Did You Know? Many of the world’s ancient books were written in Africa?

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Long before the printing press and modern libraries, Africa was a cradle of written knowledge — producing thousands of texts on science, philosophy, medicine, law, mathematics, and spirituality.

Timbuktu Manuscripts (Mali)

  • Over 700,000 handwritten manuscripts dating from the 12th century

  • Written in Arabic, African languages, and Ajami (African languages using Arabic script)

  • Covered topics like astronomy, mathematics, medicine, ethics, and law

  • Scholars from all over the Islamic world traveled to study in Timbuktu’s libraries

Ancient Egypt (Kemet)

  • Produced texts like the Book of the Dead, medical papyri, and early mathematical treatises

  • Used hieroglyphs and demotic scripts to preserve religious, legal, and scientific knowledge

  • The Library of Alexandria, located in Africa, was one of the largest libraries of the ancient world, housing scrolls from across Egypt, Greece, India, and Mesopotamia

Ethiopia

  • Home to some of the oldest Christian texts in existence, written in Ge’ez, an ancient Semitic language

  • Monasteries preserved Bible manuscripts, hymns, commentaries, and legal codes for over 1,500 years

These African centers of knowledge show that literacy, authorship, and intellectual life were thriving in Africa centuries before many parts of the world caught up.

Quote for Thought

“When books were treasures and knowledge was power, Africa was already writing the chapters of human genius.”
— Echoes from the Ink of Our Ancestors