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AFRICA REVIEW

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Title: AFRICA REVIEW


1
AFRICA REVIEW
2
Geography
  • FEATURES
  • SAHARA DESERT
  • GREAT RIFT VALLEY
  • NILE RIVER
  • KALAHARI DESERT
  • ATLAS MOUNTAINS
  • LAKE VICTORIA
  • CONGO RIVER

3
Effects of Geography
  • FEATURE EFFECT
  • SAHARA DESERTIFICATION
  • DESERT
    ACTS AS A BARRIER TO

  • TRADE AND TRAVEL


  • LACK OF FERTILE FARM LAND
  • NILE RIVER FERTILE VALLEY, SILT

  • OTHER RIVERS WATER FALLS, RAPIDS,
    CATARACTS

  • MAKE TRANSPORTATION DIFFICULT BUT

  • SOMETIMES GOOD FOR HYDROELECTRIC
    POWER

4
GEOGRAPHY CONTINUED
  • RESOURCES
  • Gold and diamonds in South Africa
  • Rubber and Ivory in the Congo
  • GREAT RIFT VALLEY
  • Made travel and trade difficult.
  • Influenced migration forcing people to move in a
    north-south direction. 100 mile wide canyon

5
Geography
6
Ancient World 4000 BC to AD 400
  • Egypt along Nile River
  • Gift of the Nile flooding, irrigation,
    drinking water
  • Polytheistic Amon-Re, Osiris, after life
  • Pyramids and mummification
  • Government Pharaoh,

7
BANTU MIGRATIONS
  • Bantu people from West Africa migrated South and
    East in search of fertile land
  • Between 500 BC and 1500 AD Bantu settlers spread
    knowledge of farming, ironworking and language.
  • Today 1/3 of Africans speak a language in the
    Bantu family

8
Islamic Influences
  • In the late 600s the Muslim traders carried Islam
    into North Africa
  • Muslim and North African forces worked together
    to conquer Spain

9
Africa 1200-1650
  • Traditional Society and Culture
  • Village Government
  • Family Patterns
  • Religious Beliefs Animism

10
African Kingdoms
  • Ghana
  • 800-1000
  • Controls Gold Salt trade
  • King has Muslim advisors
  • Mali
  • 1200-1450
  • Mali conquers Ghana
  • Mansa Musa
  • Controls gold trade routes
  • Timbuktu

11
African Kingdoms
  • Songhai
  • 1450-1600
  • Grows into largest West African State
  • Controls trade routes
  • Emperor sets up a Muslim dynasty
  • Axum
  • Located on the Red Sea
  • Trade network linking Africa, India Medit.
  • Mixing of Jewish and Christian religions

12
Africas Role in Global Trade
  • Hausa (present day Nigeria) control trade
    routes across Sahara
  • Benin -rainforest of Guinea Coast- traded Ivory,
    pepper and eventually slaves,
  • Cast bronze and brass
  • East African City-States
  • Booming trade with India, birth of a new
    language Swahilli

13
Early Encounters
  • 1400s Portuguese and 1600s Dutch try and push
    into interior of Africa.
  • Dutch settle at Cape Town and enslave some
    Africans.
  • Boers Dutch farmers

14
Triangular Trade and the Middle Passage
  • Causes
  • Labor shortage
  • Workers for plantations
  • Effects
  • Middle Passage with terrible conditions
  • Millions die due to disease
  • Decimate tribes in Africa
  • Legacy of racism
  • Cultural Diffusion

15
IMPERIALISM
  • Domination by one country of the Political Social
    and Economic life of another country or region
  • Political, Economic Social Industrial
    Revolution
  • Social Darwinism
  • Military Economic Motives
  • White Mans Burden

16
Remember Africa
17
THE SCRAMBLE FOR AFRICA1850-1914
  • By the late 1800s, European powers began
    colonizing Africa
  • From the 1500s 1800s, European traders sold
    African slaves and traded along the coast
  • Christian missionaries tried to convert African
    people, but often tried to replace native culture
    with their own
  • White Mans Burden

18
THE PARTITION OF AFRICA
  • By 1870s, King Leopold of Belgium forms a trading
    company in the Congo, other European nations join
    quest for land
  • 1884 Berlin Conference meeting to set up rules
    for colonizing Africa, NO AFRICANS INVITED

19
CONFLICTS FOR COLONIES
  • In southern Africa, Shaka organized Zulu warriors
    to fight Europeans, others resisted imperialism
    too
  • Ethiopia successfully fights off Italy 1896
  • British and Dutch farmers fight Boer War
    1899-1902 over South Africa

20
WITHIN 20 YEARS OF THE BERLIN CONFERENCE
  • The entire continent of Africa is partitioned
    among the European powers
  • (with the exception of Liberia and Ethiopia)

21
(No Transcript)
22
AFRICA POLITICAL DIVISIONS IN 1913 Percentage of
Africa Controlled by European Countries in 1913

23
EFFECTS OF IMPERIALISMON AFRICA
  • POSITIVES
  • European medicines and improved nutrition
    increase life span and help expand the African
    population
  • Modern transportation and communications
    introduced (telegraphs, RR, steamships,
    telephone)
  • Small minority received improved education, econ.
    opportunities

24
EFFECTS CONT.
  • NEGATIVES
  • European domination eroded traditional African
    values, socially and politically
  • African people treated as inferiors
  • Workers subjected to long hours, low pay,
    mistreatment (human rights violations, but do not
    confuse with slave trade)
  • Africa divided artificially, Euros. Ignore
    tribal, ethnic, and cultural boundaries
  • Divisions have led to ongoing (as in still
    today!) tribal clashes in many countries

25
Africa Since WW II
  • Nationalism
  • Dealing with Colonial Legacy
  • Divisions without concern for tribal boundaries
  • Lack of educated leaders
  • Economic dependence

26
Algeria 1954-1962
  • French wanted to keep Arab-Berber people from
    winning independence
  • Muslim Nationalists set up the FLN National
    Liberation Front
  • Public opinion in France turned against the war
  • Charles de Gaulle became President in 1958 4
    years later Algeria achieved independence

27
INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENTS
  • KENYA JOMO KENYATA

28
KENYA AND JOMO KENYATTA
  • The British held Kenya as part of the East Africa
    Protectorate.
  • A secret terrorist organization called the Mau
    Mau existed in Kenya to fight the British! The
    British called a state of emergency against the
    Mau Maus guerrilla activities.
  • The native tribe of Kenya are the Kikuyu.
  • Jomo Kenyatta led the independence movement and
    ended up in jail.
  • Kenyatta and the Mau Mau were successful against
    the British in 1963.
  • Kenyatta became the first president of the free
    Kenya.

29
GHANA AND KWAME NKRUMAH
30
GHANA INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENT
  • The British held the territory called the Gold
    Coast.
  • Kwame Nkrumah led the independence movement
  • Nkrumah believed in non-violence.
  • In 1957 The Gold Coast got its independence
    and
  • was then called Ghana.
  • Kwame Nkrumah became Ghanas first President



31
A CASE STUDY SOUTH AFRICAAPARTHEID RISE AND
FALL
  • APARTHEID THE LEGAL SEPARATION OF THE RACES
    RULED IN SOUTH AFRICA FROM 1948--1991

32
THE AFRIKAANER (DUTCH GOVERNMENT)
  • The Afrikaaner govt. gained control of the South
    Africa in 1948
  • They instituted Apartheid!
  • Each group had separate living areas
  • People of color were subjected to certain
    rules/laws!

33
APARTHEID LAWS/RULES
  • People of color must carry Pass Books around as
    identification.
  • Intermarriage between white people and people of
    color is forbidden.
  • Strikes by black workers were outlawed.
  • Jobs were restricted.
  • Separate public facilities and transportation
    were in existence.
  • Black people had no representation in government.
  • BANTU AUTHORITIES ACT established Bantustans or
    homelands
  • where black people would live
  • Separate educational facilities for white and
    black

       
34
RESISTANCE TO APARTHEID
NELSON MANDELA ----AFRICAN NATIONAL
CONGRESS STEVE BIKO---------------BLACK
CONSCIOUSNESS MOVEMENT ARCHBISHOP DESMOND
TUTU-----PEACEFUL RESISTANCE TO THE AFRIKAANER
GOVERNMENT

35
RESISTANCE TO APARTHEIDTHE ANC AND MANDELA
36
NELSON MANDELA SYMBOL OF RESISTANCE
  • Nelson Mandela was arrested in the 1960s for
    conspiracy against the government. He remained
    in jail for over 20 years. He was released by
    President F.W. deKlerk in 1989. By 1994 Mandela
    became the first black president of South Africa.
    People waited in line for days to vote in the
    first free elections!

37
STEVE BIKO BLACK CONSCIOUSNESS
38

STEVE BIKO Steve Biko was arrested by the South
African police. He was murdered while in custody
in 1977. Thousands showed up for his funeral and
he became a symbol of resistance to the white
oppression. His movement lived on after his
death. The white police officers who beat him
did not answer for their crimes until the
1990s.
Bikos grave
39
THE END OF APARTHEID
  • Many world nations put pressure (economic
    sanctions on South Africa which crippled the
    economy.
  • 1989 F.W. deKlerk became President.
  • 1990 deKlerk lifted the ban on the ANC and
    released Mandela from prison.
  • deKlerk began to repeal the apartheid laws,
    dismantling the system of racial separation.
  • April 1994 was set as the first free elections
    and for a new constitution.
  • In 1994 Nelson Mandela won the presidential
    election hands down!

FW. deKlerk
40
CIVIL WAR AND ETHNIC TENSIONIN RECENT TIMES
  • ETHNIC TENSION IN RWANDA BETWEEN HUTUS AND
    TUTSIS LED TO GENOCIDE 1990S
  • CIVIL WAR, DROUGHT, FAMINE IN SOMALIA IN 1992
    LED TO U.S. INTERVENTION (Black Hawk Down)

41
http//www.doctorswithoutborders.org/news/video/19
94rwanda/1994rwanda_wmv.htm
UNDERSTANDING THE CONLFICT
42
  • THE AIDS CRISIS THE CONTINENT WITH THE MOST
    CASES!
  • South Africa has one of the highest death rates
    due to AIDS
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