Around 250 B.C.E., a community of people in the Niger River Valley of what is now Mali began doing something scholars once thought impossible for the region: building a city. They settled permanently, worked iron, grew food, and laid the foundations for a settlement that would eventually house tens of thousands of people. The site they created, now known as Djenné-Djenno, would go on to upend one of the most enduring myths in the history of archaeology.
Key findings
- Djenné-Djenno settlement: Radiocarbon dating confirms permanent occupation beginning around 250 B.C.E., making it one of the earliest known urban centers in sub-Saharan Africa.
- Iron production in West Africa: Phase I occupation provides some of the earliest evidence for iron smelting in the region, predating contact with North African trade networks.
- African rice domestication: By Phase II, the site shows clear evidence for large-scale rice cultivation — suggesting the community may have independently developed or refined agriculture in the inner Niger delta.
A city built before the caravans arrived
For much of the 20th century, the dominant scholarly view held that complex, urban societies in West Africa emerged only after contact with North African traders crossing the Sahara. The logic seemed straightforward: trade brought surplus, surplus built cities.
Djenné-Djenno dismantled that logic.
Excavations led primarily by archaeologists Roderick and Susan McIntosh beginning in 1977 C.E. revealed a city that had already been thriving for centuries before trans-Saharan trade routes became significant. The site covers more than 33 hectares and sits about three kilometers from the modern town of Djenné. Its occupation spanned more than a millennium — from roughly 250 B.C.E. to 900 C.E. — across three distinct phases of growth.
What made the founding generation remarkable was not just that they built — it was what they built without. No evidence links the earliest settlers to external trade networks. They arrived, read the land, waited for flood cycles to recede, and then committed. They were likely ancestral Mande people, progenitors of the Bozo, who still live along the Niger River today.
What the Niger delta gave them
The environment played a central role. Geomorphological data shows that the region around 250 B.C.E. was mostly swampland — an unlikely candidate for permanent settlement. A dry episode reduced the annual flooding enough to make the area habitable. The first settlers moved in, and the material record suggests they came with skills: ceramic styles found at the site share features with Saharan traditions, hinting at earlier movement and cultural exchange across the region.
Faunal remains from Phase I include catfish, Nile perch, and — predominantly — cattle. The community likely practiced a mix of herding and early agriculture. Whether they were producing rice at this stage remains unconfirmed, though researchers consider it plausible. By Phase II, that question is settled: large-scale African rice cultivation is clearly documented, along with population growth, mud-brick architecture, and a city wall nearly two kilometers long and 3.7 meters wide at its base.
At its peak around 800 C.E., Djenné and its surrounding area housed an estimated 50,000 people — a figure that rivals many contemporaneous cities elsewhere in the world.
Terra-cotta, ritual, and a connected world
Among the most striking artifacts recovered from Djenné-Djenno are its terra-cotta figurines — depictions of humans, snakes, and horses rendered in fine clay. These appear in Phase II alongside the first evidence for rice cultivation and population growth. Researchers believe they served ritual rather than domestic purposes, and some bear resemblance to clay figures still made by Fulani pastoralists today. One human statuette was found on a house floor surrounded by small bowls of suspected offerings — a scene that opens a window onto a sophisticated spiritual world operating centuries before it was written about.
The site also points outward. Oral traditions hold that Djenné-Djenno was founded by immigrants from Dia, a neighboring settlement in the Niger basin that dates to around 900 B.C.E. — suggesting that even the “founding” of this city was itself part of a longer story of human movement and exchange across the region.
Lasting impact
Djenné-Djenno fundamentally changed how scholars understand African urbanism. Before its excavation, the idea that West Africa had produced complex, self-organized societies independent of outside influence was largely dismissed. The site proved that urban development, iron technology, and large-scale agriculture had emerged here on their own terms — driven by the logic of the land, the skills of its people, and exchange networks that existed long before the Saharan caravans.
That correction matters beyond archaeology. It restores historical agency to communities whose contributions were systematically minimized in colonial-era scholarship. The Mande-speaking peoples of the Niger basin were not waiting to be civilized by contact with the north. They were already building cities, managing floods, smelting iron, and creating art of considerable sophistication.
The site is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, recognized alongside the modern town of Djenné, and remains one of the most important archaeological references for understanding the deep roots of West African civilization.
Blindspots and limits
The record at Djenné-Djenno is far from complete. Why the city declined and was eventually abandoned around 900 C.E. remains poorly understood — the evidence for a fourth phase of occupation simply does not exist, and researchers have yet to explain the departure convincingly. The site also suffered significant looting before and after its excavation in 1977 C.E.: terra-cotta figurines were sold as souvenirs and fine art to Western collectors for decades, stripping them of archaeological context and scattering them globally. The U.S. did not ban the importation of Malian antiquities until 1993 C.E. — more than two decades after UNESCO established protections in 1970 C.E. How much material remains undiscovered, or has already been lost to the art market, cannot be reliably determined.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Djenné-Djenno
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana establishes a marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Indigenous land rights: 160 million hectares recognized ahead of COP30
- The Good News for Humankind archive on prehistory
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