The Neo-traditionalism of the Manden Charter
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The Manden Charter, according to tradition, was adopted in 1236 at Kurukan Fuga (Mali),
after the victory of Sunjata Keita, legendary Mali ruler, over Sumaoro Kante, general of susu
troops. It is a corpus of rules that was created to organize the Mali Empire. In 2009, UNESCO
inscribed the Charter on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.
The Charter, like the Hunters’ Oath (1222), belongs to the oral tradition and was
documented only in 1998. Therer are many oral variants of text. So there is controversy about
its authenticity. Basing on the results of my previous research, it is safe to say that the Charter
conveys the main social norms of Manden society and its social structure, however, it contains
also some modern ideas. In Guinea, near Niagassola village, there is a place similar to Kurukan
Fuga, where until recently the main Manden families gathered to make important decisions.
Informants said that Sundiata himself was there also. The Charter may be even more
significant today than it used to be, which is why it has become the center of attention both
among the Manden peoples and abroad. Like every oral tradition the Charter makes changes in history, and this alternation of history is inevitable, because history is important not just for
the past, but for present and future of the peoples. Today the Charter is an important element
in Manden’s self-identification.
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Zavyalova O. Yu. The Neo-traditionalism of the Manden Charter. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Asian and African Studies, 2022, vol. 14, issue 2, pp. 193–210. https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu13.2022.203 (In Russian)