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ujhistory

Nandi (c. 1760s-1827) | Encyclopedia.com - 4 views

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    Hi everyone. This is tagged incorrectly. It should have been "Natasha Erlank".
ujhistprof

September 6, 1864 - Document - Gale Primary Sources - 9 views

  • the aid of a naval officer, who could assist me in observations, I might look forward to returning with important results, not only geographical but ethnological and commercial. It is indeed regrettable that the Great Zaire should, in this our nineteenth century, be permitted to flow through regions blank and unknown to us as on their creation-day. My health being thoroughly restored in this delightful region, and having no time to spare, I resolved to return after exhausting every argument with the Chiefs of Banza Nkulu. The chief King sent abundance of provisions, and begged me to come back with a larger outfit as soon as possible. On September 17 we set out for Banza Nokki, and after three days embarked in a canoe and reached Bo
ujhistprof

Map of Africa - Countries of Africa - Nations Online Project - 14 views

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    If you are unsure of the difference between old and new names for regions of Africa, this map might be useful.
ujhistprof

Continuous Assessment Guide HIS2A 2023(1).pdf - 11 views

  • A primary source from the Gale Collection. We will cover this in the lecture on 6 March. WE WILL UPLOAD A SCREENSHOT TUTORIAL SHOWING YOU HOW TO USE GALE. You need to choose a primary source relating to a particular topic (you will be assigned a topic). You will need to download this source and attach it to Diigo. You will need to annotate the portion of it that relates to your topic.
  • A journal article that relates to the historical content of your topic, through JSTOR. JSTOR is accessible through the library website and you need to log in. You need to post the article you find to Diigo, and not just a screenshot of it. You will need to annotate the portion of it that relates to your topic.
  • A journal article that relates to the historical content of your topic, through TAYLOR AND FRANCIS. TAYLOR AND FRANCIS is accessible through the library website and you need to log in. You need to post the article you find to Diigo, and not just a screenshot of it. You will need to annotate the portion of it that relates to your topic.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • 4. An image from the web which relates to the historical content of your topic. You will need to annotate the portion of it that relates to your topic.
  • 5. An article that concerns the historical content of your topic, but available freely on the web (ie newspaper article/ a popular piece of work/ a blog). You will need to annotate the portion of it that relates to your topic.
  • 5. An article that concerns the historical content of your topic, but available freely on the web (ie newspaper article/ a popular piece of work/ a blog). You will need to annotate the portion of it that relates to your topic.
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    Hi everyone. Please consult these guidelines to your assignment. Many of you are posting the wrong things to Diigo. You don't need to post videos. Why are you posting videos? Don't forget to annotate.
ujhistprof

Welcome to our new members! - 26 views

Welcome to the first two students from History 2A to join this group. mnqobilinda1 lebesa Thanks - Prof Erlank

started by ujhistprof on 05 Mar 23 no follow-up yet
keciatshebwa

CHURCH_OF_SCOTLAND_MISSION'S_CHURCH_AT_BLANTYRE_(MALAWI).jpg (2363×1682) - 2 views

shared by keciatshebwa on 25 Apr 23 - No Cached
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    Hi Kecia I see you did manage to share, I'm replying to your email. Best, Prof Erlank
lorraine03

Henry Morton Stanley and His Critics: Geography, Exploration and Empire.pdf - 4 views

shared by lorraine03 on 26 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • The name Henry Morton S
    • lorraine03
       
      This was one of the African explorers.
  • globe. Stanley, who "discovered" Livingstone at Ujiji on Lake Tangany
    • lorraine03
       
      One of the discoveries he made.
  • Stanley was as much a man of words as a man of action; indeed, he represented the process of exploration in ways which have had a lasting impact on the modern
    • lorraine03
       
      Stanley's exploration had a significant influence on the present world.
  • ...10 more annotations...
  • rld. It has been suggested that the attitudes and assumptions of explorers constituted a kind of "unofficial symbolic imperialism", helping to define the cultural terms on which unequal political relations between colonizer and colonized could subsequently be establ
    • lorraine03
       
      The role the exploration process played during this period.
  • ".7 Joseph Conrad once described the most famous African explorers as "conquerors of truth",8 not be
  • exposed the inner secrets of distant regions (as they often claimed), but rather because they established particular ways of reading unknown landscapes.
  • This paper examines contemporary reactions to the African expeditions of Henry Morton Stanley, perhaps the most controversial of all nineteenth-century explorers
  • Stanley finds his place in conventional accounts of the history of exploration as the man who finally settled the long-running dispute over the sources of the
  • em. His career as an explorer bridges what is sometimes regarded as the golden age of African exploration (1851-78) and the era of the "scr
  • Stanley's approach to geographical exploration in many ways embodied the cultural style of the new imp
  • The exploration of Africa would be followed by the navigation of rivers, the establishment of trading stations and the building of railways.
  • n. Such exhibitions typically represented African explorers in heroic terms, as pioneers of c
    • lorraine03
       
      Prof Erlank said I can use this source, you can confirm with her.
ujhistprof

AOTARJ095739410.pdf - 3 views

shared by ujhistprof on 05 Mar 23 - No Cached
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    My PDF of a primary source.
ujhistprof

October 4, 1886 - Document - Nineteenth Century Collections Online - 5 views

  • and a wide elevated plateau extending far away to the west. This plateau can be reached from several directions, various parts of the range being quite accessible. The route I took from Livingstonia winds up and down the rugged slopes on the shores of the promontory until reaching the village of Nyamkumbe (four hours), whence the path is level over well-cultivated country to the village of Mbape (o
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