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Yes, that is true. During the Middle Ages the Berbers living in the Sahara developed trade routes through the desert down to the Niger, giving the Islamic world trade access to sub-Saharan gold, copper and ivory, slaves, and Saharan salt.
The sub-Saharan termini of these routes prospered along with the routes themselves, developing into progressively richer entities the Ghana and Gao Empires, then the Mali Empire, then the Songhai. During this period Timbuktu and Gao by all accounts grew into relatively large and shockingly prosperous cities. However, all literacy for the area appears to have been in Arabic.
The quote at the end of your quotation is from Ibn Battuta, an Arab traveler* who visited the Mali Empire for several months from 1352-1353. In that particular quote he appears to be referring to the entire country, but he reported visting the capital (Niani), Timbuktu, and Gao.
* - Calling him "a traveler" is actually understating it in roughly the same way it would be understating things to call Einstein "a scientist".
Upvote:1
There were at least two major Sub Saharan civilizations in West Africa between the 12th and 16th centuries: Mali and the Benin Empire.
Mali includes today's Mali, plus Senegal, southern Mauritania and other countries along Africa's Atlantic coast, plus the northern parts of Niger and Burkina Faso During the Middle Ages, it provided about half of Europe's gold.
The Benin Empire (not to be confused with the former Dahomey), was part of modern Nigeria. It was known for artifacts made of ivory and metals such as bronze and iron, as well as a miniature (but still substantial) version of China's Great Wall.
The slave trade diverted trade flows away from these more advanced cultures toward more primitive areas between Mali and the Benin Empire, such as the Ivory Coast and modern Ghana.