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Imperialism
To Civilize
10 Minutes Introduction to Scramble For Africa
To bring out of a savage, uneducated, or rude state
To raise from brutality to an educated stage of
development; bring out of a primitive or savage state
The “OPENING UP” OF
AFRICA
• Mid-1800s
• Missionaries and explorers
sparked foreign interest in
Africa
Africa (1880)
DAVID LIVINGSTONE (18131873)
• Scottish missionary
• 1841-1873 – lived in central Africa
– Explored Africa
• Named Lake Victoria after the British queen
– Converted many Africans to Christianity
– Wrote books on Africa which piqued foreign
interest
• 1871 – reported “lost”
–
–
–
–
“Found” by Henry Stanley
“Dr. Livingstone, I presume?”
Video
Song
Exploration
Dr. Livingstone, I Presume?”
• David Livingstone
• Doctor/Missionary
• Mapping the “Dark
Continent”
• Open the interior of
Africa for commerce
& Christianity
David Livingstone
The Scramble for Africa
# 1. Colonization of Africa
by Europeans 1880-1914
#3 Great Britain, France, Italy,
Portugal, Spain, Germany,
Belgium
King Leopold II of
Belgium
Imperialism: The policy by a stronger nation
to attempt to create an empire by dominating
weaker nations economically, politically,
culturally, or militarily.
How Did Imperialism Begin?
A coaling station for steamships, Cape Town, South Africa
Economic Motives #1
Industrialized
nations sought:
• Raw materials
• Natural resources
• A cheap labor
supply
• New
marketplaces for
manufactured
goods
• Control means of
production
The Industrial
Revolution
• The Industrial
Revolution began
in Great Britain
in the mid-18th
century
• Britain’s
advantages
• The spread of
industrialization
Technological
Advances
•
•
•
•
The steam engine
Better transportation
Increased exploration
Improvements in
communication
The steamboat Herald
(with mounted machine guns)
on the Zambezi river in Africa
One of the first steam engines
Cecil Rhodes
#9
• British imperialist who
made huge profits from
Africa’s natural resources
• Founder of the state of
Rhodesia in Africa
“The Rhodes Colossus”
This cartoon
depicts British
imperial
ambitions to
control the
entire African
continent.
Motives #1
• Religious: to spread the benefits
of Christianity and Western Culture
• Political: competition fuel by
Nationalism, Empire Building
Justification for
Imperialism
• A desire to “civilize” non-Europeans
also spurred the development of
imperialism
• Social Darwinism
Darwin’s handwritten cover page for
The Origin of Species
Herbert Spencer
Christianity
Civilization
Describe 3
examples of
European
ethnocentrism
in the political
cartoon.
Imperialism Quote
• “If you woke up one morning and found that
somebody had come to your house, and had
declared that the house belonged to him, you
would naturally be surprised, and you would like
to know by what arrangement.”
– Jomo Kenyatta – 1st President of Kenya
• How does this quote show an African reaction to
European Imperialism in Africa? Use 3 examples
Imperialism Quote
• Desmond Tutu … “when the missionaries
came to Africa, they had the Bible and we
had the land. They said ‘let us close our
eyes and pray’. When we opened them, we
had the Bible, and they had the land”.
• How does this quote show an African
reaction to European Imperialism in Africa?
Use 3 examples
The Berlin Conference
1884 #4
Rules to divide Africa
among European
powers to avoid
conflict among
European powers=
Artificial Borders
European Control of Africa
By 1914,
only two
African
nations
remained
independent
Liberia and
Ethiopia #2
The Maxim Gun #5
British
troops
fighting
forces in
Benin in
1897
Methods of Management
• Indirect Rule: This form relied on using the
existing African political rulers.
– Britain sometimes asked local chiefs to accept
British rule and legislative councils were formed
and included colonial (European) officials and
merchants.
• The idea was that these councils would train the Africans,
and at some point in time, these territories would be able
to rule themselves, much like Australia and Canada.
Methods of Management
• Direct Rule: The French and most other European countries
preferred stronger control because they felt that Africans were
not civilized enough to rule themselves.
– They adopted a policy of paternalism, in which the
Europeans acted like the Africans’ parents in providing for
their survival, but denying them rights.
– They avoided training locals, and instead, brought along
Europeans to rule the Africans.
– The French also supported a policy of assimilation, in which
the native population would take on French customs and
culture and be like them.
• African customs and culture were looked at as inferior, or
not as good as French culture.
Direct vs. Indirect Rule #6
European nations chose one of two different paths
when it came to colonial rule:
Indirect rule: colonies were ruled
through existing traditional rulers
Example: Nigeria
Direct rule: the colony was directly
administered by the colonizer
Example: Senegal
Result: loss of power and influence
By Traditional rulers
Cash Crop/Money Economy #7
• Africans sold labor to make money to pay taxes
• Problems
– Created dependence on Colonial rulers
#8 Purpose of the Railroads was to
extract wealth
#9 Aim of Colonial Rulers
• To benefit Colonial economies
accomplished by cash crop system and
forced labor
• King Leopold II of Belgium
• Cecil Rhodes
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
#10 African Resistance and failure
• Many Africans resisted European rule
– Millions of Africans died
– Europeans = superior military technology
• North Africa: Algerians fought French
• West Africa: Ibo and Fulani fought
British
• Congo Free State: 20 years of fighting
• Ethiopia exception: European training
preserved independence
African Resistance
• Africans Confront Imperialism
– Broad resistance, but Europeans have superior weapons
• Unsuccessful Movements
– Algeria fights the French for 50 years
– German East Africa resistance results in 75,000 deaths
• Successful Movements
– Ethiopia under Emperor Menelik II
– Plays Europeans against each other
– Stockpiles modern weapons
– Defeats Italy and remains independent
African Resistance
• Unsuccessful Attempts: Africans resisted
Europeans in both military conflict, and through
religious resistance.
– Algeria was able to resist French rule for 50 years.
– French West Africa held out for 16 years because it
had a strong king named Samori Toure that had
modernized his military.
– In the end, only famine could beat Toure.
African Resistance
Maji-Maji prisoners
captured by Germans.
• German East Africa: Natives in this region
used religious faith as defense.
– German colonizers had forced them to
grow cash crops, such as cotton, instead of
food.
– Natives came to believe that if magic water
called maji-maji were sprinkled on their
bodies, they would be bullet-proof
• Furthermore, they believed that God had
approved of their struggle, and that their
dead ancestors would rise from the
grave and help them against the
Germans.
• As many as 75,000 were mowed down
by German Maxim machine guns, and
150,000 more starved to death later.
African Resistance
• Ethiopia: A Successful Resistance: Ethiopia was the only
country that successfully resisted Europeans.
– Its king, Menelik II, played all of the European countries
off of each other (tricked them) as they tried to convince
him to be under their sphere of influence,
• While he tricked them, he bought modern weapons from the French and
Russians.
A Closer Look at
Imperialism in Africa
• European quest to control
natural resources
• Doing so led to drastic
changes in the
infrastructure of the
continent
The port of Zanzibar around 1900
Transportation, Communication,
Education, Medical Care
Effects
• New political systems –
– Direct and Indirect Rule
• New Economic pattern:
– money economy, cash crops, taxes, dependence, lack of
diversity
•
•
•
•
•
•
Transportation
Communication
Education
Sanitation and water systems
Medical Care
migrant workers, chibaro (forced labor)
– = breakdown of Family
• New attitude towards land
– = Land ownership
•
•
•
•
•
•
Effects
Racism
Christianity
Artificial boundaries
Educated African elite
Nationalism
Westernization
• Generalization: change and breakdown of traditional
values and organizations
Economic Consequences
Cash Crops
• depleted the soil and made it difficult to grow
subsistence crops.
• undermine local industries because they sucked up
most of the labor force.
• once colonies gained their independence, years of
dependence on a single cash crop made it difficult
to modernize and diversify their economies
Result: Slowed development and modernization
Effects of European Imperialism on Africa
Directions: Using your answers from question #11 from Scramble for
Africa sheet and pages 102-104 from the text, categorize the effects of
European Imperialism on Africa an improvement or disruption to
African culture.
Improvement
Disruption
Was European Imperialism in Africa more disruptive or
beneficial to the African culture and its people?
Support your answer with evidence.
Improvement
• Material Improvements
– Transportation and communication
– RR and Telegraphs
– Hospitals
– Sanitation and water systems
– Formal education system (western)
• Educated African elite
• Nationalism
Disruption
•Disruption of Traditional African Life
•New political systems
•New Economic pattern: money economy, cash crops, taxes,
economic dependence, lack of diversity
•migrant workers, chibaro = breakdown of Family
•New attitude towards land
•Racism
•Christianity
•Artificial boundaries
•westernization
•Generalization: change and breakdown of traditional values
and organizations
Improvement
Material improvements:
•Transportation and
communication
•RR and Telegraphs
•Hospitals
•Sanitation and water systems
•Formal education system
(western)
•Nationalism
•westernization
Disruption
Disruption of Traditional African Life
•New political systems
•New Economic pattern: money
economy, cash crops, taxes,
dependence, lack of diversity
•migrant workers, chibaro = breakdown
of Family
•New attitude towards land
•Racism
•Christianity
•Artificial boundaries
•Educated African elite
•Generalization: change and
breakdown of traditional values and
organizations