MANSA MUSA: The 400-Billion-Dollar Man.

AuthorAnastasia, Laura
PositionTIMES PAST - Biography

The early African emperor Mansa Musa turned his stash of gold into one of the world's richest empires. So why haven't you heard of him?

Think of some of the richest people alive today: Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, the Queen of England. Believe it or not, all of those big shots' bank accounts wouldn't have come close to matching the wealth of African emperor Mansa Musa. The 14th-century ruler still tops many lists as the richest person of all time.

Musa ruled as mansa, or king, of the West African empire of Mali from 1312 to 1337, controlling about 80 percent of the world's gold. His net worth would have topped $400 billion in today's dollars (see "The Richest People in History," p. 20).

Musa's claim to fame extended far beyond money, however. The emperor was a skilled leader who transformed Mali into one of the largest empires in African history.

Original accounts about Musa and his reign still exist. And lately, many people have drawn parallels between Musa and T'Challa, the wealthy king of the fictional African nation of Wakanda in the movie Black Panther. So why haven't more people heard of Musa, nicknamed the "Lion of Mali"?

Mainly because he lived hundreds of years ago. Many world history classes don't discuss events that happened before 1450--especially those in Africa.

Musa's kingdom, says Richard Smith, an expert on ancient Mali at Ferrum College in Virginia, is a symbol "of once-powerful states in the interior of Africa that were often overlooked by historians until very recent times."

A Skilled Leader

How did Musa get so rich? He was in the right place at the right time, for starters. Mali had an ideal location on the upper Niger River in West Africa. The fertile soil produced abundant crops, and the area teemed with natural resources, including salt and gold.

Salt was a hot commodity in the ancient world. It could be used to preserve meat and other foods, which was especially important since refrigerators weren't invented for another 500-plus years. Mali had easy access to the Sahara Desert's huge salt deposits.

As for gold, "the upper reaches of the Niger River produced more gold in the 14th century than anywhere else," says Smith. (Gold, which was used as currency and was a status symbol, hadn't yet been mined in most places, making the metal even more valuable.)

Mali was the second of three great West African medieval empires, coming after the Kingdom of Ghana and before the Songhai Empire. Mali became West Africa's most powerful state in the 1200s, under the leadership of Sundiata, the first great mansa.

A century later, Musa took Mali to the next level by seizing control of gold-producing regions, reconquering areas of the kingdom that had broken away, and monopolizing important trade routes. The conquests of Timbuktu and other major cities along trade routes in the Sahara were doubly beneficial to Musa: Merchants paid him taxes, and conquered kings gave him gifts of gold and other valuables.

By the time Musa's reign ended, the Mali Empire covered about 440,000 square miles of West Africa, including all or part of what are now nine modern-day countries, from Senegal in the west to Niger in the east (see map, previous page). Musa once boasted that it would take a year to travel from one end of his kingdom to the other.

Musa ruled over 40 million people in his empire and managed to maintain peace during his 25-year reign. He devoted large amounts of time and money to building schools and mosques, both of which benefited his citizens. He was also known for his generosity, handing out millions of dollars' worth of gold.

Those habits were likely the secret to his great success, says David Tschanz, a historian who has written about Musa.

"If you have a good economy and everybody's happy," he says, "nobody gets upset with you."

An International Celebrity

The world outside Musa's kingdom got a glimpse of the emperor's vast riches in 1324, when he went on a trip so extravagant that it wowed people throughout Europe and the Middle East.

Musa's journey was a 4,000-mile hajj--the traditional Muslim pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca. In true centibillionaire fashion, he didn't go it alone. He traveled with more than 60,000 people, including 12,000 slaves, in a caravan that stretched as far as the eye could see.

Also along for the ride: a mind-boggling amount of gold. About 80 camels carried roughly 300 pounds of gold each, and Musa's slaves lugged another 24 tons of the precious metal.

"It was more money than anybody had ever seen anybody ever bring with them," Tschanz says.

Musa and his entourage crossed the Sahara Desert, stopping for a few months in Cairo, Egypt, where he spent a lot of time shopping at Cairo's world-famous markets. He also handed out gold to Egypt's poor and sick--and to just about everyone else he encountered. Historians estimate that the gold he gave away during his hajj alone would be worth more than $100 million today.

Musa reportedly pumped so much gold into Cairo's economy that the precious metal decreased in value. It took more than 12 years for gold's value to bounce back. Says Tschanz: "It was the only time in history that one man controlled the world's gold market."

Tales of Musa's incredible wealth and charity quickly spread to North Africa, Europe, and the Arab world through traders and travelers he encountered during his journey. Musa had good reason to show off his fortune.

"The lavish display of wealth was designed...

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