The last colony in Africa. History of the colonization of Africa. Indigenous people of Africa

Finance

European colonization affected not only the North and South America, Australia and other lands, but the entire African continent. From the former power of Ancient Egypt, which you studied in the 5th grade, there is no trace left. Now all these are colonies divided among different European countries. In this lesson, you will learn how the process of European colonization took place in Africa and whether there were any attempts to resist this process.

In 1882, popular discontent broke out in Egypt, and England sent its troops into the country under the pretext of protecting its economic interests, which meant the Suez Canal.

Another powerful state that extended its influence to the African states in modern times was Omani empire. Oman was located in the eastern part of the Arabian Peninsula. Active Arab traders carried out trading operations along almost the entire coast indian ocean. As a result, numerous trade trading posts(small trading colonies of merchants of a certain country on the territory of another state) on the coast of East Africa, on the Comoros and in the north of the island of Madagascar. It was with the Arab traders that the Portuguese navigator encountered Vasco da Gama(Fig. 2), when he managed to go around Africa and pass through the Mozambique Strait to the shores of East Africa: modern Tanzania and Kenya.

Rice. 2. Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama ()

It was this event that marked the beginning of European colonization. The Omani empire could not stand the competition with the Portuguese and other European navigators and collapsed. The remnants of this empire are considered to be the Sultanate of Zanzibar and a few sultanates on the coast of East Africa. By the end of the 19th century, they all disappeared under the onslaught of Europeans.

The first colonizers who settled in sub-Saharan Africa were Portuguese. First, the sailors of the XV century, and then Vasco da Gama, who in 1497-1499. rounded Africa and reached India by sea, exerted their influence on the policy of local rulers. As a result, the coasts of countries such as Angola and Mozambique were explored by them by the beginning of the 16th century.

The Portuguese extended their influence to other lands, some of which were considered less effective. The main interest for the European colonizers was the slave trade. It was not necessary to found large colonies, countries set up their trading posts on the coast of Africa and were engaged in the exchange of European products for slaves or conquest campaigns to capture slaves and went to trade them in America or Europe. This slave trade continued in Africa until the end of the 19th century. Gradually different countries banned slavery and the slave trade. At the end of the 19th century, there was a hunt for slave-owning ships, but all this did not have great benefit. Slavery continued to exist.

The conditions of the slaves were monstrous (Fig. 3). In the process of transporting slaves across the Atlantic Ocean, at least half died. Their bodies were thrown overboard. There was no record of slaves. At least 3 million people, and modern historians claim that up to 15 million, Africa lost due to the slave trade. The scale of trade changed from century to century, and it reached its peak at the turn of the 18th-19th centuries.

Rice. 3. African slaves are transported across the Atlantic Ocean to America ()

After the appearance of the Portuguese colonialists, other European countries began to claim the territory of Africa. In 1652, Holland showed activity. At that time Jan van Riebeeck(Fig. 4) captured a point in the extreme south of the African continent and named it Kapstad. In 1806, this city was captured by the British and renamed Cape Town(Fig. 5). The city still exists today and bears the same name. It was from this point that the spread of the Dutch colonialists throughout South Africa began. The Dutch colonizers called themselves Boers(Fig. 6) (translated from Dutch - “peasant”). Peasants made up the bulk of the Dutch colonists who lacked land in Europe.

Rice. 4. Jan van Riebeeck ()

Rice. 5. Cape Town on the map of Africa ()

Just like in North America, the colonists clashed with the Indians, in South Africa, the Dutch colonists clashed with the local peoples. First of all, with the people scythe, the Dutch called them kaffirs. In the struggle for the territory, which received the name Kaffir Wars, the Dutch colonists gradually pushed the native tribes further and further to the center of Africa. The territories they captured, however, were small.

In 1806, the British arrived in southern Africa. The Boers did not like this and refused to submit to the British crown. They began to retreat further north. So there were people who called themselves Boer Settlers, or Burtrekers. This great campaign continued for several decades. It led to the formation of two independent Boer states in the northern part of present-day South Africa: Transvaal and the Orange Republic(Fig. 7).

Rice. 7. Independent Boer States: Transvaal and Orange Free State ()

The British were unhappy with this retreat of the Boers, because she wanted to control the entire territory of southern Africa, and not just the coast. As a result, in 1877-1881. The first Anglo-Boer War took place. The British demanded that these territories become part of the British Empire, but the Boers strongly disagreed with this. It is generally accepted that about 3,000 Boers took part in this war, and the entire English army was 1,200 people. The resistance of the Boers was so fierce that England abandoned attempts to influence the independent Boer states.

But in 1885 in the area of ​​modern Johannesburg, deposits of gold and diamonds were discovered. The economic factor in colonization was always the most important, and England could not allow the Boers to benefit from gold and diamonds. In 1899-1902. The second Anglo-Boer War broke out. Despite the fact that the war was fought on the territory of Africa, it took place, in fact, between two European peoples: the Dutch (Boers) and the British. The bitter war ended with the fact that the Boer republics lost their independence and were forced to become part of the South African colony of Great Britain.

Together with the Dutch, the Portuguese and the British, representatives of other European powers quickly appeared in Africa. Thus, in the 1830s, active colonization activities were carried out by France, which captured vast territories in North and Equatorial Africa. Actively colonized and Belgium, especially during the reign of the king LeopoldII. The Belgians created their own colony in central Africa called Free State of the Congo. It existed from 1885 to 1908. It was believed that this was the personal territory of the Belgian king Leopold II. This state was only in words m. In fact, it was inherent in the violation of all the principles of international law, and the local population was driven to work on the royal plantations. A huge number of people on these plantations died. There were special punitive detachments that were supposed to punish those who collected too little rubber(sap of the hevea tree, the main raw material for the manufacture of rubber). As proof that the punitive detachments had coped with their task, they had to bring to the point where the Belgian army was located, the severed hands and feet of the people they were punishing.

As a result, almost all African territories by the endXIXcenturies were divided among the European powers(Fig. 8). The activity of European countries in annexing new territories was so great that this era was called "race for Africa" ​​or "fight for Africa". The Portuguese, who owned the territory of modern Angola and Mozambique, counted on the capture of the intermediate territory, Zimbabwe, Zambia and Malawi, and, thus, on the creation of a network of their colonies on the African continent. But it was impossible to implement this project, since the British had their own plans for these territories. Prime Minister of the Cape Colony, based in Cape Town, Cecil John Rhodes, believed that Great Britain should create a chain of its own colonies. It should start in Egypt (in Cairo) and end in Cape Town. Thus, the British hoped to build their own colonial strip and stretch the railway along this strip from Cairo to Cape Town. After the First World War, the British managed to build the chain, but the railway was unfinished. It doesn't exist to this day.

Rice. 8. Possessions of European colonialists in Africa by the beginning of the 20th century ()

In 1884-1885, the European powers held a conference in Berlin, which made a decision on the question of which country belongs to this or that sphere of influence in Africa. As a result, almost the entire territory of the continent was divided between them.

As a result, by the end of the 19th - beginning of the 20th century, Europeans had mastered the entire territory of the continent. Only 2 semi-independent states remained: Ethiopia and Liberia. This is due to the fact that Ethiopia was difficult to colonize, because one of the main tasks of the colonizers was the spread of Christianity, and Ethiopia since the early Middle Ages has been a Christian state.

Liberia, in fact, was a territory created by the United States. It was on this territory that former American slaves were taken out of the United States by decision of President Monroe.

As a result, the British, French, Germans, Italians and other nations began to conflict in England. The Germans and Italians, who had few colonies, were dissatisfied with the decisions of the Berlin Congress. Other countries also wanted to get their hands on as much territory as possible. AT 1898 year between the British and French occurred fascist incident. Major Marchand of the French army captured a stronghold in modern South Sudan. The British considered these lands their own, and the French wanted to spread their influence there. As a result, a conflict broke out, during which relations between England and France deteriorated greatly.

Naturally, the Africans resisted the European colonizers, but the forces were unequal. Only one successful attempt can be singled out in the 19th century, when Muhammad ibn abd-Allah, who called himself Mahdi(Fig. 9), created a theocratic state in Sudan in 1881. It was a state based on the principles of Islam. In 1885, he managed to capture Khartoum (the capital of Sudan), and even though the Mahdi himself did not live long, this state existed until 1898 and was one of the few truly independent territories on the African continent.

Rice. 9. Muhammad ibn abd-Allah (Mahdi) ()

The most famous of the Ethiopian rulers of this era fought against European influence. MenelikII, who ruled from 1893 to 1913. He united the country, carried out active conquests and successfully resisted the Italians. He also supported a good relationship with Russia, despite the significant remoteness of these two countries.

But all these attempts at confrontation were only isolated and could not give a serious result.

The revival of Africa began only in the second half of the 20th century, when African countries began to gain independence one after another.

Bibliography

1. Vedyushkin V.A., Burin S.N. History textbook for grade 8. - M.: Bustard, 2008.

2. Drogovoz I. The Anglo-Boer War of 1899-1902. - Minsk: Harvest, 2004.

3. Nikitina I.A. Capture of the Boer Republics by England (1899-1902). - M., 1970.

4. Noskov V.V., Andreevskaya T.P. General history. 8th grade. - M., 2013.

5. Yudovskaya A.Ya. General history. History of the New Age, 1800-1900, Grade 8. - M., 2012.

6. Yakovleva E.V. The colonial division of Africa and the position of Russia: the second half of the 19th century. - 1914 - Irkutsk, 2004.

Homework

1. Tell us about European colonization in Egypt. Why didn't the Egyptians want the Suez Canal to open?

2. Tell us about the European colonization of the southern part of the African continent.

3. Who are the Boers and why did the Anglo-Boer Wars break out? What were their results and consequences?

4. Were there attempts to resist European colonization and how did they manifest themselves?

OVERVIEW OF AFRICA

The name "Africa" ​​from the Latin africus - frost-free,

from a tribe of Africans who lived in North Africa.

The Greeks - "Libya".

AFRICA, the second largest continent after Eurasia. 29.2 million km2 (with islands 30.3 million km2).

The Atlantic is washed from the west. approx., from the north - the Mediterranean m., from the north-east. - Red m., with V. - Indian approx. The shores are slightly indented; max. cr. Hall. - Guinean, Somali Peninsula. Geologically, the advantage platform with a Precambrian crystalline base overlain by younger sedimentary rocks. Folded mountains are located only in the northwest. (Atlas) and to the south (Cape Mountains). Wed height above the level of m. 750 m. The relief is dominated by high stepped plains, plateaus and plateaus; in the inner districts - extensive tectonic depressions (Kalahari in South. A., Congo in Central. A., etc.). From the Red m. and to the river. Zambezi Africa is fragmented by the world's largest system of fault depressions (see East African Rift System), partly occupied by lakes (Tanganyika, Nyasa, and others). Along the edges of the depressions are the volcanoes Kilimanjaro (5895 m, the highest point of A.), Kenya, and others. Minerals of world importance: diamonds (South and West A.), gold, uranium (South A.), iron ores, aluminum ( West A.), copper, cobalt, beryllium, lithium (mainly in South A.), phosphorites, oil, natural gas (North and West A.).

In A. to S. and S. from the zone of equiv. climates are followed by zones subeq., tropical. and subtropical. climate. Wed-mon. summer temperatures approx. 25-30oC. In winter, high positive temperatures also predominate. temperatures (10-25 oС), but in the mountains there are temperatures below 0 oС; snow falls annually in the Atlas Mountains. Naib. amount of precipitation in eq. zone (cf. 1500-2000 mm per year), on the coast of the Gulf of Guinea. up to 3000-4000 mm. To the north and south of the equator, precipitation decreases (100 mm or less in deserts). Main the runoff is directed to the Atlantic Ocean: the rivers: the Nile (the longest in Africa), the Congo (Zaire), the Niger, Senegal, the Gambia, the Orange, and others; cr. bass river. Ind. OK. - Zambezi. OK. 1/3A. - area inside runoff in the main time watercourses. Naib. cr. lakes - Victoria, Tanganyika, Nyasa (Malawi). Ch. types of vegetation - savannahs and deserts (the largest - the Sahara), occupying approx. 80% sq. A. Wet equiv. evergreen forests are typical for eq. zone and coastal districts subeq. zones. To the north or south of them - sparse tropical. forests turning into savannahs, and then into deserted savannahs. In the tropical A. (main arr. in reserves) - elephants, rhinos, hippos, zebras, antelopes, etc .; lions, cheetahs, leopards, etc. kr. predators. Numerous monkeys, small predators, rodents; in dry districts, an abundance of reptiles. Lots of birds including ostriches, ibises, flamingos. Termites, locusts, and tsetse fly damage the farm.

Political map of Africa

History of the colonization of Africa

Even at the end of the 19th century, there were only a few feudal monarchies in Africa (in Morocco, Ethiopia, Madagascar), the territories of Egypt, Tripolitania, Cyrenaica, Tunisia were formally part of Ottoman Empire. South of the Sahara (on the territory of Sudan, Mali, Benin), early feudal states also developed, although they were weaker than in northern Africa. The majority of the population lived in a primitive communal system at the level of tribal unions. Bushmen and Pygmies lived in the Stone Age. In general, the history of sub-Saharan Africa is poorly understood.

It began with the journey of Vasco da Gama to India in 1498. Initially, only coastal territories were developed, where Europeans founded trading posts and strongholds for trading in slaves, ivory, gold, etc. In the XVII century, the Portuguese founded colonies in Guinea, Angola, Mozambique, on the so-called. Zanzibar (the coast of modern Kenya), etc., the Dutch are small lands in the Gulf of Guinea and in southern Africa the Cape Colony (it was inhabited by the Boers - the descendants of the Dutch were conquered by Great Britain in 1806, the Boers went deep, where they founded the Transvaal, Natal and the Orange Free state. In 1899-1902 conquered by Great Britain), the French - in Madagascar. By the middle of the 19th century, there was no significant increase in the area of ​​occupied territories in Africa, only new colonizers appeared, primarily the British, who turned around with might and main a little later. By 1870, the Portuguese possessions were localized (Portuguese Guinea, Angola, Mozambique), the Dutch disappeared, but the French expanded (Algeria, Senegal, Ivory Coast, Gabon). The Spaniards penetrated into northern Morocco, Western Sahara and Rio Muni (Eq. Guinea), the British - into the Slave Coast, Gold Coast, Sierra Leone, southern Africa.

The mass penetration of Europeans into the interior of Africa began in the late 70s of the XIX century. The British captured the lands of the Zulu, Northern and Southern Rhodesia, Bechuanaland, Nigeria, Kenya, in 1881-82. Egypt (formally remaining subordinate to the Turkish Sultan, Egypt was an English colony), in 1898 Sudan (formally Sudan was an Anglo-Egyptian co-ownership). In the 1880s, the French conquered vast but sparsely populated territories in the Sahara, Sahel and equatorial Africa (French West Africa, French Equatorial Africa), as well as Morocco and Madagascar. Belgium got Ruanda-Urundi, the vast Belgian Congo (from 1885 to 1908 the personal possession of King Leopold II). Germany captured Southwest Africa and German East Africa (Tanganyika), Cameroon, Togo, Italy - Libya, Eritrea and most of Somalia. There were no US dominions. By 1914, when World War I broke out for the redivision of the world, there were only 3 independent states in Africa: Ethiopia (it was never a colony, only in 1935-41 it was occupied by Italy and included in Italian East Africa), Liberia (in December In 1821, the American colonization society bought a plot of land from the local leaders of the Kwa tribe and settled on it freed slaves - Negroes from the USA.In 1824, after the name of US President J. Monroe, the settlement was named Monrovia.Later, the territory of a number of settlements was named Liberia, and on July 26 A republic was proclaimed there in 1847. American capital firmly occupied key positions in the economy of the republic, the United States placed military bases in Liberia.) and South Africa (since 1910 the British dominion, since 1948 the National Party (Afrikaners) began to pursue a policy of apartheid (separate residence ), based on the concentration of all political and economic power in the hands of whites. Since 1961, it left the Commonwealth and became South Africa). After World War I, the German colonies passed to Great Britain (Tanganyika), South Africa (South-West Africa), France (Cameroon, Togo).

Egypt was the first country to free itself from colonialism in 1922.

Before 1951 Until 1961 Before 1971
Libya 12/24/1951 Sierra Leone 04/27/1961
Sudan 1.01.1956 Burundi 1.07.1962
Tunisia 03/20/1956 Rwanda 1.07.1962
Morocco 03/28/1956 Algeria 3.07.1962
Ghana 03/06/1957 Uganda 09/09/1962
Guinea 2.10.1958 Kenya 9/9/1963
Cameroon 1.01.1960 Malawi 6.07.1964
Togo 04/27/1960 Zambia 10/24/1964
Madagascar 06/26/1960 Tanzania 10/29/1964
DR Congo (Zaire) 06/30/1960 Gambia 02/18/1965
Somalia 1.07.1960 Benin 1.08.1966
Niger 08/3/1960 Botswana 09/30/1966
Burkina Faso 5.08.1960 Lesotho 4/10/1966
Côte d'Ivoire 08/07/1960 Mauritius 03/12/1968
Chad 08/11/1960 Swaziland 09/06/1968
CAR 08/13/1960 Eq. Guinea 10/12/1968
Congo 08/15/1960
Gabon 08/17/1960
Senegal 08/20/1960
Mali 09/22/1960
Nigeria 1.10.1960
Mauritania 11/28/1960

It has many millennia, and according to some scientific hypotheses, it was in Africa that the first people appeared, who subsequently multiplied and populated all other lands of our planet (well, except for Antarctica). So, according to these hypotheses, Africa is the cradle of mankind. And it is not surprising that many people were drawn to this continent and returned, sometimes as explorers and sometimes as conquerors, such is our human nature.

The first European colonies in Africa began to appear at the beginning of the 15-16th century. The British and French showed genuine interest in North Africa, and especially to one of the cradles of human civilizations - Egypt with its majestic pyramids and the mysterious Sphinx. The Portuguese were the first to penetrate West Africa, creating their colonies there. Subsequently, representatives of other European countries also joined them: Holland, Belgium, Germany.

The greatest peak of colonialism in Africa came in the 19th century, here interesting fact: at the beginning of the century before last, only 10% of African territories were European colonies, but at its end, 90% (!) African lands were already European colonies. Only two African countries managed to maintain full independence: and Eastern Sudan. All the other countries were under someone's heel, so many countries of North Africa belonged to France: Algeria, Tunisia, Morocco, in each of them French domination was established by force. For some other countries, such as, say, the already mentioned Egypt, there was even a desperate military struggle between France and England. The latter was also not opposed to taking possession of this tidbit, but in Egypt the British had to meet a strong and talented enemy, the famous General Napoleon Bonaparte, who would soon become the French emperor, conquer all of Europe and reach right up to Moscow. Although further military defeats by Napoleon reduced the influence of France in North Africa, Egypt did, in the end, go to the British.

The Portuguese, thanks to their brave navigators and cartographers, were the first to reach West Africa, where they entered into numerous contacts with the local population and founded their colonies, Angola, a huge African country, whose area is several times larger than the area of ​​small Portugal, became the largest Portuguese colony in West Africa. .

The British also did not catch crows, and in addition to Egypt, they founded many colonies, both in West and East and South Africa. Subsequently, representatives of other European states also came to Africa: the Germans managed to capture part of the territory of West Africa: Cameroon, Togo and Namibia (the latter country still strongly resembles Germany with its cozy cities built by the Germans themselves).

The Belgians, since by the time they appeared the African coast was already occupied by other Europeans, decided to move deep into the African continent, where they founded their colony in the country of Congo (Central Africa). The Italians received land in eastern Africa: the countries of Somalia and Eritrea became their colonies.

What attracted Europeans to Africa? First of all, numerous Natural resources, as well as human resources - that is, slaves into which the Europeans actively turned the local population. Further, the slaves were taken to the New World for hard work on local sugar plantations. In general, the slave trade is one of the darkest pages of African history, about which there will be a separate article on our website.

Returning to colonialism, in addition to its clearly negative consequences, there were some positive aspects. So the Europeans brought a certain civilization, culture to Africa, built cities, roads, Christian missionaries went along with the soldiers who wanted to convert the local population to Christianity (whether it be Protestantism or Catholicism), they did a lot to educate Africans, built schools taught African natives European languages ​​​​(primarily English, but also French, Spanish, Portuguese, German) and other sciences.

THE DECLINE OF COLONIALISM

Everything comes to an end sooner or later, and the end came to colonialism in Africa, the decline of which began in the 60s of the last century. It was at this time that active socio-political movements for the declaration of independence began in various African countries. Somewhere it is possible to gain independence by peaceful means, but somewhere it was not without armed struggle, as we say in the same Angola, where the real war for independence against Portuguese rule, which, however, after that turned into a civil war between the Angolans, who were carried away by communist ideas (the MPLA party) and who wanted to build communism in Angola, and the Angolans, who did not like it, but that's another story.

Also, the negative impact of colonialism after its collapse was the fact that some newly created African countries contained a heterogeneous cultural and even hostile population. Sometimes this led to real civil wars, as we say it was in Nigeria, a former English colony, where, after the declaration of independence, the Ibo and Yoruba tribes were hostile to each other in one country. But again, that's another story...


By the seventies of the XIX century. on the African continent, European powers owned 10.8% of the entire territory. Less than 30 years later, by 1900, the possessions of European states in Africa already accounted for 90.4 ° / 0 of the territory of the continent. The imperialist division of Africa was completed. Hundreds of thousands of Africans who defended their land and independence died in an unequal struggle with the colonialists. The imperialists, on the other hand, were given broad opportunities to plunder the country's natural wealth, unrestrained exploitation of its peoples and unheard-of enrichment.

1. Africa on the eve of partition

Indigenous people of Africa

Historically, Africa has been divided into two main parts, differing from each other in ethnic terms, in terms of socio-economic development and in the form of political structure. North Africa, down to the great deserts, has long been closely connected with the Mediterranean world. Its population is Arab and Arabized, distinguished by relative ethnic homogeneity. Egypt, Tunisia, Tripoli and Cyrenaica were part of the Ottoman Empire: Morocco was an independent state. social order North African countries was a complex set of social relations - from emerging capitalism in urban centers to the tribal system of nomads. However, with all the diversity of social orders, feudal relations prevailed.

Another part of the continent, located south of the Sahara, represented! presents a more complex picture. The northeast (the northern part of Eastern Sudan, Ethiopia, the countries of the Red Sea coast) was inhabited mainly by peoples speaking Semitic-Hamitic languages. Negroid peoples, speaking the Bantu languages, as well as various Sudanese languages, inhabited the vast expanses of tropical and southern Africa. In the far south lived the Koikoin (Hottentots) and San (Bushmen) tribes. A special place among the African peoples was occupied by the population of Madagascar, anthropologically belonging to the Mongoloids and speaking the Malagash language (Malayo-Polynesian group).

The socio-economic system and forms of political organization in this part of Africa were very diverse. In a number of regions of Western Sudan, as well as in Madagascar, the feudal order constituted the main type of social relations, combined, as a rule, with significant elements of the slave-owning and primitive communal system. Along with the feudal states, which in certain periods achieved significant centralization (Ethiopia, the state of Imerina in Madagascar, Buganda, etc.), tribal unions arose, disintegrated and revived again, rudimentary public entities. Such were the unions of the Azande and Mangbettu tribes in Western tropical Africa, the Zulu in South Africa. Many peoples in the middle zone of Western Sudan, in the northern bend of the Congo and other regions did not even know the rudimentary forms of state organization. There were no clearly defined boundaries. Tribal wars never stopped. Under these conditions, Africa became an easy prey for the colonialists.

European penetration into Africa

The Portuguese were the first Europeans to settle on the African continent. As early as the end of the 15th - beginning of the 16th century. they explored the coast of Africa from Gibraltar to the eastern ledge of the mainland north of Mozambique and founded colonies: Portuguese Guinea and Angola - in the west and Mozambique - in the east. In the second half of the 17th century, the Dutch (Cape Colony) entrenched themselves in the extreme south of Africa, partly exterminating, partly enslaving the San and Koikoin. Following the Dutch, colonists from France and other European countries headed here. The descendants of these first colonists were called Boers.

A struggle unfolded between the Europeans themselves for colonies in Africa. At the very beginning of the XIX century. The British took over the Cape Colony. Pushed back to the north, the Boers created the Republic of South Africa (Transvaal) and the Orange Free State on new lands, forcibly taken from the indigenous population. Shortly thereafter, the Boers took Natal from the Zulus. AT extermination wars against the indigenous population, which lasted almost 50 years ("Kaffir Wars"), England expanded the possessions of the Cape Colony to the north. In 1843, the British captured Natal, driving out the Boers from there.

The northern coast of Africa was the object of colonial conquests, mainly by France, which, as a result of long wars against the Arab population, by the middle of the 19th century. conquered all of Algeria.

In the early 20s of the XIX century. The United States of America bought land on the West Coast of Africa from the leader of one of the local tribes to organize the settlement of Negroes released by individual slave owners. This was an attempt to create a base for further expansion in Africa and at the same time for the settlement of free Negroes, who posed a threat to the existence of slavery in the United States . The colony of Liberia, created here, was declared an independent republic in 1847, but in fact it remained dependent on the United States.

In addition, the Spaniards (Spanish Guinea, Rio de Oro), the French (Senegal, Gabon) and the British (Sierra Leone, Gambia, Gold Coast, Lagos) owned strongholds on the west coast of Africa.

Partition of Africa at the end of the 19th century. preceded by a series of new geographical explorations of the continent by Europeans. In the middle of the century, large Central African lakes were discovered and the sources of the Nile were found.

The English traveler Livingston was the first European to cross the continent from the Indian Ocean (Quelimane in Mozambique) to the Atlantic (Luanda in Angola). He explored the entire course of the Zambezi, Lake Nyasa and Tanganyika, discovered the majestic phenomenon of African nature - Victoria Falls, as well as Lakes Ngami, Mweru and Bangweolo, crossed the Kalahari Desert. The last of the major geographical discoveries in Africa was the exploration of the Congo in the 70s by the British Cameron and Stanley.

Geographical studies of Africa made a major contribution to science, but the European colonialists used their results in their own selfish interests. Christian missionaries also played a significant role in strengthening the positions of European powers on the Black Continent.

The most common form of European penetration into Africa was the ever-expanding trade in industrial goods in exchange for the products of tropical countries on the basis of non-equivalent calculations. The slave trade continued on a large scale, despite its official prohibition by the European powers. Entrepreneurial adventurers equipped armed expeditions deep into Africa, where, under the banner of combating the slave trade, they engaged in robbery, and often hunted slaves themselves.

European colonizers were attracted to Africa by its huge natural wealth - significant resources of valuable wild trees, such as oil palms and rubber plants, the possibility of growing cotton, cocoa, sugarcane coffee, etc. Gold was found on the coast of the Gulf of Guinea, and then in South Africa and diamonds.

The division of Africa became a matter of "big politics" of European governments.

2. Capture of Egypt by England

Economic enslavement of Egypt

By the mid-1970s, Egypt was already experiencing the consequences of the country's being drawn into the world capitalist economy. The capitulation of Muhammad Ali in 1840 and the extension of the Anglo-Turkish trade convention of 1838 to Egypt led to the abolition of previously existing trade monopolies. Foreign manufactured goods gained wide access to the country. There was a process of introducing export crops, especially cotton. The industry for the primary processing of agricultural products developed, ports were re-equipped, railways were built. New classes were formed - the national bourgeoisie and the proletariat. However, the development of capitalism was hampered by feudal relations in the countryside and by the ever-increasing penetration of foreign capital. The Egyptian government, due to the high costs caused by the construction of the Suez Canal, ports and roads, was forced to resort to external loans. In 1863 the public debt of Egypt reached £16 million. Art.; the payment of interest alone absorbed a significant portion of the country's income. Loans were guaranteed by the main income items of the Egyptian budget.

After the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869, the struggle of the capitalist powers, primarily Britain and France, to establish their dominance over Egypt acquired a particularly tense character.

In November 1875, as a result of the financial bankruptcy declared by the Ottoman Empire, the rate of Egyptian valuable papers fell catastrophically. The British government took advantage of this to force the Egyptian Khedive Ismail to sell England his shares in the Suez Canal Company for a pittance.

Foreign creditors began to openly interfere in the internal affairs of Egypt. The British government sent a financial mission to Cairo, which drew up a report on the difficult financial situation of Egypt and proposed to establish foreign control over it. After lengthy Anglo-French disputes, an Egyptian Debt Commission was formed from representatives of England, France, Italy and Austria-Hungary; English and French controllers received the right to manage the income and expenditure of Egypt. In 1878, the so-called European cabinet was formed, headed by the English protege Nubar Pasha. The post of Minister of Finance was taken by an Englishman, and the post of Minister of Public Works by a Frenchman.

Foreign ministers levied heavy taxes from the fellahs (peasants), and increased the taxation of the landlords' lands. In February 1879, they fired 2,500 Egyptian officers, which hastened the outbreak of indignation in the army, which resulted in a demonstration of officers. In April 1879, an appeal signed by more than 300 ulemas, pashas, ​​beys and officers was sent to the Khedive demanding the immediate removal of foreigners from the government. Khedive Ismail was forced to comply with this demand. The new cabinet was composed only of the Egyptians, headed by Sheriff Pasha.

In response to the removal of foreigners from the government, England and France obtained from the Turkish sultan the removal of Ismail and the appointment of a new Khedive, Tevfik. He restored Anglo-French control over finances and reduced the size of the Egyptian army to 18,000 men.

The rise of the national liberation movement

The omnipotence of foreigners offended the national feelings of the Egyptians. At the head of the national liberation movement of the movement were representatives of the young Egyptian national bourgeoisie, the Egyptian intelligentsia, officers, and patriotic landowners. All of them united under the slogan "Egypt for the Egyptians" and created the first political organization in Egypt, Hizb-ul-Watan (Homeland Party, or National Party).

In May 1880, a group of officers spoke out against the obstacles placed in the promotion of Egyptian officers, the forced use of soldiers for labor work and the systematic delay in salaries.

In early 1881, officers led by Colonel Ahmed Arabi sent a petition to the Egyptian government demanding the resignation of the Minister of War and an investigation into his promotions. Arabi, a native of the fellahs, was a talented and energetic leader of Hizb-ul-Watan. He understood the importance of the army as the only organized force in the country and tried to find support among the peasantry. In February 1881, soldiers under the command of patriotic officers seized the building of the War Ministry and arrested the Minister of War.

The success of the Arabi group caused fear among the government and its foreign advisers. An attempt to remove patriotic regiments from Cairo met with resistance. The Watanists demanded the resignation of the cabinet, the drafting of a constitution, and an increase in the Egyptian army. The armed action of the army in September 1881 forced the Khedive to accept all the demands of the Watanists.

These events increased the anxiety of the colonialists. British and French diplomacy tried to organize a Turkish intervention in Egypt. When this failed, France put forward a project to establish joint Anglo-French military control over Egypt. England, seeking to independently seize Egypt, refused to accept this proposal.

Meanwhile, the new government of Sherif Pasha, formed after the September uprising, decided to hold parliamentary elections (on the basis of a very limited electoral law of 1866). Most of the Vatanists got into Parliament. They insisted that the future constitution give the parliament the right to fully control at least that part of the state budget that was not intended to pay off the public debt. The draft constitution worked out by Sheriff Pasha provided Parliament with only deliberative rights in this matter. Most of the deputies of the Egyptian Parliament at the session that opened on December 26, 1881, expressed dissatisfaction with this project. Arabi put forward a proposal to form a new cabinet.

In January 1882, a joint Anglo-French note was handed to the Khedive demanding the dissolution of parliament and the suppression of Arabi's activities. Despite this pressure, the Egyptian parliament in early February forced the resignation of Sherif Pasha's government. Ahmed Arabi entered the new cabinet as Minister of War. The creation of a national government was marked by large gatherings in support of it. The new cabinet adopted a draft constitution that provided for the approval of the budget by the government together with a parliamentary commission (except for the part intended to pay off the public debt).

After an unsuccessful attempt to bribe Arabi, on May 25, 1882, England and France presented the Khedive with notes demanding the resignation of the cabinet, the expulsion of Arabi from the country, and the removal of prominent Watanists from Cairo. The national government resigned in protest against gross foreign interference, but this caused such serious unrest in Alexandria and Cairo that Khedive Tewfik had to restore Arabi to the post of Minister of War on May 28.

Occupation of Egypt by England

At an international conference on the Egyptian question convened in Constantinople in June 1882, the British delegates were forced to join a protocol obliging all European powers not to resort to annexation or occupation of Egyptian territory.

Without waiting for the approval of the protocol of this conference, the commander of the English squadron stationed on the Alexandria raid, Vice Admiral Seymour, sent a provocative demand to the military governor of Alexandria to stop the construction of forts by the Egyptians. Presented on July 10, 1882, the British ultimatum offered to fulfill this demand within 24 hours.

On July 11, 1882, the British fleet subjected Alexandria to a fierce 10-hour bombardment. Then the land British units, numbering 25 thousand people, landed on the shore and occupied the city. Khedive Tevfik, betraying the interests of his people, fled from Cairo to Alexandria occupied by the British. In Cairo, an Extraordinary Assembly was formed from representatives of the nobility, clergy and Watani officers to govern the country and organize its defense against British aggression. The Extraordinary Assembly declared Khedive Tewfik deposed and appointed Arabi commander-in-chief of the armed forces.

Arabi had about 19,000 regular troops and 40,000 recruits at his disposal. The Egyptian army had a significant amount of ammunition and weapons, including about 500 cannons. A strategic plan for the defense of Egypt was developed.

However, in the implementation of the defense plan, Arabi made serious military and political miscalculations: he did not strengthen the Suez Canal zone, hoping that the British would not violate the convention on the neutralization of the canal; entrusted the most important defensive positions to undisciplined Bedouin detachments, whose leaders the British managed to bribe. Disregarding the neutralization of the Suez Canal, the British transferred troops from India to Port Said and Ismailia, thus ensuring an attack on Cairo from two directions.

The British forces broke through the front, stretched and weakened by the betrayal of the Bedouin leaders. On September 13, 1882, Arabi's troops were defeated at Tel-Ay-Kebir. September 14, British troops captured Cairo and then occupied the whole country. Arabi was arrested, put on trial and expelled from Egypt then there was no public force capable of leading a victorious people's struggle against foreign conquerors. The weak, barely emerging national bourgeoisie expected to achieve the expansion of its rights through compromises and was not interested in a revolutionary war. The feudal elements that joined Arabi at the most acute moment of the struggle against the English aggressors took the path of open betrayal. All this taken together caused the defeat of the national movement and facilitated the transformation of Egypt into an English colony.

3. French colonial expansion in the Maghreb countries

In the countries of the Maghreb (Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco), large land masses in the agricultural coastal strip belonged to landowners and were cultivated by peasants who paid feudal rent. Here, communal land ownership was also preserved on a noticeable scale. The steppe regions adjoining the desert were inhabited mainly by nomadic tribes, in which the process of feudalization was on initial stage and elements of the tribal system played a significant role. Handicraft and small-scale production was developed in the cities.

The Maghreb was not only one of the first objects of French colonial expansion in Africa, but also the gateway through which this expansion spread to other parts of the continent.

Back in 1830, the French army invaded Algeria, but more than two decades passed before France, in a bloody war against the Algerian people, established its colonial rule in the country. The privileged elite of the European population in Algeria - landowners, speculators, the military - barely numbered 10 thousand people. They seized the best lands and became the main pillar of the French colonial regime, inspiring further expansion, which was directed from Algeria to the west and east.

The next object of this expansion was Tunisia. The capture of Tunisia by France in 1881 caused an uprising that swept almost the entire country. Only after a hard war did the colonialists manage to break the stubborn resistance of the Tunisian people.

French authorities set up in Tunisia new system management. The French Resident General, with the Bey retaining only nominal power, was also the Prime Minister of Tunisia. The post of Minister of War was taken by the commander of the French Expeditionary Force.

French generals, senators, ministers, newspaper editors became large Tunisian landowners. On their estates, which reached 3,400 hectares, Arab peasants were forced to work on a share-cropping basis. In total, about 400 thousand hectares of the best lands were seized.

At the expense of the Tunisian people, the French colonialists built strategic railways, highways and ports. When large reserves of minerals were discovered in the bowels of the country - phosphates, iron ore and non-ferrous metal ores, French industrial companies and banks began to take part in the exploitation of Tunisia.

North Africa at the end of the 19th century. only Morocco still retained its independence. This was mainly due to the fact that the intense rivalry between several European powers did not allow any of them to establish its dominance over a country that occupied an important strategic position and had rich natural resources.

The Moroccan sultanate had been divided for a long time into two unequal zones: one included the main cities and their environs, which were really controlled by the Sultan's government, the other - an area inhabited by tribes that did not recognize the power of the Sultan and were often at enmity with each other. On the territory of Morocco were captured by Spain in the XV century. the cities of Ceuta and Melilla. France, having strengthened itself in Algeria and Tunisia, began to intensively penetrate into Morocco!

4. British colonial conquests in South Africa

European colonization of South Africa

South Africa was, along with the Maghreb, one of the oldest areas of European colonization, a springboard for expansion into the interior of the continent. The western part of South Africa was inhabited by the Koikoin and the San, as well as related Bantu-speaking tribes.

The main occupation of most Bantu tribes was cattle breeding, but they also developed hoe farming. On the eve of the collision with the Europeans, and especially during the resistance to the colonialists, more or less stable alliances of tribes arose among the Bantu.

The colonialists managed to cope with the Koikoin and San tribes relatively easily, partly exterminating them, and partly pushing them into the desert regions. The conquest of the Bantu turned out to be more difficult and stretched over a number of decades.

The situation in South Africa was greatly complicated by the fact that, along with the main conflict between the colonialists and the indigenous population, there were sharp contradictions between the two main European population groups: the British and the descendants of the Dutch colonists - the Boers, who had lost all connection with the mother country. This second conflict took on sometimes extremely acute forms. Initially, it developed as a clash of interests of the English, mainly commercial and industrial, population, as well as the English administration with Boer farmers.

By the 70s of the XIX century. England owned Basutoland, the Cape Colony and Natal. English possessions, like a huge horseshoe, stretched along the coast, blocking the Boers from further expansion to the east. The objects of European colonization in southern Africa were the lands of the Zulu in the northeast, the Bechuana, Matabele and Mason in the north, the lands of the Herero, Onambo, and Damara in the northwest.

In the summer of 1867, near the Hoptoun trading post on the banks of the river. Orange were accidentally found the first diamonds in South Africa. A stream of prospectors poured into Orange. The previously deserted desert came to life. The number of miners quickly increased to 40 thousand people. New towns and cities sprang up around the diamond mines.

For the extraction of diamonds, joint-stock companies began to be created, using the cheap labor of the indigenous population. In a competitive struggle, one of the companies - "De Beers", led by Cecil Rhodes, managed to monopolize diamond mining.

Anglo-Zulu War 1879

A serious obstacle to English expansion in the direction of the Boer republics was the Zulu state.

Since the beginning of the 70s, when Ketchwayo became the leader of the Zulus, in the Zulu state (Zululand), which acutely felt the lack of pasture land, preparations began for a liberation war, for the reconquest of the territories seized by the colonialists. Ketchwayo restored the Zulu army, updated its organization, bought weapons in Mozambique. However, the Zulus failed to complete the necessary preparations.

On December 11, 1878, the British colonial troops in Natal sent an ultimatum to Ketchwayo, the acceptance of which would mean the liquidation of the independence of the Zulu state. The council of chiefs and tribal elders rejected the ultimatum.

January 10, 1879 English troops crossed the river. Tugela and invaded Zululand. A brutal bloody war began. The English army numbered 20,000 infantry and cavalry and had 36 guns. Nevertheless, the Zulus repeatedly dealt serious blows to the invaders. Shortly after the start of the war, the British had to retreat to the borders of Natal.

Ketchwayo repeatedly turned to the British with an offer of peace, but the British command continued hostilities. Despite the huge superiority of forces, England achieved victory in this inglorious colonial war only six months later. Fierce internecine wars organized by the British began in the country, which for another three years flooded Zululand with blood. In January 1883, the unity of Zululand was restored under the supreme rule of Ketchwayo on the condition that it be recognized as a British protectorate. In 1897, Zululand was officially incorporated into Natal.

Aggravation of Anglo-Boer relations

In 1877 English troops invaded the Transvaal; The British organized a government of British officials in Pretoria. During the Anglo-Zulu War, the Boers did not take advantage of England's predicament. The common interests of the colonialists in the fight against the Zulu tribal union - the most serious force that opposed European expansion in South Africa - turned out to be more powerful than their contradictions. The situation changed after the end of the Anglo-Zulu War.

At the end of 1880, the Boer uprising against the British began. Soon, in the battle of Mount Majuba, the Boer militia inflicted a serious defeat on the English forces advancing from Natal.

Gladstone's liberal cabinet, which came to power in England at that time, preferred to resolve the conflict peacefully. Self-government of the Transvaal was restored. Under the London Convention of 1884, England recognized the independence of the Transvaal, which, however, was deprived of the right to conclude agreements with foreign powers without the consent of England (this did not apply to the Transvaal's relations with the Orange Republic) and to develop territorial expansion to the west or east - to the coast. But even after the conclusion of this convention, England persistently continued the policy of encircling the Boer republics with her possessions.

German expansion also began in this area. Against the protests of the British government, in April 1884 Germany proclaimed a protectorate over the territories from the mouth of the Orange River to the border of the Portuguese colony - Angola. Following this, the German agents began to advance deep into the mainland, consolidating the dominance of Germany over vast possessions by "treaties" with the leaders. The strip of these possessions (German South-West Africa) was approaching the Boer republics.

In 1887, England annexed the lands of Tsonga, north of Zululand. Thus, a continuous chain of English possessions closed along the east coast and came close to Portuguese Mozambique. The access to the east was finally cut off for the Boer republics.

Further development of British expansion to the north

Germany's annexation of South West Africa sealed the fate of Bechuanaland, a vast territory that occupied a significant part of the Kalahari Desert. The marginal lands of Bechuanaland, where no minerals had yet been discovered, were not of independent value. However, the threat of contact between German and Boer possessions prompted England at the beginning of 1885 to proclaim its protectorate over Bechuanaland in order to drive a wide wedge between its rivals. The capture was made on the basis of agreements with several leaders of the Bechuan tribes and under the pretext of opposing the conquest plans of the Boers. After that, the British dismembered Bechuanaland: the southern, more fertile part was declared a British possession and later included in the Cape Colony, while the northern, desert part was formally left under British protectorate.

In 1884-1886. rich gold deposits were discovered in the Transvaal. Gold diggers rushed to the Transvaal. Within a few years, the center of the gold mining industry, Johannesburg, grew up near Pretoria. The establishment of the dominance of monopolies in the gold-mining industry took place much faster than in its time in the diamond industry. This was partly due to the fact that the monopolistic enterprises already established in the diamond industry immediately extended their scope of activity to the gold-bearing regions. The powerful owners of the De Beers company, headed by Rhodes, bought gold-bearing plots from farmers on a large scale and invested large capitals in gold mining.

In the 1980s and 1990s, the Rhodes group, having gained a dominant position in key sectors of the rapidly developing industry, secured complete control over the British administration of South Africa. In 1890 Rode became Premier of the Cape Colony (he remained so until 1896). From separate, sometimes accidental annexations in the south of the African continent, England moved in the 80-90s to the consistent and persistent implementation of the Rhodes plan, which provided for the creation of a continuous strip of British possessions in Africa from Cairo in the north to Cape Town in the south.

After the annexation of Bechuanaland, only one vast area of ​​South Africa remained that had not yet been subjected to European colonization - the land of machon and matabele. By the end of the 1980s, a major knot of contradictions began to develop here: not only England and the Boer republics, but also Germany and Portugal intended to seize these lands, which, as was believed at that time, were not inferior to the Transvaal in terms of mineral wealth.

In February 1888, the British authorities managed to achieve the signing of a treaty of friendship by the leader of the Matabele Lobengula. Lobengula undertook not to enter into negotiations with anyone and not to conclude agreements for the sale, alienation or cession of any part of his country without the sanction of the British High Commissioner. Thus, the matabele and machon lands subject to Lobengula were included in the British sphere of influence.

In September of the same year, a new embassy arrived at Lobengula in his capital, Bulawayo, headed by Rhodes's companion, Rudd. In the course of six weeks of negotiations, Rudd managed to trick Lobengula into signing a treaty, the contents of which he had the most vague idea of. For a thousand guns of obsolete design, a gunboat, and a monthly pension of £100. Art. Lobengula granted the Rhodes Company full and exclusive right to develop all the mineral wealth of the country, "to do everything that they (i.e., the company) may seem necessary for the extraction of such", as well as the right to expel all their competitors from the country.

In 1889, the British government granted the British South Africa Company created by Rhodes a royal charter, that is, broad privileges and support from the authorities for the implementation of the agreement with Lobengula.

On the occupied lands, the company established its own administration. Employees of the company behaved like conquerors. Massacres of the local population became more and more frequent. The situation heated up In October 1893, the British moved their troops from the areas of Mashonaland they occupied to Bulawayo. In November, Bulawayo was taken and burned. The matabele army, heroically defending their country, was almost completely destroyed: the advantage of the British, who widely used machine guns, affected. Lobengula fled from the advancing British troops and died in January 1894.

The defeat of the last organized military force, which the indigenous population of South Africa could oppose to the colonialists, provided Rhodes' company with an opportunity for unhindered robbery. From the spring of 1895, she introduced in her official documents the new name of the country is Rhodesia, in honor of the mastermind and organizer of its capture, Cecil Rhodes. The confiscation of land and livestock belonging to the local population began to take place at an extremely rapid pace. Preparations began for the eviction of a significant part of the inhabitants in specially designated areas for them - reservations. Forced labor was widely used.

In March 1896, an uprising broke out in Matabeleland, which spread to Mashonaland a few months later. The fierce struggle continued until September 1897 and ended with the victory of the British troops. The uprising, however, forced the British to make some concessions to the rebels: matabele were allowed to return to areas from which they had previously been evicted; the less organized Mashon tribes were unable to achieve such results.

After the capture by the Rhodes company of the Limpopo-Zambezi interfluve, the conquest of South Africa by England was almost completed. Only the two Boer republics remained the last obstacle to the implementation of the imperialist plan to create a continuous strip of British possessions from Cape Town to Cairo.

5. European expansion in West Africa

French colonial conquests

If the main direction of British colonial expansion in Africa was determined by the Cairo-Cape Town plan, then French policy was imbued with the desire to create a continuous strip of possessions from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean. In the late 70s and early 80s, three main directions of the French offensive into the interior of the continent were outlined: to the east from Senegal, to the northeast from the region of the river. Ogowe and the opposite direction - to the west from French Somalia. The French possession of Senegal was the main springboard for this offensive.

Another area from which the European colonialists advanced into the depths of the continent was the coast of the Gulf of Guinea, where a sharp struggle began between France and England. Later, Germany joined this struggle.

In 1890, the French authorities in Senegal, worried about the rapid advance of England and Germany from the Guinean coast, considered that the time had come to put an end to the independence of the states, which were headed by the emirs of Samori and Ahmadu. In 1890-1893. the state of Ahmadu was defeated, in 1893 the Djenne center of the Masina region was taken, in 1894 French domination extended to Timbuktu, the ancient center of caravan trade routes that crossed West Africa. The further advance of France to the east was suspended for about a year and a half by the Tuareg, who in 1594 defeated a large detachment of French troops.

The colonial war with Samory dragged on. It was only in 1898 that the armed resistance to the invaders in Western Sudan, which had lasted for about 50 years, was broken.

In the 80s, on the site of scattered trading posts located at a great distance from each other, significant colonial possessions of France were formed - first in Guinea, and then on the Ivory Coast.

French expansion met serious resistance in Dahomey (Slave Coast), the most powerful of the states of West Africa. Dahomey had a permanent regular army, part of which was formed from women. The army was replenished with a trained reserve, and, if necessary, with a general militia. In 1889 clashes began between the Dahomey and French troops. The Dahomeans delivered a series of serious blows to the colonialists, and in 1890 a peace treaty was concluded, according to which France pledged to pay 20 thousand francs annually for the possession of Coton and Porto Novo. However, in 1892 the war resumed. This time France sent an impressive force to Dahomey, and by the end of the year the Dahomean army was defeated.

Colonial conquests of England and Germany

On the eve of the final partition of West Africa, England held small settlements at the mouth of the river. Gambia, in Sierpa Leone with a natural harbour, Freetown, on the Gold Coast and in Lagos. The Ashanti state put up a particularly stubborn resistance to the British colonialists. In an effort to weaken their opponent, the British colonialists fomented contradictions between the Ashanti and the Fanti people inhabiting coastal areas. The Fanti lands became the springboard for the English advance into the interior of the country. In 1897, the invaders managed to capture the Ashanti capital - Kumasi, but in 1900 they faced a powerful popular uprising. Within four months, the English garrison was besieged at Kumasi, and only the arrival of significant reinforcements changed the balance of power. It took England a few more years to extend its dominance to the northern territories of the Gold Coast.

Advancing up the Niger, the British faced French expansion in the opposite direction. The final demarcation of the British and French possessions in West Africa was fixed by a series of agreements concluded in 1890. A British protectorate was declared over Northern and Southern Nigeria.

The Muslim sultanates to the west and east of Lake Chad were not only tempting prey for the British and French colonizers. In the mid-80s, Germany began to expand in the same direction, striving to get ahead of its competitors. Territorial seizures were prepared by the creation of German trading posts in West Africa, as well as by the activities of scouts and explorers who concluded agreements with tribal leaders. In July 1884, the German traveler Nachtigal, on behalf of Bismarck, hoisted the German flag in a number of points in Togo and Cameroon, after which Germany officially proclaimed its protectorate over the coastal strip of these areas.

From Cameroon and Togo, Germany sought to advance towards the Niger and Lake Chad parallel to the directions of British and French expansion. In this competition, the old colonial powers had a number of advantages and, above all, great experience. With the final settlement of the borders, carried out in the 90s by diplomatic means, on the basis of the actual seizures of Germany, a narrow strip was left in Togo, bounded in the east by the French Dahomey, and in the west by the English Gold Coast. In Cameroon, Germany succeeded in asserting a territory five times the size of Togo and moving north as far as Lake Chad, but the regions of Niger and Benue remained outside German possessions. As early as the 1990s, the rule of the German imperialists provoked a number of uprisings by the local population.

Completion of the partition of West Africa

By 1900, the division of West Africa was completed. The predominant part of it went to France. French acquisitions in merged with possessions in the Maghreb and formed a continuous colonial territory from mediterranean sea to the Gulf of Guinea.

English possessions remained like islands - although sometimes of impressive size - among the array of French colonies. In economic terms, as well as in terms of population, the British colonial possessions in West Africa, located along the lower reaches of the most important rivers - the Gambia, Volta and Niger, significantly exceeded the French, among which the barren Sahara occupied the largest space.

Germany, which later than others took part in the colonial conquests, had to be content with a relatively small part of West Africa. Economically, the most valuable of Germany's African colonies were Togo and Cameroon.

A small territory of Guinea was retained by Portugal and Spain.

6. Division of Central Africa

Belgian colonial expansion

In the 70s of the XIX century. Belgium's colonial expansion also intensified. Belgian capital sought to take an active part in the division of Africa.

In September 1876, on the initiative of King Leopold II, who was closely associated with the country's influential financial circles, an international conference was convened in Brussels, in which, along with diplomats, specialists in international law, economists, travelers - explorers of Africa, etc. took part. Belgium, Germany, Austria-Hungary, England, France, Italy and Russia were represented. The organizers of the conference in every possible way emphasized the scientific and philanthropic goals allegedly pursued by it - the study of the mainland and the familiarization of its peoples with the benefits of "civilization".

The conference decided to establish an Association to organize expeditions and set up trading posts in Central Africa. To conduct the current work, national committees were created in individual countries and a commission heading the entire enterprise. The funds of the Association were to be made up of private donations. Leopold II personally contributed large sums to the Association's fund. The Belgian National Committee was the first to form as early as November 1876. Soon similar committees were set up in other countries.

The Brussels Conference of 1876 was the prologue to the division Central Africa. A well-known part of the Belgian ruling circles associated the activities of the Association with their calculations for the creation of a Belgian colonial empire. On the other hand, it seemed to the governments that took part in the Brussels Conference and in the founding of the Association that such a method would allow them, under the guise of international organization secure their own interests in Central Africa.

The Belgian committee organized several expeditions to the Congo basin, but managed to create only one trading post there. The Englishman Stanley, who entered the service of the Association, launched an energetic colonial activity in the Congo.

In 1879-1884. Stanley and his assistants founded 22 trading posts in the Congo basin - strongholds of the economic, political and military domination of the Association - and concluded about 450 agreements with tribal leaders to establish the Association's protectorate (in fact, the protectorate of the Belgian king). In cases where the diplomatic dexterity of Leopold's agents could not produce the desired results, military expeditions were undertaken in order to compel the tribal leaders to sign the required treaties. Thus, within a few years, the Association became the sovereign of a vast, though not clearly defined, territory in the Congo Basin.

Belgium failed to seize the designated areas without hindrance, its interests collided with the interests of other powers, primarily France and Portugal.

Contradictions between the colonial powers

When, in 1880, Stanley's expedition reached the small lake which the Congo River forms near its confluence with the Atlantic Ocean, and which was later called Stanley Pool, they were surprised to see the French flag on the right bank.

Back in 1875, the French began to advance from the previously captured Gabon towards the Congo River. In September 1880, Savorgnan de Brazza, acting on behalf of the French National Committee of the Association, concluded with Chief Makoko, whose possessions extended around Stanley Pool, a treaty granting France "special rights" to the lower reaches of the Congo, and thereby cutting off the Belgian Association's access to the sea. On November 30, 1882, the French Chamber of Deputies secured for France the acquisition of de Brazza. All French possessions in Equatorial Africa were united into a colony called the French Congo.

The threat to the possessions of the Belgian Association also arose from the other side. In 1882, Portugal protested against Stanley's captures. She accused the Association of taking "foreign property" and opposed her "historical rights" to it.

England actually stood behind Portugal. In February 1884, an Anglo-Portuguese treaty was signed, according to which England recognized the coastal strip for Portugal, and Portugal granted British subjects, ships in this strip the same rights as the Portuguese had.

The implementation of the Anglo-Portuguese treaty would deal a crushing blow to the Belgian colonial plans. However, in April 1884, the French government, alarmed by the strengthening of the position of its main colonial rival - England, preferred to go for a partial settlement of its conflict with the Association in order to present the latter as a shield against Anglo-Portuguese claims. In the agreement concluded with the Association, France actually recognized its sovereignty over the occupied lands, although without clearly delineating the boundaries. Soon the position of the Association was also supported by Germany, which declared that it did not recognize the Anglo-Portuguese treaty.

England thus found itself in a state of isolation. This hindered the implementation of its plans in other parts of the African continent (for example, along the lower reaches of the Niger), where English interests were more significant than in the Congo basin, and where its main competitors were the same France and Germany. England also feared that the economic strangulation of the Association, which might result from an Anglo-Portuguese treaty, would lead to the strengthening of France. In view of all this, the British government did not submit an agreement with Portugal for ratification in Parliament, and in June 1884 it was annulled.

Berlin conference

By the middle of the 80s of the XIX century. the struggle for the partition of Africa became markedly more acute. Almost every attempt by one or another colonial power to occupy new lands ran into similar aspirations of other states.

In November 1884, on the initiative of Germany and France, an international conference of 14 states with "special interests" in Africa was convened in Berlin. The association did not directly participate in the conference, but its representatives were part of the Belgian and American delegations. The work of the conference lasted until the end of February 1885.

The Berlin Conference adopted decisions on freedom of trade in the Congo basin and on freedom of navigation on the African rivers, but its real aim was the division of Central Africa among the imperialist powers.

During the negotiations, which were conducted by representatives of the Association with the countries participating in the conference, the international recognition of the Association and its vast holdings in the Congo basin was achieved. In November 1884 - February 1885, the Association concluded relevant agreements with Germany, England, Italy and other countries, and the mention of it as a new state in the Congo basin was included in the General Act of the conference.

August 1, 1885, a few months after the end of the Berlin Conference, International Association The Congo became the Congo Free State. Formally, ties with Belgium were limited to a personal union carried out by King Leopold II, but in fact the Congo basin became a Belgian colony.

7. Enslavement of the peoples of East Africa

Beginning of the division of Northeast Africa

Of the European powers that began to seize Northeast Africa in the 1970s and 1980s, England was in the most advantageous position. Even before the occupation of Egypt, she tried to gain a foothold in Eastern Sudan, which, like Egypt, which conquered it, was considered an integral part of the Ottoman Empire. The management of Eastern Sudan was carried out at the expense of the Egyptian budget. However, the actual power here belonged to the English General Gordon, who was officially in the Egyptian civil service.

Enslaving Eastern Sudan, England thereby asserted its dominance over Egypt, Agriculture which was entirely dependent on the flow of the Nile waters.

On the coast of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, England met a rival, France, which relied on a small territory around the city of Obock, which occupied a commanding strategic position at the exit from the Bab el-Mandeb Strait. In the 80s, France captured the entire coast of the Gulf of Tadjoura, as well as the city of Djibouti, which became the main stronghold of French expansion in Northeast Africa. However, the main danger to British plans in the area was not these small French territorial gains, but the growing ties between the French and Ethiopia. In the late 80s, Djibouti became the main port through which Ethiopia's foreign trade was carried out. A French military mission was invited to Addis Ababa, the capital of Ethiopia.

At the same time, Italian expansion unfolded in Northeast Africa. As early as 1869, immediately after the opening of the Suez Canal, the Genoese shipping company purchased Assab Bay and the Damarkia Islands from the Sultan of Raheita for the construction of a coal warehouse on the sea route, which was destined to become one of the busiest in the world. Ten years later, the Italian government bought the rights from the company. Assab became an Italian colony, in 1882 it was occupied by Italian troops and formally annexed. Assab was the main springboard from where Italy later launched an offensive against Ethiopia.

The British government supported Italian claims in Northeast Africa, seeing them as a counterbalance to France's colonial aspirations. Thanks to this, Italy was able to significantly expand its possessions to the south and north of Assab. In 1885, the city of Mas-Saua, previously captured by England, was transferred to Italy. In 1890, these territories were united into the colony of Eritrea.

Even earlier, in 1888, Italy proclaimed a protectorate over the vast territory of Somalia. Most of the Italian acquisitions were in the scorching desert, but they were of strategic importance, for they cut off Ethiopia from the coast. England's colonial conquests in northeast Africa were relatively small. In 1876, she established a protectorate over Fr. Socotra holding key position at the exit to the Indian Ocean, in 1884 seized part of the land inhabited by Somalis on the coast of the Gulf of Aden.

The division of Northeast Africa by the European powers was completed after the uprising in Sudan - the largest event in the history of the liberation struggle of the African peoples against the colonialists.

Mahdist uprising in Sudan

In August 1881, during the Muslim fast of Ramadan, the young preacher Mohammed Ahmed, a native of the Nubian Dangala tribe, by that time already widely known in Sudan, declared himself Mahdi - the messiah, the messenger of Allah, called to restore true faith and justice on earth. Mahdi called on the people of Sudan to rise up in a holy war - jihad - against foreign enslavers. At the same time, he proclaimed the abolition of hated taxes, the equality of all "in the face of Allah." The peoples of Sudan were asked to unite to fight a common enemy. “Better a thousand graves than paying one dirham of tax” - this call spread throughout the country.

Muhammad Ahmed, under the name of Mahdi, soon became the recognized leader of the popular liberation uprising that unfolded in Sudan.

The ranks of the rebels, poorly armed but determined to fight the conquerors, grew rapidly. A year after the start of the uprising, by September 1882, only two heavily fortified cities, Bara and El Obeid, remained under the control of the Anglo-Egyptian authorities in Kordofan. In January - February 1883, these cities, too, besieged by the rebels, were forced to surrender. The establishment of the Mahdists in El Obeid, the main city of Kordofan, was their biggest political victory. The uprising spread to the province of Darfur, Bahr el-Ghazal, Equatoria. A particular danger to British rule was the spread of the uprising to the Red Sea coast of Africa - in close proximity to the main communications linking England with its colonies.

In March-April 1884, the population of the regions of Berbera and Dongola revolted. In May, the Mahdists took possession of Berber. The route from Khartoum to the north was cut off. In January 1885, after a long siege, Khartoum - the capital of Eastern Sudan - was taken by storm, and Governor General Gordon was killed. In the summer of that year, the expulsion of the Anglo-Egyptian troops from the Sudan was completed.

The uprising of the Mahdists, directed against the British colonialists and the Egyptian feudal bureaucracy, had a pronounced liberation character. However, shortly after the victory of the Mahdists and their conquest state power serious social changes took place in the rebel camp.

The deep upheavals that Sudan experienced in the 1980s undermined the old tribal ties. The tribal nobility came to power after the expulsion of the foreign administration; the union of tribes that arose during the uprising gradually turned into a state organization of a class type. The Mahdist state was formed as an unlimited feudal theocratic monarchy.

Mohammed Ahmed died in June 1885. The Mahdist state was headed by a native of the Arab Bakkara tribe Abdallah, who took the title of caliph. He had all the power - military, secular and spiritual. Separate branches were subordinated to the closest associates of Abdallah government controlled. Taxes were not only kept in defiance of the Mahdi's promise, but new ones were introduced.

At the same time, the joint struggle brought together the various peoples of Sudan. The disintegration of the tribal system was facilitated by the beginning process of the formation of nationalities connected by an ethnic community.

The Mahdist uprising had repercussions outside Sudan. The beginning of the uprising coincided with the national liberation struggle of the Egyptian people. At least a third of the Egyptian soldiers who participated in the battles with mah diets went over to the side of the rebels. In the future, the existence of an independent Sudan had a huge impact on enslaved Egypt. The repercussions of the Mahdist uprising swept across the entire African continent, penetrated into distant India. The victories of the Mahdists inspired many peoples of Africa and Asia to resist the colonialists.

British takeover of Eastern Sudan

After the fall of Khartoum, the British colonialists did not take active steps against the Mahdist state for more than 10 years. During this decade, the political situation in East Africa has changed dramatically. Sudan was surrounded by the possessions of a number of European countries, each of which sought to gain a foothold in the Nile Valley. Eritrea and most of Somalia were taken over by Italy. German agents carried on feverish activities in East and West Tropical Africa. Leopold II vigorously developed expansion from the Congo he captured to the northeast, to the southern provinces of Sudan.

France was rapidly expanding its colonial empire in this area, approaching Sudan from the west. Its influence was noticeably strengthened in Ethiopia as well.

From now on, France could lead an offensive to the Nile valley also from east to west and thus complete the creation of a continuous strip of French possessions from the Atlantic to the Red Sea.

All this posed a great threat to the British colonial plans. The British Government felt it necessary to take decisive action in the Sudan. In December 1895, Salisbury publicly announced that the destruction of Mahdism was the task of the British government. Following this, it was decided to occupy the Dongolu region and from there to launch an offensive to the south. The commander-in-chief (sirdar) of the Egyptian army, the English general Kitchener, was entrusted to lead the campaign.

By the beginning of the resumption of hostilities against the Sudan, Kitchener had a ten thousandth, well-armed Anglo-Egyptian army. There were about 100 thousand people in the Mahdist army, but only 34 thousand of them had guns. The offensive of the Anglo-Egyptian troops proceeded very slowly. The capture of Dongola took over a year. A major battle took place in April 1898 near Metemma. Despite the desperate courage of the Sudanese troops, marching in dense ranks towards machine-gun fire, military equipment and organization brought victory to the British. On September 2, 1898, the main forces of the Mahdists were defeated near the walls of Omdurman, having lost more than half of their strength in killed, wounded and captured. Kitchener joined Omdurman. The victors subjected the defenseless city to a terrible defeat. The severed heads of prisoners were displayed on the walls of Omdurman and Khartoum. The ashes of the Mahdi were removed from the mausoleum and burned in the furnace of the steamer.

In January 1899, British dominion over Eastern Sudan was legally formalized in the form of an Anglo-Egyptian condominium. All real power in the Sudan, on the basis of this agreement, was transferred to the governor-general, who was appointed by the Egyptian khedive on the proposal of England. Egyptian laws did not apply to the territory of Sudan. The independence that the peoples of Sudan had been upholding for 18 years with weapons in their hands was destroyed. Retreating with the remnants of the troops, Abdallah continued to fight until 1900.

Fashoda

The defeat of the Mahdists in 1898 did not yet mean the establishment of England along the entire length of the Nile Valley. Having captured Omdurman and Khartoum, Kitchener moved swiftly south to Fashoda, where a French expeditionary detachment led by Captain Marshay had arrived before that.

Kitchener categorically demanded Marchand's departure. Marchand no less resolutely refused to comply with this demand without the order of his government. Since France was in no hurry to meet the British claims, the British cabinet took pressure measures. The English press spoke in an extremely militant tone. Military preparations began on both sides. “England is within a hair's breadth of war with France (Fashoda). Rob ("divide") Africa "( V. I. Lenin, Notebooks on Imperialism, M., 1939, p. 620.), - V. I. Lenin later noted.

It did not come to the Anglo-French colonial war. The French government saw that the balance of power was not in favor of France: Marchand's small detachment was opposed by Kitchener's army; it tried to bargain with the British for some compensation for the withdrawal of Marchand's detachment, but the British government declared that any negotiations were possible only after the evacuation of Fashoda by Marchand. In the end, France had to give in. In November 1898 Marchand left Fashoda. In March 1899, an agreement was concluded on the delimitation of British and French possessions in Eastern Sudan. The border passed mainly along the watershed of the Nile and Lake Chad basins. France was finally removed from the Nile valley, but secured the previously disputed region of Vadai (to the northeast of Lake Chad).

Partition of East Tropical Africa

By the beginning of the 1980s, East Tropical Africa had become a field of fierce rivalry between the British, German and French colonizers. Germany was especially active in this area, striving to create a continuous array of its possessions in Africa - from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean, on both sides of the equator. The invasion of East Africa was carried out by a private company established in 1884 - the Society for German Colonization, headed by K. Peters. Based on the "rights" acquired by Peters under 12 treaties with local leaders, the German East African Company was founded in February 1885, exercising sovereignty over a large territory.

Two weeks after the foundation of the company, an imperial charter (similar to the royal charter granted to British colonial societies) placed both the rights and possessions of the company under the protection of the German state. At the beginning of 1885, a representative of the company concluded new agreements, according to which, under its control, a coastal strip several hundred kilometers long to the north of the Portuguese possessions departed. The wealthy Sultanate of Bitu ended up in the German realm.

The emergence in an extremely short period of vast German colonial possessions in the east of the African continent caused alarm in London. In April 1885, at the direction of the British government, the Sultan of Zanzibar protested against the German invasion of his possessions. The German government objected that the Sultan was not carrying out the "effective occupation" in the disputed territories, prescribed by the decisions of the Berlin Conference. In August 1885, the Sultan was forced to recognize the German protectorate over the areas captured by the Peters company. Not satisfied with this, Peters came up with plans to create a vast German colony in East Africa, equivalent to British India. These plans, however, met resistance from a strong competitor, the Imperial British East African Company, which acted in similar ways (contracts with chiefs, setting up trading posts, etc.). There was a motley patchwork of English and German possessions in East Tropical Africa.

In 1886 an attempt was made to settle the mutual claims of England, Germany and France in East Africa. Behind the Zanzibar sultan, that is, in fact, behind England, the islands of Zanzibar and Pemba, as well as a coastal strip ten miles wide and a thousand miles long, remained. The German East Africa Company received the exclusive right to lease from the Sultan of the coastal regions, and the Imperial British East Africa Company was granted the corresponding rights to the north. Germany retained Bita, surrounded by English possessions. France was granted freedom of action in Madagascar.

The agreements of 1886 were extremely fragile. A significant part of the lands divided by the European powers had not yet been captured by them. The absence of a sufficiently clear boundary between spheres of influence raised a large number of controversial issues. The German colonial companies remained the possessions of the Zanzibar Sultan cut off from the ocean, who increasingly became an obedient toy in the hands of England. On the other hand, the British were unhappy that the German possessions in Bita were wedged into the British sphere. The situation was complicated by the fact that France did not give up its attempts to create its own colonies in this part of the mainland. Belgium sought to penetrate here from the west. In 1888, in the territories subject to Germany, the Arabs united with the Bantu peoples and raised an uprising. Soon the colonizers were expelled from almost all the lands they had captured. The rapidly growing uprising was a danger to all imperialists. Therefore, in the fight against the rebels, all the powers that had colonial interests in East Africa - Germany, England, France, Italy - united. A naval blockade of the coast was organized. Taking advantage of this support and pulling up significant forces, Germany suppressed the uprising with incredible cruelty.

In 1889, having intervened in the internecine struggle in Buganda (part of Uganda), England subjugated this country. In the same year, she captured vast areas in the south, which later formed the territory of the English colony, called Northern Rhodesia. Thus, German possessions in East Africa were reduced to a minimum size. Peters' ambitious plans for a "German India" in Africa did not materialize.

The final delimitation of the English and German possessions in East Tropical Africa took place in 1890, when the so-called "Helgoland Treaty" was concluded. Yielding to Germany about. Heligoland, England included in its sphere of influence Zanzibar, Bita, Pemba, Kenya, Uganda, Nyasaland and also some disputed territories in West Africa, on the border of the Gold Coast and Togo.

Italian defeat in Ethiopia

Ethiopia (Abyssinia) was the only African country that managed to successfully repulse the European colonialists and defend its independence.

In the middle of the XIX century. in Ethiopia, fragmented into many feudal principalities, the formation of a centralized state began. In addition to economic processes, this was facilitated by political factors: the growing threat of aggression from the European colonialists required the rallying of forces to protect the independence of the country.

By 1856, the regions of Tigre, Shoa and Amhara were united under the rule of Fedor II, who took the title of negus (emperor) of all Ethiopia. Conducted by him in 1856-1868. progressive reforms contributed to the weakening of feudal separatism, the strengthening of the power of the Negus, and the development of the country's productive forces. A single army was created instead of the fighting squads of the feudal lords. The tax system was reorganized, state revenues were streamlined, and the slave trade was banned.

In the 80s, Ethiopia attracted increased attention of the colonial circles of Italy. Italy made its first attempt to significantly expand its possessions in Northeast Africa at the expense of Ethiopia in 1886. However, in January 1887, the Ethiopians inflicted a heavy defeat on the Italian expeditionary force.

At the beginning of 1889, when a struggle broke out between the major Ethiopian feudal lords for the crown of the Negus, Italy supported the ruler of Shoa, who ascended the throne under the name of Menelik I. In May 1889, Menelik and the Italian representative signed the Uchchialsky an agreement that secured a number of territories for it. Not content with this, the Italian government resorted to outright fraud. In the text of the agreement, which remained with the Negus and written in Amharic, one of the articles (17th) indicated that the Negus could use the services of Italy in diplomatic relations with other states. In the Italian text, this article was formulated as an obligation of the negus to seek the mediation of Italy, which was tantamount to establishing an Italian protectorate over Ethiopia.

In 1890, Italy officially informed the powers about the establishment of a protectorate over Ethiopia and occupied the Tigre region. Menelik made a strong protest against the Italian interpretation of the Ucchiala Treaty, and in 1893 announced to the Italian government that from 1894, when the treaty expires, he would consider himself free from all obligations stipulated by it.

Ethiopia was preparing for an imminent war. A 112,000-strong army was created. Menelik managed to achieve an unprecedented unification of separate regions in the history of the country.

In 1895, Italian troops moved deep into Ethiopia. On March 1, 1896, a general battle took place near Adua. The Italian invaders suffered a crushing defeat. In October 1896, a peace treaty was signed in Addis Ababa, according to which Italy unconditionally recognized the independence of Ethiopia, renounced the Treaty of Uchchiala and pledged to pay an indemnity to Ethiopia. The border of 1889 was restored, which meant the loss of the Tigre region by Italy.

Results of the division of East Africa

By 1900, the division of East Africa was completed. Only Ethiopia managed to maintain its independence. The richest areas of East Africa were captured by England. An array of English colonial possessions stretched from the Mediterranean to the source of the Nile. In the north, Egypt, Eastern Sudan, Uganda, Kenya, part of Somalia passed under the rule of England, in the south - Northern Rhodesia and Nyasaland, which merged with British possessions in South Africa. Rhodes' plan was close to being carried out. Only the German East Africa and Ruanda-Urundi wedged into territories subject to England. In Mozambique, Portuguese possessions were preserved.

The example of Ethiopia and Eastern Sudan showed that the consolidation of the African peoples, the establishment of state centralization contribute to the protection of their independence and make it possible to resist the might of the colonial powers. For the peoples of the African continent, this was a most valuable historical experience.

8. Annexation of Madagascar by France

Madagascar was a centralized feudal monarchy, the core of which was the state of Imerina, which developed on the basis of the Merina people. The dominant position was occupied by the class of feudal lords, who had large land holdings. The most numerous part of the population were personally free peasants united in communities. At the end of the XIX century. the community, which had previously been a stable economic and social unit, entered the stage of decay.

In the last decades of the XIX century. important reforms were carried out in Madagascar. To finally break the remnants of feudal separatism, the country was divided into eight provinces headed by governors appointed by the government. Central power was exercised by the king and the cabinet of ministers headed by the prime minister, as well as by the royal council. The army and the judicial system underwent transformations.

Some progress was also made in the field of cultural development. In 1881, a decree was issued on the compulsory education of all children aged 8 to 16, although the real conditions for its implementation existed only in Imerin, where up to 2 thousand schools were opened. The formation of a national intelligentsia began in the country. Newspapers and books began to be published in Malagash.

Invasion of the colonialists

Back in the 30s of the XIX century. France concluded a number of "protectorate" treaties with tribal leaders, who gave her several points on the west coast, in the lands of Sakalava. In the following decades, the French colonialists sought to expand their sphere of influence.

Relations between Madagascar and France deteriorated sharply in the early 1980s. In 1882, the French government demanded that Madagascar recognize the French protectorate. At the same time, France opened hostilities: the French squadron bombarded the coastal cities, the landing of the French troops captured Majunga, an important port on the west coast, the bay of Diego Suarez in the northeast, and the port of Tamatave. The Malgash people put up armed resistance. In September 1885, the colonialists were defeated near Farafati. Nevertheless, the forces were too unequal, and the Malagasy government had to sign a peace treaty in December 1885, which satisfied the basic demands of France.

War 1882-1885 and the unequal treaty that ended it were the first step towards the annexation of Madagascar by France.

The transformation of Madagascar into a French colony

In September 1894, the French Resident General presented a draft of a new treaty to Queen Ranavalone III; under its terms, control over foreign and internal politics The country was handed over to the French authorities and armed forces were introduced into the territory of Madagascar in an amount that the French government "deems necessary".

The re-equipment and reorganization of the Malagasy army, begun after 1885, had not yet been completed, but the Malagasy troops heroically defended the independence of their country. The campaign of the French troops from Mazhunga to Tananariva took about six months. Only on September 30, 1895, the French expeditionary force approached Tananarive and bombarded the capital of Madagascar.

The next day, October 1, a peace treaty was signed, asserting the dominance of France over Madagascar. The power of the queen and her government nominally still remained, but the implementation of the diplomatic representation of the country was entirely transferred to France; internal management was also subject to its control.

At the end of 1895, a wave of popular resistance to the colonialists arose. The uprising swept the whole country. Communication routes between Mazhunga and Tananariva were cut. In May 1896, the rebels were 16 km from the capital. In most of the country, partisan power was established.

In the summer of 1896, France decided to discard all conventions: the annexation of Madagascar was announced by an act of the French Parliament. In February 1897, the French deposed the queen and expelled her, and the country was divided into military districts. The colonialists established their unlimited power over the population. However guerrilla war in a number of areas of the island continued until 1904.


The “economic civilization” of most of Africa (with the exception of the “river civilization” of the Nile Valley) took shape over thousands of years and by the time the region was colonized in the second half of the 19th century. changed very little. The basis of the economy was still slash-and-burn agriculture with hoe tillage.

Recall that this is the earliest type of farming, followed by plow farming (which, by the way, is not very widespread even at the end of the 20th century, which is hindered by the reasonable desire of local peasants to preserve a thin fertile layer of soil; a plow plowing to a fairly large depth will do more harm than good).

Farming more high level(outside the Nile Valley) was distributed only in Northeast Africa (on the territory of modern Ethiopia), in West Africa and Madagascar.

Animal husbandry (mainly cattle breeding) was auxiliary in the economy of the African peoples, and it became the main thing only in certain areas of the mainland - south of the Zambezi River, among the nomadic peoples of North Africa.

Africa has long been known to Europeans, but it was not of great interest to them. Precious reserves were not discovered here, and it was difficult to penetrate deep into the mainland. Until the end of the XVIII century. Europeans knew only the outlines of the banks and mouths of the rivers, where trading strongholds were created and from where slaves were taken to America. The role of Africa was reflected in the geographical names that the whites gave to individual sections of the African coast: the Ivory Coast, the Gold Coast, the Slave Coast.

Until the 80s. 19th century more than 3/4 of the territory of Africa was occupied by various political entities, including even large and strong states (Mali, Zimbabwe, etc.). European colonies were only on the coast. And suddenly, within only two decades, all of Africa was divided among the European powers. This happened at a time when almost all of America had already achieved political independence. Why did Europe suddenly have an interest in the African continent?

The most important reasons for colonization

1. By this time, the mainland had already been quite well explored by various expeditions and Christian missionaries. American war correspondent G. Stanley in the mid-70s. 19th century crossed the African continent with the expedition from east to west, leaving behind destroyed settlements. Addressing the British, G. Stanley wrote: “South of the mouth of the Congo River, forty million naked people are waiting to be dressed by the weaving factories of Manchester and equipped with tools by the workshops of Birmingham.”

2. By the end of the XIX century. quinine was discovered as a remedy for malaria. Europeans were able to penetrate into the depths of malarial territories.

3. In Europe, by this time, industry began to develop rapidly, the economy was on the rise, European countries stood on their feet. It was a period of relative political calm in Europe - there were no major wars. The colonial powers showed amazing "solidarity", and at the Berlin Conference in the mid-80s. England, France, Portugal, Belgium and Germany divided the territory of Africa among themselves. The borders in Africa were "cut" without taking into account the geographical and ethnic characteristics of the territory. At present, 2/5 of African state borders run along parallels and meridians, 1/3 - along other straight lines and arcs, and only 1/4 - along natural boundaries, approximately coinciding with ethnic boundaries.

By the beginning of the XX century. all of Africa was divided among the European metropolises.

The struggle of the African peoples against the invaders was complicated by internal tribal conflicts, in addition, it was difficult to resist the Europeans armed with perfect rifled firearms, invented by that time, with spears and arrows.

The period of active colonization of Africa began. Unlike America or Australia, there was no massive European immigration here. Throughout the African continent in the XVIII century. there was only one compact group of immigrants - the Dutch (Boers), numbering only 16 thousand people ("Boers" from the Dutch and German words "bauer", which means "peasant"). And even now, at the end of the 20th century, in Africa, the descendants of Europeans and children from mixed marriages make up only 1% of the population (This includes 3 million Boers, the same number of mulattos in South Africa and one and a half million immigrants from Great Britain).

Africa has the lowest level of socio-economic development compared to other regions of the world. According to all the main indicators of the development of the economy and the social sphere, the region occupies the position of a world outsider.

The most pressing problems of humanity are most relevant for Africa. Not all of Africa scores so low, but a few more fortunate countries are only "islands of relative prosperity" in the midst of poverty and acute problems.

Perhaps the problems of Africa are due to difficult natural conditions, a long period of colonial rule?

Undoubtedly, these factors played a negative role, but others also acted along with them.

Africa belongs to the developing world, which in the 60s and 70s. showed high rates of economic, and in some areas and social development. In the 80s and 90s. problems sharply escalated, the rate of economic growth decreased (production began to fall), which gave reason to conclude: "The developing world has stopped developing."

However, there is a point of view that involves the allocation of two close, but at the same time heterogeneous concepts: "development" and "modernization". Development in this case refers to changes in the socio-economic sphere caused by internal causes that lead to the strengthening of the traditional system without destroying it. Did the process of development proceed in Africa, its traditional economy? Of course yes.

In contrast to development, modernization is a set of changes in the socio-economic (and political) sphere caused by the modern requirements of the outside world. In the case of Africa, this means expanding external contacts and its inclusion in world system; i.e. Africa must learn to "play by the rules of the world". Will not Africa be destroyed by this inclusion in the modern world civilization?

One-sided, traditional development leads to autarky (isolation) and lagging behind the world leaders. Rapid modernization is accompanied by a painful breaking of the existing socio-economic structure. Optimal is reasonable combination development and modernization, and most importantly - a gradual, phased transformation, without catastrophic consequences and taking into account local specifics. Modernization has an objective character, and one cannot do without it.