The Almoravids have substantial contacts with the …

Years: 1252 - 1395

The Almoravids have substantial contacts with the Maghreb, but influences from the black Sudanic kingdoms of Ghana, Mali, and Songhai play an important role in Mauritania's history for about seven hundred years—from the eighth to the fifteenth century.

Ghana, the first of the great West African Sudanic kingdoms, included in its territory all of southeastern Mauritania extending to Tagant.

Ghana reached its apogee in the ninth and tenth centuries with the extension of its rule over the Sanhadja Berbers.

This large and centralized kingdom controlled the southern terminus of the trans-Saharan trade in gold, ivory, and salt.

The capture of Koumbi Saleh in 1076 by the Almoravids had marked the end of Ghana's hegemony, although the kingdom continues to exist for another one hundred and twenty-five years.

The Mande, under the leadership of the legendary Sundiata, found the second great Sudanic kingdom, Mali.

By the end of the thirteenth century, the Mali Empire extends over that part of Mauritania previously controlled by Ghana, as well as over the remaining Sahelian regions and the Senegal River Valley.

Sundiata and his successors take over Ghana's role in the Saharan trade and in the administration and collection of tribute from vast stretches of the Sudan and the Sahel.

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