the scramble for africa

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Mr. Cargile Mission Hills High School

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The Scramble for Africa. Mr. Cargile Mission Hills High School. Colonialism in 10 Minutes The Scramble for Africa. Mr. Cargile Mission Hills High School. II. Western Imperialism 1880-1914. Mr. Cargile Mission Hills High School. Instructional Objectives. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Scramble  for  Africa

Mr. Cargile

Mission Hills High School

Mr. Cargile

Mission Hills High School

Page 2: The Scramble  for  Africa

Mr. Cargile

Mission Hills High School

Mr. Cargile

Mission Hills High School

Page 3: The Scramble  for  Africa

Mr. Cargile

Mission Hills High School

Mr. Cargile

Mission Hills High School

Page 4: The Scramble  for  Africa

Objective: Understand the “Scramble for Africa” and be able to use concrete examples to illustrate the process of colonization and reactions to colonization in Africa.

Objective: Understand the “Scramble for Africa” and be able to use concrete examples to illustrate the process of colonization and reactions to colonization in Africa.

European Imperialism in Africa

European Imperialism in Africa

Page 5: The Scramble  for  Africa

A. The Scramble for Africa [overview] 1. Before 1880, European penetration of

Africa was limited to Fr. control of Algiers, Br. & Dutch settlers in S. Africa, & Port. coastal enclaves in W. Africa.

African Trade [15c-17c]

Page 6: The Scramble  for  Africa

Pre-19c European Trade with Africa

Page 7: The Scramble  for  Africa

European Explorations in mid-19c:

“The Scramble for Africa”

Page 8: The Scramble  for  Africa

Africa

in the

1880s

Page 9: The Scramble  for  Africa

A. The Scramble for Africa [overview]

19c Europeans Map the Interior of Africa

European Explorers in Africa

2. By 1900, European powers ruled all of Africa except Ethiopia & Liberia.

Page 10: The Scramble  for  Africa

A. The Scramble for Africa [overview] 3. The S. African War (1898-1902)

led to Br. creation & control of the Union of S. Africa.

4. The Congress of Berlin (1884-

1885) est. that European claims on African territory had to be secured by “effective occupation.” This led to a rush into the interior. 5. The Br. conquest of the Sudan exemplifies the general process of empire building.

Page 11: The Scramble  for  Africa

IndustrialRevolutionIndustrialRevolution

Source forRaw

Materials

Source forRaw

Materials

Markets forFinishedGoods

Markets forFinishedGoods

EuropeanNationalismEuropean

Nationalism

MissionaryActivity

MissionaryActivity

Military& NavalBases

Military& NavalBases

EuropeanMotives

For Colonization

EuropeanMotives

For Colonization

Places toDump

Unwanted/Excess Popul.

Places toDump

Unwanted/Excess Popul.

Soc. & Eco.Opportunities

Soc. & Eco.Opportunities

HumanitarianReasons

HumanitarianReasons

EuropeanRacism

EuropeanRacism

“WhiteMan’s

Burden”

“WhiteMan’s

Burden”

SocialDarwinism

SocialDarwinism

B. Causes of the New Imperialism

Page 12: The Scramble  for  Africa
Page 13: The Scramble  for  Africa

C. Egypt

1. The Egyptian khedives carried out a # of expensive modernization projects in the mid-19th century. These projects were financed w/ high-interest loans from European creditors.

2. Fr. & Br. bankers lobbied their gov’t. to intervene in Egypt in order to secure their loans.

Page 14: The Scramble  for  Africa

C. Egypt

3. In 1882, the British sent an army into Egypt & est. a system of indirect rule that lasted for 70 years. 4. British worked to develop Egyptian agriculture, especially cotton production by building a dam across the Nile @ Aswan.

5. The economic development of Egypt only benefited a small elite of landowners & merchants, & it was accompanied by the intro. of Western ways that conflicted w/ the teachings of Islam.

Page 15: The Scramble  for  Africa

The Belgian Congo:

“King Leopold’s Ghost”

The Belgian Congo:

“King Leopold’s Ghost”

Page 16: The Scramble  for  Africa

D. Western & Equatorial Africa 1. In West Africa,French built rXr from the upper Senegal R. to the upper Niger in order to open the interior to French merchants.

The Congo Free State or The Belgian Congo?

Page 17: The Scramble  for  Africa

King Leopold II:(r. 1865 – 1909)

2. In the Congo Basin,King Leopold II of Belgium claimed the area south of the Congo River, while France claimed the area on the north bank.

D. Western & Equatorial Africa

Page 18: The Scramble  for  Africa

Belgium’s Stranglehold on the Congo

Page 19: The Scramble  for  Africa

3. German chancellor Bismarck called the Berlin Conference on Africa in 1885 and 1886 in order to lay out the framework under which Africa would be occupied by the European nations. 4. In practice, the division and occupation of Africa met w/ resistance and required many years of effort.

D. Western & Equatorial Africa

Page 20: The Scramble  for  Africa

Berlin

Conference

of

1885-1886

Page 21: The Scramble  for  Africa

5. In West Africa,

The new colonial powers took advantage of & developed the existing trade networks.

6. In Equatorial Africa,

Where there were few inhabitants & little trade, the colonial powers granted concessions to private companies that forced Africans to produce cash crops & to carry them to the nearest navigable river or rXr.

D. Western & Equatorial Africa

Page 22: The Scramble  for  Africa

Harvesting Rubber

Page 23: The Scramble  for  Africa

Punishing “Lazy” Workers

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5-8 Million Victims! (50% of Popul.)

It is blood-curdling to see them (the soldiers) returning with the hands of the slain, and to find the hands of young children amongst the bigger ones evidencing their bravery...The rubber from this district has cost hundreds of lives, and the scenes I have witnessed, while unable to help the oppressed, have been almost enough to make me wish I were dead... This rubber traffic is steeped in blood, and if the natives were to rise and sweep every white person on the Upper Congo into eternity, there would still be left a fearful balance to their credit. -- Belgian Official

Page 25: The Scramble  for  Africa
Page 26: The Scramble  for  Africa

E. The Struggle for South Africa

1877 – Britain annexed the Transvaal. 1883 – Boers fought British in the Transvaal and regained its independence. - Paul Kruger becomes President. 1880s – Gold discovered in the Transvaal

Boer British Tensions Increase

Page 27: The Scramble  for  Africa

E. The Struggle for South Africa

Page 28: The Scramble  for  Africa

E. The Struggle for South Africa 1. Southern Africa had long been

attractive to European settlers because of its good pastures and farmlands and mineral wealth.

Dutch Landing in 1652

Page 29: The Scramble  for  Africa

The Great Trek, 1836-38

Afrikaners

Page 30: The Scramble  for  Africa

E. The Struggle for South Africa 2. The discovery of diamonds @

Kimberley in 1868 attracted European prospectors & Africans.

Diamond Mines

Raw Diamonds

Page 31: The Scramble  for  Africa

Boers Clash With the Xhosa Tribes

Boer Farmer

E. The Struggle for South Africa 3. It also set off the process by which

the British Cape Colony expanded, annexing Kimberley & defeating the Xhosa & the Zulu.

Page 32: The Scramble  for  Africa

The Boer War: 1899 - 1900

The BoersThe British

E. The Struggle for South Africa

Page 33: The Scramble  for  Africa

A Future British Prime Minister

British Boer War Correspondent, Winston Churchill

Page 34: The Scramble  for  Africa

Shaka Zulu (1785 – 1828)

Page 35: The Scramble  for  Africa

“The Colossus of Rhodes”

4. Cecil Rhodes (1853-1902) used his British South African Company to take over land in central Africa, where he created the colonies of Southern Rhodesia and Northern Rhodesia.

E. The Struggle for South Africa

Page 36: The Scramble  for  Africa

Uncle Sam: “The Colossusof the Pacific” (A Parody)

Page 37: The Scramble  for  Africa

5. Br. control over S. Africa was consolidated when Britain defeated the Afrikaaners in the S.A.W. (1899-1902).

E. The Struggle for South Africa

6. In 1910, the European settlers created the Union of South Africa, in which the Afrikaaners emerged as the ruling element in gov’t. that assigned Africans to reservations & est. a system of racial segregation.

Page 38: The Scramble  for  Africa
Page 39: The Scramble  for  Africa

1.Africa at the time of the European invasion contained a variety of societies. These societies responded differently to the European invasion…

Some welcomed the Euros as allies against local enemies.

Some resisted European rule.

F. Political and Social Consequences

Page 40: The Scramble  for  Africa

2. Pastoral & warrior states like the Zulu & Ndebele resisted European invasion, as did some commercial states like the kingdom of Asante & Benin. Ethiopia successfully defended itself against an Italian invasion in 1896.

F. Political and Social Consequences

3. Some African women welcomed colonial rule because it put an end to fighting and slave trading, but most women benefited less than men did. Women’s property rights were undermined by colonial policies that assigned property rights to the head of the household – that is, to the man.

Page 41: The Scramble  for  Africa

4. Africans simply tried to continue living as before, but colonial policies made it difficult.

Colonial emphasis on producing cash crops,

The assignment of land to European companies & planters,

and the imposition of hut taxes or head taxes proved highly disruptive.

F. Political and Social Consequences

5. The need to pay taxes in cash forced African men to take low-paid jobs and to migrate to the cities and mining camps in search for work.

Page 42: The Scramble  for  Africa
Page 43: The Scramble  for  Africa

1. Missionaries were the main conduits by which Africans came into contact w/ European culture. Missionaries taught both practical skills (crafts & domestic skills) & western ideas.

2. Africans educated in mission schools found that Christian ideals clashed w/ the reality of colonial exploitation; they began using Christian ideas to critique colonialism.

G. Cultural Responses

3. A “Civilizing Mission”

Euros often discussed colonial expansions in terms of a “civilizing mission.”

From this P.O.V., colonialism was justified by nonwhite people’s eventual enjoyment of the fruits of European civilization.

Western expansion facilitated the spread of Christianity in Africa.

Missionary efforts generally failed in India, China, and the Islamic world.

Page 44: The Scramble  for  Africa

1. Missionaries were the main conduits by which Africans came into contact w/ European culture. Missionaries taught both practical skills (crafts & domestic skills) & western ideas.

2. Africans educated in mission schools found that Christian ideals clashed w/ the reality of colonial exploitation; they began using Christian ideas to critique colonialism.

G. Cultural Responses

3. Islam continued to spread southward during the colonial period.

4. Colonialism contributed to the diffusion of Islam by building cities, increasing trade, & allowing Muslims to settle in new areas.

Page 45: The Scramble  for  Africa

Africa

in

1914

Page 46: The Scramble  for  Africa

1. Where Is Dr. Livingstone?

Dr. David Livingstone

DoctorLivingston

e,I Presume?

Sir Henry Morton Stanley

Page 47: The Scramble  for  Africa

2. What is the Source of the Nile?

John Speke Sir Richard Burton

Page 48: The Scramble  for  Africa

Social Darwinism

Page 49: The Scramble  for  Africa

The “White Man’s Burden”

Rudyard Kipling

Page 50: The Scramble  for  Africa

The “White Man’s Burden”?

Page 51: The Scramble  for  Africa

Paul Kruger (1825-1904)

Page 52: The Scramble  for  Africa

Mr. Cargile

Mission Hills High School

Mr. Cargile

Mission Hills High School

So lets recap some important things that you need to know about Imperialism.

So lets recap some important things that you need to know about Imperialism.