Mansa Musa was an emperor of the Mali Empire during the 14th century and is the richest person to have ever lived. He became emperor in 1312 and ruled until 1337. He was the ninth Mansa of the Mali Empire, one of the most powerful Islamic West African states.
His caravan may have had 60,000 people carrying supplies and bags, 500 slaves each carrying a gold staff, and 80 to 100 camels each carrying 300 pounds of gold dust. On his journey, he is said to have given out millions of dollars worth of gold.
He gave out so much gold in Cairo that the price of gold went down and stayed low for many years. and garnered the attention of the wider Muslim world.
Mansa Musa stopped in many places on his way to Mecca for his Hajj. These placed include Timbuktu and Gao. He stopped every Friday at a destination and left enough gold for a mosque to be built.
Mansa Musa made Timbuktu a center of trade, culture and of Islam, which also helped increase the spread of Islam throughout Western Africa.
Mansa Musa also helped to spread Islam. He was a devoted Muslim, and built many schools based on the teachings of the Qur’an. He sent students to Islamic universities in northern Africa.
After his Hajj, European cartographers began to draw Mansa Musa on maps. As the empire of Mali fell apart, Mansa Musa’s reputation did as well; he was no longer drawn as a noble king on maps. Instead, artists drew him to look uncivilized. He was drawn as a parody of European royalty and a normal person with a crown.