Title: The Age of Imperialism: Africa
1The Age of ImperialismAfrica
2THE DARK CONTINENT
- Dark Continent racist terminology referred to
both the peoples of Africa and their alleged
ignorance - In reality, Africa has always had diverse groups
of people with their own unique cultures and
histories - Civilizations
- Languages
- Religions
3Imperialism in Africa
- During the 18th and 19th centuries, Europeans
began to explore the interior of the African
continent
4Imperialism in Africa
- Reasons for exploration in the 1700s 1800s
- Nationalism competition among European
countries to enhance their power, wealth, and
prestige - Racism ideas of white superiority and the need
to civilize the savages - Missionaries spread Christianity to the
heathens some were motivated by humanitarianism
(improve lives of others) - Industrial Revolution always looking for more
sources of raw materials and more markets to sell
their manufactured goods - Key countries involved Great Britain, France,
Germany, Belgium, Italy
5Imperialism in Africa
- Reasons for exploration in Africa
- Atlantic slave trade was ending and Europeans saw
the great potential wealth of Africa in trade - Africa was the Dark Continent scientists and
geographers wanted to explore and document what
Africa contained
6Imperialism in Africa - Explorers
- James Bruce 1770
- Discovered source of Blue Nile in Ethiopia
Mungo Park 1795 Explored Niger River his
reports spur more exploration
7Imperialism in Africa - Explorers
- 1840 Johann Krapf Johannes Rebmann
- German missionaries
- 1st Europeans to see Mt. Kilimanjaro Mt. Kenya
- Many people couldnt believe there were
snow-capped mountains in Africa
8Imperialism in Africa - Explorers
- David Livingstone
- Scottish missionary, doctor
- Made 1st trip 1831
- Abolitionist believed ending slavery was
possible if new commerce was brought into Africa - Made several trips into interior of Africa
- Guided 1st European crossing of Kalahari Desert
- By 1860 could claim to be 1st European to cross
African continent - Explored source of White Nile
9David Livingstone
10David Livingstone
- Disappeared in mid-1860s
- Family feared he had died
- NYC newspaper hires Henry Morton Stanley to go to
Africa and find him - Stanley found Livingstone in 1871
- His trip kindled European interest in Africa
- Both men the maps they made opened Africa for
different reasons
11Dr. Livingstone, I Presume?
12Henry Morton Stanley
- Spent time in Africa exploring the Congo River
- His maps and knowledge of the area enabled King
Leopold of Belgium to claim the area
13KARL PETERS (1856-1918)
- German explorer in Africa
- Organized and propagandized for Germanys
colonial expansion - Founded the Society for German Colonization
- Acquired German East Africa (modern-day Tanzania)
- Convinced Otto von Bismarck to take over German
East Africa and increase Germanys colonies in
Africa
14CECIL RHODES (1853-1902)
- British businessman and politician in southern
Africa - Made a fortune from African diamond mines
- Established South African Company
- Land later became Rhodesia (Zimbabwe)
- Prime minister of Cape Colony (1890-1896)
- Wanted British control over South Africa
- Wanted Cape-to-Cairo Railroad
- Architect of British imperialism in southern
Africa - Great Britain became leading colonial power in
southern Africa
15CECIL RHODES (1853-1902)
16European Attitudes Toward Africans
- White superiority/black inferiority
- People to be exploited and civilized need to
change their pagan or heathen ways - Childlike, ignorant, cruel, superstitious
17The Scramble for Africa1870-1914
- Before 1885, European countries had minimal
presence in Africa
18What two areas of Africa were not taken over and
why?
19The Berlin Conference 1884-1885
Major powers met in Berlin to draw up rules for
dividing the African continent needed to
prevent war among them
20The Berlin Conference Rules to Claim a Territory
- Make a formal, public announcement of claim
- Effectively occupy territory (ex. using roads or
railroads) - Extend control from coast to interior
- Negotiate treaty with local peoples that would
constitute a claim to sovereignty
21The Berlin Conference Rules
- Agreed traders and missionaries have access to
interior - Agreed Congo and Niger rivers were international
waterways - Agreed Christianity should be brought to all
Africans - Agreed what was left of slave trade should be
destroyed
22The Berlin Conference
- Africa was divided by Europeans for Europeans
- Primary nations
- Great Britain
- France
- Belgium
- Spain
- Portugal
- Germany
- Italy
23Types of European Control
- British Indirect Rule
- French Direct Rule
- Belgians Paternalism
- Portuguese Assimilation
24KING LEOPOLD II OF BELGIUM (1835-1909)
- Took over land in central Africa
- Berlin Conference (1885)
- Leopolds control over Congo Free State
recognized by major powers - Belgian Congo (1908)
- Leopold criticized for the cruelty of his rule in
the Congo - Leopold forced to sell Congo Free State to
Belgian government - Renamed Belgian Congo
- Created European race for African colonies
Scramble for Africa - Diamonds, foodstuffs, gold, ivory, rubber
25 Belgian Congo
26Leopold the Snake
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28African Resistance
- 1890 Chief Macemba in Tanganyika to German
officer - I have listened to your words but can find no
reason why I should obey you I would rather die
first. I have no relations with you and cannot
bring it to my mind that you have given me so
much as a pesa (small maount of money) of the
quarter of a pesa or a needle or a thread.
29- I look for some reason why I should obey you and
find not the smallest. If it should be
friendship that you desire, then I am ready for
it, today and always. But to be your subject,
that I cannot be. If it should be war you
desire, then I am ready, but never to your
subject.
30AFRICANS IN AFRICA
- By the time of the First World War (1914)
- Only 2 independent African countries
- Abyssinia (Ethiopia)
- Ruled by dynasty stretching back to at least the
13th century - Last emperor was Haile Selassie, deposed in 1974
- Home to Ethiopian Orthodox Christian Church
(strongly tied to Egyptian Coptic Church) - Liberia
- Formed by freed slaves under auspices of the
United States government
31African Resistance - Ethiopians
- In 1887 1896 Ethiopian army defeated Italians
- Emperor Menelik II created modern state of
Ethiopia, including modern military - Ethiopia remained independent until 1930s when
Benito Mussolini sought revenge and occupied
Ethiopia
32African Resistance - Ashanti
- Built empire on West Africas Gold Coast
- By early 1800s, covered 150,000 square miles
- Included between 3-5 million people
- Strong king bureaucracy
- Capital of Kumasi was bustling commercial center
33African Resistance - Ashanti
Clashed with British for 75 years 1873 full
scale attack against Ashanti using modern
weaponry and African allies
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35BRITISH IN SOUTHERN AFRICA
- 1815 British took Cape Colony from the Dutch
- Boers moved north
- Transvaal
- 1886 gold discovered and British moved in
- 1881 and 1895 British attempted to take
Transvaal from the Boers - Orange Free State
- Boer War (1899-1892)
- Dutch led by President Paul Kruger
- British won
36UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA
- Created in 1910
- Included Cape Colony, Orange Free State, Natal,
and Transvaal - Self-government
37BRITISH COLONIES IN SOUTHERN AFRICA
- Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe)
- Named for Cecil Rhodes
- North of Union of South Africa
- Bechuanaland (now Botswana)
- 1885 became a British protectorate
- Kenya
- 1888 became a British protectorate
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39BRITISH IN NORTH AFRICA
- Egypt in name ruled by Ottoman Turks, but
largely independent - European capital investments
- Suez Canal opened in 1869
- Built by the Egyptians and French
- Taken over by the British (1875)
- British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli
- Bought shares in Suez Canal Company from Egypt
- Egypt was nearly bankrupt from the expense of
building the Suez Canal - British government became largest shareholder
40EUROPEANS IN EGYPT
- 1870s with the Egyptian government bankrupt,
the British and French took over financial
control of the country - Egyptian monarchs (technically Ottoman viceroys)
ruled as puppet leaders - 1882 Egyptian nationalist rebellion
- France withdrew its troops
- Great Britain left in control of Egypt
- Lord Cromer introduced reforms
- De facto British protectorate
- Made official in 1914
- Independence came in 1922
41BRITISH IN NORTHERN AFRICA
- Sudan
- Area south of Egypt
- Under Anglo-Egyptian control
- Cotton needed for British textile mills
- Entente Cordiale (1904)
- Great Britain controlled Sudan
- France controlled Morocco
- Cape-to-Cairo Railroad
- Idea of Cecil Rhodes
- Would secure Great Britains dominance in Africa
- Never completed sections missing through modern
Sudan and Uganda
42Cape-to-Cairo Railway Crossing over Victoria
Falls
43FRENCH IN AFRICA
- Algeria
- 1830 invasion
- 1831 annexation
- Tunis
- 1881 controlled by France
- Led Italy to join the Triple Alliance with
Austria-Hungary and Germany - Morocco
- 1881 large part under French control
- 1905 and 1911 nearly sparked a European war
between France and Germany - 1906 Algeciras Conference Germany recognized
French rights in Morocco - 1911 Agadir Crisis Germany recognized French
protectorate over Morocco in exchange for part of
Frances territory in the Congo
44FRENCH IN AFRICA
- Madagascar
- 1896 controlled by France
- Somaliland
- 1880s partly under French control
- West Africa
- Late 1800s largely under French control
- Sudan
- 1898 met Britains area of control and nearly
went to war - Entente Cordiale settled British-French disputes
in Africa
45FRENCH IN AFRICA
- By World War I 1914
- France controlled 3,250,000 square miles in
Africa - 14 times the area of France
- France ruled 30,000,000 Africans
- 75 of the population of France
46GERMANS IN AFRICA
- Togoland (now Togo and Ghana)
- Cameroons (now Cameroon and Nigeria)
- Southwest Africa (now Namibia)
- East Africa (now Burundi, Rwanda, and Tanzania)
47ITALIANS IN AFRICA
- 1882-1896
- Eritrea (along the Red Sea)
- Somaliland (along the Indian Ocean, part of
todays Somalia) - 1896
- Defeated in attempt to conquer Abyssinia
(Ethiopia) - 1912
- Won Tripoli from Ottoman Turks
48Effects of European Rule on Africa
- Improved Medicine
- Positive
- Negative
49Effects of European Rule on Africa
- Improved Medicine
- Positive
- Negative
- Europeans stressed cash crop agriculture
- Did not necessarily produce enough food for
Africans to eat
50Effects of European Rule on Africa
- Europeans made Africans into tenants instead of
the tribe controlling the land - Taxes were charged by Europeans Africans had to
work for the Europeans to pay the taxes - Africans had to move to urban areas to find work
led to break up of families and clans - Europeans separated traditional ethnic groups and
put together traditional enemies when creating
new boundaries
51Effects of European Rule on Africa
- Improved transportation and communication systems
- Positive
- Negative