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lmshengu

The Historical Role of British Explorers in East Africa.pdf - 1 views

shared by lmshengu on 26 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • The major exploration of East Africa was accomplished over a roughly twenty-year period after 1856inaseries ofjourneys made byBurton, Speke, Livingstone, Baker, Cameron, Stanley, and some lesser figures
    • lmshengu
       
      After 1856, Burton, Speke, Livingstone, Baker, Cameron, Stanley, and a few lesser-known individuals made a series of expeditions that resulted in the major exploration of East Africa.
  • "portent"
    • lmshengu
       
      A portent is something that indicates what is likely to happen in the future and it can also be defined as an omen of something momentous, which can be good but is more often negative
  • The technological advantage of superior firearms lay with the explorers but, except for some instances during Stanley's 1874-77 expedition, explorers were rarely in a position to deploy sufficient numbers of weapons to force their way through, even if they had been willing to try.29Paradoxically, therefore, the European explorers of East Africa in the 1850s, '60s, and '70s derived little advantage from Europe's lead in technology
    • lmshengu
       
      The explorers possessed the technological edge of better weapons, but, with the exception of a few incidents during Stanley's 1874-1877 voyage, they were rarely able to use enough weapons to force their way through, even if they had been prepared to attempt.29So, paradoxically, the European explorers of East Africa in the 1850s, 1860s, and '70s gained little from Europe's technological superiority.
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • presumably
    • lmshengu
       
      it a word that is used to convey that what is asserted is very likely though not known for certain.
  • One of the difficulties facing all those who have written on the subject is that of distinguishing between the traveler to exotic places and the scientificexplorer; naturally, the RGS insisted on its concern with the latter. 9 In practice the distinction was not and is not always easy to draw: most of the East African explorers' publications partook of the character of tourist travelogues aswellas scientific treatises. Nor was the society averse from taking financial and social advantage of the popular interest generated by the adventures and personal disputes of their explorer heroes
    • lmshengu
       
      Making the distinction between the scientific explorer and the exotic traveler is one of the challenges facing all authors who have written on the subject; consequently, the RGS insisted on its preoccupation with the latter.9The divide was not always clear in practice because the majority of the East African explorers' books had elements of both tourist travelogues and scientific treatises. The group was also not opposed to profiting financially and socially from the interest that was produced by the exploits and personal conflicts of their hero explorers.
  • they were waiting for Europeans to come and free them from the yoke of the slave trade. 4
    • lmshengu
       
      The Africans were waiting for the explorers to release them from the slavery yoke
  • widened.
    • lmshengu
       
      is to make something greater in width
  • The limited support which the government gave to the RGS and its explorers in East Africa might also be seen as symptomatic even if foreign secretaries were wont to claim that they were simply encouraging geographical science. Whatever the state of the economy or of middle class opinion, the obvious conclusion to be drawn from the evidence is that even if the Foreign Office did arrange limited help for explorers and did give Livingstone a roving consul's commission to the chiefs of the interior of East Africa, the government certainly did not want to become directly involved beyond the coast lands.
    • lmshengu
       
      After Livingstone's passing inEven while foreign secretaries were prone to insist that they were only promoting geographical knowledge, the government's meager assistance to the RGS and its explorers in East Africa could be considered as symptomatic. Regardless of the state of the economy or the opinions of the middle class, it is clear from the evidence that even though the Foreign Office did arrange some limited assistance for explorers and did grant Livingstone a roving consul's commission to the chiefs of interior East Africa, the government did not want to get directly involved outside of the coastal regions
  • cynical
    • lmshengu
       
      Cynical implies having a sneering disbelifs in sincerity or integrity and cynical is about politicians motives.
  • Following Livingstone's death in 1873, a great many of those Europeans whose interest in East Africa had been aroused by the explorers began to consider various kinds of direct intervention. From 1876, there were, for example, serious attempts to provide an infrastructure of communications. Meanwhile the missionaries were encouraged to produce useful Africans in "industrial" missions where carpentry would be as important as the Gospel. In short, very direct interference in the lives of Africans was planned. By 1876, in fact, what I would wish to call the "unofficial mind" of imperialism had been so conditioned by the explorers as far as East Africa was concerned that it was prepared through various agencies to undertake this sort of direct action. It is not surprising to find this same "unofficial mind" responding very readily to King Leopold's initiative in setting up an international association to regenerate Africa, an initiative which was itself a direct response to the reports of African explorers. 73 C. M. Andrew has written of an "unofficial mind" of imperialism
    • lmshengu
       
      Many of the Europeans whose interest in East Africa had been piqued by the explorers began to investigate various forms of active action after Livingstone's death in 1873. For instance, there were significant initiatives to establish a communications infrastructure starting in 1876. Missionaries were urged to raise suitable Africans for "indus-trial" missions where carpentry would be just as significant as the Gospel in the interim. In other words, it was designed to intrude extremely directly in Africans' lives. In fact, as far as East Africa was concerned, the explorers had already so conditioned imperialism's "unofficial mind" by 1876 that it was ready through a variety of means to engage in this type of direct action. The fact that the same "unofficial mind" is responding so strongly is not surprising.
lmshengu

Europeans and East Africans in the Age of Exploration.pdf - 3 views

shared by lmshengu on 26 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • nted a
    • lmshengu
       
      yeilded is to give forth or produce by natural process or in return for cultivation
  • y Johann Re
    • lmshengu
       
      johannes Rebmann was agerman missinary, linguist and explorer credited with feats including being the first european ,along with his colleague johann Ludwig krapf to enter africa from the indian ocean coast. in addition he was the first european to find kilimanjaro.
  • on th
    • lmshengu
       
      It is habitational name of british origin that means from the story
  • ...16 more annotations...
  • s too. It was not just that Europeans now began to arrive in larger numbers, demand more and
    • lmshengu
       
      . It was not just that Europeans now began to arrive in larger numbers, demand more and wanted to stay more
  • ample,
    • lmshengu
       
      Mtyela Kasanda, better known as King Mirambo, was a Nyamwezi king, from 1860 to 1884. He created the largest state by area in 19th-century East Africa in present day Urambo district in Tabora Region of Tanzania. Urambo district is named after him. Mirambo started out as a trader and the son of a minor chief.
  • Europeans,
    • lmshengu
       
      NYUNGU-YA-MAWE was the exact contemporary and, for a time at least, the ally, of Mirambo-ya-banhu, the famous Nyamwezi war-lord who rose. to power in west-central Tanzania early in the second half of the nine- teenth century.
  • omoted
    • lmshengu
       
      Fragmentation most generally means the process of fragmenting-breaking into pieces or being divided into parts. It can also refer to the state or result of being broken up or having been divided.
  • to switch from
    • lmshengu
       
      In matrilineal kinship sysytems,lineage and inheritance are traced through a groups female members and children are parts of their mothers and children are parts of their mothers kinship group. in contrast in patrillineal systems group membership is determined through men and children are part of their fathers kinship.
  • In the period of exploration the most notable visitors for the majority of East Africans were not the European explorers so much as other Africans and, more particularly, the Swahili and Arab traders from the coast and Zanzibar. By the late 1870s again, it might be argued, some sort of accommodation showed signs of being reached between these traders and many African
    • lmshengu
       
      For the bulk of East Africans, other Africans and especially the Swahili and Arab traders from the coast and Zanzibar were the most famous visitors throughout the age of exploration rather than European explorers. It may be argued that by the late 1870s, some type of accommodation had been made between these traders and many Africans.
  • 'Scientific geography' did, in fact, mean, more than anything, the recording of accurate observations for latitude, longitude and height on the basis of which satis? factory maps could be constructed. In this sense, the 'discovery' of a feature like the source of the Nile was indeed a discovery for it definitively established a scientific fact.
    • lmshengu
       
      In reality, the recording of precise observations for latitude, longitude, and height on which reliable maps could be created were what "scientific geography" really meant. In this sense, the 'finding' of a feature like the source of the Nile was legitimately a discovery because it established a scientific fact.
  • 'scientific geo
    • lmshengu
       
      A geographer is a physical scientist, social scientist or humanist whose area of study is geography, the study of Earth's natural environment and human society, including how society and nature interacts.
  • appear to have been in the Society mainly because it was part of the fashionable London scene. Many such individuals may have joined because they considered their continental tours made them explorers but it seems reasonable to distinguish as a separate group the wealthy amateur travellers and big-game hunters who constitute 4 per cent of the sample. But much larger than all these groups except the scholars, bulks the servicemen, no less than 47 (23 per cent) of the sample being
    • lmshengu
       
      appear to have been in the Societymainly because it was part of the fashionable London scene. Many such individualsmay have joined because they considered their continental tours made themexplorers but it seems reasonable to distinguish as a separate group the wealthyamateur travellers and big-game hunters who constitute 4 per cent of the sample.But much larger than all these groups except the scholars, bulks the servicemen,no less than 47 (23 per cent) of the sammple being naval officcers.
  • out th
    • lmshengu
       
      It is insistent and positive affirming, maintaining or defending as of a right or attribute an aasertion of ownership/ innocence .
  • Clements Markha
    • lmshengu
       
      Sir clements Robert Markham was an english geographer , explorer and writer.He was secretsry of the royal geographical society between 1863 and 1888 and later served as the society's president for a futher 12 years
  • r. There was in fact much more social and political cohesion in East African societies than most explorer
    • lmshengu
       
      IN East African societies africans were more united in terms ofsocial and political than the most of the explores and the explores discovered that when they were there in east africa.
  • Although the British government moved to increase its control over East Africa for reasons that involve much wider considerations, the apparent need to improve law and order provided at least a very powerful justification. Indeed it was a necessary part of the process by which imperial objects could be achie
    • lmshengu
       
      Even if the British government expanded its influence over East Africa for far larger objectives, the seeming need to strengthen law and order served as at least a very strong pretext. In fact, it was a crucial step in the process of achieving imperial goals. Inasmuch as this was the case, the explorers were both the antecedents and forerunners of imperialism.
  • precursors. It is much more difficult to attempt an answer to the question of what Africans learned or thought they learned about Europeans during the period of exploration in East Africa. Obviously, first of all, the explorers' direct social and economic impact was slight. It is true that Captain Speke seems to have fathered a daughter in Buganda by one of the Kabaka's
    • lmshengu
       
      Inasmuch as this was the case, the explorers were both the antecedents and forerunners of imperialism.Answering the topic of what Africans discovered or believed they discovered about Europeans during the period of exploration in East Africa is far more challenging. Obviously, the direct social and economic impact of the explorers was little. It is true that according to the CMS Archives, Captain Speke appears to have fathered a daughter in Buganda by a Kabaka sister.
  • Krapf was in a weak position and could not be more than a pawn but Speke, for example, had too large a following of reasonably well-organized porters to be taken entirely for granted. It was therefore possible for him to be a desirable ally for one side or the other in the war between the Tabora Arabs and Mnwya Sera; in the event, he tried to mediate in the dispute with some effect (Bridges, 1971). Stanley, who had an even more formidable caravan on his expeditions, and who, unlike all the other explorers, showed a willingness to act in a ruthless way, did frequently intervene as, for instance, in the war between Mirambo and the Arabs in 1
    • lmshengu
       
      Krapf was in a weak position and could not be more than a pawn but Speke,for example, had too large a following of reasonably well-organized porters to betaken entirely for granted. It was therefore possible for him to be a desirable allyfor one side or the other in the war between the Tabora Arabs and Mnwya Sera;in the event, he tried to mediate in the dispute with some effect (Bridges, 1971).Stanley, who had an even more formidable caravan on his expeditions, and who,unlike all the other explorers, showed a willingness to act in a ruthless way, didfrequently intervene as, for instance, in the war between Mirambo and the Arabsin 1
  • European explorers could, then, have a noticeable political effect although generally only in the short term. In the longer term, their special characteristics probably operated in different and less easily described ways. Early European visits to Buganda were marked by great questionings of the explorers on the place of Man in Society and in t
    • lmshengu
       
      Therefore, European explorers could have an impact on politics, albeit usually in the short term. Their unique traits likely functioned in distinct and harder-to-describe ways over a longer period of time. Early European excursions to Buganda were distinguished by intense inquiries about the role of man in society and in the world.
lmshengu

exploration of Africa - Students | Britannica Kids | Homework Help - 1 views

  • Archaeological
    • lmshengu
       
      it is the scientific study of material remains such as tools,pottery,jewelry,stone walls and monuments of past human life and activities.
  • The coasts of northern Africa were known to peoples of Europe and Asia since ancient times. Non-Africans later gained knowledge of the western, southern, and eastern coasts. However, the interior of Africa remained largely a mystery to foreigners until the mid-19th century. It was the last of the inhabited continents to be thoroughly explored by outsiders, along with Australia. Africa lies very close to southern Europe and even closer to the Middle East region of Asia. Nevertheless, Europeans explored the distant Americas first.
    • lmshengu
       
      The ancient inhabitants of Europe and Asia were aware of the northern African shores. Later, the western, southern, and eastern beaches were known to non-Africans. However, until the middle of the 19th century, the interior of Africa was mainly unknown to outsiders. Along with Australia, it was the last of the inhabited continents to be properly explored by outsiders. The Middle East region of Asia is even closer to Africa than it is to southern Europe. Nevertheless, the far-off Americas were first discovered by Europeans.
  • Africa posed several challenges to foreign explorers
    • lmshengu
       
      Many africans had faced several issues from the foreign explorers
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  • Mediterranean Sea.
    • lmshengu
       
      The mediterranean sea is a sea connected to the atlantic ocean, surrounded by the mediterranean basin and almost completely enclosed by land on the north by southern europe and anatolia on the south by north africa and on the east by the levant in western asia.
  • fierce storms
    • lmshengu
       
      Fierce storms is a violent storm with extremely strong winds and heavy rain
  • Portugal’s exploring aims were largely commercial. The Portuguese wanted to find a sea route around Africa to the riches of Asia. Like other European powers, they wanted to trade directly in valuable Asian spices. The older trade routes to Asia were becoming increasingly blocked to them.
    • lmshengu
       
      Portuguese exploration mostly served commercial interests. The Portuguese sought a sea route from the riches of Asia around Africa. They desired to engage in direct trade in priceless Asian spices, much like other European powers. Older trade routes to Asia were getting more and more closed off to them.
  • The Portuguese wanted to end Muslim control over northern Africa. That desire was one of several reasons why Portugal explored the continent in the 15th century. Spreading Christianity in Africa was another motive for Portuguese exploration, along with scientific curiosity. They also sought great wealth.
  • The Portuguese also wanted to establish trade with western Africa. Gold, ivory, and African slaves had long been traded across the Sahara to Muslims in the north.
    • lmshengu
       
      Additionally, the Portuguese desired to open markets in western Africa. African slaves, gold, and ivory had long been traded with Muslims in the north across the Sahara.
  • By the time Henry died in 1460, his navigators had explored the coast as far south as Sierra Leone. For a time the Portuguese were busy fighting the Moroccans, and few exploring expeditions were sent out. John II became king of Portugal in 1481. Under John, the Portuguese once again began exploring Africa regularly
    • lmshengu
       
      By the time Henry passed away in 1460, his explorers had traveled as far south as Sierra Leone to investigate the coastline. Few exploration trips were sent out for a while since the Portuguese were preoccupied with fighting the Moroccans. Portugal's John II was crowned king in 1481. Under John, the Portuguese resumed frequent exploration of Africa.
  • stone pillar
    • lmshengu
       
      A stone pillar having a rectangular cross section tapering towards a pyramidal top.it is a landform, eisther of rock or earth.
  • For the next 15 years, Livingstone was constantly on the move in the African interior. First, he ventured north of Cape Town into the Kalahari, a vast dry plain. By 1842 he had already traveled farther north in the Kalahari than any other European. In 1844 he traveled to Mabotsa to establish a mission station. Along the way he was mauled by a lion, and his left arm was injured. The following year Livingstone married Moffat’s daughter Mary. She accompanied him on many of his travels.
    • lmshengu
       
      Livingstone moved about constantly throughout the interior of Africa for the following 15 years. He first traveled into the Kalahari, a large, dry desert, to the north of Cape Town. He had already traversed the Kalahari further north than any previous European by 1842. He went to Mabotsa in 1844 to start a mission station there. He was attacked by a lion along the route, which hurt his left arm. Livingstone wed Mary, Moffat's daughter, the following year. She traveled with him on many occasions.
  • Modern exploration of the Nile basin began when Egypt conquered Sudan starting in 1821. As a result, the Egyptians learned more about the courses of the Blue Nile and the White Nile. A Turkish officer, Selim Bimbashi, led three expeditions between 1839 and 1842. Two of them reached the point in what is now South Sudan where rapids make navigation of the Nile difficult.
    • lmshengu
       
      When Egypt seized control of Sudan beginning in 1821, modern exploration of the Nile basin began. The Egyptians gained deeper knowledge of the Blue Nile and White Nile's courses as a result. Between 1839 and 1842, Selim Bimbashi, a Turkish officer, was in charge of three expeditions. Two of them arrived at the spot where the Nile's navigation becomes challenging due to rapids in what is now South Sudan
ndcekeasemahle

EXPLORATION: Dr. Livingstone, He Presumed - 2 views

shared by ndcekeasemahle on 25 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • Presumed DANJACOBSON David
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      David Livingstone was a well-known Scottish explorer in Africa.
  • All the journeys he undertook, once several ambitious, preliminary forays across the Kalahari Desert were beh
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      Livingstone took a long journey across the Kalahari desert exploring it.
  • the Kalahari Desert
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      The Kalahari desert is shared among the three countries in the Southern Africa. Those countries are Botswana, Namibia, and South Africa. The large area of the Kalahari desert takes up the large space in Botswana.
  • ...24 more annotations...
  • him, were of prodigious len
  • whose
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      The word emaciated refers to abnormally thin bones due to lack of nutrition if illness.
  • Westminster Abbey. It was his second career as an explorer, and as a writer and lecturer about his explorations, that turned him into a public phenomenon or legend
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      David Livingstone's work of exploration made him to be a well-known and celebrated explorer.
  • most
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      The word protracted means lasting for along time
  • his indomita
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      The word indomitability means to being unable to be defeated.
  • own irascibilities
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      irascibility is the state of being hot tempered and have an easily provoked anger.
  • Dr. Livingstone, I presume?" For that he had to thank his fellow explorer, Henry Stanley, who had been paid to find him after the alarm raised by the most protracted of all his absences, and who greeted him in these terms when the two men finally met at Ujiji
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      Stanley and Livingstone met at the Lake Tanganyika, this was because Livingstone disappeared from everyone during his exploration and Stanley went on search for him.
  • er, Hen
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      Henry Stanley was David Livingstone's fellow explorer, he was well-known for his exploration in Africa an d his search for Livingstone.
  • ng in
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      The word interred refers to a corpse being placed in a grave.
  • met
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      Ujiji was a depot located in Tanzania
  • to stamp out the slave tra
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      Livingstone fought against slave-trade.
  • Lake Tanga
  • Their meeting took place twenty years after Livingstone had abandoned his life as a missionary, and a full six years after he had once again vanished from the view of everyone other than his African guides and
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      Is the fact that David Livingstone's exploration was delayed due to the plundering of his good at Ujiji the main reason why he vanished from everyone other than his African guides and ports?
  • n his seven years in and near what is now the Republic of Botswana, from 1844 to 1851, he succeeded in converting just one ma
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      The Republic of Botswana is situated at the center of Southern Africa. In his exploration he also spent a lot of years in Botswana.
  • he chief of the Kwena t
  • frettin
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      fretting means being constantly anxious
  • e Chobe R
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      The Chibe river is located in Botswana.
  • Kalahari and relentlessly northwest to Luanda, on the Atlantic coast, and then eastwards across the breadth of the continent to arrive at the Indian Ocean; followed by a protracted and tormented series of forays up, down, and around the hitherto unmapped river and lake systems of Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Malawi, Zambia, and Tanzania, in a misguided search for (among other things) the sources of the N
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      These are the places that Livingstone journeyed through during his exploration.
  • hese. Even the regard he increasingly felt for the Africans he lived and worked with, and the warmth of the affection he came to have for them, are to some extent vitiated by the fact that he was never in danger of having to think of them as his social or professional superiors. He could therefore afford his generosity
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      As Livingstone was exploring the African continent, he spent a lot of time with Africans as a results he became generous towards them.
  • t vitia
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      to vitiate is to impair the efficiency of something.
  • h. What is less well known is that he was also a remarkable writer, both in the more formal style of Missionary Travels and Researches in Southern Africa (1857) , and the later Narrative of an Expedition to the Zambesi and its Tributaries
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      This is suprising and interesting! Despite being an explorer, a missionary and a medical doctor Livingstone was also a writer of the most interesting journals about exploration.
  • For seven years, from one more or less chance-chosen spot or another, Livingstone looked out on the bleak, dusty, thorn-ridden landscapes of Botswana, or lumbered across them in his wagons
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      Livingstone explored the landscapes of Botswana
  • s deje
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      dejected means being sad and depressed.
  • gunsmith
    • ndcekeasemahle
       
      Gunsmithing is a person who makes, repair and sell small guns.
lorraine03

The Historical Role of British Explorers in East Africa.pdf - 3 views

shared by lorraine03 on 26 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • The major exploration of East Africa was accomplished over a roughly twenty-year period after 1856inaseries ofjourneys
  • urton, Speke, Livingstone, Baker, Cameron, Stanley,
    • lorraine03
       
      This are names of the African explorers during the nineteenth century
  • East Africa.
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • found little difficulty in connecting up the work of the explorers with the advent of colonialism in what was assumed to be a continuous historical process.
  • the explorer Joseph Thomson was directly responsible for the extension of British rule over Kenya, an assertion which modern historians of imperialism might find difficult to accept. 1
    • lorraine03
       
      This is the Eastern part of Africa
  • sees the exploration as significant in itself as well as important for what was to follow: when Speke and Grant discovered Uganda in 1862, he says, it was "one of those milestones in History that mark a new epoch."2
    • lorraine03
       
      The significance of exploration by these two explorers during that tine.
  • much more recent work, still in use as a textbook in some East African schools, insists that the arrival of the explorers was a "portent" for the "simple societies" of East Africa
    • lorraine03
       
      Another benefit and importance of exploration in East Africa.
  • This implies a significant responsive activity by those who were visited by the explorers.
  • scholarly work on East African history, Coupland included a chapter on exploration which implied a more passive role for Africans
  • The importance of the explorers lay in the fact that they brought the evil to European attention so that action could follow; presumably, therefore, their principal impact was on humanitarian groups who pressed governments into action.
    • lorraine03
       
      Importance and role of the explorers.
  • In essence, they were saying that since the arrival of European colonial rulers marked also the establishment of order, education, Christianity, and economic opportunity-in a word, progress-it must be the case that the explorers, because they were also Europeans, initiated the progress.
    • lorraine03
       
      The advantages brought by the exploration process in East Africa.
maureennompumelelo1

Henry Morton Stanley Circumnavigates Africa's Lake Victoria and Explores the Entire Len... - 5 views

shared by maureennompumelelo1 on 26 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • the first person to travel and record the entire length of the Congo River. Stanley was also the first European to circumnavigate Lake Victoria (/places/africa/african-physicalgeography/lake-victoria) and the man responsible for opening parts of central Africa to transportation
    • maureennompumelelo1
       
      Stanley was the first explorer to measure the Congo River length, travel to Lake Victoria and responsible for making transportation paths in Central Africa.
  • In 1795 Scottish physician Mungo Park (/people/history/explorers-travelers-and-conquerorsbiographies/mungo-park) (1771-1806) explored the Niger River and first spoke of the immensity of the Congo, which he assumed originated from a large lake in the center of Africa.
    • maureennompumelelo1
       
      After exploring the Niger River, Mungo started praising the large size of the Congo River and even thought that it had derived from a big lake situated in Central Africa.
  • By 1836, when more than 10 million Africans had already been shipped out of their homeland as slaves, the major European powers declared slave trading illegal and thus removed a large commercial interest in African exploration. This shifted the focus of exploration to geographical science and Christian missionary work
    • maureennompumelelo1
       
      Superiors in Europe viewed slavery as an unlawful activity which led them into abandoning the mission of exploring Africa and focused on Christianity.
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • Henry Morton Stanley's first African expedition was in 1871, on assignment for The New York (/places/united-states-and-canada/us-political-geography/new-york) Herald to find Livingstone, who was assumed dead. Stanley's famous question upon finding him, "Dr. Livingstone, I presume?" made Stanley a household name in the explorer frenzy that followed Livingstone's journeys. Although not a scientist, Stanley was sent back out to answer the geographic questions left following Livingstone's death in 1873. Among these, Stanley set out in 1874 to circumnavigate the enormous Lake Victoria to see if it was a single body of water, and—more importantly—to see if it was the much-sought-after source of the Nile River. Stanley also planned to circumnavigate Lake Tanganyika (/places/africa/african-physical-geography/laketanganyika), to see if it was the source of the Nile, as Burton had suggested. Finally, Stanley planned to finish Livingstone's work of mapping the Lualaba River. Livingstone had theorized that the Lualaba, which flowed from Lake Bangweolo, was quite possibly the Nile itself. (Others thought that the Lualaba was the same as the Congo River, not the Nile.)
    • maureennompumelelo1
       
      Stanley went on a journey in search of Livingstone whom was thought to be dead. He also discovered that Lake Victoria had a single outlet that drained into the Nile River through the Rippon Falls and Lake Albert. Moreover, he also discovered the measurements Luaba River.
  • British missionary David Livingstone (/people/history/explorers-travelers-and-conquerorsbiographies/david-livingstone) (1813-1873), while partly on a quest to seek the elusive source of the Nile, discovered the Zambezi River and Victoria Falls (/places/africa/african-physicalgeography/victoria-falls). Livingstone's expedition went on to discover parts of the main network of Africa's largest rivers, including the Congo, but his work remained unfinished, leaving many questions that Stanley would soon answer.
    • maureennompumelelo1
       
      Although Livingstone had discovered many rivers he left his mission of discovering the river that supplied the Nile unconcluded which was later finished by Stanley.
  • Richard Francis Burton (1821-1890) and John Hanning Speke (/people/history/explorers-travelers-and-conquerors-biographies/john-hanning-speke) (18271864) explored part of Lake Victoria and a section of the Nile, and theorized that either Victoria or Lake Tanganyika (/places/africa/african-physical-geography/lake-tanganyika), southwest of Victoria, was the river's source
    • maureennompumelelo1
       
      These two explorers discovered a part of Lake Victoria and Nile River and from their theory made a conclusion that the rivers that supplied the Nile River was the Victoria Lake if not Tanganyika.
  • It took four months for Stanley to meet the banks of Tanganyika, but he circumnavigated it successfully in 51 days.
    • maureennompumelelo1
       
      Although Stanley had spent 4 months before reaching the ground at the edge of Tanganyika, he was able sail around the lake within 51 days.
  • Verney Lovett
    • maureennompumelelo1
       
      This was an explorer from Britain whose quest was to discover the main source of the Congo River.
  • The Congo, as Stanley had now surmised that the Lualaba and the Congo were the same river, would have nearly 200 miles (320 km) of the most severe rapids he would encounter.
  • Stanley's journey also concluded what we know about the character of the Congo River: from its source, just south of Lake Tanganyika, the river begins as the Lualaba, heads southwestward to Lake Bangweolo, then turns north to the Zambia/Zaire border to Lake Mweru, where it becomes the Congo. The mighty river crosses the equator twice, placing it in both the Northern and Southern hemispheres. After 3,000 miles (4,800 km) of a wild path through extreme landscapes, it reaches the Atlantic Ocean.
    • maureennompumelelo1
       
      Because of Stanley's exploration we are now aware about the river that supplies the Congo River and its paths where it flows until its gets to the Atlantic Ocean.
rorirapiletsa03

The Historical Role of British Explorers in East Africa.pdf - 6 views

shared by rorirapiletsa03 on 19 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • The major exploration of East Africa was accomplished over a roughly twenty-year period after 1856inaseries ofjourneys made byBurton, Speke, Livingstone, Baker, Cameron, Stanley, and some lesser figures.
  • Writers of the colonial period, not surprisingly, found little difficulty in connecting up the work of the explorers with the advent of colonialism in what was assumed to be a continuous historical process.
  • explorer Joseph Thomson was directly responsible for the extension of British rule over Kenya
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • The importance of the explorers lay in the fact that they brought the evil to European attention so that action could follow; presumably, therefore, their principal impact was on humanitarian groups who pressed governments into action
  • In essence, they were saying that since the arrival of European colonial rulers marked also the establishment of order, education, Christianity, and economic opportunity-in a word, progress-it must be the case that the explorers, because they were also Europeans, initiated the progress. 5
  • Undoubtedly the explorers' discoveries of the great lakes and the source of the Nile constitute a highly significant episode in the history of exploration and of the development of geographical ~cience.6With unprecedented rapidity, the blank maps of the middle belt of Africa of 1850 were filled with lakes, mountains, rivers, and the names of the principal peoples.
    • rorirapiletsa03
       
      If it was not for the explorers then the maps that were drawn in Europe would be incomplete or wrong
  • 5
    • rorirapiletsa03
       
      Explorers believed that without them, Africa would not be progressed and they brought European teachings in order to make them behave more like Europeans and not like "Africans"
  • eschew
    • rorirapiletsa03
       
      avoid
  • explorers provided much of the source material for the nineteenth-century history of East African societies, they themselves were ignored as irrelevant.
  • explorers had to behave to some extent like Africans or at least had to accept situations as they found them if they wanted to proceed with their travels
    • rorirapiletsa03
       
      Explorers had to make sure that they fit in with Africans, in order for them to continue exploring Africa further
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.
  • 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 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
  • This paper examines contemporary reactions to the African expeditions of Henry Morton Stanley, perhaps the most controversial of all nineteenth-century explorers
  • 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.
Siphesihle Diko

When Stanley Met Livingstone - 6 views

  • “Dark Continent”
    • Siphesihle Diko
       
      This is where David Livingstone was prior to him meeting Henry Morton, Africa. The continent was labelled like this because it was rarely explored at that time.
  • He had been placed in charge of a grand expedition to find the explorer David Livingstone, who had vanished in the heart of Africa several years earlier.
    • Siphesihle Diko
       
      The sole reason for David Livingstone to "vanish" into Africa was solely because he intended to embark on an expedition that would enable him to explore the continent and make discoveries.
  • “Wherever [Livingstone] is, be sure I shall not give up the chase,”
    • Siphesihle Diko
       
      This was due to Livingstone being an explorer that had been well renowned, hence many companies wanted to broadcast him and the work he did.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • he later wrote to the New York Herald’s editor. “If alive you shall hear what he has to say. If dead I will find him and bring his bones to you.”
    • Siphesihle Diko
       
      Livingstone was a high-profile explorer.
  • Dr. David Livingstone was the most renowned of all the explorers of Africa.
    • Siphesihle Diko
       
      His explorations were highly commended and this resulted in him being perceived as a great explorer.
  • In 1866, he embarked on what was supposed to be his last and greatest expedition: a quest to locate the fabled source of the Nile River.
    • Siphesihle Diko
       
      Ultimately, his exploration enabled him to discover this source.
  • Crocodiles and swarming tsetse flies killed their pack animals, and dozens of porters abandoned the caravan or died from illnesses.
    • Siphesihle Diko
       
      The dedication of Livingstone as an explorer caused him to disregard him but carry on in his pursuit of discoveries.
  • Despite his failing health, Livingstone refused an offer to return home and resumed his search for the source of the Nile. After being resupplied by Stanley, he parted ways with his rescuers in March 1872 and made his way south to Lake Bangweulu in modern-day Zambia. His illnesses later caught up with him, however, and he died from malaria and dysentery on May 1, 1873.
    • Siphesihle Diko
       
      Livingstone was highly committed, high-spirited, driven, and passionate as an explorer. Hence he is held to high regard whenever the topic of explorers and exploration in Africa is mentioned.
  •  
    A newspaper article explaining the historical content of the topic
mokhele_l

Africa and its exploration-Document-Gale Primary sources.pdf.pdf - 3 views

shared by mokhele_l on 26 Apr 23 - No Cached
  •  
    This article highlights the rise in African exploration following the penetration of east and Central parts of the continents by Europeans. It is said that vital exploration in central Africa only began with livingstone, part of explorers (in Africa) were Phoenician navigators employed by Necho with a desire to uncover the mystery and form behind the "Dark Continent". Additionally, records of African exploration gave rise to numerous debates and controversies as an increase in exploration both in voyages and explorers resulted in a strange interest in the continent that attracted outside curiosity.
sinekeu222094834

untitled.pdf - 1 views

shared by sinekeu222094834 on 26 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • I think I would rather cross the African continent again than undertake to write another book. It is far easier to travel than to write about it’. So wrote David Livingstone in the preface to his best-selling work, Missionary Travels (1857). Yet writing was what Livingstone spent much of his time in Africa doing, and on any scrap of paper he could find. And it was not travelling but writing, or rather more precisely publishing, which made his fortune. The European exploration of Africa during the nineteenth century has so often been treated as a story of action and adventure, that it is easy to overlook the fact that it was also a literary event. Missionary Travels became one of the best known works of travel writing in the English language, and it was widely read, reproduced and translated. In order to appreciate the significance and impact of Missionary Travels within Britain and beyond, this paper sets the work in the context of contemporary cultures of exploration and empire. It also seeks to unravel the story of the making of the book and the different hands and voices at work in its composition, including those of illustrators, sponsors and publishers
    • sinekeu222094834
       
      This paper pays close attention to the importance and impact made by Dr. David Livingstone in his exploration journey in Africa. It highlights that his journey was not just an adventure but a literary event. It also focuses on the hands and voices that were involved in making the book which is one of the reasons that made Dr. Livingstone successful.
  • Livingstone’s reputation as not just a heroic explorer, but as the standard bearer for a renewed crusade against African slavery, helped to swell sales beyond even the unprecedented levels hoped for by the publisher. For Missionary Travels was effectively a manifesto for action on an imperial scale.
    • sinekeu222094834
       
      His reputation as an explorer helped to increase the sales of his book, Mission Travels. The book served as a pathway for the promotion to end slavery.
  • disavowal
    • sinekeu222094834
       
      Denial of support and responsibility.
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • unvarnished
    • sinekeu222094834
       
      Straight forward or simple.
  • miniature
    • sinekeu222094834
       
      Very small of its kind.
  • contemporaries
    • sinekeu222094834
       
      People or things existing at the same time.
  • This paper is about a singular book – Missionary Travels – and its wider significance in the history of exploration, geography and travel writing. It is organised, like a miniature Victorian triple-decker, into three parts. The first portrays the exploration of Africa as a literary event: in order to understand a work like Missionary Travels, we need to grasp something of the wider culture in which knowledge about distant places was produced and consumed (Driver 1996). The second considers the text of Missionary Travels itself, focussing on its somewhat paradoxical form: for what is perhaps the nineteenth century’s best-known travel narrative is in many respects not a narrative at all, and only partly about travel. There are multiple hands and voices at work in this book, as was typically the case with published works on exploration andtravel(MacLaren 2011;Withers & Keighren 2011;Henderson 2012).Moreover, for a text sometimes supposed to epitomise the certitudes of the pre-Darwinian moral world, the authorial voice is notably ambivalent about its own claims to knowledge. The final part of the paper considers the ways in which Livingstone’s book was put to work, by missionary, explorer and imperial adventurer alike. This, its afterlife, is as much part of the story of Missionary Travels as the author and the original text themselves
    • sinekeu222094834
       
      The paper discusses the book and its importance in the history of exploration and writing.
  • charlatans
    • sinekeu222094834
       
      Falsely claiming to have a special knowledge or skill.
  • Consider the ‘Map of African Literature’ published by novelist turned explorer, Reade, in 1873, the year of Livingstone’s death (Figure 1). It shows the white spaces of the continent colonised by the names of explorers, LIVINGSTONE particularly prominent amongst them.
    • sinekeu222094834
       
      This map shows the colonized areas of Africa with the names of explorers.
  • Livingstone here offers a strikingly frank admission of his own limitations as a scientific observer, coupled with a rare glimpse of the improvised and often unreliable methods of field survey he had to rely on.
    • sinekeu222094834
       
      This might suggest that field research is unpredictable and challenging. It requires researchers to adapt and it also highlights the significance of acknowledging one's limitations and being open about the obstacles and limitations of field research.
thabokhanyile

Changes in German Travel Writing about East Africa, 1884-1891.pdf - 1 views

shared by thabokhanyile on 22 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • The paper's editors wrote that Carl Peters's expedition to find the explorer Emin Pasha in the Egyptian province of Equatoria might be the world's last real journey of exploratio
  • The paper's editors wrote that Carl Peters's expedition to find the explorer Emin Pasha in the Egyptian province of Equatoria might be the world's last real journey of exploratio
  • ded, the paper concluded that further German exploration of Africa was too dang
  • ...29 more annotations...
  • The article's author declared that German colonialists would have to reorient themselves away from exploration toward new ways of exerting control over Africa.2
  • While travel, including exploratory travel, remained central to the German experience in East Africa after 1
  • arked the end of an era for how the German reading public experienced that travel. The style of travel writing about East Africa changed to fit the new needs of the colonial state and the reading demands of the metropolitan p
  • K), the founding organization of Germany's East African colony, repurposed the scientific travel narrative that had formed the entirety of their knowledge about East Africa before 1884 to further the organization's goals of building a colonial e
  • Travelogues were particularly important in German East Africa as compared to Germany's other colonies because the GfdK began its acquis
  • «That of the encounter between a European explorer, the intrepid leader of an expeditionary caravan and emissary of s
  • tion of territory without the support of existing networks in the region and contrary to the Bismarck regime's wishes (Smith 32
  • tion of territory without the support of existing networks in the region and contrary to the Bismarck regime's wishe
  • International African Association exploratory expedition, a hunting trip, a scientific expedition, or an English trading expedition (Wagner 28).8
  • Scientific accounts of East African travel by German explorers and missionaries were prominent in Germany in the early 1880s, despite Germany's lack of a form
  • nths of existence, they suggested possible places to find such wide stretches. Their lack of knowledge of Africa was apparent in their proposals: Joseph Freiherr Molitor von Mühlfeld called for greater emigration to Argentina, Major Friedrich Wilhelm Alexander von Mechow suggested colonizing on the Kwango River, and Alexander Merensky recommended what is today southern Angola
  • Like earlier travelers, Peters and Pfeil went on lecture tours and presented their travels to metropolitan audiences.1
  • The 1884 expedition's members followed the pre-colonial travelers' methods and published travelogues about their exploration and conquest.
  • They inspired him to dream up a plan to acquire land in East Africa. Great riches, he believed, were to be made on Lake Malawi. He suggested the region of Usagara, which according to Stanley held great hope for colonial development (Zur Erwerbung 5
  • Explorers frequently suggested that their travels served a higher calling that would advance the progress of humanity. A calling beyond the self explained the explorer's willingness to brave danger and made him a hero to those who believed in the same calling. To promote their own bravery and skill in the eyes of European audiences, explorers had to convince them that the dangers they faced were beyond anything one could experience in Europe. Explorers traversed unknown places posing a great deal of personal danger and had to depend on aid networks of which they had little knowle
  • avelers drew comparisons between African societies and ones more familiar to European audiences.
  • Peter s's and Pfeil's travelogues fit many of the topoi of earlier travelogues about East Africa, but they sought to fix their travels as permanent markers on the East African landscape, to make German colonialism real in East Africa through writing.
  • Like earlier travelers, Peters cited European history to make his argument, but he used a specifically German history in a way that inscribed German cultural achievements onto the
  • ition» 304). In all of his accounts of East African travel, Peters resorted frequently to quoting poetry to demonstrate his Germanness or a European spirit of exploration. His historical references were not meant merely to make landscapes more familiar to domestic audiences, but served to make them specif
  • Travel for Hellgrewe was a series of short vignettes as he moved between stations of German
  • isen
  • Kultur in the East African wilderness; travel was not the long journey away from civili
  • Hellgrewe's book makes clear that the change in form could not be attributed solely to the lack o
  • new areas to explore. Hellgrewe still searched for the fetishized African wilderness that had motivated pre-colonial German travelers to East Africa and provided the majority of the material for their ac
  • Such was the state of travel writing as planning began for the German expedition to rescue Emin Pasha in 1888. Inspiration for the expedition had come largely from a travel narrative in the pre-colonial style, Wilhelm Junker's Reisen
  • in Afrika. Junker had traveled in East Central Africa from 1875 throu
  • 1886. Near the end of his travels, he had become trapped in Equatoria when the Mahdi attacked Khartoum
  • Pre-colonial travelers had been able to establish their own myths through their expeditionary narrative, but Peters was not afforded the chance in the wake of his failed expedition.
  • ast Africa. Other forms of travel writing replaced the travelogue of African exploration prevalent earlier in the century. Expeditionary reports certainly remained central to German colonization in East Africa after 1891. As
lorraine03

Papers of Augustus Sparhawk, Chief Agent of the Expedition D'Etudes Du Haut Congo - Doc... - 1 views

  •  
    This manuscript is about the two explorers in the nineteenth century named Henry Stanley and Livingstone. They both explored some parts of Africa. Due to their extensive exploration in Africa, they were regarded as the greatest explorers. However, they explored different aspects. It is stated in this primary source that Livingstone discovered: Zambesi, Lake Nyassa, and Lake Bangweolo of Africa. In addition Stanely explored: Congo, he gave the world the definite information of the Victoria Nyanza and solved the Nile problem. These expeditions had a significance impact and played a crucial role during the nineteenth century in parts and people of Africa. Most of this information appears on page 3.
mokhele_l

Images of Exploration in Africa: the Art of James Augustus Grant on the Nile Expedition... - 9 views

shared by mokhele_l on 18 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • The history of discovery and exploration affords many examples of travellers who have returned from locations previously unknown to their compatriots at home finding that interest and wonder in their exploits is accompanied by doubt or mistrust concerning the stories they have to tell.
    • mokhele_l
       
      This article draws to exploration in Africa through the images of previous scholars/ African explorers. Through these images, it is evident that in some cases, European exploration of South and East Africa is invalid- In cases of misinterpretation and false representation, African exploration shifted from a pursuit of knowledge to issues of subjective publications.
  • The period of the Enlightenment, in fact, saw expectations of truthfulness become more demanding:
    • mokhele_l
       
      the age that emphasized truth and science over superstition. African exploration in this period was meant to reveal accurate information.
  • There was an obvious danger of distortion through misunderstanding or a deliberate desire to increase the appeal and interest of a scene
    • mokhele_l
       
      Historically, African exploration resulted in distortion as an attempt to achieve euphoria or a lack of understanding.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • There was an obvious danger of distortion through misunderstanding or a deliberate desire to increase the appeal and interest of a scen
  • Perhaps he interpreted Livingstone's description as best he could but perhaps, too, he inserted elements which he knew would appeal to the public
    • mokhele_l
       
      Central to African exploration was interpretation and representation.
  • problems of misrepresentation by no means disappear. Scenes are staged, people are dressed specially or put in what are taken to be appropriate surroundings.
    • mokhele_l
       
      with reference to the last 2 points, manipulated representation acted a tool of a distorted euphoria.
  • what nineteenth-century European explorers had to say about non-European areas and peoples they had encountered tended to be taken at face value because it had come to be believed that explorers no longer told tall stories but were detached and scientific.
    • mokhele_l
       
      European exploration of Africa was primarily on surface level. The intention wasn't knowledge b through experience but simply providing an interesting read.
  • and images from travellers' accounts was to be relied upon
nkosithand

Black Explorers of Africa Pioneers in Pan-African Identity on JSTOR - 0 views

  •  
    There are five slaves that were taken from their countries to other countries. One of the slaves went to school and became a teacher. When he was done with school he went back to his country to become a teacher and he published many books, he is considered as a first black explore of books in Africa. One of the slave was a first black explorer who explored route, he explored that there are routes that are used when travelling, when he was transported as a slave.
ntombifuthi

A romance of slavery: exploration, encounters and cartographies of violence i... - 4 views

shared by ntombifuthi on 24 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • t is important to note that while explorers’ books can readily be subjected to postcolonial criticism, and while the exploration of Africa and the later events of the scramble were undoubtedly connected, recent scholarship has problematised any attempt to posit a “direct line of causation between exploration and empire”. If, as Kennedy puts it, “exploration was the avatar of empires” we must conclude that “empires were [...] directed to multiple, often contending, objectives” (2014, 9, 10)
    • ntombifuthi
       
      Even though explorers' books are easily exposed to post-colonial critique, the following events of the scramble were obviously related, recent scholarship has regarded any attempt to put in place a direct line of causation between exploration and empire as a problem that requires immediate solution
  • Henry Morton Stanley is one of the best-known names in the roster of Victorian explorers.
    • ntombifuthi
       
      One of the most popular Victorian explorers is Henry Morton Stanley
  • In James Newman’s judgement, it is also the case that “In terms of exploration and discovery as defined in nineteenth-century Europe, he clearly stands at the top”.
    • ntombifuthi
       
      Stanley was said to be one of the best when it comes to exploration and discovery as defined in nineteen-century Europe
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • My Kalulu tells the story of Selim, a Zanzibari boy of noble birth who embarks on a journey into eastern Africa in the company of his father, Sheikh Amer bin Osman, as part of an extensive Arab trading party.
    • ntombifuthi
       
      Stanley wrote an explorer fiction named "My Kalulu", which is about the story of Slim, a Zanzibar boy of noble birth who takes on a journey to Eastern Africa with his father, Sheikh Armer bin Osman as part of great Arab trading party
  •  
    Where is your tag?
t222227229

26 Famous Explorers From History to Modern Times - 1 views

  • Famous explorers exist through the centuries. Ever since humans got the urge to travel, people have been exploring. As technology progressed, the quicker people could travel and the deeper people could explore into the corners of the world. These explorers’ expeditions comes in all shapes and sizes – from those who ventured into solo travel to those who took whole crews with them.
    • t222227229
       
      this portion talks about how explorers exist through the centuries and they have been exploring.
  • Here is a list of 11 explorers who are all long gone, but pioneered some form of adventurous exploration.
    • t222227229
       
      on this part they are going to list explorers.
lmshengu

Mungo Park's African Adventures - Document - Gale eBooks - 1 views

  • By the end of the eighteenth century, vigorous exploration of the interiors of major continents was well underway. In North America, the eastern part of the continent was well known, and major portions west of the Mississippi had been explored by the Spanish and the French. South America had been explored by the Spanish, and much of Asia had been visited or described as well. The Australian interior remained a mystery, nor was anything known of the African interior. Of these, Africa was of far greater interest because of its animals, great lakes and rivers, natives, and jungle. It simply seemed more exotic, dangerous, and interesting than Australia. It was also more accessible, lying just a few thousand miles from Europe.
    • lmshengu
       
      The interiors of the main continents had been vigorously explored by the end of the eighteenth century. The eastern half of North America was well known, and the Spanish and French had explored the most of the territory west of the Mississippi. The Spanish had explored South America and had visited or written about much of Asia. Both the Australian interior and the interior of Africa remained a mystery. Africa was the most fascinating of all due to its wildlife, large lakes and rivers, inhabitants, and jungle. Simply put, it appeared to be more exotic, perilous, and fascinating than Australia. Due to its proximity to Europe-just a few thousand miles-it was also more accessible.
  • After Park's disappearance public and political interest in Africa began to increase. He had proved that Africa could be explored, showing that it was possible to journey through unknown territory to a major African river, with few supplies and little help—but that doing so was dangerous business. More than 15 years would pass before the next major expedition left for Africa. (This is surprising when you consider that Africa, is, after all, geographically closer to Europe than either of the Americas or Asia. Yet, trade was established with India and China, colonies were established in both North and South America, and a struggling colony was present in Australia before African exploration was well underway.) Hugh Clapperton, Dixon Denham, and Walter Oudney led a three-year expedition for the British government (1822-1825) through Saharan and sub-Saharan Africa—and returned to England to tell about it. They were followed by many others in subsequent decades, culminating in the epic journeys of David Livingstone (from 1852 until his death in 1873
    • lmshengu
       
      By the end of the eighteenth century, the innards of the major continents had undergone active exploration. The eastern part of North America was well known, while the majority of the area west of the Mississippi had been explored by the Spanish and French. The Spanish had traveled through most of Asia and had explored South America. The interiors of Australia and Africa both remained a mystery. Due to its wildlife, numerous lakes and rivers, residents, and jungle, Africa was the most fascinating of all the continents. In other words, it seemed more exotic, dangerous, and exciting than Australia. It was also easier to get to because of how close it was to Europe-just a few thousand kilometers away.
  • Back in England, Park married, wrote a book, and became licensed in surgery. In 1805 he set out again on another expedition sponsored by the African Association, accompanied by nearly 40 men, trying again to map the course of the Niger. This time, after reaching the river, they built boats and sailed along it for over 1,000 miles (1,609 km), mapping its course as it flowed to the east and turned south. Disease, however, killed all but 11 of his expedition members, and the weakened party was never to reach the mouth of the Niger. They were killed in a battle with natives near the present city of Bussa in 1806.
    • lmshengu
       
      Park married, published a book, and obtained his surgical license back in England. With roughly 40 additional men, he headed out on another African Association-sponsored trip in 1805 in an effort to survey the Niger once more. This time, they arrived at the river, built boats, and sailed nearly 1,000 miles (1,609 km) down it while charting its course as it ran to the east before turning south. However, disease claimed the lives of all but 11 of his expedition's participants, and the weaker group was unable to make it to the Niger River's mouth. In 1806 they lost their lives in a conflict with locals close to the modern-day city of Bussa.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • Over the next century, Britain, France, Italy, Germany, Portugal, and Belgium all established (or tried to establish) colonies, trading outposts, or both in Africa. Although warfare between competing European powers rarely erupted, the natives often resisted European incursions. The African tribes, however, could neither coordinate their efforts nor overcome the technological advantage of European weapons. In every instance but one (Ethiopia, who defeated the Italians in 1896), they failed to resist the onslaught of European colonizers.
    • lmshengu
       
      In the next century, colonies, trading outposts, or both, were created (or attempted to be formed) in Africa by Britain, France, Italy, Germany, Portugal, and Belgium. The locals frequently opposed European advances, notwithstanding the rarity of conflict between rival European nations. However, the African tribes were unable to work together or overcome the technological superiority of European weapons. In all but one case-Ethiopia, which beat the Italians in 1896-they were unable to fend off the invasion of European invaders.
mokhele_l

European Exploration and Africa's Self-Discovery.pdf - 8 views

shared by mokhele_l on 13 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • Africa was indeed a dark continent, in the sense of being relatively unknown outside it
    • mokhele_l
       
      European exploration was sparked by european desire to know about a somewhat "Unknown" part of the world.
  • whistle: his instruments are all borrowed from one coast people.' Ogot asks whether this kind of reporting by the explorers really helped Europe to know Africa better. Indee
  • nding of African cultures, he wanted to understand in order to change. The first anthropologists, by contrast, wanted to understand in order to pres
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • Exploration itself can be due to a passionate interest in Africans. It has been suggested that David Livingstone was perhaps 'the one explorer who may be said to have lived and died for Africans rather than for Af
    • mokhele_l
       
      European exploration was driven by interest in Africans and their practices, This interest also manifested in the representation of Africans as barbaric people- European interest in Africans may have been a tool of an academic paradigm of difference.
  • . The first anthropologists, by contrast, wanted to understand in order to pres
    • mokhele_l
       
      A different motive in European exploration was understanding Africa and Africans and preserving knowledge and culture.
  • The discoveries of the anthropologists helped to correct some of the myths-to which the physical explorer had lent greater credibilityabout an Africa steeped in savagery. The anthropological researchers came to provide a different kind of inform
    • mokhele_l
       
      Exploration as a tool of dissolution of previously established myths on Africa.
  • cience.2 But another strong influence on the explorers, besides the scientific spirit, was the European romantic movement, associated with the spirit of anti-scie
  • ience.2 But another strong influence on the explorers, besides the scientific spirit, was the European romantic movement, associated with the spirit of anti-scie
    • mokhele_l
       
      Europeans in Africa aimed at spreading the european idea of Euphoria- modernization and civilization.
nkosithand

Travel and Exploration - Document - Gale eBooks - 0 views

  • The rest of Africa, however, remained a mystery to the outside world until medieval* travelers began exploring the continent. Arabs crossed the northern and western parts of Africa. The Chinese learned much about eastern Africa's coast along the Indian Ocean. Europeans spent hundreds of years charting the shores of Africa and then probing all of the continent's interior. Driven by trade, conquest, religion, science, or curiosity, generations of explorers gradually revealed Africa to the rest of the world.
    • nkosithand
       
      The Medieval travellers were the one who begin to explore the continent of Africa. The Europeans spent many years trying to discover Africa and after many years of trying they were able to reveal the continent of Africa to the rest of the world.
  • The major European effort to explore Africa before 1500 took place at sea, not on land, and focused on Africa's western coast. In 1419 Prince Enrique of Portugal, known to later historians as Henry the Navigator, set up a research center on Portugal's south coast to gather information about Africa and to sponsor expeditions southward into waters unknown to European sailors. After the prince died in 1460, Portugal continued to send these explorers out to sea.
    • nkosithand
       
      When they were trying to explore Africa, they tried exploring Africa at a sea not in land. They tried to explore Africa in water as they were using Sailers, during the 14th century, Portugal continued with their explorations, as they sent explorers out to the sea.
  •  
    IN THE EARLY 600O, PEOPLE FROM OUTSIDE AFRICA VISITED AFRICA
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