Diop-Maes Louise-Marie. — Essay on population evaluation in Sub-Saharan Africa during the 15th and 16th centuries. The study of archeological remains and of a wide range of first-hand documents from Arabic, Sudanese and European sources, has led to the hypothesis that Sub-Saharan Africa was far more densely populated during the 15th and 16th centuries than has been previously believed. According to this evidence, there were not only cities of more than 6 000 to 7 000 dwellings surrounded by huts, but also a great many large villages throughout Sub-Saharan Africa, implanted within the boundaries of vast rather stable states. The hypothesis of a densely populated Sub-Saharan Africa, during the 15th and 16th centuries is further supported by t...
Fargues Philippe. — A Century of Demographic Change in Mediterranean Africa 1885-1985. A reconsidera...
A nation of traders, the Mandingos are to be found, from the 15th century onward, in contact with th...
One encounters often among African historians reflexes which tend to preserve a type of inferiority ...
The article is an analysis of the presence of Africans in France from ancient times to the beginning...
African historians have shown little interest in the collection or critical examination of documents...
Did the Black Death, the famous, devastating plague pandemic that struck the Mediterranean and Weste...
This article deals with the largest collection of primary sources yet located documenting the popula...
This article uses demographic data from nineteenth-century Angola to evaluate, within a West Central...
From the colonial era to the present, economic progress in sub-Saharan Africa has been slow. This pa...
The aim of this paper is to give an overall view of the statistical operations used for collecting d...
Tabutin Dominique, Schoumaker Bruno.- The Demography of Sub-Saharan Africa from the 1950s to the 200...
Introduction La traite transatlantique, du 15ième au 19ième siècle, a changé radicalement la démogra...
How Africa was conceived as an idea and integrated into the evolving Euro-North American-centric mod...
The scramble and Partition of African countries began in earnest with the Berlin Conference of 1884-...
The Portuguese colonial bureaucracy started thinking about the problem of « porters » from the secon...
Fargues Philippe. — A Century of Demographic Change in Mediterranean Africa 1885-1985. A reconsidera...
A nation of traders, the Mandingos are to be found, from the 15th century onward, in contact with th...
One encounters often among African historians reflexes which tend to preserve a type of inferiority ...
The article is an analysis of the presence of Africans in France from ancient times to the beginning...
African historians have shown little interest in the collection or critical examination of documents...
Did the Black Death, the famous, devastating plague pandemic that struck the Mediterranean and Weste...
This article deals with the largest collection of primary sources yet located documenting the popula...
This article uses demographic data from nineteenth-century Angola to evaluate, within a West Central...
From the colonial era to the present, economic progress in sub-Saharan Africa has been slow. This pa...
The aim of this paper is to give an overall view of the statistical operations used for collecting d...
Tabutin Dominique, Schoumaker Bruno.- The Demography of Sub-Saharan Africa from the 1950s to the 200...
Introduction La traite transatlantique, du 15ième au 19ième siècle, a changé radicalement la démogra...
How Africa was conceived as an idea and integrated into the evolving Euro-North American-centric mod...
The scramble and Partition of African countries began in earnest with the Berlin Conference of 1884-...
The Portuguese colonial bureaucracy started thinking about the problem of « porters » from the secon...
Fargues Philippe. — A Century of Demographic Change in Mediterranean Africa 1885-1985. A reconsidera...
A nation of traders, the Mandingos are to be found, from the 15th century onward, in contact with th...
One encounters often among African historians reflexes which tend to preserve a type of inferiority ...