The word Ghana means "warrior king" and was the title given to the ruler of Awkar, often now called the Ghana Empire. The Empire was not located where the modern country of Ghana is, but in what is now southeastern Mauritania and western Mali. It existed from about 300 AD to about 1200 AD.
I'm afraid to say, but Ghana did not exist yet in the 300's A.D., however, Sundiata ruled in 300 B.C.
No. Mansa Musa was the king of the Malian Empire, and ruled from either roughly 1307 to 1332 AD or 1312 to 1337 AD. The Malian Empire under Mansa Musa did however include territory that was previously part of the Ghana Empire.
800-1230 ad/ce.
Diocletian.
between 400 and 1100, a vast trading empire called ghana emerged in west Africa
YES
Ghana was the earliest trading empire in West Africa.
That would have to be the Ghana Empire or Wangadou Empire which was located in what is now southeastern Mauritania, and Western Mali between 830 and 1235 AD.
Ghana didn’t exist in 1060. It wasn’t a country until 1957. In the 4-3 rd centuries it was called Wagadugu and Ghana was the title of the kings who ruled the kingdom. It was controlled by Sudiata in 1240 AD and absorbed into the Mali Empire in 1307.
Ghana, Mali, and Songhey are the Sudanic states. These are countries that used to be part of the Sudanic empire between the 700s and 1500s AD.
The Fatamid Caliphate was an Islamic empire from 909 to 1171 AD. Its first capital was Mahdia in Tunisia before moving to Cairo. The Ghana Empire (c. 830-1235) had its capital at Koumbi Saleh, in present-day Mauritania. The Mali Empire (1230-1600), which like the Ghana Empire included Timbuktu, had its capital at ancient Niani, and later at Ka'Ba.