carving up africa “the great african cake”—everyone wants a bite!

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Page 1: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!
Page 2: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

Carving Up Africa

“The Great African Cake”—everyone

wants a bite!

Page 3: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

Ignorance & Interest in Africa Until the 1800s, little was known

about Africa except its coastal areas; until David Livingstone began to explore the unknown areas in Africa, causing a huge interest in Africa & a mad race for colonies from 1880-1914

Starting in 1885, 14 European nations partitioned (divided) Africa; By 1914—90% of Africa was controlled by Europeans (See overhead)(See overhead)

Page 4: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

The Congress of Berlin By 1885, this scramble for African

colonies became so fierce, that 12 major European countries, the USA, Russia, & Ottoman Empire met to “define the rules of the game” regarding imperialism in Africa

This Congress of BerlinCongress of Berlin settled issues such as navigation & trade rights, future colonization of Africa—but it was not attended by any Africans

Page 5: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!
Page 6: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!
Page 7: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

Exploration (1700)

What is differentdifferent about the conquests of Africa during the Age of Exploration (1500-1700) &

the Age of Imperialism (1850-1914)?

Imperialism (1914)

Page 8: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!
Page 9: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

Belgium After David Livingstone’s reports

of the potential of central Africa, Belgium became the first country to colonize Africa, claiming the Congo (in 1879)

Medicine & new steamboats allowed explorers to go further inland to explore

Page 10: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

France Soon, France gained Algeria, Tunisia,

Morocco (where 1 million French settled); dreamed of a huge French empire stretching East-West across Africa near the Sahara Desert

Page 11: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

France In 1859, a French

company built the

Suez CanalSuez Canal to connect the Red Sea & the

Mediterranean Sea

Page 12: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

England England had important colonies

in India & Australia so the Suez Canal was very important

In 1882, Britain gained control of the Suez Canal & made Egypt a protectorate, took control of Sudan, & parts of East Africa

Page 13: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

England British entrepreneur Cecil RhodesCecil Rhodes

moved to South Africa & made his fortune in diamond mines

RhodeRhodesia?

Page 14: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

England Cecil Rhodes &

many others in the British government wanted to create a huge African empire from Cairo (in Egypt) to Cape Town (in South Africa)

Page 15: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

EnglandEngland

South AfricaSouth Africa

EgyptEgypt

IndiaIndia

Page 16: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

England The race for African colonies led

to a near war between France & England called the Fashoda Fashoda IncidentIncident:

–England’s north-south “empire” overlapped France’s east-west “empire” near the town of Fashoda in the Sudan

Page 17: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

The Fashoda The Fashoda IncidentIncident

This incident showed how serious imperialism was to Europeans

Page 18: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

These nations gained minor colonies:–Spain & Portugal due to poor

economies & bad kings–Germany

& Italy because they were the last 2 nations in Europe to unify

Other Countries Imperialize

Page 19: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

ISN pg 164: Imperialism in Africa Preview:

–Why did Europeans want colonies in Africa?

–What role did David Livingston play in imperializing Africa?

–What was the purpose of the Congress of Berlin?

Page 20: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

So, Was Imperialism

Good or Bad

Page 21: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

Effects of Imperialism Imperialists profited from

colonial mines, plantations, & factories

Africans were hired at low wages, were not taught professional skills, & were heavily taxed; tribes fought other tribes

Schools & churches were set up to “reteach” Western ways; led to a decline in African traditions

Page 22: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!
Page 23: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

As whites made new colonies in South Africa, they fought King Shaka & the Zulu tribe

Page 24: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!

Effects of Imperialism Whites in South Africa used

segregation called AApartheid partheid (legal separation of blacks & whites); Apartheid kept Africans out of power for over 100 years

Over time, educated Africans all over the continent demanded self-rule; by 2000 complete independence from European rule

Page 25: Carving Up Africa “The Great African Cake”—everyone wants a bite!