Mansa musa biography wikipedia
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Mansa Musa
Musa Na ( c. - c. ), ko Mansa Musa, shi ne Mansa na goma (wanda ake fassarawa "sultan", "mai nasara" [1] ko "sarki" ) na Daular Mali, kasar musulman ta Afirka ta yamma.
A lokacin da Musa ya hau kan karagar mulki, Mali a bangare dayawa ta kuma ƙunshi yankin tsohuwar daular Ghana wacce kasar Mali ta ci galaba a kanta. Masarautar Mali ta kuma ƙunshi ƙasa wanda yanzu wani ɓangare ne na Mauritania da kuma jihar ta Mali ta zamani. A zamanin mulkinsa, Musa ya rike mukamai da yawa, kamar "Sarkin Melle", "Ubangijin ma'adinan Wangara", kuma "Mai nasara akan Ghanata".
Musa ya ci birane guda 24, tare da garuruwansu. A zamanin mulkin Musa, wataƙila Mali ce ta kasance mai samar da zinari mafi girma a duniya, kuma ana ɗaukar Musa ɗaya daga mutane mafi arziki a tarihi. Koyaya, masu sharhi na zamani irin su mujallar Time sun kammala cewa babu ingantacciyar hanyar da za ta ƙayyade arzikin Musa.
Musa gaba daya ana kiransa ne da "Mansa Musa" a cikin rubuce-rubu
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Mansa Musa
Mansa Musa was the emperor (mansa) of Mali during the 14th century. He became emperor in He was the first African ruler to be famous in all of Europe and the mittpunkt East.
Historians say he was the richest individ to have ever lived. Today, his wealth would be worth more than billion USD.[1]
Mansa Musa came to power in CE. Mansa Musa's new trade works made the already wealthy country the wealthiest in Africa, which mostly came from gold, elfenben, and unique salt. He is known for being the richest man in history with his large amount of gold, and what he did to make Mali memorable.
Mansa Musa was the great-nephew of Sundiata Keita, who started the Mali Empire. He fryst vatten famous for his Hajj (–5). His caravan may have had 60, people carrying supplies and bags, slaves each carrying a gold personal, and 80 to camels each carrying pounds of gold dust. On his journey, he is said to have given out millions of dollars worth of gold. He gave out so much gold in Cairo t
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Atlantic voyage of the predecessor of Mansa Musa
Account of Mali Empire Atlantic voyage
In , while staying in Cairo during his hajj, Mansa Musa, the ruler of the Mali Empire, told an Egyptian official whom he had befriended that he had come to rule when his predecessor led a large fleet in an attempt to cross the Atlantic Ocean and never returned. This account, recorded by the Arab historian al-Umari, has attracted considerable interest and speculation as a possible instance of pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact. The voyage is popularly attributed to a Mansa Abu Bakr II,[a] but no such mansa ever reigned. Rather, the voyage is inferred to have been undertaken by Mansa Muhammad ibn Qu.
A precise date for the suggested voyage is not known, though it is interpreted as having occurred in or shortly before , the year Musa is inferred to have become mansa. No clear evidence of the fate of the voyage or even its existence has ever been found.
Musa's account
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