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Exploring AfricaIsland 5: Central and East Africa, and the Legacy of Exploration
The most famous of the Victorian African explorers, David Livingstone, a shopkeeper's son from Blantyre, Scotland, had qualified in medicine from Glasgow University and sailed for southern Africa with the London Missionary Society in 1840. Over the next years, he steadily pushed his base northward into central Africa, until in 1851 he reached the Zambesi. Sending his wife and family home, he set out on an extraordinary series of travels through what was still Arab slave-trading territory, until he eventually marched his porters down the Zambesi valley towards the east coast, and in 1855 discovered the Falls of Shongwe, illustrated here; these he admiringly described as seeming to "exceed in size the falls of the Clyde at Stonebyres," and renamed in honor of the British queen.
Aside from Livingstone himself, the mid-nineteenth century European exploration of East and Central Africa involved three significant English explorers: Sir Richard Burton (1821-1890), the translator of the unexpurgated Arabian Nights and discoverer of Lake Tanganyika; John Hanning Speke (1827-1864), originally Burton's second-in-command, discoverer of Lake Victoria Nyanza and of the landlocked kingdom of Uganda; and Samuel Baker, whose book is displayed here. Baker, a west-country landowner traveling independently with his wife, set out on Speke's suggestion to find another great lake to the west, which he would name after Queen Victoria's recently-deceased prince consort, Lake Albert Nyanza, and which completed geographic knowledge of the sources of the White Nile. Sir Ronald Murchison, for whom Baker named the falls illustrated here, was president of the Royal Geographical Society.
After the Missionary Travels that made him famous, Dr. Livingstone became more and more an explorer, rather than a missionary. His eagerness to end the Central African (Arab) slave-trade led to a government-sponsored expedition (1858-63), that took him up the Zambesi, to discover Lake Nyasa, but he found European companions frustrating. For his third great journey, starting in 1866, he traveled only with Africans, and simply disappeared from European view. In March 1871, the Welsh-born New York journalist H. M. Stanley set out from Zanzibar on a lavishly-funded but initially secret trip to find the famous explorer, which he did by the shores of Lake Tanganyika, that November. His report of their meeting, and the words he used to greet him, were headline news around the world, and Stanley immediately became the popular idea of an African explorer.
Though he had been ill and without supplies when Stanley found
him, Livingstone expected his researches in the Nile basin to take a further
two years, and declined to return with his rescuer. Just over a year later,
in April 1872, still pushing onwards, he was dead from dysentery. Remarkably,
his African servants embalmed the body and carried it, with his journals
and other effects, through hostile territory for a journey of over a thousand
miles, down to the British consul at the coast. It took them nine months.
He was buried as a national hero in Westminster Abbey, early in 1874.
By the time of this book's publication, the previously-blank areas on the African map were beginning to be filled in, and Stanley's subtitle seems to promise little new to his readers, yet the memorable title and pictorial cover of the volume indicate the dominant role that Stanley's image of Africa would come to exercise in late 19th century Europe and America.
This volume, and its glamorous colored frontispiece, is a good
example of how the explorers' original accounts were summarized and repackaged
for a popular readership.
After the success of his quest for Livingstone, Stanley became
a professional explorer, commanding large-scale armed expeditions throughout
Central and East Africa on behalf of the increasingly-interventionist colonial
powers. Twice he journeyed through the Congo basin, to clear the way for
King Leopold's ambitions of a Belgian sphere of influence in the heart
of Africa. This book recounts his fourth major expedition, which helped
to ensure British influence over Uganda. He returned to Britain and was
elected to Parliament in the mid-1890s, but fame was not the same as honor;
on his death in 1904, he was refused burial in Westminster Abbey with Livingstone.
The end of the period covered by this exhibition saw the European powers, great and small, engaged in the "Scramble for Africa," ruthless competition in the decade following the Berlin Congress (1884-85) to map out the continent into exclusive areas of colonial influence. Stanley had been involved from the start with Belgian commercial ambitions over the Congo basin. This fascinating book describes the company that administered the so-called Free State and eulogizes the rather miscellaneous group of adventurers, of several nationalities, who made careers as the company's agents. In 1908, international outrage at the company's exploitation of forced labor led to a formal Belgian takeover of the colony.
This book attests to on-going interest in Africa by African-Americans. The U.S.-based African Methodist Episcopal Church, Zion, had conducted mission work in the Gold Coast Colony (now Ghana) since 1880, and in 1924 Alleyne had become the first A.M.E. Zion bishop to be resident there. "In prophetic voice, the writer pictures an enightened and Christianized Africa taking her place in the sun beside the other great peoples of the world" (preface).
The first modern African novel to achieve a lasting international reputation, Achebe's tragic story of the immediate pre-colonial period among the Igbo of eastern Nigeria provides a deliberate counterpoint to then-conventional European accounts of the coming of colonialism, and Achebe's concluding image, of the colonial administrator efficiently drafting his official report on another culture's tragedy, contrasts ironically with Conrad's Mr. Kurtz.
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Updated April 22, 2005 by the Department of Rare Books and Special Collections. |