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History of Christian Missions to Africa | Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History - 1 views

  • SummaryChristianity came very early to Africa, as attested by the Gospels. The agencies by which it spread across North Africa and into the Kingdom of Aksum remain largely unknown. Even after the rise of Islam cut communications between sub-Saharan Africa and the churches of Rome and Constantinople, it survived in the eastern Sudan kingdom of Nubia until the 15th century and never died in Ethiopia. The documentary history of organized missions begins with the Roman Catholic monastic orders founded in the 13th century. Their evangelical work in Africa was closely bound up with Portuguese colonialism, which both helped and hindered their operations. Organized European Protestant missions date from the 18th-century evangelical awakening and were much less creatures of states.
    • ingacutshwa
       
      Aksum, which was 100 miles away from the Red Sea, was a symbolic place for the power of Christianity in the Ethiopian Kingdom. Aksum was the home of the Ark of the Covenant, Ethiopia's original New Jerusalem.
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Explorers and Exploration of Africa - 0 views

  • 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
    • wamiercandy
       
      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.
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    This article explains how the portugal explorers came into the world of exploration and changed how other countries do things including africa.
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List of issues Journal of Southern African Studies - 1 views

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    The war between Ndebele's in the 18 centuries
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Guns, Race, and Skill in Nineteenth-Century Southern Africa.pdf - 1 views

shared by gracebvuma on 26 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • ettlers of the Cape of Good Hope to procure firearms and to serve in the militia. The European farmers (called Boers) who crossed the colonial boundaries into the African interior distributed guns to Africans, in spite of company regulations fo
    • gracebvuma
       
      Africans procured firearms from the Boers. The distribution of guns to Africans was prohibited most likely to ensure the superiority of the Boers or settlers.
  • lly free. Liberals also encouraged the spread of evangelical Christianity among Africans. Partly through the encouragement of traders and missionaries, more African
    • gracebvuma
       
      The spread of Christianity can be linked to the increase in Africans having firearms.
  • s. Settler perceptions of the threat posed by armed Africans persuaded British conservatives to portray Africans as skilled with firearms, even as they otherwise characterized Africans as racially inferi
    • gracebvuma
       
      Africans were still unskilled with firearms, this could mean the use of guns amongst Africans was not widespread yet.
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  • rms completely into their military tactics, but by the Anglo-Zulu War of 1879 some Zulu shot well because, according to a British government source, they had received instruction from redcoat deserters.4
    • gracebvuma
       
      Africans may have been taught how to operate firearms by deserters who were white.
  • lonial descriptions of African peoples of the region, they characterized the Khoisan and Griqua as skilled with weapons, a facility that enabled them to resist colonialism for a w
    • gracebvuma
       
      Some sources tell of Africans having advanced skills with guns, this could mean more guns were being distributed to Africans. The use of firearms gave them the ability to fight the settlers, confirming that early settlers did not want to give Africans guns because it somewhat leveled the playing field in the struggle against colonization.
  • The Sotho were "indifferently armed and were poor shots" before the 18
    • gracebvuma
       
      this shows that many different tribes had acquired guns. Koi, San, Sotho, Zulu.
  • em. It happens that skills with guns and the perceived and real links to political power weapons and skills conferred were debated extensively in southern Africa in the nineteenth
    • gracebvuma
       
      Heavy correlation between access to guns and the intensity with which Africans were able to fight settlers.
  • he much-sought-after elephant, fostered a preference for large-caliber weapons. By the eighteenth century a distinct local pattern of firearms design had begun to emerge, which can be understood as a technological response to the region's ecology and eco
    • gracebvuma
       
      the distribution and use of guns seemed to have encouraged economic growth in Southern Africa.

DS0103071042.pdf - 0 views

shared by nokubonga1219 on 26 Apr 23 - No Cached
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ZULU WAR ONLINE ARTICLE.pdf - 5 views

  • T he Anglo-Zulu war is perhaps the most well known colonial campaign of the V ictorian or any other era
  • ut before the discovery of gold in 1886, the region was poor and unpromising –
    • rikarooi
       
      Therefore, the British army had a desire for the Zulu population to provide labor.
  • the aim of this paper is to challenge some of these assumptions and to put forward a more radical and, I think, a more plausible answer to the question of why there was an Anglo-Zulu war in 1879.
    • rikarooi
       
      There are various perspectives concerning the Zulu war.
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  • 18 000 Europea
  • settlers
  • ritannica but with the emergence of the USA,
  • Other theorists have argued that Zululand was conquered to turn the Zulu warriors into miners and farm labourers, b
    • rikarooi
       
      Similar to the context of slavery. The British or European army (capitalists wanted to oppress the lower class (in this case the Zulu people)
  • efore 1860, Britain had had no serious rivals for her easy dominance of trade and empire expressed in the idea of Pa
  • ir Bartle Frere an
    • rikarooi
       
      The former governor of the Bombay presidency
  • And at the tip of this iceberg was Lord Carnarvon, whose first act as Colonial Secretary was to order a thoroughgoing imperial defence review
  • The first visible sign of this review in Natal was the building of Fort Durnford at Estcourt and Fort Amiel at Newcastle.
  • t Lucia Bay in the north of Zululand was annexed in 1886 without the knowledge of th
  • Colonial Secretary while Zululand itself was finally annexed in 1887 by Melmoth Osborn on his own initiative.
  • up the Political and Secret Committee (a fact that was carefully omitted from his tombstone biography) and shepherded the Prince of Wales on his tour of India in 1876 – no mean feat, given Bertie the Boundah’s extra-curricular interests
  • esponsibility for starting the Zulu war – it was the work of Sir Bartle Frere, British High Commissioner
  • Henry Bartle Edward Frere was born at Bath in 1815, joined the East India Company in 1834 and went to work in the Bombay presidency, where he rose rapidly through the ranks – it helped that he married the governor’s daughter – to become the Chief Commissioner of Sind on the North West frontier, member of the Viceroy’s Council (1859–62) and ultimately, the legendary Governor of Bombay (1862–7). For a short period after the mutiny he was, de facto, Viceroy of India as everyone else on the Council had died or was in England. On his return to England he served on the India Council heading
    • rikarooi
       
      Sir Henry Bartle Frere's biography
  • Frere was sent out to South Africa not to tame the Zulus but to get ready to fight the Russians.
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    Counts as your general historical source (not Diigo or T&F)
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Natalia 39 pp28-36 C.pdf - 7 views

  • There has been some speculation that Frere and Lord Chelmsford spent June and July of 1878 cooking up a dastardly plot to attack the Zulus and circumvent the findings of Bulwer’s boundary commission; in fact they were engaged on a survey of the possible measures for the defence of the Cape peninsular from a Russian attack. 1
    • okuhle
       
      Without the knowledge of the Zulus, Frere plotted with Shepstone against the Zulus, causing conflict between the Zulus and the British.
  • the Zulus had looked on the British as allies against the Boers and now, feeling completely betrayed, began to take a much more robust attitude to both the Boers and the British
    • okuhle
       
      As Zulus owned the Transvaal, they did not expect the British to take it over. According to the Zulus, the British was allied with them. When Shepstone told them that the Transvaal was under the British, the Zulus felt the need to try and get their land back.
  • At the same time, however, Cetshwayo was definitely against going to war with the British and hoped to maintain his friendship with them as an ally against the
    • okuhle
       
      King Cetywayo had hoped that the friendship between his people and the British would not come to an end, but Frere caused the conflict and brainwashed the British into believing that the Zulus were a threat to the future as the Zulus had a strong army which could be a threat to the British.
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  • Boers. We can probably say that the Zulus as a nation had no intention of going to war with Britain in 1879 but that they were a potential threat for the future. However , the war happened in 1879 because Sir Bartle Frere made it happen.
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Microsoft Word - HRL-Vol.30 2016.docx.pdf - 2 views

  • Zululand and Natal
    • mondlinzuza
       
      The Zululand and Natal are confusing. Which region belongs to Natal? One will think that Zululand is the whole of Natal.
  • By the end of the 18 th century tribal wars became more severe. Tribal leaders emerged determined to win more land at the expense of neighbouring groups.
    • mondlinzuza
       
      The reason the Bantu people were fighting was because the grazing land became scarce. Weak group had to surrender their land to the stronger group.
  • The Zulu was originally a small clan living in the territory of one of the Nguni rulers in Natal, Dingiswayo. Shaka who was born in 1787, was one of the sons of the Zulu clan chief, Senzangakona. His mother’s bad temper led to her being driven away from her husband’s household and Shaka grew up among strangers. He had an unhappy childhood; he was bullied and mocked by his companions. Memories of humiliation gave him a ferocious thirst for power. As a youth he joined Dingiswayo’s forces and earned a reputation for reckless courage. This found him favour with the chief. In 1816, after the death of his father, with the aid of Dingiswayo, he removed a brother from the chieftaincy of Zulu and became the chief of Zululand. Shaka proved to be a military leader of outstanding genius
    • mondlinzuza
       
      Dingiswayo was the ruler of the Nguni people and the Zulu clan was small and ruled by Senzangakhona who is a father of Shaka. Shaka had to grow up in Dingiswayo's region because his mother was expelled from the Zulu clan due to her behavior.
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  • The Mthethwa themselves were conquered and their new chief, Mondisa was killed and replaced by another member of the royal family appointed by Shaka. Shaka added the remnants of the Mthethwa to his Zulu forces.
    • mondlinzuza
       
      Shaka combines the military of the Mthethwa with his Zulu force after taking over the Zulu kingdom. The Mthethwa's rulers had to die for this to happen.
  • In Shaka’s system the territorial chiefs lacked the power and importance that they had in the traditional system. Though they might continue to adjudicate over cases that arose in territories under their control, their authority was restricted. All young men were drafted into the army and it was in the army that all the power resided. Without an effective backing the sub-chiefs could not exercise great influence and were entirely at the mercy of Shaka’s whims.
    • mondlinzuza
       
      Young people were subjected to joining the military.
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Images of Exploration in Africa: the Art of James Augustus Grant on the Nile Expedition... - 3 views

  • compatriots
  • cynocephali
    • r222200556
       
      having a head of a dog
  • ridiculed
    • r222200556
       
      to make fun of or criticize
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  • source of the Blue Nile well
    • r222200556
       
      Blue Nile originates at Lake Tana in Ethiopia (where it is called the Abay River)
  • the explorer must be scientific, his expertise and accuracy in using the sextant and chronometer to determine exactly where it was he had been on the earth's surface being mirrored by the precision and accuracy of the descriptions and images he offered on his return.
    • r222200556
       
      The explorer was more advanced hence he used a watch to measure the accurate time is it going to take him to travel and come back.
  • Alejandro Malaspina
    • r222200556
       
      Alejandro was a Tuscan explorer who spent most of his life as a Spanish naval officer. Under a Spanish royal commission, he undertook a voyage around the world from 1786 to 1788.
  • draughtsmen
    • r222200556
       
      A person skilled at drawing engineering
  • distortion
    • r222200556
       
      A misrepresentation of the truth.
    • r222200556
       
      somebody from one's own country
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American Explorers of Africa.pdf - 2 views

  • as been made, as should have been done, in regard to the name of Wilkes Land. Americans are a patriotic people, their conduct in the present world war shows it, but, in regard to geographical discoveries outside of the United States made by Americans, they seem too inert and too indifferent to assert themselves and to back up their own sons. Among the geographical discoveries by Americans which are too much neglected at home are those made in Africa. And yet in the closing period of the "age of discovery," in which the secrets of the so-called Dark Continent were revealed, three Americans, Paul Belloni Du Chaillu, Charles Chaille-Long, and Arthur Donaldson Smith, and one An
    • r222200556
       
      Americans are a patriotic nation, as evidenced by their behavior during the current world war, but they appear too apathetic and inactive to assert themselves and support their own sons when it comes to geographical discoveries made outside of the United States. Africa is one of the continents where Americans have produced geographical discoveries that are far too underappreciated at home. Yet in the final years of the "age of discovery," when the mysteries of the so-called Dark Continent were revealed, four Americans-Paul Belloni Du Chaillu, Charles Chaille-Long, Arthur Donaldson Smith, and Henry M. Stanley-and one Anglo-American-put the majority of the Congo's course on a map and established the existence of an African pygmy race.
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Explorers and Exploration - 2 views

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    Explorers are walking with donkeys, wearing a certain uniform, others are holding spears and walking on a dry land
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