Origin and fate of the Mali Empire Introduction Mali people occupied the land of the western side of the Atlantic in the heyday. They also traveled to the east mountains, the capital of the Songshan, the winding mountain of Niger in the south, and the Sahara desert at the northernmost tip. They built a great empire between 1240 and 1337 and experienced a slow decline until the 17th century. The historic Mali Empire was born from a small country called Kanga Gava. The people are called Mandingo (they are also known as Malinke and Mandinka).
Since 1389, Mary acquired a series of ambiguous artifacts. This is the most unknown period in the history of Mali Empire. It is clear that there is no stable lineage to rule the empire. Another characteristic of this era is the gradual loss of property in the north and east to the rising Shinkai Empire, and the new business of Mali's economic focus shifting from the summary trade route to the coast. Mansa Sandaki Keita is the descendant of kenkoro-sigui Mari Djata Keita, who abolished Maghan Keita II and became the first official to rule Mali without the Keita dynasty. However, Sandaki Keita is not the name of this person, it should be regarded as a title. Sandaki may mean a senior consultant or top consultant (meaning a consultant) dispatched from san or sanon (meaning "high"). He will dominate only after his descendant Mansa Gao Keta
According to the legend of the Mali Empire, Bilally is the ancestor of the Keita clan, moved to the Gambia area of West Afrida, established the origins of the Keita family, and today is also a Mali nobleman. Son Jara (aka Sunyata, Sondiata, other subspecies) is a member of Keita and is celebrated by Son Jara's epic. At the beginning of the story of the Mali Empire, Bilari, a faithful Islamic believer born as a religious faith, played a role in Islamic society as "the town warrior to pray for prayers." In the village of Mali along the Gambier River in West Africa, the tradition of the caller is a tradition of bullfighters and narratives. As shown below, this tradition is related to the story of Son Jara.