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Songhai Empire breaks free from Mali and rises in the western Sahel

For more than a century, the prosperous trading city of Gao had been a prize held by the Mali Empire. Then, around 1430 C.E., that grip finally loosened. As succession disputes tore at Mali’s center of power, the Songhai people of Gao reclaimed their independence — and began building what would become one of the largest empires in African history.

Key facts

  • Songhai Empire: Centered on Gao along the Niger River, the Songhai state had roots stretching back to the 11th century C.E., but it was only after breaking from Mali around 1430 C.E. that it grew into a major regional power.
  • Trans-Saharan trade: Control of gold, salt, kola nuts, and ivory moving across the Sahara made Gao one of the wealthiest cities in the medieval world, attracting both the Mali Empire’s conquest and, eventually, Songhai’s own imperial ambitions.
  • Gao’s independence: The weakening of Mali following the death of Mansa Sulayman in 1360 C.E. set off decades of dynastic instability, culminating in Songhai rulers formalizing independence under Sunni Muhammad Dao in the 1380s–90s C.E. and consolidating it by the 1430s C.E.

A city older than any empire

Long before empires competed for it, Gao was already a meeting place of peoples. Somewhere between the 9th and 3rd centuries B.C.E., several distinct groups — the Sorko, skilled boat-builders and fishers on the Niger River; the Gao, hunters of crocodiles and hippos; and the Do, farmers working the fertile riverbanks — gradually merged into a shared culture and language. Before the 10th century C.E., Songhai-speaking horsemen unified these groups under centralized leadership.

By the 10th century C.E., Gao had grown into a small but prosperous kingdom. The Sanhaja tribes from the Sahara and North African traders had joined the region’s commercial life, and the Songhai chiefs had positioned themselves at the center of a lucrative network. When the Mali Empire expanded eastward around 1300 C.E., Gao was simply too valuable to ignore. Mali conquered the city, collected taxes from its kings, and absorbed its trade wealth for more than a century.

It was a subordination the Songhai never fully accepted.

How Mali’s collapse became Songhai’s opportunity

The traveler Ibn Battuta visited Gao in 1353 C.E. and found it thriving under Malian dominion — a great town on the Niger, he wrote, one of the finest and most fertile cities of the Sudan. But even as he traveled, the forces that would undo Mali’s control were gathering.

The death of Mansa Sulayman in 1360 C.E. triggered a long chain of succession crises. The reign of Mari Djata II left the empire financially depleted. Tuareg rebellions required military attention in the north. When Songhai began asserting independence in Gao, Mali’s forces managed to suppress other revolts but could not re-subjugate the city. By the 1380s and 90s C.E., the Songhai had formalized their independence under Sunni Muhammad Dao. By the 1430s C.E., Malian control over Gao had effectively ended.

This was not a sudden revolution. It was a slow, deliberate reassertion — a people pressing into the space that a fading empire could no longer fill.

What Songhai built

The decades following 1430 C.E. set the stage for dramatic expansion. Under Sonni Ali, who reigned from 1464 to 1492 C.E., the Songhai surpassed the Mali Empire in territory, wealth, and military reach. Timbuktu fell to Songhai in 1468 C.E. Djenné, after a famous seven-year siege, followed in 1473 C.E. Both cities were already major centers of Islamic scholarship and commerce, and their incorporation made the Songhai Empire one of the most significant cultural and economic powers of the medieval world.

Askia Muhammad Ture — known as Askia the Great — took power in 1493 C.E. and deepened those foundations further. He introduced political reforms, standardized weights and measures, expanded access to Islamic education, and cultivated Timbuktu as a center of learning that drew scholars from across North and West Africa. At its height, the Songhai Empire stretched roughly 2,000 kilometers across the western Sahel, encompassing much of what is today Mali, Niger, and Nigeria.

Lasting impact

The Songhai Empire’s rise demonstrated something that is easy to overlook in histories focused on European expansion: the 15th and 16th centuries C.E. were a period of extraordinary African state-building, intellectual sophistication, and commercial integration. The libraries of Timbuktu, which housed hundreds of thousands of manuscripts on mathematics, astronomy, medicine, law, and theology, owe their flourishing in part to the stability and patronage that Songhai rule provided.

The trade networks the empire managed — connecting sub-Saharan West Africa to the Mediterranean world via trans-Saharan routes — were not peripheral to global commerce. They were integral to it. Gold from the Songhai sphere helped finance economies across North Africa and Europe for generations.

The institutional memory of Songhai governance, scholarship, and trade also persisted long after the empire’s collapse. Oral traditions, Arabic manuscripts, and the built environments of Gao, Timbuktu, and Djenné have continued to inform West African identity and scholarship into the present.

Blindspots and limits

The Songhai Empire’s expansion was not without violence or coercion. Sonni Ali’s conquest of Timbuktu in 1468 C.E. was accompanied by documented atrocities against Muslim scholars and civilians, recorded by multiple Arabic-language historians of the period. The empire also participated in the trans-Saharan slave trade, which caused profound suffering for the people caught within it. The written record that survives skews heavily toward Arabic-literate Islamic scholars, meaning that the perspectives of non-Muslim communities, women, and rural populations within the empire remain largely unrecorded. What we know of this period is substantial — and also incomplete.

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For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Songhai Empire

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