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Imperial ism in Africa [Image source: http://www.bcpl.net/~sullivan/modules/imperial/images/imperiali
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Imperialism in Africa

Feb 02, 2016

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Imperialism in Africa. [Image source: http://www.bcpl.net/~sullivan/modules/imperial/images/imperialism.gif]. Imperialism. Latin word from the days of the Roman empire domination of a country’s political, economic, and social life by another country. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Imperialism in Africa

Imperialism in Africa

[Image source: http://www.bcpl.net/~sullivan/modules/imperial/images/imperialism.gif]

Page 2: Imperialism in Africa

Imperialism

• Latin word from the days of the Roman empire

• domination of a country’s political, economic, and social life by another country

Page 3: Imperialism in Africa

Causes for nineteenth-century European Imperialism

1. Economics

2. Nationalism

3. Balance-of-Power

4. White Man’s Burden

Page 4: Imperialism in Africa

“Take up the White Man’s burden –Send forth the best ye breed –Go bind your sons to exileTo serve your captives’ need;To wait in heavy harnessOn fluttered folk and wild –Your new-caught, sullen peoples,Half-devil and half-child.”

- Rudyard Kipling

Page 5: Imperialism in Africa

[Image source: http://www.usd.edu/honors/HWB/1999/1999f/imperialism%20in%20africa.htm]

Initially, European holdings were limited to coastal areas near the mouths of rivers along the trade routes to Asia.

Page 6: Imperialism in Africa

Missionaries such as David Livingstone

often expanded European

knowledge of the interior of

Africa as a result of their

travels.[Image source: http://www.historicprints.com/hf-17.jpg]

Page 7: Imperialism in Africa

[Image source: http://homepage.ntlworld.com/maps-at-anona/davidlivingstone2.gif]

The travels of these

explorers allowed

their respective nations to

lay claim to those lands.

Page 8: Imperialism in Africa

Chancellor Otto von

Bismarck of Germany

convened a conference to

discuss the procedures for

establishing colonies.

[Image source: http://www.museumofworldwarii.com/images/TourPictures/01_Wilhelm1_lge.jpg]

Page 9: Imperialism in Africa

Berlin Conference

• met in late-1884/early-1885• set the criteria for claiming colonies

in Africa• initiated the “Scramble for Africa”

- succeeded in deflecting European attention and aggression outward- resulted in the partitioning of Africa

Page 10: Imperialism in Africa

•Countries at the Conference of Berlin:

Great Britain

France

Spain

Belgium

Italy

Portugal

Germany

Page 11: Imperialism in Africa

•In Africa, only two countries allowed to remain independent:

Ethiopia Liberia

Page 12: Imperialism in Africa

[Image source: http://www.cpror.com/cprorGB/images/portchX.gif]

King Charles X started France on the road to

empire when he ordered his

troops to invade Algeria in 1830.

Page 13: Imperialism in Africa

It took France ten years and 100,000

troops to conquer and occupy all of

Algeria.

Page 14: Imperialism in Africa

France went on to conquer Tunis in 1881

and secure special rights in Morocco in

1904.

Page 15: Imperialism in Africa

[Image source: http://www.saburchill.com/history/chapters/empires/images/0083.jpg]

Meanwhile, Great Britain was chewing up territory elsewhere in

Africa.

Page 16: Imperialism in Africa

Britain acquiredSouthern Africafrom the Dutchduring the Napoleonic Wars, in an effort to maintain their trade routes to their empire in the Orient.

[Image source

http://www.hydro.com/library/images/about/hydro_worldwide/continent_countries/south-africa.gif]

Page 17: Imperialism in Africa

British interests collided with an expanding Zulu Empire.

[Image source: Into The Fire by Mark Churms ]

Page 18: Imperialism in Africa

After some initial defeats,

the British managed to extend their hegemony

over most of southern Africa.

[Image source: http://www.military-art.com/images/dhm_371_small.jpg]

Page 19: Imperialism in Africa

[Image source: http://www.edinfor.pt/anc/f-lesseps.jpg]

In 1859, the French

entrepreneur, Ferdinand de

Lesseps, set up a company to build the Suez

Canal.

Page 20: Imperialism in Africa

[Image source: http://www.wwnorton.com/college/history/ralph/ralimage/30suez.jpg]

Page 21: Imperialism in Africa

The Suez Canal

provided a more direct route

between Europe

and East Asia.

[Image source: http://people.hofstra.edu/geotrans/eng/ch1en/conc1en/img/suez.gif]

Page 22: Imperialism in Africa

[Image source

http://www.cc-pays-de-gex.fr/edres01/ecoles/ecsgplio/images/SuezNASA.gif]

Great Britain gained

control of the canal in 1875 when Egypt sold

its shares to pay off some

debts.

Mediterranean Sea

RedSea

Page 23: Imperialism in Africa

[Image source: http://regentsprep.org/Regents/global/themes/imperialism/images/imperialism.gif

Page 24: Imperialism in Africa

Concern over the security of the Suez Canal led Britain to take a greater

interest in the affairs of Egypt.

[Image source:

Page 25: Imperialism in Africa

Egypt became a protectorate of

Great Britain in 1882 after the

defeat of a nationalist

revolt led by Ahmed Arabi.

[Image source: http://www.antiquemapsandprints.com/p-3959.jpg]

Page 26: Imperialism in Africa

[Image source: http://sudanhome.com/cards/cards/el_mahdi.jpg]

During the 1880s, an

Islamic revival, led by a self-proclaimed

deliverer known as the

Mahdi, threatened

British interests in Egypt.

Page 27: Imperialism in Africa

His force swept across the Sudan, re-instituting fundamentalist practices.

[Image source: http://ron.heavengames.com/gameinfo/nations/nubia/nubia.shtml]

Page 28: Imperialism in Africa

Among the practices revived by the Mahdi was slavery.

[Image source: http://mirrormax.i8.com/images/children.gif]

Page 29: Imperialism in Africa

The British ultimately defeated the forces of the Mahdi at the

Battle of Omdurman.

http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/images/aa332391.jpg]

Page 30: Imperialism in Africa

“Whatever happens, we have got,the Maxim gun, and they have not.”

[Image source: http://www.uh.edu/engines/maximgun.jpg]

- Hillaire Belloc

Page 31: Imperialism in Africa

[Image source: http://users.westconnect.com.au/%7Eianmac5/choc.jpg]

Many people, such as Britain’s competitors in

colonization, the French, hoped

that Britain would fail miserably in their efforts to

establish a global empire.

Page 32: Imperialism in Africa

British and French interests

collided at Fashoda in 1898, almost resulting

in a shooting war between the two great imperialist

powers.[Image source: http://www.saburchill.com/history/chapters/empires/0055.html]

Page 33: Imperialism in Africa

The British met opposition in

places like West Africa, when they sought to conquer

and subdue the Ashanti Empire of

Queen Yaa Asantewaa.

[Image source: http://www.ashanti.com.au/Asantewa.jpg]

Page 34: Imperialism in Africa

The French also ran into difficulties when they tried to defeat Samory Touré,

the “Black Napoleon” of the Western Sudan, in the late-nineteenth century.

[Image source: http://www.playahata.com/pages/bhfigures28.html]

Page 35: Imperialism in Africa

King Behanzin of

Dahomey turned out

to be a formidable foe for the French as

well.[Image source: http://shopping.corbis.com/search/details.asp?imageid=11017521]

Page 36: Imperialism in Africa

Relative late-comers to the Scramble for Africa included:

• Belgium

• Italy

• Germany

Page 37: Imperialism in Africa

King Leopold II of Belgium aspired to be the ruler of a large empire like his fellow

European monarchs.

[Image source: http://worldroots.clicktron.com/brigitte/gifs3/leopold2belgium.gif]

Page 38: Imperialism in Africa

He managed to claim

virtually all the land

drained by the Congo River for Belgium.

[Image source: http://www.cwrl.utexas.edu/~benjamin/316kfall/316kunit3/studentprojects/conrad/congo.jpg]

Page 39: Imperialism in Africa

Leopold was able to claim the Congo for Belgium because he promoted the fiction that his rule would

be benign. In reality, the colony became

one large plantation producing rubber.

[Image source: http://www.historywiz.com/images/africa/snake.gif]

Page 40: Imperialism in Africa

Natives who failed to

harvest their quota of latex

were often punished by having their

hands cut off.[Image source: http://www.me.mtu.edu/~aswaisan/leopold.htm]

Page 41: Imperialism in Africa

Italy declared war on the Ottoman Empire in 1911, seizing Tripoli and

renaming it Libya.

Page 42: Imperialism in Africa

Menelik II succeeded in conquering

many smaller kingdoms, creating a reunified Ethiopian Empire. [Image source:

http://www.macalester.edu/courses/geog61/kshively/images/menelik.gif]

Page 43: Imperialism in Africa

An expanding Ethiopia

collided with an expanding

Italian Empire, resulting in a

brief war.

Page 44: Imperialism in Africa

The Italians suffered a humiliating defeat at the Battle of Adowa in 1896.

[Image source: http://www.rastaites.com/images/ithiopianversion.jpg]

Page 45: Imperialism in Africa

As a result of their victory at Adowa, Ethiopia

managed to be one of the only African

nations to maintain it’s

independence.[Image source: http://www.artehistoria.com/historia/jpg/REC12781.jpg]

Page 46: Imperialism in Africa

Much against Chancellor Bismarck’s desire, nationalist groups in Germany succeeded in driving Germany into the ranks of Imperialist powers in Africa.

[Image source: http://www.dhm.de/ausstellungen/victalb/e13ab3.htm]

Page 47: Imperialism in Africa

[Image source: http://www.dhm.de/ausstellungen/victalb/kolonie3.jpg]

Page 48: Imperialism in Africa

[Image source: http://www.usd.edu/honors/HWB/1999/1999f/imperialism%20in%20africa.htm]