High Middle Ages · Africa · Exploration

1029

Swahili traders reach Sofala for gold

1029

Muslim merchants from Kilwa and Mogadishu established trading stations at Sofala on the Mozambican coast, the closest port to the gold-producing regions of the Zimbabwean plateau. Gold dust, ivory, and iron flowed through Sofala to the Indian Ocean world, connecting the mines of southern Africa to markets in Gujarat, the Persian Gulf, and Song China.