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Makuria - Economy |  | Makuria - Economy: Encyclopedia II - Makuria - Economy |  | | The main economic activity in Makuria was agriculture, with farmers growing several crops a year of barley, millet, and dates. The methods used were generally the same that had been used for millennia. Small plots of well irrigated land were lined along the banks of the Nile, which would be fertilized by the river's annual flooding. One important technological advance was the saqiya, an oxen-powered water wheel, that was introduced in the Roman period and helped increase yields and population density.See also: Makuria, Makuria - Sources, Makuria - History, Makuria - Origins, Makuria - Height, Makuria - Decline, Makuria - Economy, Makuria - Government, Makuria - Religion, Makuria - Culture, Makuria - Rulers, Makuria - Notes |  | | Makuria, Makuria - Culture, Makuria - Decline, Makuria - Economy, Makuria - Government, Makuria - Height, Makuria - History, Makuria - Notes, Makuria - Origins, Makuria - Religion, Makuria - Rulers, Makuria - Sources |  | |
|  |  | Makuria: Encyclopedia II - Makuria - Economy
Makuria - Economy
The main economic activity in Makuria was agriculture, with farmers growing several crops a year of barley, millet, and dates. The methods used were generally the same that had been used for millennia. Small plots of well irrigated land were lined along the banks of the Nile, which would be fertilized by the river's annual flooding. One important technological advance was the saqiya, an oxen-powered water wheel, that was introduced in the Roman period and helped increase yields and population density.[13] Settlement patterns indicate that land was divided into individual plots rather than as in a manorial system. The peasants lived in small villages composed of clustered houses of sun-dried brick.
Important industries included the production of pottery, based at Faras, and weaving based at Dongola. Smaller local industries include leatherworking, metalworking, and the widespread production of baskets, mats, and sandals from palm fibre.[14] Also important was the gold mined in the Red Sea Hills to the east of Makuria.[15]
Makurian trade was largely by barter as the state never adopted a currency. In the north, however, Egyptian coins were common.[16] Makurian trade with Egypt was of great import. From Egypt a wide array of luxury and manufactured goods were imported. The main Makurian export was slaves. The slaves sent north were not from Makuria itself, but rather from further south and west in Africa[17]. Little is known about Makurian trade and relations with other parts of Africa. There is some archaeological evidence of contacts and trade with the areas to the west such as Darfur and Kanem-Bornu, but few details. There seem to have been important political relations between Makuria and Christian Ethiopia to the south-east. For instance, in the 10th century, Georgios II successfully intervened on behalf of the unnamed ruler at that time, and persuaded Patriarch Philotheos of Alexandria to at last ordain an abuna, or metropolitan, for the Ethiopian Orthodox Church. However, there is little evidence of much trade between the two Christian states.
Other related archives1002, 1080, 1089, 1130, 1150, 1171, 1210, 1268, 1272, 1274, 1276, 1279, 1286, 1304, 1305, 1317, 1397, 13th century, 1412, 14th century, 1517, 1960, 1964, 24, 30, 4th, 5, 5th century, 641, 651, 652, 68, 697, 6th century, 71, 722, 74, 744, 750, 76, 790, 7th century, 800 BC, 822, 854, 872, 89, 892, 93, 943, 969, AD 350, Ali Baba, Alodia, Arab, Arabic, Arabization, Arabized, Aswan High Dam, Awlad Kenz, Ayyubids, Baghdad, Baybars, Bedouin, Beja, Burckhardt, Byzantine Empire, Byzantine art, Cataract, Chalcedonian, Christendom, Constantine, Coptic, Coptic Patriarch of Alexandria, Darfur, Dongola, Dotawo, Egypt, Empress Theodora, Eparch, Ethiopia, Ethiopian Orthodox Church, Faras, Fatimids, Francisco Alvarez, Georgios, Georgios I, Georgios II, Golden Age, Greek, Greek alphabet, Ibn Khaldun, Ibn Selim el-Aswani, Islamicization, John of Ephesus, John the Deacon, Kanem-Bornu, Kush, Kyriakos, Lebna Dengel, Mamlukes, Medieval, Melkite, Merkurios, Meroe, Meroƫ, Monophysite, Monophysites, Nile River, Nobatia, Nobiin language, Nobiin tongue, Nubian, Old Dongola, Old Nubian, Old Nubian language, Ottoman, Patriarch Philotheos of Alexandria, Ptolemy, Qasr Ibrim, Rafael, Roman Empire, Salah-ed-din, Salomo, Sassanian, Selim, Shi'ite, Sudan, Taifa, Thebaid, UNESCO, Umayyad, University of Ghana, Upper Egypt, Zacharias III, abuna, al-Maris, al-Umari, archaeology, baqt, barley, baskets, bishops, bow, cattle, converted to Christianity, currency, dates, dual monarchy, grave goods, its counterpart, ivory, jihad, kingdom, leatherworking, linen, mass, mats, metropolitan, millet, monasticism, mosque, ostrich, oxen, painted, pottery, sandals, slaves, succession, uncial, water wheel, weaving, wheat, wine
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Economy", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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