Africa - Countries 1914/1918

History and countries
978-3-14-100890-6 | Page 144 | Ill. 2
Africa | Countries 1914/1918 | History and countries | Karte 144/2

Overview

The colonisation of Africa was limited until well into the 19th Century, mainly due to European trading posts along the coast. The largest parts of the continent were under local control. An exception was the Cape Colony, originally a food station of the East India Company, where Dutch settlers immigrated in 1657. After their "Great Trek", the Boers had extended the white settlement with the proclamation of the "Boer State" in 1835/38. Other than that, privileged European trading companies in various coastal bases drove a brisk trade in African slaves and natural products; legally until 1820 and illegally until 1870. The interior of the continent remained largely unaffected, apart from initial expeditions and missionary ventures.

Scramble for Africa

In the 1880's, colonialism reached a new level with the "Scramble for Africa", the race for African colonies, which marked the beginning of the classic era of imperialism. In a headlong competition, the European powers appropriated nearly the entire continent by force in just about 15 years. Only Ethiopia on the East Coast and Liberia on the Atlantic remained independent.

The Berlin conference in November 1884, attended by the statesmen of Europe, invited by Bismarck, decided on the fate of Africa after imperial conflicts threatened to escalate in Africa. The conference led to an almost complete partition of the continent into spheres of interest and the subsequent occupied territories. The border demarcation was carried out mostly at random and didn't take into account any ethnic or cultural traditions.

Through strategic objectives such the "Cape-Cairo" railway plan, Great Britain sought to have a corridor between the Cape Province and the Mediterranean Sea. The British expansion was from the north and south. Cecil Rhodes first captured Bechuanaland and then Rhodesia. After the Boer War from 1899 to 1902, the whole area was combined as the Union of South Africa. In the north, Egypt was occupied and then Sudan, after the failed Mahdi uprising there. British Somaliland and Aden were used primarily to secure the shipping lanes to India.

The French, in the meantime, tried to infiltrate the whole of West Africa from Algeria and Senegal. The project to create a major Sudanese unification failed in 1898 with the Fashoda crisis, when British and French troops faced each other in the region of the present-day Sudan. The threat of war was settled in 1899 by a compromise.

Bismarck was a typical 19th Century cabinet politician, but an absolute non-imperialist, and found it difficult to decide to resume the race for distant colonies. The areas of Togo, Cameroon, Southwest Africa, German East Africa, and Zanzibar claimed by the German Empire were economically relatively uninteresting.

In 1887, Italy conquered Eritrea and in 1888, Italian Somaliland. An attempt to annex Ethiopia failed and after the defeat at Adowa in 1896, its independence had to be recognised. In the Italo-Turkish war of 1911/1912, the Italians conquered the previously Ottoman colony of Libya.

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