latter.
Contents contributed and discussions participated by Zimasa Mabude
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The East African Slave Trade, 1861-1895: The "Southern" Complex - 2 views
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The East Central African Question - 2 views
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they have taken no practical steps to develop the country or to check the slave-trade.
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Nyassa Land
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the Earl of Claren- don
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Her l~![ajesty~s Government attached more importance to the moral influence that might be exerted on the minds of the natives by a well-regulated and orderly household of Europeans, setting an example of consistent, moral conduct to all who might witness it, treating the people with kindness ~nd relieving their wants, teaching them to make experi- ments in agriculture, explaining to them the more simple arts, imparting to them religious instruction, "~s far as they are left: 481.28px; top: 592.826px; font
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Shir6 Highlands
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our missionaries and traders
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Her Majesty's Government
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Only by the aid of English sailors has the Government of Mozambique, on more than one occasion, been saved from being overturned.
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apart from the larger issues at stake
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penal settlements
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Serpa Pinto aml Cardoso
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Earl Russell
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I can conceive that those whose interests are bound up in East Central Africa may think that Her Majesty's Government are willing to take only half measures, but it should be borne in mind that responsibilities incurred on behalf of the nation must be restricted to those involving national interests.
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the Society
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native emancipation
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Dr. Livingstone
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:European Powers
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to improve our acquaintance with the inhabitants, and to endeavour to engage them to apply themselves to industrial pursuits and to the cultivation of their lands,
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I hope, on some future occasion, when rival claims have been adjusted, to give a more accurate delimitation of tile territories possessed by the European Powers.
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s.s. Pioneer, and of the Lad~/2VUass(e
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Let it be known among all your people, and among all the surrounding tribes, that the English are the friends and promoters of all lawful commerce, hut that they are the enemies of the slave-trade and slave-hunting."
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concurrence