Is Mansa Musa the richest man who ever lived?
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos is the
richest man in the world, according to the 2019 Forbes billionaires' list
released this week. With an estimated fortune of $131bn (£99bn) he is the
wealthiest man in modern history.
But he is by no means the richest man
of all time.
That title is believed to belong to
Mansa Musa, the 14th Century West African ruler who was so rich his generous
handouts wrecked an entire country's economy.
"Contemporary accounts of Musa's
wealth are so breathless that it's almost impossible to get a sense of just how
wealthy and powerful he truly was," Rudolph Butch Ware, associate professor
of history at the University of California, told the BBC.
Mansa Musa was "richer than
anyone could describe", Jacob Davidson wrote about the African king for
Money.com in 2015.
In 2012, US website Celebrity Net
Worth estimated his wealth at $400bn, but economic historians agree that his
wealth is impossible to pin down to a number.
The
10 richest men of all time
·
Mansa Musa
(1280-1337, king of the Mali empire) wealth indescribable
·
Augustus Caesar
(63 BC-14 AD, Roman emperor) $4.6tn (£3.5tn)
·
Zhao Xu
(1048-1085, emperor Shenzong of Song in China) wealth incalculable
·
Akbar I
(1542-1605, emperor of India's Mughal dynasty) wealth incalculable
·
Andrew Carnegie
(1835-1919, Scottish-American industrialist) $372bn
·
John D
Rockefeller (1839-1937) American business magnate) $341bn
·
Nikolai
Alexandrovich Romanov (1868-1918, Tsar of Russia) $300bn
·
Mir Osman Ali
Khan ( 1886-1967, Indian royal) $230bn
·
William The
Conqueror (1028-1087) $229.5bn
·
Muammar Gaddafi
(1942-2011, long-time ruler of Libya) $200bn
The
golden king
Mansa Musa was born in 1280 into a
family of rulers. His brother, Mansa Abu-Bakr, ruled the empire until 1312,
when he abdicated to go on an expedition.
According to 14th Century Syrian
historian Shibab al-Umari, Abu-Bakr was obsessed with the Atlantic Ocean and
what lay beyond it. He reportedly embarked on an expedition with a fleet of
2,000 ships and thousands of men, women and slaves. They sailed off, never to
return.
Some, like the late American historian
Ivan Van Sertima, entertain the idea that they reached South America. But there
is no evidence of this.
In any case, Mansa Musa inherited the
kingdom he left behind.
Under his rule, the kingdom of Mali
grew significantly. He annexed 24 cities, including Timbuktu.
The kingdom stretched for about 2,000
miles, from the Atlantic Ocean all the way to modern-day Niger, taking in parts
of what are now Senegal, Mauritania, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, The Gambia,
Guinea-Bissau, Guinea and Ivory Coast.
Mali
Empire
With such a large land mass came great
resources such as gold and salt.
During the reign of Mansa Musa, the
empire of Mali accounted for almost half of the Old World's gold, according to
the British Museum.
And all of it belonged to the king.
"As the ruler, Mansa Musa had
almost unlimited access to the most highly valued source of wealth in the
medieval world," Kathleen Bickford Berzock, who specializes in African art
at the Block Museum of Art at the Northwestern University, told the BBC.
"Major trading centres that
traded in gold and other goods were also in his territory, and he garnered
wealth from this trade," she added.
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