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History of the African Continent

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THE DARK CONTINENT Dark Continent racist terminology referred to both the peoples of Africa and their alleged ignorance. In reality, Africa has always ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: History of the African Continent


1
History of the African Continent
2
THE 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

3
GEOGRAPHY OF AFRICA
  • Continent not a country
  • Continent is three times larger than Europe
  • Northern Africa desert
  • Mid-to-southern Africa diverse
  • climates and topography

4
FOREIGN HISTORY IN AFRICA
  • Greeks controlled Egypt after conquest by
    Alexander the Great
  • Ptolemaic dynasty
  • Romans ruled all areas along the Mediterranean
    coastline, including northern Africa
  • Mediterranean Roman lake
  • West African Trading Kingdoms
  • Ghana (300 A.D. to 1100 A.D.)
  • 7th century - Arab traders converted many
    Africans to Islam
  • gold and salt trade
  • Mali (1300 A.D. 1400 A.D.)
  • expanded trade
  • great leaders Sundiata Kieta and Mansa Musa
  • Songhai (1400s 1500s)
  • Timbuktu became a major center of trade
  • great leader Sunni Ali

5
The OPENING UP OF AFRICA
  • Source of slaves for the Americas from the 17th
    century
  • But little foreign interest in the interior of
    sub-Saharan Africa
  • Mid-1800s Missionaries explorers sparked
    foreign interest in Africa

6
European Imperialism in Africa
This is a map that shows the colonial division of
Africa as of 1913. Note where the concentration
of possessions for each country are.
7
Video
8
Definitions
  • A. Colonialism the policy of taking a weaker
    nations land for self gain.
  • B. Imperialism the domination of one nation
    over the political, economic, or social affairs
    of another nation
  • Reasons for the colonization of Africa- refueling
    ports, slave trade, mineral and agricultural
    resources, strategic location

9
Early Contact - A Slow Start
  • Europeans had a slow start in colonizing Africa
    due to natural barriers and lack of interest
    until the slave trade and search for raw
    materials drew them to the continent
  • 1. (Glory) Explorers - The early explorers at
    first had little impact on Africans as they used
    Africa ports largely for refueling for voyages to
    India and Asia. Eventually they began expanding
    inland and IMPOSED many of their customs and
    beliefs. Some European communities got along
    well with Africans and some clashed. As they
    began to expand inland and claim more territory
    clashes became more frequent. Some Africans
    liked the modern technology brought by the
    Europeans and some thought that it was evil.
  • 2. (God) Missionaries Christian missionaries
    sought to convert the Africans to Christianity.
    Some accepted the new faith, many rejected it and
    resented the Europeans for not respecting their
    gods. Missionaries brought education, modern
    agriculture, and health care along with the
    Bible. Some missionaries were accepted into
    African society and some were killed for trying
    to bring change.
  • 3. (Gold) Slave trade and raw materials - The
    slave traders had a terrible impact on African
    society and culture. By trapping and buying many
    Africans south of the Sahara, they destroyed
    individuals, families, and tribes, creating hate
    of Europeans. The primary slavery areas were
    West Africa (along the coast), Central Africa
    (Congo River valley), and southeast Africa
    (Zimbabwe). Raw materials were needed for
    European industries and factories these
    resources also drew imperialists to set up
    colonies.

10
The Slave TradeThis is an etching of the slave
trade
11
DAVID LIVINGSTONE (1813-1873)
  • Scottish missionary
  • 1841-1873 lived in central Africa
  • Explored Africa
  • Named Lake Victoria after the British queen
  • Converted many Africans to Christianity
  • Wrote books on Africa which piqued foreign
    interest
  • 1871 reported lost
  • Found by Henry Stanley
  • Dr. Livingstone, I presume?

12
HENRY STANLEY (1841-1904)
  • Welsh-American reporter
  • Found Dr. Livingstone in Africa
  • Dr. Livingstone, I presume?
  • Explored Africa
  • Congo River
  • Lake Tanganyika
  • Lake Victoria
  • Worked with Belgiums King Leopold II and his
    African colonization company
  • International African Society

13
KARL 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

14
CECIL 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

15
KING 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

16
The Berlin Conference - 1885
  • The purpose was to reduce the potential of war
    between European countries for rival claims to
    land in Africa. This race to claim land was
    started by King Leopold of Belgium who claimed
    Zaire.
  • No Africans were invited
  • Results
  • 1. Belgiums right to the Congo Free State were
    recognized.
  • 2. Free trade on the Congo and Niger rivers
  • 3. No European country could claim any part of
    Africa without first setting up a government
    office there.
  • 4. Europeans began to divide up Africa
  • The entire continent was partitioned or divided
    up over the next 20 years with the exception of
    Ethiopia and Liberia. Europeans began to exploit
    (take advantage of) Africa.

17
BRITISH 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

18
UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA
  • Created in 1910
  • Included Cape Colony, Orange Free State, Natal,
    and Transvaal
  • Self-government

19
BRITISH 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

20
BRITISH 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

21
EUROPEANS 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

22
BRITISH 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

23
Cape-to-Cairo Railway Crossing over Victoria
Falls
24
FRENCH IN AFRICA
  • Algeria
  • 1830 invasion
  • 1831 annexation
  • Tunis
  • 1881 controlled by France
  • Led Italy to join the Triple Alliance with
    Austria-Hungary and Germany during World War One
  • Morocco
  • 1881 large part under French control
  • 1905 and 1911 nearly sparked a European war
    between France and Germany

25
FRENCH 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

26
FRENCH 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

27
GERMANS IN AFRICA
  • Togoland (now Togo and Ghana)
  • Cameroons (now Cameroon and Nigeria)
  • Southwest Africa (now Namibia)
  • East Africa (now Burundi, Rwanda, and Tanzania)

28
ITALIANS 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

29
BELGIANS IN AFRICA
  • 1908
  • Belgium gained control of Congo (Congo Free
    State) from King Leopold II
  • Leopold was infamous for the cruelty of his rule
    in the Congo
  • Congo Free State (todays Democratic Republic of
    Congo)
  • 80 times the size of Belgium
  • Source of uranium

30
PORTUGUESE IN AFRICA
  • Under old imperialism Portugal gained African
    territory and led the early trans-Atlantic
    African slave trade
  • Angola
  • Mozambique

Portuguese territory in Africa, 1810
31
SPANISH IN AFRICA
  • Spain had very few possessions in Africa
  • Tip of Morocco
  • Rio de Oro
  • Rio Muni

32
AFRICANS 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 (support)
    of the United States government

33
Famous Leaders of the Independence Movement
  • A. Menelik II - late 1800s, independence from
    Italy for Ethiopia
  • B. Kwame Nkrumah gained independence for Ghana
    on the west coast of Africa from England. Pushed
    Pan-Africanism (all Africans working together)
  • C. Jomo Kenyatta led the independence movement
    in Kenya from England. His name means burning
    spear
  • D. Julius Nyerre led the independence movement
    from Germany for his country of Tanzania on the
    southeast African coast.
  • E. Leopold Sedar Senghor Senegal's famous
    poet/politician who led the Senegalese
    independence movement and inspired many African
    independence movements with his poems of freedom
    and African pride. Senegal attained its freedom
    from France as a result of his work.
  • F. Mobutu Sese Sekou Belgium suddenly gave the
    Congo its independence in 1963. This resulted in
    a long tribal Civil War broken up by U.N. troops.
    Joseph Mobutu, an army general took over and
    restored order and set up the first national
    government. (authoritarian and corrupt)

34
Problems of New African Nations
  • A. Tribalism continuing loyalty to tribes and
    prejudice against other tribes
  • B. Poverty massive unemployment or under
    employment
  • C. Subsistence Agriculture many tribes,
    villages, families, exist on what they produce
  • D. Disease epidemics of malaria, ebola virus,
    parasites, nutritional diseases, yellow fever,
    sleeping sickness, STD, and HIV/AIDS
  • E. Hunger vast numbers are hungry daily

35
Problems (cont.)
  • F. Sanitary Conditions lack of knowledge of the
    link between cleanliness and disease prevention
  • G. Lack of Communication with over 800 major
    language groups, intertribal communication
    remains a problem
  • H. Lack of Educational Opportunities rural
    villages and cities lack the educational
    resources to properly educate the young
  • I. Desertification the spread of the deserts

36
Video
37
Communication Problems
  • These are the 6 major language classifications
    which is further divided into over 800 major
    language groups (not including dialects). This
    hinders communication.

38
Reflection
  • Which of these problems that Africa is facing do
    you believe is the most challenging? Why?
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