各什么各什么| 喝茶叶茶有什么好处| 什么是尿崩症| 女生肚子大是什么原因| 孕晚期流鼻血是什么原因| 朋友的意义是什么| 羞辱什么意思| 乳腺点状强回声是什么意思| 暗疾是什么意思| 什么天长地久| 体重指数是什么意思| 凝血常规是查什么的| 武汉大学校长是什么级别| 胸部疼痛挂什么科| 复位是什么意思| 喝水经常呛到是什么原因| 杜仲有什么作用| 指责的意思是什么| 阻力是什么意思| 中医五行属什么| 什么是黄体破裂| 胆囊炎吃什么药好得快| 什么是集体户| 六一送女孩子什么礼物| 宫颈糜烂用什么药好得快| 午马是什么意思| 胆囊切除有什么影响| 利福喷丁和利福平有什么区别| 孔子姓什么名什么| 瑶柱是什么| 女生大姨妈推迟是什么原因| cdr是什么意思| 瞳孔缩小意味着什么| 五行缺金是什么命| 当演员有什么要求| 俄罗斯乌克兰为什么打仗| 卧推练什么肌肉| 一月19日是什么星座| 西红柿不能跟什么一起吃| 白细胞2加号什么意思| 猪尾巴炖什么好吃| 血脂高可以吃什么水果| 睡觉出汗是什么原因男性| 七月二十是什么星座| 休克疗法是什么意思| 爱吐口水是什么原因| 原发性高血压是什么意思| 后羿属什么生肖| 减肥吃什么药好| 尿液里白细胞高是什么原因| 5月3日什么星座| 萨满教供奉什么神| 乌唇是什么原因| 左侧头疼是什么原因| 潮汐是什么意思| 吃海带有什么好处| 二尾子什么意思| 丙三醇是什么东西| 拉肚子可以吃什么| 马加其念什么| 前列腺炎是什么引起的| 老花眼视力模糊有什么办法解决吗| 左眼跳是什么原因| 经常打嗝是什么原因引起的| 鸭肉煲汤放什么材料好| 作曲是什么意思| 朱砂五行属什么| 脑袋疼挂什么科| 古字五行属什么| 辟邪剑谱和葵花宝典有什么关系| 输卵管堵塞吃什么药能打通| 干咳有痰是什么原因| 孤独的最高境界是什么| 跟泰迪很像的狗叫什么| 嘴唇白是什么原因| 白猫来家里有什么预兆| 腌牛肉放什么调料| 原生家庭是什么| 利妥昔单抗是治什么病| 成五行属性是什么| 唐宝是什么意思| 绿杨春属于什么茶| 打乙肝疫苗需要注意什么| 大名鼎鼎的鼎是什么意思| 纵隔淋巴结转移是什么意思| 什么食物铅含量高| 性激素六项什么时候检查| 扁桃体经常发炎是什么原因| 地狱不空誓不成佛是什么意思| 结婚五周年是什么婚| 520是什么日子| 怀孕不能吃什么水果| 过午不食什么意思| 时柱将星是什么意思| 手脚发麻是什么病征兆| 疯马皮是什么皮| 舌头上有溃疡是什么原因| 缺锌会有什么症状| 海纳百川是什么意思| 蜱虫用什么药可以消灭| 喝蜂蜜水有什么好处和坏处| 什么是宫刑| 外交部长是什么级别| ryan是什么意思| 异常子宫出血是什么原因| 什么鱼是深海鱼| 刚刚怀孕有什么症状| 气管炎咳嗽吃什么药最有效| 凭什么是什么意思| 喉咙干疼吃什么药| dht是什么| 乳腺增生是什么原因引起的| 桥本甲状腺炎是什么| 狗咬了不能吃什么| 为什么怀孕了就不来月经了| 甲功五项能查出什么病| 宫颈光滑说明什么| 什么是肛漏| 脱毛膏是什么原理| 专业组是什么意思| 一直头疼是什么原因| 才下眉头却上心头是什么意思| 糖尿病人可以吃什么零食| 什么叫暧昧| 贫血是什么意思| 新生儿为什么有黄疸| 花甲吃什么| 金银花入什么经| 来月经吃什么排得最干净| 五什么六什么| ooh什么意思| 脂肪肝是什么引起的| 同房后小腹疼痛是什么原因| 手指是什么生肖| 浑水摸鱼什么意思| 蒸鱼豉油可以用什么代替| 红枣有什么功效| 降火喝什么茶| 湿气重吃什么好| 正月十八是什么星座| 不射精是什么原因| 墨镜什么牌子好| 出处是什么意思| 手脚抽筋吃什么药| 七岁属什么生肖| 腊肠和什么菜炒最佳| 疣是什么病毒| 挺拔的意思是什么| 地铁不能带什么东西| 手上的线分别代表什么图解| 何炅的老婆叫什么名字| 什么的贝壳| 脑梗是什么原因| 气喘吁吁什么意思| 散光有什么症状| 口腔溃疡吃什么药| 什么食物黄体酮含量高| 罗贯中和施耐庵是什么关系| 阁僚是什么意思| 挑疳积挑出来的是什么| 奇葩什么意思| 风五行属什么| 宫外孕出血是什么颜色| 和包是什么| 什么分什么裂| aape是什么牌子| 女性夜尿多是什么原因| 飞机票号是什么意思| 经期提前是什么原因| 浪琴手表什么档次| 狗吃什么会死| 和可以组什么词| 金银花有什么作用| 酸性体质是什么意思| 丰都为什么叫鬼城| 夏天为什么热| 老虎菜为什么叫老虎菜| 子宫内膜为什么会增厚| 胃胀吃点什么药| 阴虱长什么样子| 一月八号是什么星座| 纵隔肿瘤是什么病| 喉咙有痰吐出来有血是什么原因| 一什么凉席| 大姨妈吃什么水果最好| 成林香是什么意思| 为什么会长脂肪瘤| 狗狗什么时候打疫苗| nasa是什么牌子| 4月26日什么星座| 案底是什么意思| 狗毛对人体有什么危害| 木芙蓉什么时候开花| 什么叫同工同酬| hcg阴性是什么意思| 狗怕什么| 什么钙片好| 中医四诊指的是什么| 本自具足是什么意思| 阴晴不定是什么意思| aquascutum是什么牌子| 头痛看什么科| 读书心得是什么意思| 撸管是什么意思| 12月份什么星座| 杨贵妃属什么生肖| 着床成功后有什么症状或感觉| 黄瓜敷脸有什么效果| 忐忑不安是什么意思| 酱酱酿酿是什么意思| 心包填塞三联征是什么| 功夫是什么意思| 五一广场有什么好玩的| 砗磲是什么| 女人吃什么提高性激素| 老人反复发烧是什么原因引起的| 含五行属什么| 玫瑰花泡水喝有什么好处| 角质是什么| 总咳嗽是什么原因| 一个金字旁一个各念什么| 男属狗配什么属相最好| 英雄本色是什么意思| 依稀是什么意思| 一什么粽子| 荨麻疹是什么原因| 妙手回春是什么意思| 牛肉粉是什么调料| 中耳炎是什么症状| 长公主是皇上的什么人| 春什么秋什么的成语| 白羊属于什么象星座| 百分比是什么意思| 晚上睡不着什么原因| 口水分泌过多是什么原因| 明朝为什么会灭亡| 半月板变性是什么意思| 小炒肉用什么肉| 宫殿是什么意思| 左什么右什么| 为什么同房后小腹疼痛| 村里入党需要什么条件| 膝盖骨质增生用什么药效果好| 治霉菌性阴炎用什么药好得快| 气管炎吃什么药最有效| 药物流产吃什么药| 脑梗的人适合吃什么食物| 排卵期什么时候开始| 聚乙二醇是什么东西| 鸡奸是什么意思| 左肋骨下方是什么器官| 白菜什么时候播种| 燕窝什么季节吃最好| 青梅是什么水果| mm表示什么| 梦见媳妇出轨什么预兆| 脚后跟疼痛什么原因| 三门代表什么生肖| 女性阴部痒是什么原因| 狗狗咳嗽吃什么药好得快| 上海的市花是什么| 正比和反比是什么意思| 喝什么可以减肥瘦肚子| 为什么三角形具有稳定性| 百度

http://www.tibetinfor.com/ty/29-5605.html

百度 联合国粮农组织是联合国系统中最大的专业技术机构之一,在粮食安全、消除饥饿和农村贫困等方面制定全球发展战略。

The Berlin Conference of 1884–1885 was a meeting of colonial powers that concluded with the signing of the General Act of Berlin,[1] an agreement regulating European colonisation and trade in Africa during the New Imperialism period. The conference of fourteen countries was organised by Otto von Bismarck, the first chancellor of Germany, at the request of Leopold II of Belgium at a building (No. 77, now No. 92) on Berlin’s central Wilhelmstrasse.[2] It met on 15 November 1884 and, after an adjournment, concluded on 26 February 1885 with the signing of the General Act. During the conference, attendees also discussed other related issues and agreed on a common framework for the recognition of European ''effective occupation'' of African coastal territory elsewhere on the continent. After the conference, the pace of European claims being made on African territory increased, part of the Scramble for Africa that had already begun.[3]

The conference of Berlin, as illustrated in German newspaper Die Gartenlaube
The conference of Berlin, as illustrated in Illustrirte Zeitung

The General Act of Berlin can be seen as the formalisation of the Scramble for Africa that was already in full swing.[4] The conference contributed to ushering in a period of heightened colonial activity by European powers, and is sometimes cited as being responsible for the "carve-up of Africa".[5] However, some scholars warn against overstating its role in the colonial partitioning of Africa, drawing attention to the many bilateral agreements concluded before and after the conference.[6][7][8] A 2024 study found that the only borders set at the conference were those of the Congo region (and these were subsequently revised), and that most of Africa’s borders did not take their final form until over two decades later.[9] Wm. Roger Louis conceded, however, that "the Berlin Act did have a relevance to the course of the partition" of Africa.[citation needed]

European powers were also driven by economic motivations, as competition for the vast natural resources on the continent were crucial for industrialization and expansion. As European industries grew, the raw materials such as rubber, minerals, ivory, and cotton made Africa highly valuable. In addition, the control over the vast African markets allowed European countries to sell manufactured goods, leading to economic dominance in resources and trade. The Berlin Conference materialized these ambitions, formalizing claims to areas rich in resources and establishing rules to deter conflict among the European powers. Economic rivalries between Britain and France increased the urgency to secure colonies before monopolies were created in key areas such as the Congo Basin. Europe had an industrial surplus which led them to find markets abroad, making the African colonies both their supplier of raw materials as well as consumers of European products.[10][11]

Seven of the fourteen countries represented – Austria-Hungary, Russia, Denmark, the Netherlands, Sweden-Norway, the Ottoman Empire, and the United States – came home without any formal possessions in Africa.

Background

edit
 
Cartoon depicting Leopold II and other imperial powers at the Berlin Conference

Prior to the conference, European diplomats approached African rulers and the French leaders had already invaded some parts of Lagos in the same manner as they had in the Western Hemisphere, by establishing a connection to local trade networks. In the early 19th century, the European demand for ivory, which was then often used in the production of luxury goods, led many European merchants into the interior markets of Africa.[citation needed] European spheres of power and influence were limited to coastal Africa at this time as Europeans had only established trading posts (protected by gunboats).[12]

In 1876, King Leopold II of Belgium, who had founded and controlled the International African Association the same year, invited Henry Morton Stanley to join him in researching and "civilising" the continent. In 1878, the International Congo Society was also formed, with more economic goals but still closely related to the former society. Leopold secretly bought off the foreign investors in the Congo Society, which was turned to imperialistic goals, with the "African Society" serving primarily as a philanthropic front.[13]

Explorers and missionaries played a vital role in setting the stage for the Berlin conference. They mapped territories, negotiated treaties with local populations, and promoted narratives justifying European expansion onto the continent. Figures such as Henry Morton Stanley conducted expeditions into the Congo Basin on behalf of King Leopold II. He established treaties with local leaders that later gave Belgium sovereignty over the region. Missionaries carried out similar tasks, seeking to spread Christianity and western values across the continent. These missionaries often aligned their goals with those of colonial expansion. Missions established in these regions were used as early posts of European values, blending their religious objectives with political ones. Reports by explorers and missionaries painted Africa as a land of opportunity and a perfect target for the "civilizing mission"

From 1878 to 1885, Stanley returned to the Congo not as a reporter but as Leopold's agent, with the secret mission to organize what would become known as the Congo Free State soon after the closure of the Berlin Conference in August 1885.[8][14][6] French agents discovered Leopold's plans, and in response France sent its own explorers to Africa. In 1881, French naval officer Pierre de Brazza was dispatched to central Africa, travelled into the western Congo basin, and raised the French flag over the newly founded Brazzaville in what is now the Republic of Congo. Finally, Portugal, which had essentially abandoned a colonial empire in the area, long held through the mostly defunct proxy Kingdom of Kongo, also claimed the area, based on old treaties with Restoration-era Spain and the Catholic Church. It quickly made a treaty on 26 February 1884 with its old ally, Great Britain, to block off the Congo Society's access to the Atlantic.

By the early 1880s, many factors including diplomatic successes, greater European local knowledge, and the demand for resources such as gold, timber, and rubber, triggered dramatically increased European involvement in the continent of Africa. Stanley's charting of the Congo River Basin (1874–1877) removed the last terra incognita from European maps of the continent, delineating the areas of British, Portuguese, French and Belgian control. These European nations raced to annex territory that might be claimed by rivals.[15]

France moved to take over Tunisia, one of the last of the Barbary states, using a claim of another piracy incident. French claims by Pierre de Brazza were quickly acted on by the French military, which took control of what is now the Republic of the Congo in 1881 and Guinea in 1884. Italy became part of the Triple Alliance, an event that upset Bismarck's carefully laid plans and led Germany to join the European invasion of Africa.[16]

In 1882, realizing the geopolitical extent of Portuguese control on the coasts, but seeing penetration by France eastward across Central Africa toward Ethiopia, the Nile, and the Suez Canal, Britain saw its vital trade route through Egypt to India threatened. Because of the collapsed Egyptian financing and a subsequent mutiny in which hundreds of British subjects were murdered or injured, Britain intervened in the nominally Ottoman Khedivate of Egypt, which it controlled for decades.[17]

Conference

edit

The European race for colonies made Germany start launching expeditions of its own, which frightened both British and French statesmen. Hoping to quickly soothe the brewing conflict, Belgian King Leopold II convinced France and Germany that common trade in Africa was in the best interests of all three countries. Under support from the British and the initiative of Portugal, Otto von Bismarck, the Chancellor of Germany, called on representatives of 13 nations in Europe as well as the United States to take part in the Berlin Conference in 1884 to work out a joint policy on the African continent.

The conference opened on 15 November 1884 and closed on 26 February 1885.[18] The number of plenipotentiaries varied per nation,[19] but these 14 countries sent representatives to attend the Berlin Conference and sign the subsequent Berlin Act:[20]

State Colonial empire Plenipotentiaries
  Germany German colonial empire Otto von Bismarck
Paul von Hatzfeldt
Clemens Busch
Heinrich von Kusserow [de]
  Austria-Hungary Austrian colonial empire Imre Széchényi von Sárvár-Fels?vidék
  International Congo Society International Congo Society Gabriel August van der Straten-Ponthoz [de]
Auguste, Baron Lambermont
  Spain Spanish colonial empire Francisco Merry y Colom, 1st Count of Benomar
  Denmark Danish colonial empire Emil Vind [da]
  United States American colonial empire John A. Kasson
Henry S. Sanford
Henry Morton Stanley (as Technical Adviser)[1]
  France French colonial empire Alphonse de Courcel
  United Kingdom British colonial empire Edward Baldwin Malet
  Italy Italian colonial empire Edoardo de Launay [it]
  Netherlands Dutch colonial empire Philip van der Hoeven
  Portugal Portuguese colonial empire Ant?nio José da Serra Gomes [pt]
António de Serpa Pimentel
  Russia Russian colonialism Pyotr Kapnist
  Sweden–Norway Swedish colonial empire Gillis Bildt
  Ottoman Empire Ottoman Empire Mehmed Said Pasha

Uniquely, the United States reserved the right to decline or to accept the conclusions of the conference.[21]

General Act

edit

The General Act fixed the following points:

  • Partly to gain public acceptance,[22][7] the conference resolved to end slavery by African and Islamic powers. Thus, an international prohibition of the slave trade throughout their respected spheres was signed by the European members. In his novella Heart of Darkness, Joseph Conrad sarcastically referred to one of the participants at the conference, the International Association of the Congo (also called "International Congo Society"), as "the International Society for the Suppression of Savage Customs".[23][24] The first name of this Society had been the "International Association for the Exploration and Civilization of Central Africa".
  • The properties occupied by Belgian King Leopold's International Congo Society, the name used in the General Act, were confirmed as the Society's. On 1 August 1885, a few months after the closure of the Berlin Conference, Leopold's Vice-Administrator General in the Congo, Francis de Winton, announced that the territory was henceforth called "the Congo Free State", a name that in fact was not in use at the time of the conference and does not appear in the General Act.[14][6][8] The Belgian official Law Gazette later stated that from that same 1 August 1885 onwards, Leopold II was to be considered Sovereign of the new state, again an issue never discussed, let alone decided, at the Berlin Conference.[25][26]
  • The 14 signatory powers would have free trade throughout the Congo Basin as well as Lake Malawi and east of it in an area south of 5° N.
  • The Niger and Congo rivers were made free for ship traffic.
  • The Principle of Effective Occupation (based on effective occupation, see below) was introduced to prevent powers from setting up colonies in name only.
  • Any fresh act of taking possession of any portion of the African coast would have to be notified by the power taking possession, or assuming a protectorate, to the other signatory powers.
  • Definition of regions in which each European power had an exclusive right to pursue the legal ownership of land

The first reference in an international act to the obligations attaching to spheres of influence is contained in the Berlin Act.

Principle of effective occupation

edit

The principle of effective occupation stated that a power could acquire rights over colonial lands only if it possessed them or had effective occupation: if it had treaties with local leaders, flew its flag there, and established an administration in the territory to govern it with a police force to keep order. The colonial power could also make use of the colony economically. That principle became important not only as a basis for the European powers to acquire territorial sovereignty in Africa but also for delimiting their respective overseas possessions, as effective occupation served in some instances as a criterion for settling colonial boundary disputes. However, as the scope of the Berlin Act was limited to the lands that fronted on the African coast, European powers in numerous instances later claimed rights over interior lands without demonstrating the requirement of effective occupation, as articulated in Article 35 of the Final Act.

 
Comparison of Africa in the years 1880 and 1913

At the Berlin Conference, the scope of the Principle of Effective Occupation was heavily contested between Germany and France. The Germans, who were new to the continent, essentially believed that as far as the extension of power in Africa was concerned, no colonial power should have any legal right to a territory unless the state exercised strong and effective political control and, if so, only for a limited period of time, essentially an occupational force only. However, Britain's view was that Germany was a latecomer to the continent and was assumptively unlikely to gain any possessions beyond those it already held, which were swiftly proving to be more valuable than British territories.[citation needed] That logic caused it to be generally assumed by Britain and France that Germany had an interest in embarrassing the other European powers on the continent and forcing them to give up their possessions if they could not muster a strong political presence. On the other side, Britain had large territorial holdings there and wanted to keep them while it minimised its responsibilities and administrative costs. In the end, the British view prevailed.

The great powers' disinclination to rule their territories is apparent throughout the protocols of the Berlin Conference but especially in the Principle of Effective Occupation. In line with Germany and Britain's opposing views, the powers finally agreed that it could be established by a European power establishing some kind of base on the coast from which it was free to expand into the interior. The Europeans did not believe that the rules of occupation demanded European hegemony on the ground. The Belgians originally wanted to include that effective occupation required provisions that "cause peace to be administered", but Britain and France were the powers that had that amendment struck out of the final document.

That principle, along with others that were written at the conference, allowed the Europeans to conquer Africa but to do as little as possible to administer or control it. The principle did not apply so much to the hinterlands of Africa at the time of the conference. This gave rise to hinterland theory, which basically gave any colonial power with coastal territory the right to claim political influence over an indefinite amount of inland territory. Since Africa was irregularly shaped, that theory caused problems and was later rejected.[27]

Agenda

edit
  • Portugal–Britain: The Portuguese government presented a project, known as the "Pink Map", or the "Rose-Coloured Map", in which the colonies of Angola and Mozambique were united by co-option of the intervening territory (the land later became Zambia, Zimbabwe, and Malawi). All of the countries attending the conference, except for Britain, endorsed Portugal's ambitions, and just over five years later, in 1890, the British government issued an ultimatum that demanded the Portuguese withdraw from the disputed area.[citation needed]
  • France–Britain: A line running from Say in Niger to Maroua, on the northeastern coast of Lake Chad, determined which part belonged to whom. France would own territory to the north of the line, and Britain would own territory to the south of it. The basin of the Nile would be British, with the French taking the basin of Lake Chad. Furthermore, between the 11th and 15th degrees north in latitude, the border would pass between Ouadda?, which would be French, and Darfur in Sudan, which would be British. In reality, a no man's land 200 km wide was put in place between the 21st and 23rd meridians east.
  • France–Germany: The area to the north of a line, formed by the intersection of the 14th meridian east and Miltou, was designated to be French, and the area to the south would be German, later called German Cameroon.
  • Britain–Germany: The separation came in the form of a line passing through Yola, on the Benue, Dekoa, going up to the extremity of Lake Chad.
  • France–Italy: Italy was to own what lies north of a line from the intersection of the Tropic of Cancer and the 17th meridian east to the intersection of the 15th parallel north and the 21st meridian east.

Aftermath

edit
 
European claims in Africa, 1913. Today's boundaries, which are largely a legacy of the colonial era, are shown.   Belgium   Germany   Spain   France   Great Britain   Italy   Portugal   Independent (Liberia and Ethiopia)

The conference provided an opportunity to channel latent European hostilities towards one another outward; provide new areas for assisting the European powers expand in the face of rising American, Russian and Japanese interests; and form constructive dialogue to limit future hostilities. In Africa, colonialism was introduced across nearly all the continent. When African independence was regained after World War II, it was in the form of fragmented states.[28]

Despite the vast consequences that the Berlin Conference, no African rulers were invited to the conference. The European powers divided the continent according to their own economic interests, completely disregarding the prior borders and will of the people. The European powers ignored pre-existing power structures and created arbitrary borders, leading to long term political and economic strife for the newly created countries.[29][30]

The Scramble for Africa sped up after the Conference since even within areas designated as their sphere of influence, the European powers had to take effective possession by the principle of effectivity. In central Africa in particular, expeditions were dispatched to coerce traditional rulers into signing treaties, using force if necessary, such as was the case for Msiri, King of Katanga, in 1891. Bedouin- and Berber-ruled states in the Sahara and the Sahel were overrun by the French in several wars by the beginning of World War I. The British moved up from South Africa and down from Egypt and conquered states such as the Mahdist State and the Sultanate of Zanzibar and, having already defeated the Zulu Kingdom in South Africa in 1879, moved on to annex the independent Boer republics of Transvaal and the Orange Free State.

Within a few years, Africa was at least nominally divided up south of the Sahara. By 1895, the only independent states were:

The following states were annexed by the British Empire roughly a decade after (see below for more information):

By 1902, 90% of all the land that makes up Africa was under European control. Most of the Sahara was French, but after the quelling of the Mahdi rebellion, the end of the Fashoda crisis and the Voulet–Chanoine Mission, the Sudan remained firmly under joint British–Egyptian rulership, with Egypt being under British occupation before becoming a British protectorate in 1914.[31]

The Boer republics were conquered by the British in the Second Boer War from 1899 to 1902. Libya was conquered by Italy in 1911, and Morocco was divided between the French and Spanish in 1912.

Motives and David Livingstone's crusade

edit
 
Slave traders and their captives bound in chains and collared with 'taming sticks'. From Livingstone's Narrative

One of the chief stated justifications "was a desire to stamp out slavery once and for all".[32] Before he died in 1873, Christian missionary, David Livingstone, called for a worldwide crusade to defeat the Arab-controlled slave trade in East Africa. The way to do it was to "liberate Africa" by the introduction of "commerce, Christianity" and civilisation.[32]

Crowe, Craven, and Katzenellenbogen are authors who have attempted to soften the language and therefore the intent of the conference. They warn against an overemphasis on its role in the colonial partitioning of Africa, extensively justifying it by ignoring the motivations and outcomes of the conference by only drawing attention to bilateral agreements concluded before and after the conference, regardless of whether they were finalised and followed in practice.[6][7][8] For example, Craven has questioned the legal and economic impact of the conference.[7]

However, the countries that ultimately participated in the Final Act ignored requirements set forth within it to establish their satellite governments, rights to the land, and trade for the benefit of their national, and domestic economies.[33]

The divvying up of the African continent according to European colonization instead of existing ethnic barriers resulted in displaced ethnic identities and which had ramifications in more recent decades such as the Rwandan Genocide of 1994.[34]

Analysis by historians

edit

Historians have long marked the Berlin Conference as the formalisation of the Scramble for Africa[35] but recently, scholars have questioned the legal and economic impact of the conference.[7]

Some have argued the conference central to imperialism. African-American historian W. E. B. Du Bois wrote in 1948 that alongside the Atlantic slave trade in Africans a great world movement of modern times is "the partitioning of Africa after the Franco-Prussian War which, with the Berlin Conference of 1884, brought colonial imperialism to flower" and that "[t]he primary reality of imperialism in Africa today is economic," going on to expound on the extraction of wealth from the continent.[36]

Other historians focus on the legal implications in international law and argue[37] that the conference was only one of many (mostly bilateral) agreements between prospective colonists,[38] which took place after the conference.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b The Belgian Congo and the Berlin act, by Keith, Arthur Berriedale, 1919, p. 52.
  2. ^ De Belgische Koloni?n - Documentaire over het Belgisch Koloniaal Rijk (English: The Belgian Colonies - Documentary on the Belgian Colonial Empire) timestamp 10:40 to 10:52)
  3. ^ "Berlin Conference | 1884, Result, Summary, & Impact on Africa | Britannica". www.britannica.com. 20 June 2025. Retrieved 17 July 2025.
  4. ^ Bruce Gilley: In Defense of German Colonialism, September 1, 2022
  5. ^ Heath, Elizabeth (2010), "Berlin Conference of 1884–1885", Encyclopedia of Africa, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/acref/9780195337709.001.0001/acref-9780195337709-e-0467, ISBN 978-0-19-533770-9, retrieved 17 June 2025
  6. ^ a b c d Katzenellenbogen, S. (1996). "It didn't happen at Berlin: Politics, economics and ignorance in the setting of Africa's colonial boundaries.". In Nugent, P.; Asiwaju, A. I. (eds.). African Boundaries: Barriers, Conduits and Opportunities. London: Pinter. pp. 21–34.
  7. ^ a b c d e Craven, M. (2015). "Between law and history: the Berlin Conference of 1884–1885 and the logic of free trade". London Review of International Law. 3: 31–59. doi:10.1093/lril/lrv002.
  8. ^ a b c d Crowe, S. E. (1942). The Berlin West African Conference, 1884–1885. London: Longmans Green.
  9. ^ Paine, Jack; Qiu, Xiaoyan; Ricart-Huguet, Joan (2024). "Endogenous Colonial Borders: Precolonial States and Geography in the Partition of Africa". American Political Science Review. 119: 1–20. doi:10.1017/S0003055424000054. ISSN 0003-0554.
  10. ^ Pakenham, Thomas (15 December 1991). The Scramble for Africa. HarperCollins.
  11. ^ Boahem, Adu A (1 September 1989). African Perspectives on Colonialism. JohnsHopkinsPress.
  12. ^ Chamberlain, Muriel E., The Scramble for Africa (1999).
  13. ^ Acherson, Neal, The King Incorporated: Leopold the Second and the Congo (1999).
  14. ^ a b Cornelis, S. (1991). "Stanley au service de Léopold II: La fondation de l'état Indépendant du Congo (1878–1885)". In Cornelis, S. (ed.). H.M. Stanley: Explorateur au Service du Roi. Tervuren: Royal Museum for Central Africa. pp. 41–60 (53–54).
  15. ^ F?rster, Stig, Wolfgang Justin Mommsen, and Ronald Edward Robinson, eds. Bismarck, Europe and Africa: The Berlin Africa Conference 1884–1885 and the Onset of Partition (1988).
  16. ^ Langer, William L., European Alliances and Alignments: 1871–1890 (1950), pp. 217–220.
  17. ^ Langer, European Alliances and Alignments: 1871–1890 (1950), pp. 251–280.
  18. ^ Rosenberg, Matt. "The Berlin Conference: Where a Continent Was Colonized". ThoughtCo. Retrieved 19 September 2017.
  19. ^ Wang, Shih-tsung (31 July 1998). "The Conference of Berlin and British 'New' Imperialism, 1884–85" [柏林會議與英國「新帝國主義」,1884–85] (PDF) (Report). 王世宗. Taipei: Department of History and Research Institute of National Taiwan University (國立臺灣大學歷史學系暨研究所). Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 September 2020. Also available here, original here.
  20. ^ General-Akte der Berliner Konferenz [Acte Général de la Conférence de Berlin], 26 February 1885.
  21. ^ "Between law and history: the Berlin Conference of 1884–1885 and the logic of free trade". London Review of International Law. Lril.oxfordjournals.org. 10 March 2015. Archived from the original on 16 October 2015. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  22. ^ David, Saul. "BBC – History – British History in depth: Slavery and the 'Scramble for Africa'". bbc.co.uk/history. BBC. Retrieved 19 September 2017.
  23. ^ "Historical Context: Heart of Darkness." EXPLORING Novels, Online Edition. Gale, 2003. Discovering Collection. (subscription required)
  24. ^ Stengers, Jean, "Sur l'aventure congolaise de Joseph Conrad". In Quaghebeur, M. and van Balberghe, E. (eds), Papier Blanc, Encre Noire: Cent Ans de Culture Francophone en Afrique Centrale (Za?re, Rwanda et Burundi). 2 Vols. Brussels: Labor. Vol. 1, pp. 15–34.
  25. ^ Thomson, Robert (1933). Fondation de l'état Indépendant du Congo: Un chapitre de l'histoire du partage de l'Afrique. Brussels: Lebègue. pp. 177–189.
  26. ^ Moniteur Belge / Belgisch Staatsblad. Brussels: Direction du Moniteur Belge. 1885–1886. p. 22.
  27. ^ Herbst, Jeffrey. States and Power in Africa. Ch. 3, pp. 71–72.
  28. ^ de Blij, H. J.; Muller, Peter O. (1997). Geography: Realms, Regions, and Concepts. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. p. 340. ISBN 9780471119463.
  29. ^ Mudimbe, V.Y. (May 1988). The Invention of Africa: Gnosis, Philosophy, and the Order of Knowledge. IndianaUniversityPress.
  30. ^ Ekeh, Peter H (January 1975). Colonialism and the Two Publics in Africa: A Theoretical Statement. CambridgeUniversityPress.
  31. ^ Roger Owen, Lord Cromer: Victorian Imperialist, Edwardian Proconsul (Oxford University Press, 2005).
  32. ^ a b "BBC - History - British History in depth: Slavery and the 'Scramble for Africa'". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 13 November 2022.
  33. ^ Gurminder K. Bhambra; Yolande Bouka; Randolph B. Persaud; Olivia U. Rutazibwa; Vineet Thakur; Duncan Bell; Karen Smith; Toni Haastrup; Seifudein Adem (3 July 2020). "Why Is Mainstream International Relations Blind to Racism?". Foreign Policy. Retrieved 13 November 2022.
  34. ^ Celestin, Rwigema Pierre (27 March 2025). "Impact of the Berlin Conference (1884–1885) on EAC Development: 140 Years After the Divide of Africa". International Journal of Political Science and Public Administration. 6 (1): 25–47.
  35. ^ Matua, Maka Wu (1995). "Why Redraw the Map of Africa: A Moral and Legal Inquiry". Harvard Law School. 16 (4).
  36. ^ Du Bois, W. E. Burghardt (July 1943). "The Realities in Africa: European Profit or Negro Development?". Foreign Affairs. Vol. 21, no. 4. ISSN 0015-7120.
  37. ^ Aghie, Antony (2004). Landauer, Carl (ed.). Imperialism, Sovereignty and the Making of International Law. Cambridge University Press.
  38. ^ Hargreaves, John (1963). Prelude to the Partition of West Africa. Macmillam.

Sources

edit
  • Chamberlain, Muriel E. (2014). The Scramble for Africa. London: Longman, 1974, 4th edn. ISBN 0-582-36881-2.
  • Craven, M. 2015. "Between law and history: the Berlin Conference of 1884–1885 and the logic of free trade." London Review of International Law 3, 31–59.
  • Crowe, Sybil E. (1942). The Berlin West African Conference, 1884–1885. New York: Longmans, Green. ISBN 0-8371-3287-8 (1981, New ed. edition).
  • F?rster, Stig, Wolfgang Justin Mommsen, and Ronald Edward Robinson, eds. Bismarck, Europe and Africa: The Berlin Africa conference 1884–1885 and the onset of partition (Oxford University Press, 1988) online; 30 topical chapters by experts.
  • Hochschild, Adam (1999). King Leopold's Ghost. ISBN 0-395-75924-2.
  • Katzenellenbogen, S. 1996. It didn't happen at Berlin: Politics, economics and ignorance in the setting of Africa's colonial boundaries. In Nugent, P. and Asiwaju, A. I. (Eds.), African boundaries: Barriers, conduits and opportunities. pp. 21–34. London: Pinter.
  • Petringa, Maria (2006). Brazza, A Life for Africa. ISBN 978-1-4259-1198-0.
  • Lorin, Amaury, and de Gemeaux, Christine, eds., L'Europe coloniale et le grand tournant de la Conférence de Berlin (1884–1885), Paris, Le Manuscrit, coll. "Carrefours d'empires", 2013, 380 p.

Further reading

edit
  • Craven, Matthew. The invention of a tradition: Westlake, the Berlin Conference and the historicisation of international law (Klosterman, 2012).
  • Leon, Daniel De (1886). "The Conference at Berlin on the West-African Question". Political Science Quarterly 1(1).
  • F?rster, Susanne, et al. "Negotiating German colonial heritage in Berlin's Afrikanisches Viertel." International Journal of Heritage Studies 22.7 (2016): 515–529.
  • Frankema, Ewout, Jeffrey G. Williamson, and P. J. Woltjer. "An economic rationale for the West African scramble? The commercial transition and the commodity price boom of 1835–1885." Journal of Economic History (2018): 231–267. online
  • Harlow, Barbara, and Mia Carter, eds. Archives of Empire: Volume 2. The Scramble for Africa (Duke University Press, 2020).
  • Mulligan, William. "The Anti-slave Trade Campaign in Europe, 1888–90." in A Global History of Anti-slavery Politics in the Nineteenth Century (Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2013). 149–170 online.
  • Nuzzo, Luigi (2012), Colonial Law, EGO – European History Online, Mainz: Institute of European History. Retrieved 25 March 2021 (pdf).
  • Rodney, Walter. How Europe Underdeveloped Africa (1972) –
  • Shepperson, George. "The Centennial of the West African Conference of Berlin, 1884–1885." Phylon 46#1 (1985), pp. 37–48. online
  • Vanthemsche, Guy. Belgium and the Congo, 1885–1980 (Cambridge University Press, 2012). 289 pp. ISBN 978-0-521-19421-1
  • Waller, Bruce. Bismarck at the crossroads: the reorientation of German foreign policy after the Congress of Berlin, 1878–1880 (1974) online
  • Yao, Joanne (2022). "The Power of Geographical Imaginaries in the European International Order: Colonialism, the 1884–85 Berlin Conference, and Model International Organizations". International Organization.
edit
Listen to this article (17 minutes)
 
This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 11 December 2017 (2025-08-06), and does not reflect subsequent edits.
挂彩是什么意思 月经推迟挂什么科 大便颗粒状是什么原因 痛风不能吃什么食物 运是什么结构
吗丁啉有什么功效 太阳指什么生肖 cold是什么意思 溶栓治疗是什么意思 手指长痣代表什么
调理牛肉是什么意思 远山含黛是什么意思 九门提督相当于现在什么官 淋巴结肿大是什么原因引起的 进入icu病房意味着什么
运钞车是什么车 麻豆是什么意思 一百万存款算什么水平 聊胜于无什么意思 三月18号是什么星座的
米面是什么hcv8jop2ns0r.cn 丝瓜什么时候种植最好hcv7jop6ns1r.cn 幽门螺杆菌怕什么食物hcv8jop1ns9r.cn 拉新是什么意思hcv8jop1ns2r.cn 阿胶的原料是什么hcv8jop7ns2r.cn
有什么水果shenchushe.com 血糖高了会有什么危害hcv7jop5ns6r.cn 三个女人一台戏什么意思hcv9jop6ns9r.cn 双肺呼吸音粗是什么意思hcv7jop5ns4r.cn 唇亡齿寒什么意思hcv7jop7ns4r.cn
蟹爪兰用什么肥料最好hcv8jop6ns0r.cn 8月31号是什么星座hcv8jop9ns4r.cn 冬虫夏草到底是什么hcv9jop6ns2r.cn 经常按摩头皮有什么好处hcv8jop7ns6r.cn 汗斑用什么药hcv7jop9ns9r.cn
英语6级是什么水平sscsqa.com 农村一般喂金毛吃什么hcv8jop0ns3r.cn 女性尿血挂什么科hcv8jop6ns6r.cn 黄芪最佳搭配是什么bjcbxg.com 相位是什么意思gangsutong.com
百度