20
The New Imperialism and Africa Sometimes history is hard to believe….

The New Imperialism and Africa

  • Upload
    topper

  • View
    63

  • Download
    3

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

The New Imperialism and Africa. Sometimes history is hard to believe…. I. African Background. A. Early 1800s 1. Before the scramble for colonies began 2. New Imperialism: 1870 – 1914. B. Significant Size 1. Nearly 4 times the size of Europe 2. Diverse a . Languages b. Gov’ts . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: The New Imperialism  and Africa

The New Imperialism and AfricaSometimes history is

hard to believe….

Page 2: The New Imperialism  and Africa

I. African BackgroundA. Early 1800s

1. Before the scramble for colonies began

2. New Imperialism: 1870 – 1914

B. Significant Size1. Nearly 4

times the size of Europe

2. Diversea. Languages

b.Gov’ts.

Page 3: The New Imperialism  and Africa

1. North Africaa. Contains the Sahara Desert and the fertile land along the Mediterranean Sea

b. Part of the Muslim worldc. Under the rule of the declining Ottoman Empire

C. Regions

Page 4: The New Imperialism  and Africa

a. Slave Tradei. Heavily impacted by the

transatlantic slave tradeii. By the early 1800s, European nations

began to outlaw it BUT it took years to end it.

iii. In 1787, the British organized Sierra Leone as a colony for former slaves.

iv. Some free blacks from the United States settled in Liberia which in 1847 became an independent republic.

2. West Africa

Page 5: The New Imperialism  and Africa

b. Experienced an Islamic revival by the early 1800s.

Page 6: The New Imperialism  and Africa

3. East Africaa. Influenced by Islam

(proximity to Saudi Arabia)

b. Boasted such profitable trade cities as Mombasa & Kilwai. Cargoes of Slavesii. Captives marched

from the interior to the coast & shipped as slaves to the Middle East

iii. Ivory and copper from Central Africa were exchanged for cloth and firearms from India.

Page 7: The New Imperialism  and Africa

4. South Africaa. Zulus (native tribe)

emerged as a major force in Southern Africa under a ruthless and brilliant leader, Shaka

b. By the 1830s, Zulus faced a new treat: the arrival of well-armed mounted Boers, descendents of Dutch farmers who were migrating north from the Cape Colony.

Page 8: The New Imperialism  and Africa

i. Boers resented British laws that abolished slavery and other instances of interference with their way of life.

ii. To escape British rule, several thousand Boer families traveled north on the “Great Trek.”

c. In 1814, the Cape Colony has passed from Dutch to British rule.

Page 9: The New Imperialism  and Africa

d. Migrating Boers & Zulus foughti. Zulu regiments

could not defeat Boer guns.

ii. Struggle for control would rage until the end of the 1800s.

Page 10: The New Imperialism  and Africa

A. From the 1500s to the 1700s, Europeans traded along the African coast.

B. While African resistance, difficult geography, and diseases all kept Europeans from moving into the interior, medical advances and river steamships changed all that in the 1800s.

C. Explorers Advance Through the Interior1. Great fascination with African geography

marked with ignorance of native peoples.2. Great hardships endured

II. European Contact Increases

Page 11: The New Imperialism  and Africa

D. Missionaries Follow Explorers

1. Catholic and Protestant alike sought conversions to Christianity.

2. Built schools and medical clinics alongside churches.

3. Focused on the evils of the slave trade

4. Assumed a paternalistic view of Africans, meaning they saw them as children in need of guidance (of not knowing any better…)

Page 12: The New Imperialism  and Africa

E. Livingstoneblazes a trail!1. Dr. David

Livingstone: best known explorer and missionary.

Crisscrossed Africa for 30 years.

Wrote about the many people he met with more sympathy and less bias than did most Europeans.

Page 13: The New Imperialism  and Africa

III. A Scramble for Colonies:The Race is on!A. King Leopold of

Belgium1. Publicly spoke of

his civilizing mission to carry the light “that for millions of men still plunged in barbarism will be the dawn of a better era.”

2. Privately, he dreamed of conquest and profit

3. Strong nationalist sentiments & suspicions caused Britain, France, and Germany to make rival claims to the region.

Page 14: The New Imperialism  and Africa

B. Berlin Conference

1. To avoid bloodshed, European powers met at an international conference in Berlin in 1884.

2. NO Africans were invited!

3. European powers recognized Leopold’s claims but then agreed that a European power could not claim any part of Africa unless it had set up a gov’t. office there.

Page 15: The New Imperialism  and Africa

5. In the 20 years following the Conference, European powers partitioned almost the entire continent.a. New borders were established.b. Little or no regard given to traditional

patterns of settlement or ethnic backgrounds. (aftermath continues to haunt Africa – impact STILL today….)

4. The rush to colonize Africa was!

Page 16: The New Imperialism  and Africa

1. Leopold exploited the riches of the Congo, including copper, rubber, and ivory.

2. Laborers (Africans) were forced to work for almost nothing, were savagely beaten or even

mutilated

C. Horrors in the Congo.

Page 17: The New Imperialism  and Africa

1. Invaded and conquered Algeria in the 1830s, costing tens of thousands of French lives and killing many times more Algerians.

At its height, the French empire in Africa was as large as the continental United States!

D. France Extends its influence

Check out all of the orange!!!!!

Page 18: The New Imperialism  and Africa

1. Claims were more scattered than that of France.

2. Included more heavily populated regions with many rich resources.a. British won the Boer War (1899-1902)b. Controlled vast supplies of gold and

diamonds.

E. Britain Takes Its Share

Page 19: The New Imperialism  and Africa

F. Others join the scramble!1. Portugal

2. Italy3. Germany

Page 20: The New Imperialism  and Africa

G. African Resistance1. Largely unsuccessful

2. Ethiopia was the only African nation, aside from Liberia to preserve its independence.

3. New African Elite Emerge

a. Western-educated, upper class eventually emerged

b. By the early 1900s, African leaders were forming nationalist movements to pursue self-determination & independence!