The Songhai Empire: Africa's Powerful Forgotten Kingdom — Fexingo History

The Forgotten Sahelian Farmers Who Fed the Songhai Empire

4 min · 26. maj 2026
episode The Forgotten Sahelian Farmers Who Fed the Songhai Empire cover

Description

When we think of the Songhai Empire, we think of gold, salt, and scholarly cities like Timbuktu. But the empire's true backbone was its agricultural system — a sophisticated network of flood-retreat farming along the Niger River, managed by the Sorko and Tyeddo peoples. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the agricultural surplus that allowed Songhai to support a vast army, a bureaucracy, and trade networks across the Sahara. They discuss the falo system — the seasonal floodplains that were cultivated with sorghum, millet, and rice — and how the state managed land tenure through the fari-mondio, or provincial governors. They also examine how climate change and Sahel drought cycles affected Songhai's food security, and the role of enslaved labor in the fields. The conversation touches on a lesser-known rebellion in the Dendi region sparked by grain hoarding, and how the collapse of agriculture after the Saadian invasion accelerated the empire's fall. This episode avoids rehashing previous topics and instead offers a fresh lens on Songhai's economy through the mouths of its farmers, using evidence from the Tarikh al-Sudan and archaeological studies of ancient Niger River settlements. #SonghaiAgriculture #NigerRiver #Farming #Sahel #FaloSystem #Sorko #Tyeddo #FariMondio #TarikhAlSudan #Dendi #Sorghum #Millet #Rice #ClimateChange #EnslavedLabor #FoodSecurity #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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118 episodes

episode Songhai's Secret Police: The Koyam Intelligence Network artwork

Songhai's Secret Police: The Koyam Intelligence Network

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the shadowy world of the Koyam, the imperial intelligence corps of the Songhai Empire. Long before modern spy agencies, the Koyam served as the eyes and ears of the Askia, monitoring provincial governors, foreign courts, and even the military. Lucas delves into the Tarikh al-Sudan and Tarikh al-Fattash to uncover how the Koyam were recruited—often from slave-soldier ranks or trusted eunuchs—and how they reported directly to the emperor, bypassing even the highest nobles. The discussion reveals specific operations: how the Koyam uncovered a plot by the Mossi states in 1505, how they tracked caravan movements along the Taghaza salt route, and how they infiltrated the Saadian court in Marrakech decades before the Battle of Tondibi. Lucas also examines the ethical ambiguities of a network that could destroy a rival with a whispered word, and how the system collapsed when Askia Ishaq II lost control of the Koyam during the Saadian invasion. This episode offers a rare look at the intelligence apparatus that helped Songhai dominate the Sahel for over a century. #SonghaiEmpire #Koyam #Intelligence #TarikhAlSudan #TarikhAlFattash #AskiaMuhammad #AskiaIshaqII #Mossi #Taghaza #Saadian #Tondibi #Gao #Timbuktu #WestAfrica #Sahel #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

24. juni 20267 min
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Songhai's Female Scholars: The Women of Timbuktu's Libraries

When we picture Timbuktu's golden age, we often imagine male scholars like Ahmed Baba. But the Tarikh al-Sudan and Tarikh al-Fattash reveal a hidden history: women who built libraries, taught at Sankore, and shaped intellectual life in the Songhai Empire. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the lives of figures like Aisha al-Fulaniya, a scholar and teacher who amassed a personal library of over 700 manuscripts, and Nana Asma'u, though she belongs to a later Sokoto context, we focus on the women of 15th-16th century Timbuktu. We discuss how elite women endowed libraries, how the manuscript trade involved female copyists, and how the Saadian invasion scattered these collections. We also examine the limits of women's public roles and the legends that grew around female education in the Sahel. A nuanced look at gender and knowledge in a forgotten empire. #SonghaiEmpire #Timbuktu #FemaleScholars #AhmedBaba #TarikhAlSudan #TarikhAlFattash #AishaAlFulaniya #SankoreMadrasa #WestAfrica #Sahel #ManuscriptLibraries #WomenInHistory #NanaAsmau #MaliEmpire #15thCentury #16thCentury #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Yesterday5 min
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22. juni 20265 min
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