Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Foundations
- Part II Africa in World History
- Part III Imperial Africa
- 17 Upsetting the equilibrium
- 18 The European conquest of Africa
- 19 Southern Africa, 1486–1910
- 20 European colonial rule in Africa
- 21 The colonial legacy
- Part IV Independent Africa
- Index
- References
18 - The European conquest of Africa
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2014
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Foundations
- Part II Africa in World History
- Part III Imperial Africa
- 17 Upsetting the equilibrium
- 18 The European conquest of Africa
- 19 Southern Africa, 1486–1910
- 20 European colonial rule in Africa
- 21 The colonial legacy
- Part IV Independent Africa
- Index
- References
Summary
After four hundred years during which Europe had displayed little or no interest in Africa beyond its coastline, suddenly – in the twenty years between 1878 and 1898 – the European states partitioned and conquered virtually the entire continent. To observers in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, this sudden conquest was a frantic, often unseemly, and largely unexpected scramble for territory in a continent about which the Europeans knew little and for which most cared nothing. Their sentiments were encapsulated in the famous remark by the English historian John H. Seeley that his generation had conquered half of the world “in a fit of absence of mind.” Today, however, with the advantage of hindsight historians have perceived several fundamental causes and events that combined to upset four hundred years of equilibrium between Africa and Europe and precipitate the European conquest of virtually the entire continent. The Industrial Revolution created demands for new raw materials from Africa, and made Africa an attractive potential market for European manufactured goods. Moreover, the new technologies produced by the Industrial Revolution provided the instruments that upset the long-standing balance of power between Africa and Europe. Imperialism was propelled as well by popular nationalism, which pressed European statesmen into pursuing expansionist policies in the name of imperial defense. Changing terms of trade required European merchants to seek political stability in Africa, where for centuries they had profited from the instability that had fostered the slave trade. European Christianity was also changing in the nineteenth century, as the new and powerful Evangelical movement inspired aggressive missionary activity, which in the past had been largely confined to the African coast, deeper into the continent.
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- Information
- A History of Sub-Saharan Africa , pp. 263 - 278Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013