15
I. Sub-Saharan Africa A. Atlantic Slave Trade 1. For several centuries, Africa had been victimized by the Atlantic Slave Trade. 2. Millions of Africans had been forcibly transported to the Americas. 3. From the 1400s onward, Europeans had plundered gold, Ivory, and other reserves from Africa. 4. Europeans established outposts, naval bases, and small colonies. European Colonialism

European Colonialism

  • Upload
    urban

  • View
    46

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

European Colonialism. Sub-Saharan Africa A. Atlantic Slave Trade 1. For several centuries, Africa had been victimized by the Atlantic Slave Trade. 2. Millions of Africans had been forcibly transported to the Americas. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: European Colonialism

I. Sub-Saharan Africa A. Atlantic Slave Trade 1. For several centuries, Africa had been

victimized by the Atlantic Slave Trade. 2. Millions of Africans had been forcibly

transported to the Americas. 3. From the 1400s onward, Europeans had

plundered gold, Ivory, and other reserves from Africa.

4. Europeans established outposts, naval bases, and small colonies.

European Colonialism

Page 2: European Colonialism

European Colonies by 1800

Page 3: European Colonialism

B. Colonization 1. European colonization of Sub-

Saharan Africa was comparatively limited until late in the 1800s.

2. After the Napoleonic wars, the slave trade was made illegal in most western countries.

3. Only the United States continued to conduct slave trading until after the Civil War.

Page 4: European Colonialism

4. Great changes began to take place after 1880. Before this time, outsiders controlled only 10 percent of the continent.

5. By 1914, foreigners controlled the entire continent with the exception of two small countries. (Liberia and Ethiopia)

6. One important reason for this was the industrial-era weaponry.

Page 5: European Colonialism

European Colonies by 1900

Page 6: European Colonialism

C. South Africa 1. South Africa had been colonized by the

Dutch in the mid-1600s. 2. These Afrikaner Boers, as they called

themselves, displaced or conquered native Africans.

3. After the British took control of South Africa, the Boers themselves were displaced.

4. The Boers made their trek to the north and east establishing the Orange Free State and the South African Republic.

Page 7: European Colonialism

5. Eventually both of them came into contact with the Zulu, a Bantu-speaking people.

6. The most powerful Zulu leader was a man by the name of Shaka, who united all the various clans into a single tribe.

7. One particular factor that heightened tensions in South Africa was the discovery of Diamond fields.

Page 8: European Colonialism

D. East Africa 1. Even though the Portuguese had

established trade on the east coast the most prolific power were the Arabs.

2. The most important East African port was Zanzibar.

3. Such resources as cloves, spices, sugar, and ivory flowed through Zanzibar but the most important resource was slavery.

Page 9: European Colonialism

Island of Zanzibar

Page 10: European Colonialism

E. White Man’s Burden 1. White Man’s Burden was a poem

written by Rudyard Kipling in 1899. 2. It also became a Eurocentric

philosophy in which non-European cultures are seen as children.

3. The view proposes that white people have an obligation to rule over uncivilized and unchristian people.

Page 11: European Colonialism

The White Man’s Burden

Page 12: European Colonialism

F. Belgium and the Congo 1. Belgium gained control over the largest African

colonies in the Congo Basin. 2. Leopold II of Belgium, with his Anglo-American

explorer Henry Stanley, establishes a private company for the economic development of the Congo.

3. Leopold’s exploitation of the Congo was brutal and is recorded as among the worst in Africa.

4. Belgian-owned rubber plantations overexploited trees and used the local populations as a form of slave labor.

5. It is estimated that over 10 million Africans died as a result of this exploitation.

Page 13: European Colonialism

Congo Basin

Page 14: European Colonialism

G. German colonization of Africa 1. German possessions of Africa included

Togoland, the Cameroons, Southwest Africa, and German East Africa.

2. Because the land Germany acquired did not produce much profits, the Germans actually lost money in their ventures.

3. The Germans dealt with many uprisings including the infamous Herero Wars were it is estimated that 80% of the Herero people had been killed.

Page 15: European Colonialism

H. Effects on European Diplomacy 1. The scramble for Africa quickly stirred up

aggression among many Europeans. 2. Otto von Bismarck of Germany attempted to cool

tensions through the Berlin Conference (1884-1885). 3. The Boer War (1899-1902) occurred between

England and the Boers of South Africa. 4. More than 120,000 women, children, and male

noncombatants were placed in concentration camps. 5. The Germans let their sympathies for the Boers

be known which made Anglo-German relations very strained.