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1465. The Mali Empire is overextended, barely able to garrison its territory, and driven by internal power struggles. Sensing weakness, a new player emerges: the sorcerer-king, Sunni Ali. 

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The Empire of Mali - The Final Bloody Act - Extra History - #5

The Mali Empire comes to an end after the rise of rival powers and weakened by colonial influences, but not without leaving a legacy as a place of wealth and splendor. Support us on Patreon! http://bit.ly/EHPatreon (--More below) Subscribe for new episodes every week! http://bit.ly/SubToEC Grab your Extra Credits gear at the store! http://bit.ly/ExtraStore Play games with us on Extra Play! http://bit.ly/WatchEXP Thanks for participating in this week's discussion! We want you to be aware of our community posting guidelines so that we can have high-quality conversations: https://goo.gl/HkzwQh Contribute community subtitles to Extra Credits: http://www.youtube.com/timedtext_cs_panel?c=UCCODtTcd5M1JavPCOr_Uydg&tab=2 Talk to us on Twitter (@ExtraCreditz): http://bit.ly/ECTweet Follow us on Facebook: http://bit.ly/ECFBPage Get our list of recommended games on Steam: http://bit.ly/ECCurator ___________ Would you like James to speak at your school or organization? For info, contact us at: contact@extra-credits.net ____________ ♪ Get the intro music here! http://bit.ly/1EQA5N7 *Music by Demetori: http://bit.ly/1AaJG4H ♪ Get the outro music here! http://bit.ly/23isQfx *Music by Sean and Dean Kiner: http://bit.ly/1WdBhnm

Comments

Anonymous

Alternate History Idea: What if Instead of Dying of “Sleeping Sickness” Mansa Musa’s Son had been a much Healthier Person and began Enacting a Number of Reforms Designed to Strengthen the Empire’s Grip on the Trans-Saharan Trade and Spent his Money more Wisely than in our Timeline, although Gao still Gained its Independence from the Mali same way as it did in Real History. Civilization IV Technologies ~ Military Tradition *Ping!* “Victorious Warriors Win First and then go to War while Defeated Warriors go to War First and then Seek to Win.” ~ Sun Tzu

Anonymous

what will the one off be

Anonymous

You know, Mali had a pretty good run looking back at it. Lasting for 400 years is impressive, lots of famous European states haven't managed that, and the amount of civil warring seems pretty unremarkable compared to the likes of England or China. Have there been countries that have done better? Absolutely, but there are a lot of highly respected ones that have done a lot worse as well. Also, I'm so happy to hear you mention Denmark and Sweden among the slave trading nations. Denmark was the fifth (or possibly sixth, I can't quite remember) most important nation for transatlantic slave shipments, yet it's considered a topic not to talk about here and internationally it gets overlooked in favor of the big colonial powers. Yet if you walk through Copenhagen, seeing the mansions of the old mercantile families and the famous architecture of King Christian IV, the wealth that paid for them was founded on slavery. To this day, much of the traditional bourgeoisie of Denmark, recognizable by their unique last names, are people whose wealth came from their ancestors using humans as a commodity. Denmark is not a big country and it was slower than places like England, France, the Low Countries and the parts of Germany along the Rhine to adopt newer mercantile culture in the renaissance and enlightenment. Danish colonial ventures were also mostly failures, money pits draining what little resources the crown didn't spend on military adventures in Sweden. So more than most slave trading nations, the wealth that Danish merchants did manage came from the slave trade. It's a legacy that the world needs to know and Denmark needs to own up to.

Anonymous

Wizard kings? Sounds OP, please nerf.

Anonymous

Reminds me of Leopold II. It’s mind blowing that one of the worst human rights violators of the era was a freaking Belgian king.

Anonymous

Okay serious question; do you guys think that Meritocracies are vital in the growth of nations, empires and golden-ages?

Anonymous

It does help a lot and, ethically, that's the right thing to do. Now, is it vital (as in can't happen without it) No it's not.

Anonymous

I hope when you do a series on the slave trade you remain objective. And remember things like the fact the African slave practise was equivalent to European ones in some regions.

Anonymous

Hmm i'm still really hoping they'll do an episode on the Dutch trade empire. Some of the most era defining events (Rise of the modern economy, the first modern army and the birth of the first Modern republic.)

Anonymous

Amazing series as a whole, but I have a couple of gripes with it - for starters, in the first episode, the ability to use iron is treated like its something sacred in west africa when in reality, most all people besides the khoisan were doing it across the continent - and even they were doing it from picking up the skill from ironworking bantu africans. Also, why the continued use of the word tribe? These were organized states. Tribe usually has a negative connotation to it, so i personally don't like the word. Anyway, looking forward to your next series :)