This journal explains more about the explorers of Central Africa that came Ed good people that were welcome with open arms but they ended up colonising Africa.
Another river and its sources, the Congo, became the great riddle that occupied geographic societies and made them send expeditions to Central Africa. Their discoveries entertained European readers, fed the greed for power and wealth of many nations, and made explorers famous.
(remarkable also because of the positive value Gierow gives to his observation of what other travellers often saw as a sign of savagery):
Undeterred, the German association then sent out a third expedition led by Pogge whose first trip had made him a famous and respected explorer.
the Bashilange presented them, as ethnographers, with a most intriguing case, a chance to break through that other cordon that consisted of preconceived images of savage Africa, a chance that, as I begin to see it, did not come around again until after the demise of colonial regimes in the sixties of this century.
This journal is more about the explorers which was the Europeans that came with a voyage and sailed through Central Africa looking at the remarkable resources that they could put to good use and they ended up settling down because some of the explorers were very greedy they wanted everything to themselves. They started learning about the culture of African people which they liked very much but when they painted a picture for their followers back in Europe they would describe African as Savages.
One of the chief problems with many of the existing scholarly interpretations of sixteenth century 'Portuguese' Africa is that they fail to understand Europe's trade with Africa in terms of commodity chains.8 Direct European involvement on the coast of Africa south of the Sahara came to take place because of markets; some of these market relationships were already very old when this started to happen, i.e. caravan routes, and some new ones came into being as a result of increased contact and trade along new routes. By the sixteenth century, the various commodity chains embracing African trade connected Africa primarily with north, northwestern and central Europe, not Lisbon, which was mostly a way station on the route northward. This was true not only for the trade items produ
this part explains how the trade between African and Portuguese began which was seen as exploitation at first but as years went by Africa claimed back its resources and began good trade with Portuguese
l-state systems.9 The logic of markets, far more than political jurisdictions, established the routes along which flowed the various European and African trade commodities as well as the technology, informational exchanges and financial tools that allowed the trade to flo
This part of the journal explains how the European explorers started using Central Africa's resources to start up their own trade which was also gonna require African roots to be used without paying any money to the Africans.
Portuguese attack. The weakness of its territorial claims and the implausibility of enforcing maritime rule over such a vast coastline were among the conditions that drove various Portuguese groups - representing the crown, colonies and religious orders - to attempt to gain a more secure territorial base in Africa by the end of the sixteenth century. These groups realized just such a project in Angola by the end of the sixteenth century. By the seventeenth century, all European groups competing for African trade sought to harness merchant shipping to African territorial claims and relied on state support to achieve these ends, although the success of these ventures remained limited.
This part explains the goodness of African resources that ended up producing competition within the European countries as every one wanted to gain power and colonise Cental Africa.
This is a source from Jstor which explains how the European explorers discovered Central Africa and began to use its resources for their own gain while they colonised people in Central Africa.
Another, dated circa 1502, is a contraband copy of a top-secret Portuguese document, rendering Africa and the eastern seaboard of the Americas substantially as we know them today
This newspaper explains how the portugal explorers begain exploring Africa
The first of the rooms nominally devoted to the mother country shows several maps. One from Florence in the early 1490s posits a land bridge connecting southern Africa to China but shows no sign of the Americas or the Pacific
The Portuguese explorers introduced it around the world. To this day it flourishes as far afield as Hawaii, yet back home it is largely forgotten.
This source explains more about how the Italian explorers were very much interested in other parts of Eastern Africa which would be a very good root for their trade.