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Unit Questions: Imperialism in Africa

Unit Questions: Imperialism in Africa. Why did European countries conquer Africa? How did European contact impact Africans?. Imperialism A policy in which a strong nation seeks to dominate other countries politically, economically, and/or socially. Imperialism. Case Study: Africa.

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Unit Questions: Imperialism in Africa

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  1. Unit Questions: Imperialism in Africa • Why did European countries conquer Africa? • How did European contact impact Africans?

  2. Imperialism A policy in which a strong nation seeks to dominate other countries politically, economically, and/or socially.

  3. Imperialism Case Study: Africa

  4. Early Man

  5. Early Civilizations

  6. Mali

  7. Reasons for European Imperialism Why did Europeans want to conquer Africa?

  8. Economics

  9. Economics As the industrial revolution was gaining steam in Europe in the 19th century many European countries believed they need new markets for their products. They hoped and believed that by controlling Africa they could sell their products to them. They also wanted Africa as a source of raw materials. Europe’s factories were producing at a great rate, and they consumed great amounts of materials.

  10. European Superiority

  11. European Superiority Europeans also believed in a particular European superiority. The manufacturing output created by the industrial revolution gave Europeans great advantages and lead many to believe in European superiority. Many asked why shouldn’t Europeans dominate the world?

  12. Social Darwinism • Charles Darwin’s theory of “survival of the fittest.” • Applied to human societies and races. • Europeans considered more evolve and therefore better.

  13. Nationalism

  14. Nationalism In some ways imperialism was little more that Nationalistic competition between European countries. In a way they believed that the more land and people they controlled the better they were.

  15. Missionary Impulse

  16. Missionary Impulse Finally, as was the case of Latin America, many Europeans believed it was their responsibility to spread the word of Christianity, and Africa was another source of souls to be saved.

  17. Mnemonic Activity With a partner come up with a mnemonic device to remember what the Reasons for European Imperialism

  18. Reasons for European Success Why were Europeans able to conquer Africa?

  19. Technological Advantages

  20. Technological Advances Along with the industrial revolution came great advancements in technology. Many of those technologies gave Europeans advantages over Africans. The maxim gun, steam ships, railroads

  21. Cure for Malaria

  22. Cure for Malaria Once a cure for Malaria was discover, Europeans no longer had to fear disease which kept many away from Africa.

  23. Exploitation of African Diversity

  24. Exploitation of African Diversity As we discussed, Africa is and was highly diverse. Europeans were able to use this diversity against them by playing one group against another and forming strategic alliances. It also made coordination between African groups difficult.

  25. Mnemonic Activity With a partner come up with a mnemonic device to remember what the Reasons for European Success in Africa

  26. Europeans Carve Up Africa

  27. Impact of Imperialism Over the course of the 19th and early-twentieth century Europe took over and carved up almost every last inch of Africa. They did this will little attention paid to the needs, wants or desires of Africans themselves.

  28. EuropeanNationalism Source for Raw Materials MissionaryActivity Industrial Revolution European Motives For Colonization Markets forFinishedGoods Military& NavalBases SocialDarwinism EuropeanRacism Places toDumpUnwanted/Excess Popul. HumanitarianReasons Soc. & Eco.Opportunities “WhiteMan’sBurden”

  29. BERLIN CONFERENCE • Meeting at the Berlin residence of Chancellor Otto von Bismarck in 1884, the foreign ministers of fourteen European powers and the United States established ground rules for the future exploitation of the "dark continent." Africans were not invited or made privy to their decisions. • The Horizon: History of Africa, Alvin Edt Josephy, American Heritage Publishing Co., New York, 1971, p. 452.

  30. What was the Berlin Conference? • In November 1884, the imperial chancellor and architect of the German Empire, Otto von Bismarck, convened a conference of 14 states (including the United States) to settle the political partitioning of Africa. Bismarck wanted not only to expand German spheres of influence in Africa but also to play off Germany's colonial rivals against one another to the Germans' advantage. Of these fourteen nations, France, Germany, Great Britain, and Portugal were the major players in the conference, controlling most of colonial Africa at the time.

  31. Impact of Berlin Conference • The Berlin Conference was Africa's undoing in more ways than one. The colonial powers superimposed their domains on the African Continent. By the time Africa regained its independence after the late 1950s, the realm had acquired a legacy of political fragmentation that could neither be eliminated nor made to operate satisfactorily. The African politico-geographical map is thus a permanent liability that resulted from the three months of ignorant, greedy acquisitiveness during a period when Europe's search for minerals and markets had become insatiable.

  32. Dividing up the Land • The French dominated most of West Africa, and the British East and Southern Africa. The Belgians acquired the vast territory that became The Congo. The Germans held four colonies, one in each of the realm's regions. The Portuguese held a small colony in West Africa and two large ones in Southern Africa. • After colonial rule was firmly established in Africa, the only change in possessions came after World War I. Germany's four colonies were placed under the League of Nations, which established a mandate system for other colonizers to administer the territories.

  33. Africa- The cultural and ethnic diversity of the African people was disregarded by European imperialist nations

  34. Positives • European medicine & improved nutrition increased life span of Africans. This caused an increase in population. Modern transportation & communications; telegraphs, railroads, steamships, and telephones A small minority received improved education and economic opportunities. Negatives European domination led to an erosion of traditional African values and destroyed many existing social relationships African peoples were treated a s inferior. Forced to work long hours for low pay. Europeans divided up Africa ignoring tribal, ethnic, and cultural boundaries. These divisions have led to ongoing tribal clashes

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