1 / 24

Scramble for Africa 1880-1900

Scramble for Africa 1880-1900. The Scramble for Africa. Rapid colonization of continent by European powers http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pw12KGSj53k&feature=related. Geography of Arica. Continent – not a country Continent is three times larger than Europe Northern Africa – desert

warner
Télécharger la présentation

Scramble for Africa 1880-1900

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Scramble for Africa1880-1900

  2. The Scramble for Africa • Rapid colonization of continent by European powers • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pw12KGSj53k&feature=related

  3. Geography of Arica • Continent – not a country • Continent is three times larger than Europe • Northern Africa – desert • Mid-to-southern Africa – diverse climates and topography

  4. Geography of Arica • mid-1800s before colonization African peoples were divided into hundreds of ethnic and linguistic groups • Europeans had contact with sub-Saharan peoples, but large African armies kept Europeans out of Africa for 400 years.

  5. Geography of Arica • European travel was hindered by difficult rivers and African diseases like malaria • Europeans who did penetrate the interior of Africa were explorers, missionaries, or humanitarians who opposed the slave trade • Travel books, newspapers, and magazines encouraged interest in Africa

  6. FOREIGN HISTORY IN AFRICA • Greeks controlled Egypt after conquest by Alexander the Great • Ptolemaic dynasty • Romans ruled all areas along the Mediterranean coastline, including northern Africa • Mediterranean – “Roman lake” • Arab traders converted many Africans to Islam from the 7th century • Source of slaves for the Americas from the 17th century • But little foreign interest in the interior of sub-Saharan Africa

  7. The “OPENING UP” OF AFRICA • Mid-1800s • Missionaries and explorers sparked foreign interest in Africa

  8. The Scramble for Africa • “Dark Continent” – racist terminology referred to both the peoples of Africa and their alleged ignorance • In reality, Africa has always had diverse groups of people with their own unique cultures and histories • Civilizations • Languages • Religions

  9. The Scramble for Africa • Bringing civilization to “savages” • Benefiting natives • Taught superiority of European way of life, backwardness of African

  10. DAVID LIVINGSTONE (1813-1873) • Scottish missionary • 1841-1873 – lived in central Africa • Explored Africa • Named Lake Victoria after the British queen • Converted many Africans to Christianity • Wrote books on Africa which piqued foreign interest • 1871 – reported “lost” • “Found” by Henry Stanley • “Dr. Livingstone, I presume?”

  11. HENRY STANLEY (1841-1904) • Welsh-American reporter • “Found” Dr. Livingstone in Africa • “Dr. Livingstone, I presume?” • Explored Africa • Congo River • Lake Tanganyika • Lake Victoria • Worked with Belgium’s King Leopold II and his African colonization company • International African Society

  12. KARL PETERS (1856-1918) • German explorer in Africa • Organized and propagandized for Germany’s colonial expansion • Founded the Society for German Colonization • Acquired German East Africa (modern-day Tanzania) • Convinced Otto von Bismarck to take over German East Africa and increase Germany’s colonies in Africa

  13. CECIL RHODES (1853-1902) • British businessman and politician in southern Africa • Made a fortune from African diamond mines • Established South African Company • Land later became Rhodesia (Zimbabwe) • Prime minister of Cape Colony (1890-1896) • Wanted British control over South Africa • Wanted Cape-to-Cairo Railroad • Architect of British imperialism in southern Africa • Great Britain became leading colonial power in southern Africa

  14. CECIL RHODES (1853-1902)

  15. KING LEOPOLD II OF BELGIUM (1835-1909) Congo • Took over land in central Africa • Berlin Conference (1885) • Leopold’s control over Congo Free State recognized by major powers • Belgian Congo (1908) • Leopold criticized for the cruelty of his rule in the Congo • Leopold forced to sell Congo Free State to Belgian government • Renamed Belgian Congo • Created European race for African colonies – “Scramble for Africa” • Diamonds, foodstuffs, gold, ivory, rubber

  16. BRITISH IN SOUTHERN AFRICA • 1815 – British took Cape Colony from the Dutch • Boers moved north • Transvaal • 1886 – gold discovered and British moved in • 1881 and 1895 – British attempted to take Transvaal from the Boers • Orange Free State • Boer War (1899-1892) • Dutch led by President Paul Kruger • British won

  17. Forces Driving Imperialism in Africa • The industrial revolution • Looking for new markets and raw materials • European Superiority • Racism- they are better then everyone • Social Darwinism- survival of the fittest • To civilize and westernize the people • Advances in technology • Machine guns (Maxim), steam engines, a drug created in 1829 to protect them from malaria • Africa had no Unity • Europeans used the rival groups against each other.

  18. The Division of Africa • GOLD! DIAMONDS! Europeans colonize more!!! • Berlin Conference 1884-1885 • 14 European countries met • Decided on how to divide the continent • **no African King was invited and they paid little attention to different ethnic and linguistic differences. • Demand for raw materials

  19. Berlin Conference • 1884-1885 regulated European colonization & trade in Africa • Called by Portugal • Organized by Otto von Bismark (1st Chancellor of Germany)

  20. Berlin Conference • Africans not invited or made aware of decisions

  21. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E6w8m0DK3hc

More Related