Mansa Musa's Family Built the Richest Empire in History. Where Are They Today?

Mansa Musa's 1324 pilgrimage to Mecca crashed Egypt's gold market for 12 years. His empire covered 1.3 million square kilometres and controlled roughly two-thirds of all gold circulating in the medieval Mediterranean. This video traces the full arc of the Keita dynasty — from Sundiata's founding victory at the Battle of Kirina around 1235, through the golden age under Mansa Musa, to the empire's 250-year decline, the final humiliation at Djenné in 1599, and where the Keita bloodline is today. From the first president of Mali who died in prison to the albino prince who became Africa's most famous voice — and the 800-year-old ceremony in a mud-walled hut where the story is still being told. Sources include Shihab al-Umari's account of Musa's pilgrimage (c. 1340), Ibn Battuta's Rihla (1352–53), Ibn Khaldun's Kitab al-Ibar, the Tarikh al-Sudan, the Tarikh al-Fattash, the 1375 Catalan Atlas, the Kouroukan Fouga / Manden Charter (1998 Kankan reconstruction), UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage records for the Kamablon ceremony, Britannica, D.T. Niane's "Sundiata: An Epic of Old Mali," Nehemia Levtzion's "Ancient Ghana and Mali," the ICC judgment in Prosecutor v. Al Mahdi (2016), and Jan Jansen's field research on the Kangaba septennial ceremony. #ManaMusa #MaliEmpire #KeitaDynasty #Sundiata #AfricanHistory #MedievalAfrica #Timbuktu #FallenDynasties #RoyalHistory #WestAfrica #GoldEmpire #TheFallenCrown