The Berlin Conference: 1884
Answer these questions based on the reading
below
1. List 3 reasons why Europeans wanted to take over Africa.
2. What was the Berlin Conference?
3. What agreements came out of the Berlin Conference?
4. What considerations were made by the Europeans to the native
Africans?
5. Make a guess: How will the decisions made at the conference
change Africa?
THE BERLIN
CONFERENCE
Because
of its size, surface features, climate, resources, and strategic importance, Africa became a prime candidate for conquest by ambitious
European empires. Although Africa is physically remote from the power centers
of Europe, North America, and Asia, it is
surrounded by water and can therefore be reached easily from the other
continents. This meant that the Europeans needed to establish rules for dealing
with one another if they were to avoid constant bloodshed and competition for
African resources. The Berlin
Conference established those ground rules.
By
the mid-nineteenth century, Europeans had established colonies all along the
African coast and competed for control. The push for overseas territories was
made even more intense by the Industrial Revolution and the need for cheap
labor, raw material, and new markets. The competition between
the Europeans often lead to violent conflict.
The
conference was held in Berlin
between November 15, 1884 and November 26, 1885, under the leadership of German
Chancellor Otto von Bismarck. Although controlling the slave trade and
promoting humanitarian idealism were promoted as the focus of the conference,
the conference only passed empty resolutions about the ending of slave trade
and providing for the welfare of Africa. In
truth, the result of the Conference was a method of dividing the continent of Africa between the European powers.
Article 34 of the Berlin
Act states that any European nation that took possession of an African coast,
or named themselves as “protectorate” of one, had to inform the other powers of
the Berlin Act
of this action. If this was not done then their claim would not be
recognized. This article introduced the “spheres of influence” doctrine, the
control of a coast also meant that they would control the hinterland to an
almost unlimited distance.
Article
35 determined that in order to occupy a coastal possession, the nation also had
to prove that they controlled sufficient authority there to protect existing
rights such as freedom of trade and transit. This was called the doctrine of
“effective occupation” and it made the conquest of Africa
a less bloody process.
The Berlin Act was an
important change in international affairs. It created the rules for “effective
occupation” of conquered lands, ensuring that the division of Africa
would take place without war among the European powers. Through the Berlin Act, the European
powers justified dividing a continent among them without considering the
desires of the indigenous peoples.
While
this appears extremely arrogant to us now, it seemed to them to be the obvious
extension of their imperialism. The Berlin
Conference is one of the clearest examples of the assumptions and
preconceptions of this era, and its effects on Africa
can still be seen today.
The above
information used with permission from http://www.campus.northpark.edu/history/WebChron/Africa/BerlinConf.html
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