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Rio Nuñez incident

The Rio Nuñez incident or Rio Nuñez affair (French: Affaire du Rio Nuñez, prise de Debokké) was an international incident in 1849 on the Nunez River (Rio Nuñez) near Boké, in modern-day Guinea. The incident occurred as a result of a local power struggle in which vessels of a joint Belgian and French naval force fired on an enemy village, which resulted in inventory losses incurred by two British traders.[1]

Belgian and French warships during the Rio Nuñez Incident by Paul Jean Clays

Background edit

French-British rivalry edit

During the 1840s and 50s, West Africa was the site of fledgling colonial rivalry between European powers. The Nuñez region lay between the French colony of Senegal and British Gambia and Sierra Leone. French traders were increasingly challenged by commercial trading expeditions from Britain, Belgium and America.[citation needed]

Early Belgian colonial ambitions in the region edit

Because of his first marriage to Princess Charlotte of Wales, which would have made him prince consort of the United Kingdom had she not died at 21, Leopold I had been studying Britain's colonial questions and had become a strong partisan of colonisation.[2] Once he accepted the Belgian throne, he was thus convinced that the new country needed its own colonies.[2] The Rio Nunez had been a colonial interest of Belgium since 1845 but was being set up more as a trading outpost than a true colony.[1] One of the first merchants to take an interest in the region was Abraham Cohen,[1] who persuaded the King that it was a worthy opportunity.[3] The Belgian Royal Navy's Louise Marie schooner was thus sent to investigate the region on 17 December 1847; it arrived in the Bay of Gorée on 11 January 1848.[3] They stayed in the Rio Nunez in February and March and learned that the river had the potential to be successfully exploited except during the rainy season.[3]

Local power struggle edit

 
Lamina, King of the Nalous.

The indigenous people were split into two groups ever since the death of the king of the Landoumas in late 1846, who occupied the upper section of the river beyond Rapass (or Ropaz). One group supported Tongo who was also the Britain's choice (at the beginning), and another supported Mayoré, his brother, and was supported by France (at the beginning). Mayoré had also gained the support of the Nalous, who had pledged their armed support.[3] That angered Tongo, who set fire to Walkaria but was beaten by Joura, the brother of Lamina, King of the Nalous, and was forced to retreat inland. The proxy war led to a treaty between France and Britain that forbade either party from intervening on the river.[3] Van Haverbeke, the Belgian commanding officer, seized the opportunity by signing a convention with Lamina where the latter ceded to the King of the Belgians both sides of the Rio Nunez, up to one mile inland, from the backwater upstream of Rapass to the backwater downstream of Victoria.[3] Against regular payments by the Belgians, he would also provide them with protection.[3] The Louise-Marie then sailed to Belgium and back down to the Rio Nunez to bring the treaty that was to be ratified.[3] Meanwhile, Cohen was to be in charge of commerce in the region.[3] Their return was not well received by the French regional commander, Édouard Bouët-Willaumez, who thought the river to be very important to France and was unhappy to have been ordered by his government to protect the Belgian at all cost.[3] On 11 February 1849, Lamina came aboard the schooner and received to his great pleasure his uniform complete with epaulettes from the Belgians.[3]

 
The French-Belgian commercial outpost of Bicaise on the Rio Nunez.

Once the treaty with Lamina signed, the Belgians wanted to make an agreement with Mayoré, who was becoming less and less hospitable to Europeans.[3] Mayoré had expulsed Ismaël Tay, a Frenchman and his own brother in-law, and kidnapped his wife-and child, whom he felt threatened by since he could one day have a claim to his throne.[3] The Belgians organised an expedition with Bicaise, a local merchant, and discovered Mayoré's people constructing a building meant for two English merchants, Braithwaith and Marin, on land owned by Bicaise without his authorisation.[3] Brathwaith and Marin had arrived in the area at the same time as the Louise-Marie and had made many gifts to Mayoré to earn his favour.[3] The Belgian officers then disembarked and set up near Bicaise's house which was on a plateau. They became surrounded by about 400 locals armed with rifles. When the Belgians aimed at Mayoré's hut, the locals soon began pleading not to destroy their village, declared that Mayoré was a drunk oppressor and confirmed Ismael's complaints. Van Haverbeke then went to see Mayoré and demanded an answer from him by 11pm or to except an attack. At around 10pm, they received a positive answer and left the village with Ismael's wife and child, who had been saved without Mayoré's knowledge.[3]

On the 27th, Van Haverbeke learned of Mayore's plans to take back the wife and child and ordered his troops to inspect every ship going up river. On the same day, the British ship Favourite's commander went to see Haverbeke to protest his actions on account of Britain's treaty with France, but he admitted that his superiors had misinterpreted the treaty, which did not concern Belgium or any other third parties. Ismael then learned that his family had been taken prisoner again by Mayoré. French and Belgians then met and decided to overthrow Mayoré and name Lamina as his successor. A party was sent to make a last effort to get the prisoners back. Meanwhile, the locals told the expedition that the two British traders had brought about 30 guns the day before to Mayoré's forces while they flew the white flag.[3] Later that day, a delegation of Foulhas arrived and denounced Mayoré, and Landouma dignitaries (Mayore's own peoples) came to say that Mayore was acting under influence of the British traders and that unlike their king, the Landouma chiefs wanted to give Ismael's family back.[3] Five days later, on the 16th, after many talks between French and Belgian command, the blockade of the river by the Louise-Marie had started. On the 17th, a letter was sent to the British merchants to leave the area or to have their possessions destroyed by the attack. Two days later, they arrived at Bicaise's home with a peace offering on behalf of Mayore, but that was distrusted by the French and the Belgians, who held the view that they could not trust Mayore. On the 20th, a letter from the Britons was received that stated that they would hold the French and Belgian governments responsible of any damage that they would suffer, as they refused to leave Boké.[3] On the 23rd, Tongo and 150 of his men arrived holding red flags. They were then armed by the French. On the same day, the French intercepted the two British fleeing traders and kept them on board until the attack was over.[3] An official declaration of war was then sent to Mayore.

Attack edit

On the following morning, 24 March 1848[inconsistent], the high grounds were full of Mayore's men, armed with rifles. On the merchants' hut, the Union Jack and a white flag was visible.[3] The French officer de la Tocnaye decided to open fire on the village to set it on fire, an action that was soon followed by the other ship. After about 15 minutes, the landing was ordered to launch and soon attained the riverside. The men were supported by highly-successful mortar fire from the warships.[3] Boké was taken within 40 minutes, with the village burned along with the British merchants' stores.[3][4]

 
The French regional commander, Admiral Édouard Bouët-Willaumez.

Aftermath edit

Bouët-Willaumez hoped that the Nunez region could be formally annexed as a protectorate of the French colonial empire. The attack, far from securing the region for France, went contrary to his plans. Both France and Belgium led a cover-up.[citation needed] Attempts by the British Prime Minister, Viscount Palmerston, to force France to pay reparations for the incident were ultimately unsuccessful and the affair lasted four years.[citation needed]

The incident formed part of the "prelude to the Scramble for Africa" and, as Bouët-Willaumez had hoped, did lead to increased French control of the Nunez. In 1866, French forces occupied Boké. The affair was therefore one of the first signs of future French hegemony in West Africa in what would become French West Africa (AOF).[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Ansiaux, Robert Raymond (2006). Early Belgian Colonial Efforts: The Long and Fateful Shadow of Leopold I. Arlington: University of Texas at Arlington. p.156.
  2. ^ a b Maroy, Ch. (1930). "La colonie belge du Rio Nunez et l'expédition franco-belge de Bokié en 1849". Bulletin d'Études et d'Informations de l'École supérieure du Commerce, Antwerp, September–October edition, P.47.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Leconte, Louis (1952). Les Ancêtres de Notre Force Navale. Brussels, Pauwels Fils. Pp. 161-199: "L'affaire du Rio Nunez".
  4. ^ Braithwaite, Roderick (1996). "The Rio Nunez Affair: New perspectives on a significant event in nineteenth century Franco-British colonial rivalry". Revue française d'histoire d'outre-mer. 83 (311): 25–45. doi:10.3406/outre.1996.3428.

Sources edit

  • Anrys, H., de Decker de Brandeken, J-M., Eyngenraam, P., Liénart, J-C., Poskin, E., Poullet, E., Vandensteen, P., Van Schoonbeek, P., Verleyen, J. (1992). La Force Navale - De l'Amirauté de Flandre à la Force Navale Belge. Comité pour l'Étude de l'Histoire de la Marine Militaire en Belgique, Tielt, Impremerie Lannoo. pp. 111–115: "L'affaire du Rio Nunez".
  • Braithwaite, Roderick (1996). "The Rio Nunez Affair: New perspectives on a significant event in nineteenth century Franco-British colonial rivalry". Revue française d'histoire d'outre-mer. 83 (311): 25–45. doi:10.3406/outre.1996.3428.
  • Suret-Canale, Jean (1980). "Guinea in the Colonial System 1". Essais d'Histoire africaine. London: Hurst: 111–147.
  • Demougeot, A. (April–June 1938). "Histoire du Nunez". Bulletin du Comité d'Études Historiques et Scientifiques de l'A.O.F. 21 (2): 177–289.
  • Braithwaite, Roderick (1996). Palmerston and Africa: the Rio Nunez affair, Competition, Diplomacy and Justice. London: British Academic Press. ISBN 978-1860641091.
  • Ansiaux, Robert Raymond (2006). Early Belgian Colonial Efforts: The Long and Fateful Shadow of Leopold I. Arlington: University of Texas at Arlington.
  • Du Colombier Thémistocle (1920). Une expédition Franco-Belge en Guinée. La Campagne de le goëlette belge Marie-Louise dans la Colonie Belge du Rio Nunez (1849), Bulletin de la Société Belge d'Études coloniales.
  • Leconte, Louis (1952). Les Ancêtres de Notre Force Navale. Brussels, Pauwels Fils. pp. 161–199: "L'affaire du Rio Nunez".
  • Maroy, Ch. (1930). "La colonie belge du Rio Nunez et l'expédition franco-belge de Bokié en 1849". Bulletin d'Études et d'Informations de l'École supérieure du Commerce, Antwerp, September–October edition, P.47.
  • Leconte, Louis (1945), La marine de guerre belge (1830-1940), Brussels, La Renaissance du Livre, coll. « "Notre Passé" », 1945, chap. 5 (« Le service Ostende-Douvres. L'affaire du Rio-Nunez. »), pp. 51–64.

External links edit

  • Nunez Affair at the Tubman Institute

nuñez, incident, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, april, 202. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Rio Nunez incident news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message The Rio Nunez incident or Rio Nunez affair French Affaire du Rio Nunez prise de Debokke was an international incident in 1849 on the Nunez River Rio Nunez near Boke in modern day Guinea The incident occurred as a result of a local power struggle in which vessels of a joint Belgian and French naval force fired on an enemy village which resulted in inventory losses incurred by two British traders 1 Belgian and French warships during the Rio Nunez Incident by Paul Jean Clays Contents 1 Background 1 1 French British rivalry 1 2 Early Belgian colonial ambitions in the region 1 3 Local power struggle 2 Attack 3 Aftermath 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksBackground editFrench British rivalry edit During the 1840s and 50s West Africa was the site of fledgling colonial rivalry between European powers The Nunez region lay between the French colony of Senegal and British Gambia and Sierra Leone French traders were increasingly challenged by commercial trading expeditions from Britain Belgium and America citation needed Early Belgian colonial ambitions in the region edit Because of his first marriage to Princess Charlotte of Wales which would have made him prince consort of the United Kingdom had she not died at 21 Leopold I had been studying Britain s colonial questions and had become a strong partisan of colonisation 2 Once he accepted the Belgian throne he was thus convinced that the new country needed its own colonies 2 The Rio Nunez had been a colonial interest of Belgium since 1845 but was being set up more as a trading outpost than a true colony 1 One of the first merchants to take an interest in the region was Abraham Cohen 1 who persuaded the King that it was a worthy opportunity 3 The Belgian Royal Navy s Louise Marie schooner was thus sent to investigate the region on 17 December 1847 it arrived in the Bay of Goree on 11 January 1848 3 They stayed in the Rio Nunez in February and March and learned that the river had the potential to be successfully exploited except during the rainy season 3 Local power struggle edit nbsp Lamina King of the Nalous The indigenous people were split into two groups ever since the death of the king of the Landoumas in late 1846 who occupied the upper section of the river beyond Rapass or Ropaz One group supported Tongo who was also the Britain s choice at the beginning and another supported Mayore his brother and was supported by France at the beginning Mayore had also gained the support of the Nalous who had pledged their armed support 3 That angered Tongo who set fire to Walkaria but was beaten by Joura the brother of Lamina King of the Nalous and was forced to retreat inland The proxy war led to a treaty between France and Britain that forbade either party from intervening on the river 3 Van Haverbeke the Belgian commanding officer seized the opportunity by signing a convention with Lamina where the latter ceded to the King of the Belgians both sides of the Rio Nunez up to one mile inland from the backwater upstream of Rapass to the backwater downstream of Victoria 3 Against regular payments by the Belgians he would also provide them with protection 3 The Louise Marie then sailed to Belgium and back down to the Rio Nunez to bring the treaty that was to be ratified 3 Meanwhile Cohen was to be in charge of commerce in the region 3 Their return was not well received by the French regional commander Edouard Bouet Willaumez who thought the river to be very important to France and was unhappy to have been ordered by his government to protect the Belgian at all cost 3 On 11 February 1849 Lamina came aboard the schooner and received to his great pleasure his uniform complete with epaulettes from the Belgians 3 nbsp The French Belgian commercial outpost of Bicaise on the Rio Nunez Once the treaty with Lamina signed the Belgians wanted to make an agreement with Mayore who was becoming less and less hospitable to Europeans 3 Mayore had expulsed Ismael Tay a Frenchman and his own brother in law and kidnapped his wife and child whom he felt threatened by since he could one day have a claim to his throne 3 The Belgians organised an expedition with Bicaise a local merchant and discovered Mayore s people constructing a building meant for two English merchants Braithwaith and Marin on land owned by Bicaise without his authorisation 3 Brathwaith and Marin had arrived in the area at the same time as the Louise Marie and had made many gifts to Mayore to earn his favour 3 The Belgian officers then disembarked and set up near Bicaise s house which was on a plateau They became surrounded by about 400 locals armed with rifles When the Belgians aimed at Mayore s hut the locals soon began pleading not to destroy their village declared that Mayore was a drunk oppressor and confirmed Ismael s complaints Van Haverbeke then went to see Mayore and demanded an answer from him by 11pm or to except an attack At around 10pm they received a positive answer and left the village with Ismael s wife and child who had been saved without Mayore s knowledge 3 On the 27th Van Haverbeke learned of Mayore s plans to take back the wife and child and ordered his troops to inspect every ship going up river On the same day the British ship Favourite s commander went to see Haverbeke to protest his actions on account of Britain s treaty with France but he admitted that his superiors had misinterpreted the treaty which did not concern Belgium or any other third parties Ismael then learned that his family had been taken prisoner again by Mayore French and Belgians then met and decided to overthrow Mayore and name Lamina as his successor A party was sent to make a last effort to get the prisoners back Meanwhile the locals told the expedition that the two British traders had brought about 30 guns the day before to Mayore s forces while they flew the white flag 3 Later that day a delegation of Foulhas arrived and denounced Mayore and Landouma dignitaries Mayore s own peoples came to say that Mayore was acting under influence of the British traders and that unlike their king the Landouma chiefs wanted to give Ismael s family back 3 Five days later on the 16th after many talks between French and Belgian command the blockade of the river by the Louise Marie had started On the 17th a letter was sent to the British merchants to leave the area or to have their possessions destroyed by the attack Two days later they arrived at Bicaise s home with a peace offering on behalf of Mayore but that was distrusted by the French and the Belgians who held the view that they could not trust Mayore On the 20th a letter from the Britons was received that stated that they would hold the French and Belgian governments responsible of any damage that they would suffer as they refused to leave Boke 3 On the 23rd Tongo and 150 of his men arrived holding red flags They were then armed by the French On the same day the French intercepted the two British fleeing traders and kept them on board until the attack was over 3 An official declaration of war was then sent to Mayore Attack editOn the following morning 24 March 1848 inconsistent the high grounds were full of Mayore s men armed with rifles On the merchants hut the Union Jack and a white flag was visible 3 The French officer de la Tocnaye decided to open fire on the village to set it on fire an action that was soon followed by the other ship After about 15 minutes the landing was ordered to launch and soon attained the riverside The men were supported by highly successful mortar fire from the warships 3 Boke was taken within 40 minutes with the village burned along with the British merchants stores 3 4 nbsp The French regional commander Admiral Edouard Bouet Willaumez Aftermath editBouet Willaumez hoped that the Nunez region could be formally annexed as a protectorate of the French colonial empire The attack far from securing the region for France went contrary to his plans Both France and Belgium led a cover up citation needed Attempts by the British Prime Minister Viscount Palmerston to force France to pay reparations for the incident were ultimately unsuccessful and the affair lasted four years citation needed The incident formed part of the prelude to the Scramble for Africa and as Bouet Willaumez had hoped did lead to increased French control of the Nunez In 1866 French forces occupied Boke The affair was therefore one of the first signs of future French hegemony in West Africa in what would become French West Africa AOF citation needed See also editBelgian colonial empire Guillaume DelcourtReferences edit a b c Ansiaux Robert Raymond 2006 Early Belgian Colonial Efforts The Long and Fateful Shadow of Leopold I Arlington University of Texas at Arlington p 156 a b Maroy Ch 1930 La colonie belge du Rio Nunez et l expedition franco belge de Bokie en 1849 Bulletin d Etudes et d Informations de l Ecole superieure du Commerce Antwerp September October edition P 47 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Leconte Louis 1952 Les Ancetres de Notre Force Navale Brussels Pauwels Fils Pp 161 199 L affaire du Rio Nunez Braithwaite Roderick 1996 The Rio Nunez Affair New perspectives on a significant event in nineteenth century Franco British colonial rivalry Revue francaise d histoire d outre mer 83 311 25 45 doi 10 3406 outre 1996 3428 Sources editAnrys H de Decker de Brandeken J M Eyngenraam P Lienart J C Poskin E Poullet E Vandensteen P Van Schoonbeek P Verleyen J 1992 La Force Navale De l Amiraute de Flandre a la Force Navale Belge Comite pour l Etude de l Histoire de la Marine Militaire en Belgique Tielt Impremerie Lannoo pp 111 115 L affaire du Rio Nunez Braithwaite Roderick 1996 The Rio Nunez Affair New perspectives on a significant event in nineteenth century Franco British colonial rivalry Revue francaise d histoire d outre mer 83 311 25 45 doi 10 3406 outre 1996 3428 Suret Canale Jean 1980 Guinea in the Colonial System 1 Essais d Histoire africaine London Hurst 111 147 Demougeot A April June 1938 Histoire du Nunez Bulletin du Comite d Etudes Historiques et Scientifiques de l A O F 21 2 177 289 Braithwaite Roderick 1996 Palmerston and Africa the Rio Nunez affair Competition Diplomacy and Justice London British Academic Press ISBN 978 1860641091 Ansiaux Robert Raymond 2006 Early Belgian Colonial Efforts The Long and Fateful Shadow of Leopold I Arlington University of Texas at Arlington Du Colombier Themistocle 1920 Une expedition Franco Belge en Guinee La Campagne de le goelette belge Marie Louise dans la Colonie Belge du Rio Nunez 1849 Bulletin de la Societe Belge d Etudes coloniales Leconte Louis 1952 Les Ancetres de Notre Force Navale Brussels Pauwels Fils pp 161 199 L affaire du Rio Nunez Maroy Ch 1930 La colonie belge du Rio Nunez et l expedition franco belge de Bokie en 1849 Bulletin d Etudes et d Informations de l Ecole superieure du Commerce Antwerp September October edition P 47 Leconte Louis 1945 La marine de guerre belge 1830 1940 Brussels La Renaissance du Livre coll Notre Passe 1945 chap 5 Le service Ostende Douvres L affaire du Rio Nunez pp 51 64 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rio Nunez Incident Nunez Affair at the Tubman Institute Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rio Nunez incident amp oldid 1216339815, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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