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European exploration of Africa

The geography of North Africa has been reasonably well known among Europeans since classical antiquity in Greco-Roman geography. Northwest Africa (the Maghreb) was known as either Libya or Africa, while Egypt was considered part of Asia.

Map of Africa by John Thomson, 1813. Much of the continent is simply labeled "unknown parts". The map still includes Ptolemy's Mountains of the Moon, which have since been credited to ranges varying from the Rwenzori to Kilimanjaro to the peaks of Ethiopia at the head of the Blue Nile.

European exploration of sub-Saharan Africa begins with the Age of Discovery in the 15th century, pioneered by the Kingdom of Portugal under Henry the Navigator. The Cape of Good Hope was first reached by Bartolomeu Dias on 12 March 1488, opening the important sea route to India and the Far East, but European exploration of Africa itself remained very limited during the 16th and 17th centuries. The European powers were content to establish trading posts along the coast while they were actively exploring and colonizing the New World. Exploration of the interior of Africa was thus mostly left to the Muslim slave traders, who in tandem with the Muslim conquest of Sudan established far-reaching networks and supported the economy of a number of Sahelian kingdoms during the 15th to 18th centuries.

At the beginning of the 19th century, European knowledge of the geography of the interior of sub-Saharan Africa was still rather limited. Expeditions exploring Southern Africa were made during the 1830s and 1840s, so that around the midpoint of the 19th century and the beginning of the colonial Scramble for Africa, the unexplored parts were now limited to what would turn out to be the Congo Basin and the African Great Lakes. This "Heart of Africa" remained one of the last remaining "blank spots" on world maps of the later 19th century (alongside the Arctic, Antarctic, and interior of the Amazon Basin). It was left for 19th-century European explorers, including those searching for the famed sources of the Nile, notably John Hanning Speke, Richard Francis Burton, David Livingstone, and Henry Morton Stanley, to complete the exploration of Africa by the 1870s. After this, the general geography of Africa was known, but it was left to further expeditions during the 1880s onward, notably, those led by Oskar Lenz, to flesh out more detail such as the continent's geological makeup.

History edit

Antiquity edit

 
Reconstruction of Hecataeus' map of the world

The Phoenicians explored North Africa, establishing a number of colonies, the most prominent of which was Carthage. Carthage itself conducted exploration of West Africa. The first alleged circumnavigation of the African continent attested to was made by Phoenician sailors, in an expedition commissioned by Egyptian pharaoh Necho II, c. 600 BC which took three years. A report of this expedition is provided by Herodotus (4.37). They sailed south, rounded the Cape heading west, made their way north to the Mediterranean, and then returned home. He states that they paused each year to sow and harvest grain. Herodotus himself is sceptical of the historicity of this feat, which would have taken place about 120 years before his birth; however, the reason he gives for disbelieving the story is the sailors' reported claim that when they sailed along the southern coast of Africa, they found the Sun stood to their right, in the north; Herodotus, who was unaware of the spherical shape of the Earth found this impossible to believe. Some commentators took this circumstance as proof that the voyage is historical, but other scholars still dismiss the report as unlikely.[1]

Euthymenes of Massalia explored the coast of West Africa in the early sixth century BC.

The West African coast may have been explored by Hanno the Navigator in an expedition c. 500 BC.[2] The report of this voyage survives in a short Periplus in Greek, which was first cited by Greek authors in the 3rd century BC.[3]: 162–3  There is some uncertainty as to how far precisely Hanno reached; he may have sailed as far as Sierra Leone, Guinea or even Gabon.[4] However, Robin Law notes that some commentators have argued that Hanno's exploration may have taken him no farther than southern Morocco.[5]

 
Roman expeditions to Sub-Saharan Africa west of the Nile river

Africa is named for the Afri people who settled in the area of current-day Tunisia. The Roman province of Africa spanned the Mediterranean coast of what is now Libya, Tunisia, and Algeria. The parts of North Africa north of the Sahara were well known in antiquity. However, the Romans never seem to have explored the Sahara itself, or the lands South of it.[6]

Prior to the 2nd century BC, however, Greek geographers were unaware that the landmass then known as Libya expanded south of the Sahara, assuming that the desert bounded on the outer Ocean. Indeed, Alexander the Great, according to Plutarchus' Lives, considered sailing from the mouths of the Indus back to Macedonia passing south of Africa as a shortcut compared to the land route. Even Eratosthenes around 200 BC still assumed an extent of the landmass no further south than the Horn of Africa.

By the Roman imperial period, the Horn of Africa was well-known to Mediterranean geographers. The trading post of Rhapta, described as "the last marketplace of Azania," may correspond to the coast of Tanzania. The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, dated to the 1st century AD, appears to extend geographical knowledge further south, to Southeast Africa. Ptolemy's world map of the 2nd century is well aware that the African continent extends significantly further south than the Horn of Africa, but has no geographic detail south of the equator (it is unclear whether it is aware of the Gulf of Guinea).[7]

Middle Ages edit

Between 859 and 861 a Viking fleet of 62 ships, led by Hastein and Björn Ironside sailed from the Loire to raid in the Mediterranean, including North Africa.

From 1146 to 1148 the Norseman, Roger II of Sicily, established the Kingdom of Africa.

In May 1291 the Genoese brothers, Vandino and Ugolino Vivaldi, commanded the first known expedition in search of a sea route to India around Africa, but went lost. A few years later, in 1312, possibly in search of the Vivaldi brothers, a fellow Genoese, Lancelotto Malocello rediscovered the Canary Islands. Lanzarote is named after him.

Jaume Ferrer sailed from Majorca down the West African coast to find the legendary "River of Gold" in 1346, but the outcome of his quest and his fate are unknown.

Early Portuguese expeditions edit

 
Prince Henry of Portugal in 15th century triptych of St. Vincent, by Nuno Gonçalves

Portuguese explorer Prince Henry, known as the Navigator, was the first European to methodically explore Africa and the oceanic route to the Indies. From his residence in the Algarve region of southern Portugal, he directed successive expeditions to circumnavigate Africa and reach India. In 1420, Henry sent an expedition to secure the uninhabited but strategic island of Madeira. In 1425, he tried to secure the Canary Islands as well, but these were already under firm Castilian control. In 1431, another Portuguese expedition reached and annexed the Azores.

Naval charts of 1339 show that the Canary Islands were already known to Europeans. In 1341, Portuguese and Italian explorers prepared a joint expedition. In 1342 the Catalans organized an expedition captained by Francesc Desvalers to the Canary Islands that set sail from Majorca. In 1344, Pope Clement VI named French admiral Luis de la Cerda Prince of Fortune, and sent him to conquer the Canaries. In 1402, Jean de Bethencourt and Gadifer de la Salle sailed to conquer the Canary Islands but found them already plundered by the Castilians. Although they did conquer the isles, Bethencourt's nephew was forced to cede them to Castile in 1418.

In 1455 and 1456 two Italian explorers, Alvise Cadamosto from Venice and Antoniotto Usodimare from Genoa, together with an unnamed Portuguese captain and working for Prince Henry of Portugal, followed the Gambia River, visiting the land of Senegal, while another Italian sailor from Genoa, Antonio de Noli, also on behalf of Prince Henry, explored the Bijagós islands, and, together with the Portuguese Diogo Gomes, the Cape Verde archipelago. Antonio de Noli, who became the first governor of Cape Verde (and the first European colonial governor in Sub-Saharan Africa), is also considered the discoverer of the First Islands of Cape Verde.[8]

Along the western and eastern coasts of Africa, progress was also steady; Portuguese sailors reached Cape Bojador in 1434 and Cape Blanco in 1441. In 1443, they built a fortress on the island of Arguin, in modern-day Mauritania, trading European wheat and cloth for African gold and slaves. It was the first time that the semi-mythic gold of the Sudan reached Europe without Muslim mediation. Most of the slaves were sent to Madeira, which became, after thorough deforestation, the first European plantation colony. Between 1444 and 1447, the Portuguese explored the coasts of Senegal, Gambia, and Guinea. In 1456, the Venetian captain Alvise Cadamosto, under Portuguese command, explored the islands of Cape Verde. In 1462, two years after Prince Henry's death, Portuguese sailors explored the Bissau islands and named Serra Leoa (Lioness Mountains).

 
Map of Western Africa by Lázaro Luis (1563). The large castle in West Africa represents the São Jorge da Mina (Elmina castle) fortified factory.

In 1469, Fernão Gomes rented the rights of African exploration for five years. Under his direction, in 1471, the Portuguese reached modern Ghana and settled in A Mina (the mine), today's Elmina. They had finally reached a country with an abundance of gold, hence the historical name of "Gold Coast" that Elmina would eventually receive.

In 1472, Fernão do Pó discovered the island that would bear his name for centuries (now Bioko) and an estuary abundant in shrimp (Portuguese: camarão,), giving its name to Cameroon.

Soon after, the equator was crossed by Europeans. Portugal established a base in Sāo Tomé that, after 1485, was settled with criminals. After 1497, expelled Spanish and Portuguese Jews were also sent there.

In 1482, Diogo Cão found the mouth of a large river and learned of the existence of a great kingdom, Kongo. In 1485, he explored the river upstream as well.

But the Portuguese wanted, above anything else, to find a route to India and kept trying to circumnavigate Africa. In 1485, the expedition of João Afonso d'Aveiros, with the German astronomer Martin of Behaim as part of the crew, explored the Bight of Benin (Kingdom of Benin), returning information about African king Ogane.

In 1488, Bartolomeu Dias and his pilot Pêro de Alenquer, after putting down a mutiny, turned a cape where they were caught by a storm, naming it Cape of Storms. They followed the coast for a while realizing that it kept going eastward with even some tendency to the north. Lacking supplies, they turned around with the conviction that the far end of Africa had finally been reached. Upon their return to Portugal, the promising cape was renamed Cape of Good Hope.

Some years later, Christopher Columbus landed in America under rival Castilian command. Pope Alexander VI decreed the Inter caetera bull, dividing the non-Christian parts of the world between the two rival Catholic powers, Spain and Portugal.

Finally, in the years 1497 to 1498, Vasco da Gama, again with Alenquer as a pilot, took a direct route to Cape of Good Hope, via St. Helena. He went beyond the farthest point reached by Dias and named the country Natal. Then he sailed northward, making land at Quelimane (Mozambique) and Mombasa, where he found Chinese traders, and Malindi (both in modern Kenya). In this town, he recruited an Arab pilot who led the Portuguese directly to Calicut. On 28 August 1498, King Manuel of Portugal informed the Pope of the good news that Portugal had reached India.

Egypt and Venice reacted to this news with hostility; from the Red Sea, they jointly attacked the Portuguese ships that traded with India. The Portuguese defeated these ships near Diu in 1509. The Ottoman Empire's indifferent reaction to Portuguese exploration left Portugal in almost exclusive control of trade through the Indian Ocean.[citation needed] They established many bases along the eastern coast of Africa except for Somalia (See Ajuran-Portuguese wars). The Portuguese also captured Aden in 1513.

One of the ships under command of Diogo Dias arrived at a coast that was not in East Africa. Two years later, a chart already showed an elongated island east of Africa that bore the name Madagascar. But only a century later, between 1613 and 1619, did the Portuguese explore the island in detail. They signed treaties with local chieftains and sent the first missionaries, who found it impossible to make locals believe in Hell, and were eventually expelled.[citation needed]

Early modern history edit

Portuguese edit

 
17th-century crucifix, copper alloy, the Democratic Republic of the Congo

The Portuguese presence in Africa soon interfered with existing Arab trade interests. By 1583, the Portuguese established themselves in Zanzibar and on the Swahili coast. The Kingdom of Congo was converted to Christianity in 1495, its king taking the name of João I. The Portuguese also established their trade interests in the Kingdom of Mutapa in the 16th century, and in 1629 placed a puppet ruler on the throne.

The Portuguese (and later also the Dutch) also became involved in the local slave economy, supporting the state of the Jaggas, who performed slave raids in the Congo.[citation needed]

 
Queen Nzinga in peace negotiations with the Portuguese governor in Luanda, 1657

They also used the Kongo to weaken the neighboring realm of the Ndongo, where Queen Nzinga put up a fierce but eventually doomed resistance to Portuguese and Jagga ambitions. Portugal intervened militarily in these conflicts, creating the basis for their colony of Angola. In 1663, after another conflict, the royal crown of Kongo was sent to Lisbon. Nevertheless, a diminished Kongo Kingdom would still exist until 1885, when the last Manicongo, Pedro V, ceded his almost non-existent domain to Portugal.

The Portuguese dealt with the other major state of Southern Africa, the Monomotapa (in modern Zimbabwe), in a similar manner: Portugal intervened in a local war hoping to get abundant mineral riches, imposing a protectorate. But with the authority of the Monomotapa diminished by the foreign presence, anarchy took over. The local miners migrated and even buried the mines to prevent them from falling into Portuguese hands. When in 1693 the neighboring Cangamires invaded the country, the Portuguese accepted their failure and retreated to the coast.

Dutch edit

Beginning in the 17th century, the Netherlands began exploring and colonizing Africa. While the Dutch were waging a long war of independence against Spain, Portugal had temporarily united with Spain, starting in 1580 and ending in 1640. As a result, the growing colonial ambitions of the Netherlands were mostly directed against Portugal.

For this purpose, two Dutch companies were founded: the West Indies Company, with power over all the Atlantic Ocean, and the East Indies Company, with power over the Indian Ocean.

The West India Company conquered Elmina in 1637 and Luanda in 1640. In 1648, they were expelled from Luanda by the Portuguese. Overall the Dutch built 16 forts in different places, including Gorée in Senegal, partly overtaking Portugal as the main slave-trading power. The Dutch Gold Coast and Dutch Slave Coast were successful.

But in the colony of Dutch Loango-Angola, the Portuguese managed to expel the Dutch.

In Dutch Mauritius the colonization started in 1638 and ended in 1710, with a brief interruption between 1658 and 1666. Numerous governors were appointed, but continuous hardships such as cyclones, droughts, pest infestations, lack of food, and illnesses finally took their toll, and the island was definitively abandoned in 1710.

The Dutch left a lasting impact in South Africa, a region ignored by Portugal that the Dutch eventually decided to use as a station in their route to East Asia. Jan van Riebeeck founded Cape Town in 1652, starting the European exploration and colonization of South Africa.

Other early modern European presence edit

 
Map of Fort James (Gambia), the first English possession in Africa

Almost at the same time as the Dutch, other European colonial powers attempted to create their own outposts in West Africa, following in the footsteps of the Portuguese.

During the Tudor period, English merchant adventurers started trading in West Africa, coming into conflict with Portuguese troops. In 1581, Francis Drake reached the Cape of Good Hope. In 1660, the Royal African Company was founded. In 1663, the English built Fort James in Gambia. One year later, another English colonial expedition attempted to settle southern Madagascar, resulting in the death of most of the colonists. The English forts on the West African coast were eventually taken by the Dutch.

In 1626, the French Compagnie de l'Occident was created. This company expelled the Dutch from Senegambia (Senegal), making it the first French domain in Africa, they also conquered the island of Arguin.

France also set her eyes on Madagascar, the island that had been used since 1527 as a stop in travels to India. In 1642, the French East India Company founded a settlement in southern Madagascar called Fort Dauphin. The commercial results of this settlement were scarce and, again, most of the settlers died. One of the survivors, Etienne de Flacourt, published a History of the Great Island of Madagascar and Relations, which was for a long time the main European source of information about the island. Further settlement attempts had no more success but, in 1667, François Martin led the first expedition to the Malagasy heartland, reaching Lake Alaotra. In 1665, France officially claimed Madagascar, under the name of Île Dauphine. However, little colonial activity would take place in Madagascar until the 19th century.

In 1651, the Duchy of Courland and Semigallia (a vassal of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth) gained a colony in Africa on St. Andrew's Island at the Gambia River and established the Jacob Fort there. The Duchy also took other local lands including St. Mary Island (modern-day Banjul) and Fort Jillifree

In 1650, Swedish merchants founded Swedish Gold Coast in modern Ghana following the foundation of the Swedish Africa Company (1649). In 1652 the foundations were laid of the fort Carlsborg.In 1658 Fort Carlsborg was seized and made part of the Danish Gold Coast colony, then to the Dutch Gold Coast. Later on the local population started a successful uprising against their new masters and in December 1660 the King of the Akan people subgroup-Efutu again offered Sweden control over the area, but in 1663 were seized by the Danish after a long defense of Fort Christiansborg.

The Dano-Norwegian colonized the Danish Gold Coast, from 1674 to 1755 the settlements were administered by the Danish West India-Guinea Company. From December 1680 to 29 August 1682, the Portuguese occupied Fort Christiansborg. In 1750 it was made a Danish crown colony. From 1782 to 1785 it was under British occupation. From 1814 it was made part of the territory of Denmark.

In 1677, King Frederick William I of Prussia sent an expedition to the western coast of Africa. The commander of the expedition, Captain Blonk, signed agreements with the chieftains of the Gold Coast. There, the Prussians built a fort named Gross Friederichsburg and restored the abandoned Portuguese fort of Arguin. But in 1720, the king decided to sell these bases to the Netherlands for 7,000 ducats and 12 slaves, six of them chained with pure gold chains.

In 1777, the Spanish Empire and Portuguese Empire signed the Treaty of San Ildefonso in which Portugal give the islands of Annobón and Fernando Poo in waters of the Gulf of Guinea, as well as the Guinean coast between the Niger River and the Ogooué River, to Spain.

The British expressed their interest by the formation in 1788 of The Association for Promoting the Discovery of the Interior Parts of Africa. The individuals who formed this club were inspired in part by the Scotsman James Bruce, who had ventured to Ethiopia in 1769 and reached the source of the Blue Nile.

Overall, the European exploration of Africa in the 17th and 18th centuries was very limited. Instead, they were focused on the slave trade, which only required coastal bases and items to trade. The real exploration of the African interior would start well into the 19th century.

The 19th century edit

 
Routes of European explorers in Africa to 1853

Although the Napoleonic Wars distracted the attention of Europe from exploratory work in Africa, those wars nevertheless exercised great influence on the future of the continent, both in Egypt and South Africa. The occupation of Egypt (1798–1803), first by France and then by Great Britain, resulted in an effort by the Ottoman Empire to regain direct control over that country. In 1811, Mehemet Ali established an almost independent state, and from 1820 onward established Egyptian rule over eastern Sudan. In South Africa, the struggle with Napoleon caused the United Kingdom to take possession of the Dutch settlements at the Cape. In 1814, Cape Colony, which had been continuously occupied by British troops since 1806, was formally ceded to the British crown.

Meanwhile, considerable changes had been made in other parts of the continent. The occupation of Algiers by France in 1830 put an end to the piracy of the Barbary states. Egyptian authority continued to expand southward, with the consequent additions to knowledge of the Nile. The city of Zanzibar, on the island of that name, rapidly attained importance. Accounts of a vast inland sea, and the discovery of the snow-clad mountains of Kilimanjaro in 1840–1848, stimulated the desire for further knowledge about Africa in Europe.

In the mid-19th century, Protestant missions were carrying on active missionary work on the Guinea coast, in South Africa and in the Zanzibar dominions. Missionaries visited little-known regions and peoples, and in many instances became explorers and pioneers of trade and empire. David Livingstone, a Scottish missionary, had been engaged since 1840 in work north of the Orange River. In 1849, Livingstone crossed the Kalahari Desert from south to north and reached Lake Ngami. Between 1851 and 1856, he traversed the continent from west to east, discovering the great waterways of the upper Zambezi River. In November 1855, Livingstone became the first European to see the famous Victoria Falls, named after the Queen of the United Kingdom. From 1858 to 1864, the lower Zambezi, the Shire River and Lake Nyasa were explored by Livingstone. Nyasa had been first reached by the confidential slave of António da Silva Porto, a Portuguese trader established at Bié in Angola, who crossed Africa during 1853–1856 from Benguella to the mouth of the Rovuma. A prime goal for explorers was to locate the source of the River Nile. Expeditions by Burton and Speke (1857–1858) and Speke and Grant (1863) located Lake Tanganyika and Lake Victoria. It was eventually proved to be the latter from which the Nile flowed.

Henry Morton Stanley, who had in 1871 succeeded in finding and succouring Livingstone (originating the famous line "Dr. Livingstone, I presume"), started again for Zanzibar in 1874. In one of the most memorable of all exploring expeditions in Africa, Stanley circumnavigated Victoria Nyanza (Lake Victoria) and Lake Tanganyika. Striking farther inland to the Lualaba, he followed that river down to the Atlantic Ocean—which he reached in August 1877—and proved it to be the Congo.

 
Comparison of Africa in the years 1880 and 1913

In 1895, the British South Africa Company hired the American scout Frederick Russell Burnham to look for minerals and ways to improve river navigation in the central and southern Africa region. Burnham oversaw and led the Northern Territories British South Africa Exploration Company expedition that first established that major copper deposits existed north of the Zambezi in North-Eastern Rhodesia. Along the Kafue River, Burnham saw many similarities to copper deposits he had worked in the United States, and he encountered native peoples wearing copper bracelets.[9] Copper rapidly became the primary export of Central Africa and it remains essential to the economy even today.

The emergence of modern cartography, and placing it at the heart of the approach to scientific exploration, meant that a new drive to explore Africa began in Europe, particularly Britain. According to John Barrow, undersecretary to the Admiralty in the early 1800s, described British knowledge of the African continent as "retrograded" and "almost blank", and pushed for further explorations of the continent.[10] This cartographic approach "emptied African space of prior political and ethnic identifications" in Europeans' eyes.[11]

Explorers were also active in Southern Morocco, the Sahara and the Sudan, which were traversed in many directions between 1860 and 1875 by Georg Schweinfurth and Gustav Nachtigal.[12] These travellers not only added considerably to geographical knowledge, but obtained invaluable information concerning the people, languages and natural history of the countries in which they sojourned. Among the discoveries of Schweinfurth was one that confirmed Greek legends of the existence beyond Egypt of a "pygmy race". But the first western discoverer of the pygmies of Central Africa was Paul Du Chaillu, who found them in the Ogowe district of the west coast in 1865, five years before Schweinfurth's first meeting with them. Du Chaillu had previously, through journeys in the Gabon region between 1855 and 1859, made popular in Europe the knowledge of the existence of the gorilla, whose existence was thought to be as legendary as that of the Pygmies of Aristotle.

List of Africa explorers edit

15th century edit

 
Portuguese map of western Africa, 1571

15th/16th century edit

16th century edit

  •   Paulo Dias de Novais
  •   António Fernandes (he travalled to Monomotapa and beyond, exploring most of the present day Zimbabwe and possibly northeastern South Africa)[13]
  •   Lourenço Marques (trader and explorer in East Africa)
  •   Francisco Álvares (missionary and explorer in Ethiopia)
  •   Gonçalo da Silveira (jesuit missionary, travalled up the Zambezi River to the capital of the Monomotapa which appears to have been the N'Pande kraal, close by the M'Zingesi River, a southern tributary of the Zambezi)

18th century edit

19th century edit

 
Heinrich Barth approaching Timbuktu in 1853
 
Hermenegildo Capelo and Roberto Ivens in 1883
 
Emin Pasha Relief Expedition

Early 20th century edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Alan B. Lloyd, Herodotus, Book II (1975, 1988 Leiden). Lloyd, Alan B. (1977). "Necho and the Red Sea: Some Considerations". Journal of Egyptian Archaeology. 63: 142–155. doi:10.1177/030751337706300122. JSTOR 3856314. S2CID 192316548. Alan Lloyd suggests that the Greeks at this time understood that anyone going south far enough and then turning west would have the sun on their right but found it unbelievable that Africa reached so far south. He suggests that "It is extremely unlikely that an Egyptian king would, or could, have acted as Necho is depicted as doing" and that the story might have been triggered by the failure of Sataspes attempt to circumnavigate Africa under Xerxes the Great. See also Jona Lendering, The circumnavigation of Africa 16 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine, Livius.
  2. ^ The Periplus of Hanno; a voyage of discovery down the west African coast (1912)
  3. ^ Harden, Donald (1971) [1962]. The Phoenicians. Harmondsworth: Penguin. ISBN 0-14-021375-9.
  4. ^ "Some taking Hanno to the Cameroons, or even Gabon, while others say he stopped at Sierre Leone." (Harden 1971, p. 169).
  5. ^ R.C.C. Law (1979). "North Africa in the period of Phoenician and Greek colonization". In Fage, J.D. (ed.). The Cambridge History of Africa, Volume 2. Cambridge University Press. p. 135. ISBN 9780521215923. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
  6. ^ L'Ange, Gerald (17 April 2012). The White Africans: From Colonisation To Liberation. Jonathan Ball Publishers. ISBN 978-1-86842-491-7.
  7. ^ The limit of Ptolemy's knowledge in the west is Cape Spartel (35° 48 N); while he does assume that the coast eventually retreats in a "Great Gulf of the Western Ocean", this is not likely based on any knowledge of the Gulf of Guinea. Eric Anderson Walker, The Cambridge history of the British Empire, Volume 7, Part 1, 1963, p. 66. In the east, Ptolemy is aware of the Red Sea (Sinus Arabicus) and the protrusion of the Horn of Africa, describing the gulf south of the Horn of Africa as Sinus Barbaricus.
  8. ^ Astengo C, Balla M., Brigati I., Ferrada de Noli M., Gomes L., Hall T., Pires V., Rosetti C. Da Noli a Capo Verde. Antonio de Noli e l'inizio delle scoperte del Nuovo Mondo. Marco Sabatelli Editore. Savona, 2013. ISBN 9788888449821 [4]
  9. ^ Burnham, Frederick Russell (1899). "Northern Rhodesia". In Wills, Walter H. (ed.). Bulawayo Up-to-date; Being a General Sketch of Rhodesia . Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co. pp. 177–180.
  10. ^ Kennedy, Dane (1 March 2013). The Last Blank Spaces. Harvard University Press. p. 12. ISBN 978-0-674-07497-2.
  11. ^ Kennedy, Dane (1 March 2013). The Last Blank Spaces. Harvard University Press. pp. 12–15. ISBN 978-0-674-07497-2.
  12. ^ "Sahara and Sudan: The Results of Six Years Travel in Africa". World Digital Library. 1879–1889. Retrieved 2 October 2013.
  13. ^ http://www.rhodesia.nl/rhodesiana/volume19.pdf[bare URL PDF]

Bibliography edit

european, exploration, africa, geography, north, africa, been, reasonably, well, known, among, europeans, since, classical, antiquity, greco, roman, geography, northwest, africa, maghreb, known, either, libya, africa, while, egypt, considered, part, asia, afri. The geography of North Africa has been reasonably well known among Europeans since classical antiquity in Greco Roman geography Northwest Africa the Maghreb was known as either Libya or Africa while Egypt was considered part of Asia Map of Africa by John Thomson 1813 Much of the continent is simply labeled unknown parts The map still includes Ptolemy s Mountains of the Moon which have since been credited to ranges varying from the Rwenzori to Kilimanjaro to the peaks of Ethiopia at the head of the Blue Nile European exploration of sub Saharan Africa begins with the Age of Discovery in the 15th century pioneered by the Kingdom of Portugal under Henry the Navigator The Cape of Good Hope was first reached by Bartolomeu Dias on 12 March 1488 opening the important sea route to India and the Far East but European exploration of Africa itself remained very limited during the 16th and 17th centuries The European powers were content to establish trading posts along the coast while they were actively exploring and colonizing the New World Exploration of the interior of Africa was thus mostly left to the Muslim slave traders who in tandem with the Muslim conquest of Sudan established far reaching networks and supported the economy of a number of Sahelian kingdoms during the 15th to 18th centuries At the beginning of the 19th century European knowledge of the geography of the interior of sub Saharan Africa was still rather limited Expeditions exploring Southern Africa were made during the 1830s and 1840s so that around the midpoint of the 19th century and the beginning of the colonial Scramble for Africa the unexplored parts were now limited to what would turn out to be the Congo Basin and the African Great Lakes This Heart of Africa remained one of the last remaining blank spots on world maps of the later 19th century alongside the Arctic Antarctic and interior of the Amazon Basin It was left for 19th century European explorers including those searching for the famed sources of the Nile notably John Hanning Speke Richard Francis Burton David Livingstone and Henry Morton Stanley to complete the exploration of Africa by the 1870s After this the general geography of Africa was known but it was left to further expeditions during the 1880s onward notably those led by Oskar Lenz to flesh out more detail such as the continent s geological makeup Contents 1 History 1 1 Antiquity 1 2 Middle Ages 1 3 Early Portuguese expeditions 1 4 Early modern history 1 4 1 Portuguese 1 4 2 Dutch 1 4 3 Other early modern European presence 1 5 The 19th century 2 List of Africa explorers 2 1 15th century 2 2 15th 16th century 2 3 16th century 2 4 18th century 2 5 19th century 2 6 Early 20th century 3 See also 4 References 5 BibliographyHistory editAntiquity edit Main article Romans in sub Saharan Africa Further information North Africa during classical antiquity nbsp Reconstruction of Hecataeus map of the worldThe Phoenicians explored North Africa establishing a number of colonies the most prominent of which was Carthage Carthage itself conducted exploration of West Africa The first alleged circumnavigation of the African continent attested to was made by Phoenician sailors in an expedition commissioned by Egyptian pharaoh Necho II c 600 BC which took three years A report of this expedition is provided by Herodotus 4 37 They sailed south rounded the Cape heading west made their way north to the Mediterranean and then returned home He states that they paused each year to sow and harvest grain Herodotus himself is sceptical of the historicity of this feat which would have taken place about 120 years before his birth however the reason he gives for disbelieving the story is the sailors reported claim that when they sailed along the southern coast of Africa they found the Sun stood to their right in the north Herodotus who was unaware of the spherical shape of the Earth found this impossible to believe Some commentators took this circumstance as proof that the voyage is historical but other scholars still dismiss the report as unlikely 1 Euthymenes of Massalia explored the coast of West Africa in the early sixth century BC The West African coast may have been explored by Hanno the Navigator in an expedition c 500 BC 2 The report of this voyage survives in a short Periplus in Greek which was first cited by Greek authors in the 3rd century BC 3 162 3 There is some uncertainty as to how far precisely Hanno reached he may have sailed as far as Sierra Leone Guinea or even Gabon 4 However Robin Law notes that some commentators have argued that Hanno s exploration may have taken him no farther than southern Morocco 5 nbsp Roman expeditions to Sub Saharan Africa west of the Nile riverAfrica is named for the Afri people who settled in the area of current day Tunisia The Roman province of Africa spanned the Mediterranean coast of what is now Libya Tunisia and Algeria The parts of North Africa north of the Sahara were well known in antiquity However the Romans never seem to have explored the Sahara itself or the lands South of it 6 Prior to the 2nd century BC however Greek geographers were unaware that the landmass then known as Libya expanded south of the Sahara assuming that the desert bounded on the outer Ocean Indeed Alexander the Great according to Plutarchus Lives considered sailing from the mouths of the Indus back to Macedonia passing south of Africa as a shortcut compared to the land route Even Eratosthenes around 200 BC still assumed an extent of the landmass no further south than the Horn of Africa By the Roman imperial period the Horn of Africa was well known to Mediterranean geographers The trading post of Rhapta described as the last marketplace of Azania may correspond to the coast of Tanzania The Periplus of the Erythraean Sea dated to the 1st century AD appears to extend geographical knowledge further south to Southeast Africa Ptolemy s world map of the 2nd century is well aware that the African continent extends significantly further south than the Horn of Africa but has no geographic detail south of the equator it is unclear whether it is aware of the Gulf of Guinea 7 Middle Ages edit Between 859 and 861 a Viking fleet of 62 ships led by Hastein and Bjorn Ironside sailed from the Loire to raid in the Mediterranean including North Africa From 1146 to 1148 the Norseman Roger II of Sicily established the Kingdom of Africa In May 1291 the Genoese brothers Vandino and Ugolino Vivaldi commanded the first known expedition in search of a sea route to India around Africa but went lost A few years later in 1312 possibly in search of the Vivaldi brothers a fellow Genoese Lancelotto Malocello rediscovered the Canary Islands Lanzarote is named after him Jaume Ferrer sailed from Majorca down the West African coast to find the legendary River of Gold in 1346 but the outcome of his quest and his fate are unknown Early Portuguese expeditions edit Further information History of Portugal 1415 1578 Portuguese discoveries and Portuguese explorersThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Prince Henry of Portugal in 15th century triptych of St Vincent by Nuno GoncalvesPortuguese explorer Prince Henry known as the Navigator was the first European to methodically explore Africa and the oceanic route to the Indies From his residence in the Algarve region of southern Portugal he directed successive expeditions to circumnavigate Africa and reach India In 1420 Henry sent an expedition to secure the uninhabited but strategic island of Madeira In 1425 he tried to secure the Canary Islands as well but these were already under firm Castilian control In 1431 another Portuguese expedition reached and annexed the Azores Naval charts of 1339 show that the Canary Islands were already known to Europeans In 1341 Portuguese and Italian explorers prepared a joint expedition In 1342 the Catalans organized an expedition captained by Francesc Desvalers to the Canary Islands that set sail from Majorca In 1344 Pope Clement VI named French admiral Luis de la Cerda Prince of Fortune and sent him to conquer the Canaries In 1402 Jean de Bethencourt and Gadifer de la Salle sailed to conquer the Canary Islands but found them already plundered by the Castilians Although they did conquer the isles Bethencourt s nephew was forced to cede them to Castile in 1418 In 1455 and 1456 two Italian explorers Alvise Cadamosto from Venice and Antoniotto Usodimare from Genoa together with an unnamed Portuguese captain and working for Prince Henry of Portugal followed the Gambia River visiting the land of Senegal while another Italian sailor from Genoa Antonio de Noli also on behalf of Prince Henry explored the Bijagos islands and together with the Portuguese Diogo Gomes the Cape Verde archipelago Antonio de Noli who became the first governor of Cape Verde and the first European colonial governor in Sub Saharan Africa is also considered the discoverer of the First Islands of Cape Verde 8 Along the western and eastern coasts of Africa progress was also steady Portuguese sailors reached Cape Bojador in 1434 and Cape Blanco in 1441 In 1443 they built a fortress on the island of Arguin in modern day Mauritania trading European wheat and cloth for African gold and slaves It was the first time that the semi mythic gold of the Sudan reached Europe without Muslim mediation Most of the slaves were sent to Madeira which became after thorough deforestation the first European plantation colony Between 1444 and 1447 the Portuguese explored the coasts of Senegal Gambia and Guinea In 1456 the Venetian captain Alvise Cadamosto under Portuguese command explored the islands of Cape Verde In 1462 two years after Prince Henry s death Portuguese sailors explored the Bissau islands and named Serra Leoa Lioness Mountains nbsp Map of Western Africa by Lazaro Luis 1563 The large castle in West Africa represents the Sao Jorge da Mina Elmina castle fortified factory In 1469 Fernao Gomes rented the rights of African exploration for five years Under his direction in 1471 the Portuguese reached modern Ghana and settled in A Mina the mine today s Elmina They had finally reached a country with an abundance of gold hence the historical name of Gold Coast that Elmina would eventually receive In 1472 Fernao do Po discovered the island that would bear his name for centuries now Bioko and an estuary abundant in shrimp Portuguese camarao giving its name to Cameroon Soon after the equator was crossed by Europeans Portugal established a base in Sao Tome that after 1485 was settled with criminals After 1497 expelled Spanish and Portuguese Jews were also sent there In 1482 Diogo Cao found the mouth of a large river and learned of the existence of a great kingdom Kongo In 1485 he explored the river upstream as well But the Portuguese wanted above anything else to find a route to India and kept trying to circumnavigate Africa In 1485 the expedition of Joao Afonso d Aveiros with the German astronomer Martin of Behaim as part of the crew explored the Bight of Benin Kingdom of Benin returning information about African king Ogane In 1488 Bartolomeu Dias and his pilot Pero de Alenquer after putting down a mutiny turned a cape where they were caught by a storm naming it Cape of Storms They followed the coast for a while realizing that it kept going eastward with even some tendency to the north Lacking supplies they turned around with the conviction that the far end of Africa had finally been reached Upon their return to Portugal the promising cape was renamed Cape of Good Hope Some years later Christopher Columbus landed in America under rival Castilian command Pope Alexander VI decreed the Inter caetera bull dividing the non Christian parts of the world between the two rival Catholic powers Spain and Portugal Finally in the years 1497 to 1498 Vasco da Gama again with Alenquer as a pilot took a direct route to Cape of Good Hope via St Helena He went beyond the farthest point reached by Dias and named the country Natal Then he sailed northward making land at Quelimane Mozambique and Mombasa where he found Chinese traders and Malindi both in modern Kenya In this town he recruited an Arab pilot who led the Portuguese directly to Calicut On 28 August 1498 King Manuel of Portugal informed the Pope of the good news that Portugal had reached India Egypt and Venice reacted to this news with hostility from the Red Sea they jointly attacked the Portuguese ships that traded with India The Portuguese defeated these ships near Diu in 1509 The Ottoman Empire s indifferent reaction to Portuguese exploration left Portugal in almost exclusive control of trade through the Indian Ocean citation needed They established many bases along the eastern coast of Africa except for Somalia See Ajuran Portuguese wars The Portuguese also captured Aden in 1513 One of the ships under command of Diogo Dias arrived at a coast that was not in East Africa Two years later a chart already showed an elongated island east of Africa that bore the name Madagascar But only a century later between 1613 and 1619 did the Portuguese explore the island in detail They signed treaties with local chieftains and sent the first missionaries who found it impossible to make locals believe in Hell and were eventually expelled citation needed Early modern history edit Portuguese edit nbsp 17th century crucifix copper alloy the Democratic Republic of the CongoThe Portuguese presence in Africa soon interfered with existing Arab trade interests By 1583 the Portuguese established themselves in Zanzibar and on the Swahili coast The Kingdom of Congo was converted to Christianity in 1495 its king taking the name of Joao I The Portuguese also established their trade interests in the Kingdom of Mutapa in the 16th century and in 1629 placed a puppet ruler on the throne The Portuguese and later also the Dutch also became involved in the local slave economy supporting the state of the Jaggas who performed slave raids in the Congo citation needed nbsp Queen Nzinga in peace negotiations with the Portuguese governor in Luanda 1657They also used the Kongo to weaken the neighboring realm of the Ndongo where Queen Nzinga put up a fierce but eventually doomed resistance to Portuguese and Jagga ambitions Portugal intervened militarily in these conflicts creating the basis for their colony of Angola In 1663 after another conflict the royal crown of Kongo was sent to Lisbon Nevertheless a diminished Kongo Kingdom would still exist until 1885 when the last Manicongo Pedro V ceded his almost non existent domain to Portugal The Portuguese dealt with the other major state of Southern Africa the Monomotapa in modern Zimbabwe in a similar manner Portugal intervened in a local war hoping to get abundant mineral riches imposing a protectorate But with the authority of the Monomotapa diminished by the foreign presence anarchy took over The local miners migrated and even buried the mines to prevent them from falling into Portuguese hands When in 1693 the neighboring Cangamires invaded the country the Portuguese accepted their failure and retreated to the coast Dutch edit Beginning in the 17th century the Netherlands began exploring and colonizing Africa While the Dutch were waging a long war of independence against Spain Portugal had temporarily united with Spain starting in 1580 and ending in 1640 As a result the growing colonial ambitions of the Netherlands were mostly directed against Portugal For this purpose two Dutch companies were founded the West Indies Company with power over all the Atlantic Ocean and the East Indies Company with power over the Indian Ocean The West India Company conquered Elmina in 1637 and Luanda in 1640 In 1648 they were expelled from Luanda by the Portuguese Overall the Dutch built 16 forts in different places including Goree in Senegal partly overtaking Portugal as the main slave trading power The Dutch Gold Coast and Dutch Slave Coast were successful But in the colony of Dutch Loango Angola the Portuguese managed to expel the Dutch In Dutch Mauritius the colonization started in 1638 and ended in 1710 with a brief interruption between 1658 and 1666 Numerous governors were appointed but continuous hardships such as cyclones droughts pest infestations lack of food and illnesses finally took their toll and the island was definitively abandoned in 1710 The Dutch left a lasting impact in South Africa a region ignored by Portugal that the Dutch eventually decided to use as a station in their route to East Asia Jan van Riebeeck founded Cape Town in 1652 starting the European exploration and colonization of South Africa Other early modern European presence edit nbsp Map of Fort James Gambia the first English possession in AfricaAlmost at the same time as the Dutch other European colonial powers attempted to create their own outposts in West Africa following in the footsteps of the Portuguese During the Tudor period English merchant adventurers started trading in West Africa coming into conflict with Portuguese troops In 1581 Francis Drake reached the Cape of Good Hope In 1660 the Royal African Company was founded In 1663 the English built Fort James in Gambia One year later another English colonial expedition attempted to settle southern Madagascar resulting in the death of most of the colonists The English forts on the West African coast were eventually taken by the Dutch In 1626 the French Compagnie de l Occident was created This company expelled the Dutch from Senegambia Senegal making it the first French domain in Africa they also conquered the island of Arguin France also set her eyes on Madagascar the island that had been used since 1527 as a stop in travels to India In 1642 the French East India Company founded a settlement in southern Madagascar called Fort Dauphin The commercial results of this settlement were scarce and again most of the settlers died One of the survivors Etienne de Flacourt published a History of the Great Island of Madagascar and Relations which was for a long time the main European source of information about the island Further settlement attempts had no more success but in 1667 Francois Martin led the first expedition to the Malagasy heartland reaching Lake Alaotra In 1665 France officially claimed Madagascar under the name of Ile Dauphine However little colonial activity would take place in Madagascar until the 19th century In 1651 the Duchy of Courland and Semigallia a vassal of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth gained a colony in Africa on St Andrew s Island at the Gambia River and established the Jacob Fort there The Duchy also took other local lands including St Mary Island modern day Banjul and Fort JillifreeIn 1650 Swedish merchants founded Swedish Gold Coast in modern Ghana following the foundation of the Swedish Africa Company 1649 In 1652 the foundations were laid of the fort Carlsborg In 1658 Fort Carlsborg was seized and made part of the Danish Gold Coast colony then to the Dutch Gold Coast Later on the local population started a successful uprising against their new masters and in December 1660 the King of the Akan people subgroup Efutu again offered Sweden control over the area but in 1663 were seized by the Danish after a long defense of Fort Christiansborg The Dano Norwegian colonized the Danish Gold Coast from 1674 to 1755 the settlements were administered by the Danish West India Guinea Company From December 1680 to 29 August 1682 the Portuguese occupied Fort Christiansborg In 1750 it was made a Danish crown colony From 1782 to 1785 it was under British occupation From 1814 it was made part of the territory of Denmark In 1677 King Frederick William I of Prussia sent an expedition to the western coast of Africa The commander of the expedition Captain Blonk signed agreements with the chieftains of the Gold Coast There the Prussians built a fort named Gross Friederichsburg and restored the abandoned Portuguese fort of Arguin But in 1720 the king decided to sell these bases to the Netherlands for 7 000 ducats and 12 slaves six of them chained with pure gold chains In 1777 the Spanish Empire and Portuguese Empire signed the Treaty of San Ildefonso in which Portugal give the islands of Annobon and Fernando Poo in waters of the Gulf of Guinea as well as the Guinean coast between the Niger River and the Ogooue River to Spain The British expressed their interest by the formation in 1788 of The Association for Promoting the Discovery of the Interior Parts of Africa The individuals who formed this club were inspired in part by the Scotsman James Bruce who had ventured to Ethiopia in 1769 and reached the source of the Blue Nile Overall the European exploration of Africa in the 17th and 18th centuries was very limited Instead they were focused on the slave trade which only required coastal bases and items to trade The real exploration of the African interior would start well into the 19th century The 19th century edit See also Colonisation of Africa Scramble for Africa and Timeline of European exploration 19th century nbsp Routes of European explorers in Africa to 1853Although the Napoleonic Wars distracted the attention of Europe from exploratory work in Africa those wars nevertheless exercised great influence on the future of the continent both in Egypt and South Africa The occupation of Egypt 1798 1803 first by France and then by Great Britain resulted in an effort by the Ottoman Empire to regain direct control over that country In 1811 Mehemet Ali established an almost independent state and from 1820 onward established Egyptian rule over eastern Sudan In South Africa the struggle with Napoleon caused the United Kingdom to take possession of the Dutch settlements at the Cape In 1814 Cape Colony which had been continuously occupied by British troops since 1806 was formally ceded to the British crown Meanwhile considerable changes had been made in other parts of the continent The occupation of Algiers by France in 1830 put an end to the piracy of the Barbary states Egyptian authority continued to expand southward with the consequent additions to knowledge of the Nile The city of Zanzibar on the island of that name rapidly attained importance Accounts of a vast inland sea and the discovery of the snow clad mountains of Kilimanjaro in 1840 1848 stimulated the desire for further knowledge about Africa in Europe In the mid 19th century Protestant missions were carrying on active missionary work on the Guinea coast in South Africa and in the Zanzibar dominions Missionaries visited little known regions and peoples and in many instances became explorers and pioneers of trade and empire David Livingstone a Scottish missionary had been engaged since 1840 in work north of the Orange River In 1849 Livingstone crossed the Kalahari Desert from south to north and reached Lake Ngami Between 1851 and 1856 he traversed the continent from west to east discovering the great waterways of the upper Zambezi River In November 1855 Livingstone became the first European to see the famous Victoria Falls named after the Queen of the United Kingdom From 1858 to 1864 the lower Zambezi the Shire River and Lake Nyasa were explored by Livingstone Nyasa had been first reached by the confidential slave of Antonio da Silva Porto a Portuguese trader established at Bie in Angola who crossed Africa during 1853 1856 from Benguella to the mouth of the Rovuma A prime goal for explorers was to locate the source of the River Nile Expeditions by Burton and Speke 1857 1858 and Speke and Grant 1863 located Lake Tanganyika and Lake Victoria It was eventually proved to be the latter from which the Nile flowed Henry Morton Stanley who had in 1871 succeeded in finding and succouring Livingstone originating the famous line Dr Livingstone I presume started again for Zanzibar in 1874 In one of the most memorable of all exploring expeditions in Africa Stanley circumnavigated Victoria Nyanza Lake Victoria and Lake Tanganyika Striking farther inland to the Lualaba he followed that river down to the Atlantic Ocean which he reached in August 1877 and proved it to be the Congo nbsp Comparison of Africa in the years 1880 and 1913In 1895 the British South Africa Company hired the American scout Frederick Russell Burnham to look for minerals and ways to improve river navigation in the central and southern Africa region Burnham oversaw and led the Northern Territories British South Africa Exploration Company expedition that first established that major copper deposits existed north of the Zambezi in North Eastern Rhodesia Along the Kafue River Burnham saw many similarities to copper deposits he had worked in the United States and he encountered native peoples wearing copper bracelets 9 Copper rapidly became the primary export of Central Africa and it remains essential to the economy even today The emergence of modern cartography and placing it at the heart of the approach to scientific exploration meant that a new drive to explore Africa began in Europe particularly Britain According to John Barrow undersecretary to the Admiralty in the early 1800s described British knowledge of the African continent as retrograded and almost blank and pushed for further explorations of the continent 10 This cartographic approach emptied African space of prior political and ethnic identifications in Europeans eyes 11 Explorers were also active in Southern Morocco the Sahara and the Sudan which were traversed in many directions between 1860 and 1875 by Georg Schweinfurth and Gustav Nachtigal 12 These travellers not only added considerably to geographical knowledge but obtained invaluable information concerning the people languages and natural history of the countries in which they sojourned Among the discoveries of Schweinfurth was one that confirmed Greek legends of the existence beyond Egypt of a pygmy race But the first western discoverer of the pygmies of Central Africa was Paul Du Chaillu who found them in the Ogowe district of the west coast in 1865 five years before Schweinfurth s first meeting with them Du Chaillu had previously through journeys in the Gabon region between 1855 and 1859 made popular in Europe the knowledge of the existence of the gorilla whose existence was thought to be as legendary as that of the Pygmies of Aristotle List of Africa explorers editThis article may contain unverified or indiscriminate information in embedded lists Please help clean up the lists by removing items or incorporating them into the text of the article October 2014 15th century edit nbsp Portuguese map of western Africa 1571 nbsp Diogo Cao nbsp Diogo de Azambuja nbsp Bartolomeu Dias nbsp Pero de Alenquer nbsp Joao Infante nbsp Joao Grego nbsp Alvaro Martins nbsp Pero Dias nbsp Gil Eanes nbsp Nuno Tristao nbsp Antao Goncalves nbsp Dinis Dias nbsp Alvaro Fernandes nbsp Pero de Sintra nbsp Fernao do Po nbsp Alvise Cadamosto Venetian born nbsp Antonio de Noli Genoese born nbsp Diogo Gomes nbsp Alvaro Caminha nbsp Joao de Santarem nbsp Pedro Escobar nbsp Duarte Pacheco Pereira nbsp Lopes Goncalves and Atlantic Ocean 15th 16th century edit nbsp Vasco da Gama and discovered sea route to India nbsp Diogo Dias and Indian Ocean discovered Madagascar nbsp Pero da Covilha 15th 16th century diplomat and explorer in Ethiopia nbsp Pedro Alvares Cabral discovered Brazil explored India along the African coast nbsp Sancho de Tovar and Vicente Pegado among others also among the first Europeans ever to contemplate and to describe the ruins of Great Zimbabwe then referred to by the Portuguese as Monomotapa 16th century edit nbsp Paulo Dias de Novais nbsp Antonio Fernandes he travalled to Monomotapa and beyond exploring most of the present day Zimbabwe and possibly northeastern South Africa 13 nbsp Lourenco Marques trader and explorer in East Africa nbsp Francisco Alvares missionary and explorer in Ethiopia nbsp Goncalo da Silveira jesuit missionary travalled up the Zambezi River to the capital of the Monomotapa which appears to have been the N Pande kraal close by the M Zingesi River a southern tributary of the Zambezi 18th century edit nbsp Francisco de Lacerda explorer in Zambia nbsp Mungo Park explored Niger River in 1790s 19th century edit nbsp Heinrich Barth approaching Timbuktu in 1853 nbsp Hermenegildo Capelo and Roberto Ivens in 1883 nbsp Antoine Thomson d Abbadie 1810 1897 Irish born explored Ethiopia nbsp Heinrich Barth nbsp Pierre Savorgnan de Brazza Italian born nbsp Johann Ludwig Burckhardt nbsp Frederick Russell Burnham 1861 1947 an American explorer of south west central and east Africa nbsp Richard Francis Burton 1821 1890 African Great Lakes nbsp Rene Caillie nbsp Hermenegildo Capelo nbsp Roberto Ivens nbsp Candido Jose da Costa Cardoso visited Lake Malawi also known as Lake Nyasa or Lake Niassa in 1846 nbsp Paul Du Chaillu nbsp Hugh Clapperton 1788 1827 explored west and central Africa nbsp Victor de Compiegne 1846 1877 explored Gabon nbsp Dixon Denham 1786 1828 explored west central Africa nbsp James Frederic Elton 1840 1877 nbsp Emil Holub nbsp Ignatius Knoblecher 1819 1858 explored the White Nile basin nbsp Alexander Gordon Laing 1793 1826 nbsp Macgregor Laird 1808 1861 nbsp Richard Lemon Lander 1804 1834 nbsp Harry Johnston 1858 1927 nbsp Frederick John Jackson 1860 1929 explored Uganda nbsp Oskar Lenz 1848 1925 expeditions in 1879 80 trans Sahara and 1885 87 Congo nbsp David Livingstone 1813 1873 nbsp Emin Pasha Relief Expedition nbsp John Kirk 1832 1922 nbsp Frederick Lugard 1858 1945 nbsp Joseph Thomson 1858 1895 African Great Lakes nbsp Samuel Baker 1821 1893 explored Uganda and the Sudan nbsp Arthur Henry Neumann 1850 1907 explored what has since become Kenya and Uganda nbsp Charles Henri Pobeguin 1856 1951 explored French Africa nbsp Luigi Robecchi Bricchetti 1855 1926 nbsp Carlo Piaggia nbsp Serpa Pinto soldier and colonizer of Africa nbsp Antonio da Silva Porto nbsp Arthur Henry Neumann 1850 1907 nbsp Manuel Iradier 1854 1911 Explorer of Equatorial Guinea nbsp Vittorio Bottego 1860 1897 nbsp Giuseppe Maria Giulietti 1847 1881 nbsp Prince Luigi Amedeo Duke of the Abruzzi 1873 1933 nbsp Georg Schweinfurth Latvian born nbsp Frederick Courtney Selous 1851 1917 nbsp Henry Morton Stanley 1841 1904 Welsh born nbsp William Edgar Geil 1 October 1865 Doylestown Pennsylvania 11 April 1925 Venice nbsp John Hanning Speke 1827 1864 discovered the source of the Nile nbsp James Hingston Tuckey 1776 1816 Irish born nbsp Robert Bruce Napoleon Walker 1832 1901 explored Gabon as a trader for Hatton amp CooksonEarly 20th century edit nbsp Jan Czekanowski nbsp William Edgar Geil nbsp Kazimierz NowakSee also editSaharan explorers List of European colonies in Africa Cartography of Africa Age of DiscoveryReferences edit Alan B Lloyd Herodotus Book II 1975 1988 Leiden Lloyd Alan B 1977 Necho and the Red Sea Some Considerations Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 63 142 155 doi 10 1177 030751337706300122 JSTOR 3856314 S2CID 192316548 Alan Lloyd suggests that the Greeks at this time understood that anyone going south far enough and then turning west would have the sun on their right but found it unbelievable that Africa reached so far south He suggests that It is extremely unlikely that an Egyptian king would or could have acted as Necho is depicted as doing and that the story might have been triggered by the failure of Sataspes attempt to circumnavigate Africa under Xerxes the Great See also Jona Lendering The circumnavigation of Africa Archived 16 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine Livius The Periplus of Hanno a voyage of discovery down the west African coast 1912 Harden Donald 1971 1962 The Phoenicians Harmondsworth Penguin ISBN 0 14 021375 9 Some taking Hanno to the Cameroons or even Gabon while others say he stopped at Sierre Leone Harden 1971 p 169 R C C Law 1979 North Africa in the period of Phoenician and Greek colonization In Fage J D ed The Cambridge History of Africa Volume 2 Cambridge University Press p 135 ISBN 9780521215923 Retrieved 20 February 2016 L Ange Gerald 17 April 2012 The White Africans From Colonisation To Liberation Jonathan Ball Publishers ISBN 978 1 86842 491 7 The limit of Ptolemy s knowledge in the west is Cape Spartel 35 48 N while he does assume that the coast eventually retreats in a Great Gulf of the Western Ocean this is not likely based on any knowledge of the Gulf of Guinea Eric Anderson Walker The Cambridge history of the British Empire Volume 7 Part 1 1963 p 66 In the east Ptolemy is aware of the Red Sea Sinus Arabicus and the protrusion of the Horn of Africa describing the gulf south of the Horn of Africa as Sinus Barbaricus Astengo C Balla M Brigati I Ferrada de Noli M Gomes L Hall T Pires V Rosetti C Da Noli a Capo Verde Antonio de Noli e l inizio delle scoperte del Nuovo Mondo Marco Sabatelli Editore Savona 2013 ISBN 9788888449821 4 Burnham Frederick Russell 1899 Northern Rhodesia In Wills Walter H ed Bulawayo Up to date Being a General Sketch of Rhodesia Simpkin Marshall Hamilton Kent amp Co pp 177 180 Kennedy Dane 1 March 2013 The Last Blank Spaces Harvard University Press p 12 ISBN 978 0 674 07497 2 Kennedy Dane 1 March 2013 The Last Blank Spaces Harvard University Press pp 12 15 ISBN 978 0 674 07497 2 Sahara and Sudan The Results of Six Years Travel in Africa World Digital Library 1879 1889 Retrieved 2 October 2013 http www rhodesia nl rhodesiana volume19 pdf bare URL PDF Bibliography editMichael Crowder The Story of Nigeria Faber and Faber London 1978 1962 Basil Davidson The African Past Penguin Books Harmondsworth 1966 1964 Donald Harden The Phoenicians Penguin Harmondsworth 1971 1962 Herodotus transl Aubrey de Selincourt Penguin Harmondsworth 1968 1954 Historia Universal Siglo XXI Africa desde la prehistoria hasta los anos sesenta Pierre Bertaux 1972 Siglo XXI Editores S A ISBN 84 323 0069 1 Vincent B Khapoya The African Experience Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River New Jersey 1998 1994 Louise Levanthes When China Ruled the Seas Oxford University Press New York and Oxford 1994 Kevin Shillington History of Africa St Martin s Press New York 1995 1989 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title European exploration of Africa amp oldid 1184020672, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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