Tag: africa

  • History of Black Slaves and Slave Trade in Africa

    History of Black Slaves and Slave Trade in Africa

    During the Age of Exploration, Europeans colonized the New World of America and brought many black people to work as slaves. This infamous trade in black slaves raises the question of where these black people came from and how they became slaves. Let’s dive into the origins of black slaves in the slave trade. The beginning of the European black slave trade dates back to 1441, when Portuguese explorers Antão Gonçalves and Nuno Tristão first engaged in it.

    One of the first European black slave traders was the Portuguese explorer Nuno Tristão.
    One of the first European black slave traders was the Portuguese explorer Nuno Tristão.

    These two Portuguese navigators, under orders from the Portuguese king, led their exploration ship southwards to Africa in search of a route to the East and trade goods. During this voyage, greedy and eager to find wealth, the Portuguese explorers captured 10 black people near Cape Bojador and brought them back to Portugal to be sold in the markets of Lisbon. This was the beginning of the European black slave trade.

    Note: Cape Bojador, also known as “Cape Brown,” is the northernmost point on the African continent. It is located at 9°51′E, 37°20′N.

    In order to obtain more labor, the Portuguese began to capture black people on a large scale from West Africa, and then bring them back to their own country or sell them to plantations in places like the Madeira region and the Canary Islands for labor.

    Early Black Slaves in the Slave Trade

    However, the scale of the slave trade was small in the 15th century, and only a small number of black slaves were available for European merchants to trade. The value created by this trade was far less than that of African goods such as gold, ivory, and pepper.

    Black slaves were only a commodity and not particularly important, so there were no Europeans specializing in the slave trade at this time.

    If Europeans wanted to obtain black slaves during this period, they would carry firearms, cannons and other weapons to attack the settlements of black people or villages that refused to trade with Europeans.

    The transatlantic slave trade transformed a practice that had been performed in Africa for centuries into something completely different.

    They would then shackle and force the captured black people onto ships, and finally transport them to markets for sale. The whole process was full of bloodshed, violence and the killing of innocent people.

    This kind of violent and plundering slave trade conducted by European merchants caused fierce resistance from black people. As a result, European merchants turned to “legal means” to obtain black slaves by exchanging goods with local slave owners or chiefs.

    Black Tribes Implemented Slavery Before the Europeans

    black slaves in african slavery

    In fact, before white people arrived in West Africa, local black tribes had already implemented slavery. Although most black tribes were still in the early stages of slavery and had not fully entered a slave society, the chiefs, leaders, or warriors in the tribes mostly held some slaves to serve them.

    Slaves in West Africa during the era of the transatlantic slave trade were individuals who lacked personal autonomy, freedom, and rights. They were considered the private property of their owners, who had the power of life and death over them and could subject them to enslavement, sale, or even murder at will.

    Most of the black slaves in West Africa were captured as a result of warfare, punishment, superstition, or famine.

    • Warfare: Local black tribes engaged in wars due to feuds, territorial disputes, or hunting grounds, among other reasons. In the course of these tribal conflicts, some black people were taken captive by opposing tribes and turned into slaves.
    • Punishment: Apart from the capturing of enemy tribe members, some black people were also punished into slavery for crimes or debts, for instance, when a husband discovered his wife committing adultery, according to tribal customary law, the husband had the right to capture his wife’s lover and turn them into a slave.
    • Superstition: Most West African blacks believed in animism, where everything has a spirit, and were highly superstitious, without a scientific worldview. Thus, when someone desecrated a god or a sacred object, the tribal priests or chiefs would turn the perpetrator into a slave.
    • Famine: Although West Africa had abundant natural resources, there were times of drought or flooding, and blacks had little savings culture, which made it difficult to survive disaster years. Therefore, during periods of famine, some blacks sold their wives, children, or even themselves into slavery. As the famous American pastor Charles W. Thomas noted in his description of the African Slave Coast: “During periods of famine, if (black) men have no slaves to dispose of or satisfy demands, they would pawn themselves for food. They have a certain self-sacrificing spirit, and when their families are in danger, a member of the family will step forward and sell themselves to the highest bidder to save their parents or other relatives from peril.

    Number of Slaves in West Africa When Europeans Arrived

    When Europeans first arrived in West Africa, there were few slaves in the region. While many African tribes had slaves, the number of slaves within each tribe was small, and slave owners rarely sold their slaves. This was because the local people had low productivity and did not lack labor.

    They only needed to make minimal effort to obtain enough production materials to sustain themselves. Therefore, the local people did not have much desire to accumulate wealth, resulting in few slaves within their tribes.

    Portuguese soldiers in the 16th century.
    Portuguese soldiers in the 16th century.

    The emergence and maintenance of slavery require certain prerequisites. Only when social productivity and the division of labor develop, labor productivity increases, and the surplus wealth produced by laborers increases, can enslaving others become a profitable enterprise.

    This is why slavery was not prevalent in low-level hunting tribes but was widely practiced in developed agricultural societies.

    Furthermore, the phenomenon of African tribes keeping slaves can also reflect the compassion of African slave owners to some extent. After all, many African tribes without the habit or ability to keep slaves tend to execute members of enemy tribes they capture instead of enslaving them.

    The Price of an African Slave

    In the late 17th and early 18th centuries, before the prices of black slaves skyrocketed and the dollar was invented, the average cost of transporting an adult male black slave from the African slave coast to the American region was around 12 pounds. This cost included the price of the slave, shipping costs, food expenses, clothing expenses, and so on.

    After arriving in America, an adult black slave could be sold for 20–45 pounds, while the price of an underage male black slave was around 15 pounds.

    In the mid-to-late 18th century, the price of black slaves skyrocketed, and the purchase price from African black chiefs increased to around 22 pounds per person. Many of these slaves were sold in America for over 50 pounds.

    In the early 18th century, 1 pound was roughly equivalent to around 350 dollars in today’s currency, based on the exchange rate of gold, without taking inflation and purchasing power into account. But converting ancient currency to modern currency is often inaccurate.

    Expansion of the African Slave Trade in the 16th Century

    After the discovery and colonization of the New World in the 15th century, the Spanish began expanding into regions such as the West Indies, Central America, and South America.

    They carried out brutal massacres of the indigenous people, known as Native Americans, and subjected them to various methods of enslavement. However, due to their inability to resist European-borne diseases, illnesses, and heavy labor, some Native American populations were pushed to the brink of extinction.

    To address the need for labor in colonial agriculture and mining, the Spanish began importing black slaves from West Africa in 1503. This led to the massive expansion of the African slave trade, which became a major trade for Europeans.

    The infamous triangular trade was established during this period. European slave traders would sail from various European ports to West African coasts such as the Gold Coast, Ivory Coast, and Slave Coast to purchase slaves from local slave traders using European goods.

    They would then transport the purchased black slaves by ship to the Americas, where they would sell them to plantations or mines. Finally, they would purchase gold, cash crops, and other products from the colonies to sell in Europe and make huge profits.

    The profits from the triangular trade were enormous, leading more and more Europeans to become slave traders and participate in the slave trade, making the black slave trade gradually more organized from the 15th century on.

    Why Did Black Rulers Sell Their Own People and Promote Slave Trade?

    History of Black Slaves and Slave Trade in Africa
    An artwork from the book “Moral Capital.”

    Due to low levels of social productivity, black tribes in West Africa were unable to produce a wide variety of goods. In order to improve their own lives, black slave owners were forced to participate in the slave trade and exchange various goods for slaves with slave traders.

    The “price” of a black slave was quite high and therefore very attractive to black slave owners. For example, in 1801, a healthy and strong male slave could be exchanged for the following goods from a slave trader: 18 pounds of printed cotton cloth, 18 pounds of Indian coarse cotton cloth, 18 pounds of chintz cloth, one piece of bandanna cloth, 14 pounds of Nicaene cloth, 14 pounds of Costal cloth, 3 rolls of Romel cloth, 52 handkerchiefs, one brass bottomed kettle, two muskets, 25 barrels of gunpowder, 100 flints, two bags of lead, 20 knives, four iron pots, four felt hats, four straw hats, four short swords, six strings of beads, and 14 gallons of brandy (with a total value of 25 pounds). If they only wanted alcohol, a strong male black slave could be exchanged for 110 gallons of rum.

    In addition, some black rulers were forced to engage in military competition to prevent hostile tribes from attacking them. They had to exchange slaves with European merchants for powerful weapons. For example, they would exchange 15 strong male slaves or 21 female slaves for a cannon or some guns and gunpowder.

    Without these weapons, black tribes would be very likely to be destroyed by other tribes, so the sale of slaves to plunder became the reason for starting wars.

    In the 19th century, when some Europeans decided to abolish the slave trade and persuade African chiefs to do the same, one black chief refused, explaining that his people were not familiar with other types of trade and that the slave trade was the only way for them to gain wealth and honor. They celebrated victories with songs and lulled their children to sleep with songs of triumph over their enemies.

    “Lawful Methods” Used for Acquiring African Slaves

    To obtain black slaves, European slave traders would first visit African chiefs or leaders and offer them gifts such as cloth, guns, gunpowder, brandy, and wine—items that were not available in Africa—to entice the greedy rulers to participate in the slave trade.

    After a short time, the chiefs would sell all their slaves to the traders to obtain more European goods. The traders’ greed would not be satisfied, and they would continue to buy slaves as long as there was space on their ships. When the supply of slaves was low, the European slave traders would use various methods to stimulate the African tribes to produce and sell more slaves.

    Typically, European slave traders would instigate wars between two African tribes or provide one tribe with a large number of weapons, inciting them to seek revenge against a hostile tribe. Meanwhile, the slave traders would continuously exchange cheap goods for captives with the African chiefs.

    Slave traders would also instigate civil wars within African tribes, funding rebels or “exposing” certain individuals in the tribe as conspiring against their chief. The best way to quell a rebellion or conspiracy was to turn the rebels or unsuccessful power strugglers into slaves and sell them.

    In addition to inciting wars, slave traders would also collaborate with the witch doctors in African tribes, encouraging them to capture fellow Africans under various pretexts. For instance, a witch doctor might accuse one person of using evil witchcraft against another person and tell the victim that the best way to break the curse is to capture the accused and sell them to slave traders.

    Alternatively, the witch doctor could tell certain tribe members that their wives had been unfaithful to them with another man and incite the husband to capture the so-called lover and sell them into slavery.

    Unlawful Methods Used for Acquiring African Slaves

    The aforementioned methods were referred to as “legal methods” by European slave traders. However, after the success of plantation economies and the surge in demand for black slaves in various American colonies in the 1700s, the price of black slaves skyrocketed.

    In the early 17th century, a strong male black slave was sold in the American slave market for only 35 pounds. But about twenty years later, the price of an average slave had already doubled to 70 pounds per person, and the total cost of a black slave was only 27 pounds and 5 shillings and 10 pence.

    Such a lucrative business led to a change in the way slave traders obtained black slaves, using more brutal and despicable “illegal methods” to meet the labor demands of the American colonies. During this period, most black slaves were free people who had been captured or kidnapped.

    Earlier European slave traders would examine the source and identity of the slaves and would either return some free black people who had been kidnapped to their respective tribes or refuse to buy slaves with such status to maintain relationships with the local people.

    The slave traders of the 18th century cared only about the physical health of the slaves they purchased and no longer paid attention to their identities. They welcomed anyone who would sell them “slaves.”

    During this period, the majority of black slaves in the slave trade were free people who had been kidnapped. Small groups of slave catchers also emerged as one of the main suppliers of black slaves.

    Johann Moritz Rugendas (1802-1858), a German artist, depicted a slave catcher in Imperial Brazil.
    Johann Moritz Rugendas (1802–1858), a German artist, depicted a slave catcher in Imperial Brazil.

    These small groups of slave catchers were typically made up of local black people, with very few members, usually only three or four people. Some groups even had only one or two people, and they used deceit, kidnapping, and coercion to obtain slaves.

    These black slave catchers showed no regard for their fellow black people. They would attack lone black people to sell them to slave traders for European goods.

    Slave-catching groups also lured black people into their rooms under the guise of offering free food or selling cheap goods. Once the black people entered the room, the members of the slave-catching group would capture them as slaves.

    Sometimes, in order to obtain the most valuable, strong male slaves, slave-catching groups would send women to seduce young black men into their rooms for sexual encounters. However, once the black men entered the room, the slave catchers would kidnap them as slaves while they were defenseless.

    Some slave catchers would also hide in the bushes near the fields. Once a farmer came out to till the land, the slave catchers would kidnap them.

    There were also some slave catchers who would deceive distant black people or their own friends and family into drinking rum. When the other party woke up drunk, they would find that they had been sold to slave traders by their so-called friends.

    Sometimes, in order to quickly obtain slaves, European slave traders would cooperate with slave catchers and work together to trap black people from other tribes. For example, European slave traders would use the pretext of reconciling a conflict between two tribes to invite black people from one tribe to the slave ship to negotiate.

    However, once these black people got on the slave ship, the slave traders would reveal their evil nature and work with the slave catchers to kidnap them as slaves.

    In addition, members of slave-catching groups would sometimes be sold as slaves themselves. A ship’s carpenter recorded in his diary that in the town of Galinas on the west coast of Africa, he saw a merchant preparing to sell a slave to a slave ship. However, when he walked with the slave to the beach, suddenly, four men emerged from the bushes, grabbed him, and took away his goods.

    Although these four people paddled the merchant’s canoe, they still sold the merchant and his slave to a slave ship. The captain of the slave ship witnessed the entire process but still bought the two slaves with money.

    Regardless of whether the “black slaves” were free or not, slave traders did not care. In their eyes, a black person was a black person, without any difference in identity. Some ship captains even declared to all their partners, as long as someone is willing to sell slaves, they will buy them.

    This illegal slave trade had a significant impact on the daily lives of black tribes, making people fearful and afraid of being kidnapped by slave catchers. As a result, a black chief had to write a letter to the king of Portugal to describe the terrible nature of the slave trade. He explained how people suffered from enslavement and plunder every day, and even the nobles and royalty were not immune.

    Slave Wars in Africa

    Although slave traders obtained black slaves illegally, the number of slaves still could not meet the demand of the American colonies. As a result of the slave trade’s impact, black tribes and populations along the West African coast had decreased significantly, and surviving black people had armed themselves with guns and ammunition. Thus, the success rate of slave catching in the region decreased, and the cost increased.

    In response, some black tribes began to resist slave catchers, and the slave catchers also began to fight back. These conflicts eventually evolved into what is known as the slave-catching war or “Slave Wars” in Africa.

    In this situation, slave traders began to support and incite larger-scale slave wars, and their activities were not limited to the coastal areas of West Africa. They instigated black tribes living near the coast to advance into the interior of Africa and then attack the black tribes in the interior to capture black slaves for trading.

    At that time, many black tribes lived in the interior of Africa, and these inland tribes lagged far behind the coastal black tribes in terms of social productivity and military strength, which gave the slave catchers an opportunity to exploit.

    Slave traders would either provide weapons for some greedy and warlike black tribes, or join forces with these tribes to form a slave-catching team and then attack the black tribes in the interior together. European slave traders left some authentic records of such actions:

    “We provided some guns and ammunition for the black chiefs, and then, the horn sounded, a group of black warriors gathered together to distribute weapons. After distributing the weapons, they camped by the tributary of the Sassandra River until midnight. Then, these black warriors left me and quietly crossed the forest. Half an hour later, gunshots and screams were heard, and the forest was set on fire. Later, these people brought back thirty captives, including men, women, and children.”

    Most of these plundering actions deep into the interior of Africa were launched by black tribes or countries along the West African coast. They regarded their fellow countrymen in the interior as the main source of black slaves and established powerful tribes or kingdoms based on the huge profits from the slave trade. For example, the famous Dahomey Kingdom (1600–1904) thrived under the stimulus of the slave trade.

    The Dahomey Kingdom, located in West Africa, was the predecessor of modern-day Benin. Starting from the 17th century, it continuously plundered the land and people of other black tribes, enslaving them. It thrived and accumulated enormous wealth by relying on the bloody and insane “triangular slave trade.”

    Slave-capturing teams were the most important partners of slave traders. Without their supplies, European slave traders would not be able to obtain a large number of black slaves. Although these members of the capturing teams were also black, they had no psychological barriers to capturing their “fellow countrymen” as slaves.

    On the contrary, these black slave capturers were even crueler than European slave traders. After all, slave traders would try to keep as many slaves alive as possible to make money, but black capturers had no such concerns.

    Not only did black capturers use the captured slaves for their own purposes or sell them, but they also killed a large number of prisoners of war as a blood sacrifice to their gods. This kind of human sacrifice was especially common during major holidays or ceremonies, often killing several thousand people at once. It even affected the operation of the slave trade, forcing slave traders to advise black kings to reduce the scale of live human sacrifices as much as possible.

    The Impact of the African Slave Trade on Africa

    The impact of the African slave trade on Africa was devastating. As the scale of the slave raids increased, thousands of black Africans were captured and sold into slavery every year, causing significant damage to the population and social fabric of African societies.

    Many densely populated villages were destroyed, fertile farmland was abandoned, and surviving black Africans were forced to hide in dense forests, resulting in the stagnation of local black civilizations and societies.

    When European countries no longer needed black slaves as laborers, they had already accumulated massive profits from the African slave trade, invented medicines to combat tropical diseases, and developed more powerful weapons.

    However, the African continent had been devastated by centuries of slave raids, and as a result, it had no way to resist European conquest and colonization, making it easy for Europeans to conquer Africa.

    This Article at a Glance

    When did the European black slave trade begin and where did the slaves come from?

    The European black slave trade began in 1441, when Portuguese navigators Antão Gonçalves and Nuno Tristão captured 10 black people near Cape Bojador in Africa and brought them back to Portugal to be sold in the markets of Lisbon. The Portuguese then began to capture black people on a large scale from West Africa, bringing them back to their own country or selling them to plantations in places like the Madeira region and the Canary Islands for labor.

    Were there any Europeans specializing in the slave trade during the 15th century?

    No, there were no Europeans specializing in the slave trade during the 15th century. Black slaves were only a commodity and not particularly important, and the value created by this trade was far less than that of African goods such as gold, ivory, and pepper. If Europeans wanted to obtain black slaves during this period, they would carry firearms, cannons and other weapons to attack the settlements of black people or villages that refused to trade with Europeans.

    Did local black tribes implement slavery before the Europeans arrived in West Africa?

    Yes, before white people arrived in West Africa, local black tribes had already implemented slavery. Although most black tribes were still in the early stages of slavery and had not fully entered a slave society, the chiefs, leaders, or warriors in the tribes mostly held some slaves to serve them. Most of the black slaves in West Africa were captured as a result of warfare, punishment, superstition, or famine.

    What were the legal and illegal methods used for acquiring African slaves during the 18th century?

    In the 18th century, slave traders no longer cared about the identities of the slaves and would welcome anyone who would sell them slaves. This led to the emergence of small groups of slave catchers who would use deceit, kidnapping, and coercion to obtain slaves. They would also attack lone black people and lure them into rooms to capture them as slaves.

    What was the impact of the slave trade on black tribes and populations along the West African coast?

    The slave trade had a significant impact on black tribes and populations along the West African coast. The success of plantation economies and the surge in demand for black slaves in various American colonies in the 1700s led to the emergence of more brutal and despicable “illegal methods” to meet the labor demands of the American colonies. The number of slaves could not meet the demand, leading to a decrease in black tribes and populations along the West African coast.

  • Timeline of Human History: From 8 Million Years Ago to 3000 BC

    Timeline of Human History: From 8 Million Years Ago to 3000 BC

    Around eight million years ago, our ancestors lived in Africa. We emerged seven million years later and developed skills such as advanced toolmaking and agriculture which allowed us to establish settlements all over the world. Humans are now a distinct species on the planet, but this was not always the case.

    Strange human ancestors once roamed the Earth, such as Nutcracker Man or Homo floresiensis, whose tiny bodies resembled hobbits. Fossils show that Homo sapiens once interacted with Neanderthals, and a recently discovered species known as the Denisovans adds to the evidence that modern humans and some of our forefathers lived close to each other.

    Timeline of human history

    • 7 million years ago:
      Hominin and chimpanzee lineages merged.
    • 7 – 6 million years ago:
      The species Sahelanthropus tchadensis may have lived before the Hominin-Chimpanzee divergence.
    • 5.7 – 5.2 million years ago:
      Ardipithecus kadabba, a similar species of A. ramidus.
    • 4.4 million years ago:
      Ardipithecus ramidus (“Ardi”) looked like a chimpanzee but definitely walked on two legs.
    • 4.1 – 2 million years ago:
      Australopithecus afarensis had a bigger brain than modern chimpanzees, but still climbed trees.
    • 3.6 million years ago:
      The date of hominin footprints found in volcanic ash at Laetoli, Tanzania.
    • 3.5 – 2 million years ago:
      The first identifiable hominin fossils of Australopithecus africanus.
    • 3.3 million years ago:
      The first marks made on bones with stone tools in Dikika, Ethiopia, point to the first stone tool use and meat consumption.
    lucy
    Skeletal cast of “Lucy”. (Credit: H. Lorren Au Jr/ZUMA Press/Corbis)
    • 3.18 million years ago:
      “Lucy” represents the actual appearance of Australopithecus afarensis; 13 males and females of different ages formed the “First Family” of A. afarensis fossils.
    • 2.6 million years ago:
      The first known stone tools appeared in the Gona region of Ethiopia. 
    • 2.5 – 1.2 million years ago:
      The “Nutcracker Man”, Paranthropus boisei, had large teeth and jaws for grinding food.
    • 2-1 million years ago:
      Paranthropus robustus, the first Paranthropus discovered.
    • 1.9 – 1.6 million years ago:
      Homo habilis (“handy man”) is believed to have made tools and left bone markings.
    • 1.8 million years ago:
      Homo ergaster was much taller and slimmer than its ancestors.
    • 1.7 million years ago:
      The first known fossils of hominins found outside Africa are those of Homo georgicus, which was discovered in Eurasia, in Dmanisi, Georgia. 
    • 1.65 million years ago:
      The Acheulean hand axes represent an important step toward human intelligence.
    Homo erectus Turkana Boy
    “Turkana boy.” (Credit: Neanderthal Museum, CC BY-SA 4.0)
    • 1.65 – 1 million years ago:
      Homo erectus remains were discovered in Java, but they were most likely from 1.5 million years ago.
    • 1.6 million years ago:
      The first known hand tools in China were thought to have been made by Homo erectus, but it was later realized that they are 0.8 million years younger than the fossils recently found in the region.
    • 1.5 million years ago:
      The “Turkana boy” is a nearly complete skeleton of an adult Homo ergaster found in Tanzania.
    • 1.5 – 1.4 million years ago:
      Signs of fire sites were found in South Africa, but they could have occurred naturally.
    • 1.2 million years ago:
      The emergence of the first Europeans; Homo antecessor.
    • 0.79 million years ago:
      The first reliable evidence for the control of fire at Gesher Benot Ya’aqov, Israel.
    • 0.78 million years ago:
      Earth’s magnetic field began to polarize as it does today.
    • 0.6 million years ago:
      Homo heidelbergensis is now widespread.
    • 0.4 million years ago:
      Typical Neanderthal anatomy found across Europe.
    Clacton Spear 2018.jfif
    The Clacton Spear, dating back 400,000 years. (Natural History Museum, CC BY-SA 4.0)
    • 0.4 million years ago:
      The Clacton Spear or Clacton Spear Point, was found at Clacton-on-Sea in 1911. It is the oldest dated piece of crafted wood, dating back 400,000 years.
    • 0.3 million years ago:
      Evidence for hubs used for making tools with multiple parts.
    • 0.3 million years ago:
      Modern human skeletal features appear in African Homo heidelbergensis.
    • 0.28 million years ago:
      Shaped stones found in Israel may be the first examples of art.
    • 0.28 million years ago:
      The first evidence of the use of natural colors.
    • 0.2 million years ago:
      Mitochondrial Eve (DNA) was the last common ancestor of all humans.
    • 0.186 – 0.127 million years ago:
      Neanderthals engaged in mass hunting and killing.
    • 0.16 million years ago:
      Age of the Homo sapiens idaltu; the skull has some primitive features, but shares distinctive features with modern humans.
    • 130,000 – 115,000 years ago:
      Increased consumption of fish and marine mammals in South African sites.
    • 120,000 years ago:
      First possible Neanderthal grave.
    • 110,000 – 90,000 years ago:
      The first Homo sapiens arrived in the Levant.
    • 75,000 years ago:
      Advanced “blade” technologies, shell grains, and jagged ochre from Blombos Cave in South Africa.
    The eruption of Mount Toba
    The eruption of Mount Toba. (Credit: Unknown artist)
    • 73,500 years ago:
      The eruption of Mount Toba in Sumatra led to a global drop in temperatures.
    • 46,000 years ago:
      The earliest fossils of modern humans found in South Asia.
    • 45,000 years ago:
      Widespread human settlement in Australia.
    • 45,000 years ago:
      The first Homo sapiens reached Europe.
    • 40,000 years ago:
      The first settlements in New Guinea.
    • 40,000 years ago:
      Late Homo erectus lived in China.
    • 40,000 years ago:
      The first Homo sapiens appeared in China.
    • 37,000 years ago:
      Campanian ignimbrite eruption in Italy; ash covers much of Europe.
    • 36,000 – 28,000 years ago:
      Some tools found suggest that Neanderthals and humans interacted in Europe.
    • 35,000 years ago:
      Aurignacian technology spread across Europe, including typical stone tools and examples of art.
    • 32,000 years ago:
      The first Homo sapiens appeared in Japan.
    Chauvet cave paintings France 3
    32,000 years old Chauvet cave paintings.
    • 32,000 years ago:
      Chauvet cave paintings, France.
    • 28,000 years ago:
      The earliest Neanderthal settlements.
    • 28,000 – 21,000 years ago:
      The birth of Gravettian culture.
    • 27,000 years ago:
      The date of the complex settlements of hunter-gatherers on the Russian plains.
    • 21,000 years ago:
      Solutrean technologies emerged.
    • 21,000 – 18,000 years ago:
      Last Glacial Maximum.
    • 18,000 years ago:
      Magdalenian technologies emerged.
    • 18,000 years ago:
      The appearance of the controversial Homo floresian specimen, a.k.a the “hobbit”.
    • 17,000 years ago:
      The first known spear-throwing humans arrived in the Combe Sauniere region of France.
    • 16,000 – 15,000 years ago:
      Beginning of re-settlement in areas of northern Europe previously abandoned due to poor climatic conditions.
    • 15,000 years ago:
      Lascaux cave paintings.
    first dogs
    The domestication of dog. (Credit: Ettore Mazza)
    • 15,000 years ago:
      Controversial early South American settlement site in Monte Verde, Chile.
    • 14,000 years ago:
      The domestication of dog.
    • 11,500 – 9000 BC:
      Rapid settlement of the Americas by various peoples using Clovis stone tools.
    • 10,800 – 9600 BC:
      Younger Dryas glacial period, probably caused by melting ice sheets; temperatures rose rapidly after 9600 BC.
    • 10,500 BC:
      The first domestication of cereals occurred with rye, wheat, and barley. The earliest evidence is from Syria, around 8000 BC.
    • 9500 – 8000 BC:
      Construction of a temple by hunter-gatherers in Göbekli Tepe, Turkey.
    • 9000 BC:
      The first domesticated animals in Western Asia.
    • 9000 – 7000 BC:
      Archaeological sites in Cyprus show that the island was inhabited and that sheep, goats, cattle, and pigs were transported by ships.
    • 9000 – 3000 BC:
      Increased rainfall created the “Green Sahara”; lakes, rivers, marshes, and meadows in North Africa.
    • 8500 – 7300 BC:
      A stone wall built around a large village in Jericho, Israel, probably to prevent flooding, not warfare.
    • 8000 BC:
      In China, early agricultural settlements grew corn in the Yellow River Valley.
    green sahara
    “Green Sahara”, 9000 – 3000 BC. (Credit: Carl Churchill)
    • 8000 BC:
      Mesoamerica was the first place where squash was domesticated, and Ecuador is where the oldest squash and beans were found.
    • 7000 BC:
      The first domestication of Zebu animals occurred in Mehrgarh, West Pakistan by farmers growing wheat, rye, and lentils.
    • 7000 BC:
      The first domestication of cattle occurred by hunter-fisher communities in the Green Sahara.
    • 7000 BC:
      New Guinea plantations were the first to grow bananas, taro, and yam.
    • 6500 BC:
      Simple irrigated agriculture began in Central Mesopotamia.
    • 6200 BC:
      Establishment of the first farming communities in the Euphrates Valley in Southern Mesopotamia.
    • 6000 BC:
      Production of fish and rice, as well as pig and chicken raising, in Yangzi Valley villages (China).
    • 6000 BC:
      The first native corn developed in Mexico from the wild teosinte plant.
    • 5500 BC:
      Independent development of copper craftsmanship in the Balkans.
    • 5100 BC:
      Copper mining in the Ai Bunar region of Bulgaria.
    • 5000 – 1000 BC:
      With locally mined, cold-processed copper trade and industry, ancient copper culture flourished in North America’s Great Lakes region.
    • 5000 BC:
      In West Asia, North Africa, and Europe, the first domestic animals were kept for milk and plowing, as well as for meat.
    invention of the wheel
    A potter’s wheel from 3500 BC.
    • 4000 BC:
      The first domestication of grapes and olives occurred in the Eastern Mediterranean.
    • 4000 BC:
      In China, irrigated rice cultivation began in water-covered, ploughed fields.
    • 3500 BC:
      The first wheeled transport which was used for local needs and military purposes emerged and spread across large areas of Eurasia.
    • 3500 BC:
      Stamp seals began to be used for administrative and economic purposes in Western Asia.
    • 3300 BC:
      Writing was invented in Mesopotamia.
    • 3200 BC:
      The first ever city of Uruk emerges.
    • 3200 BC:
      The beginning of Egyptian hieroglyphic writing.
    • 3200 BC:
      The first bronze production in Western Asia.
    • 3100 – 2900 BC:
      Proto-Elamite (Early Bronze Age) writing system from the Iranian Plateau.
    • 3000 BC:
      … and metallurgy made its way to Western China.

    Bibliography:

    1. Craig Stanford; John S. Allen; Susan C Antón. (2009). Biological Anthropology: The Natural History of Humankind
    2. Monroe W Strickberger. (2000). Evolution.
    3. Donovan Webster (2010). Meeting the Family: One Man’s Journey Through His Human Ancestry.
  • Who Were the Famous Explorers That Discovered Africa?

    Who Were the Famous Explorers That Discovered Africa?

    There’s a lot of intrigue around Africa’s discovery. For centuries, Africa had been known as the “Dark Continent.” As the sailors mapped the oceans and the explorers traveled across the continents, Africa’s inner region was always shown empty on world maps, probably because it was known to be an extremely dangerous place. Tropical diseases that would kill a European in a day were too common, the virgin forests were full of lions and crocodiles, and when African tribes thought foreigners were coming to “invade” them, they could become too aggressive.

    The explorers who discovered Africa

    Starting in 1850, this Dark Continent has become “brighter.” The drugs that heal the most dangerous diseases were found, and thanks to the new rifles, there was now an opportunity to kill the dangerous animals and scare the tribal warriors. Some explorers traveled along the tropical rivers of Central Africa to explore the great lakes, especially the source of the Nile River, while others were traveling through the plains of South Africa or exploring the interiors of tropical forests as missionaries.

    David Livingstone

    Dr. Livingstone, I presume?

    Henry Stanley, 1871, November

    As a missionary, the explorer Livingstone set out on a journey to explore Central Africa in 1866 to put an end to the Arab slave trade. However, no news had been received from him for a long time, and he was thought to be dead. American journalist Henry Stanley made the historical statement above when he met David Livingstone in a deserted village near Lake Tanganyika in November 1871.

    henrystanleyhat
    Stanley’s hat.

    When Stanley finally came across Dr. Livingstone, he was wearing this hat. Many of the first travelers in Africa wore such hats to avoid sunstroke.

    livingstonehat
    Livingstone’s hat.

    Livingstone, who was overwhelmed by the illnesses he caught during his discovery of Africa, wore this hat when he saw Stanley. Livingstone, who once said, “The mere animal pleasure of travelling in a wild unexplored country is very great,” continued to explore the surroundings of Lake Tanganyika in Africa and died of the disease there in 1873.

    John Hanning Speke

    Speke was a British explorer who made several trips to Central Africa. Together with Richard Burton, he went to Lake Tanganyika in 1858, then went on his way and found Lake Victoria. In 1862, he returned to prove that the Nile originates from Lake Victoria.

    African rhinoceros johnhanningspeke
    Speke’s drawings were of high quality.

    Speke was also a good naturalist. He noted down the animals and plants he saw everywhere he went. You can see his white rhino drawings above from his book. The last male white rhino went extinct some time ago. Work continues to fertilize the remaining two females.

    Richard Burton

    richard burton
    The easiest way to get around Arab land.

    Explorer Sir Richard Burton was an officer in the English Army. He knew 28 languages other than Arabic. Dressed as an Arab, he went to places in Asia and East Africa where no Europeans had ever set foot. He also discovered much of tropical Africa and parts of South America.

    Pierre Desceliers

    the map of Africa by Pierre Desceliers
    The map of Africa by Pierre Desceliers.

    When Desceliers drew this map in the 16th century, sailors had traveled all over Africa. The map shows the African coasts quite accurately, but the middle is a space filled with imaginary things. That’s why this map is called Map Monster. The origin of the Nile was unknown, and Desceliers’ proposal was only an estimation; the real source of the Nile River would be found only 300 years later.

    The British and then the Americans take the lead in the discovery of the priceless African continent. The main goal of both countries was to find the source of the Nile River, and the winner would take everything.

  • David Livingstone: His Life, Journeys, and Accomplishments

    David Livingstone: His Life, Journeys, and Accomplishments

    Who Dr. David Livingstone was, what was like his early life, and how did he die on the African continent? This famous explorer spent 30 years of his life living in Africa and exploring every point of this “dark continent.” He is perhaps the person who caused today’s Africa to be so doomed by the colonial empires.

    Dr. David Livingstone and the exploration of Africa

    The Scottish missionary and explorer David Livingstone had been fighting for his life for two weeks in an African village at the tip of Lake Tanganyika. Just when he was about to die of illness, hunger, and thirst, he stumbled upon a village in Ujiji after tramping for 350 miles (563 km).

    However, the stocks of food, medicine, and a small group of servants that had to be there waiting for him were sold by unscrupulous porters. Livingstone was too sick to walk the 780-mile (1255 km) road to the east coast, and since he had nothing to trade with anyone like a cloth or a bracelet, he fell into a pitiful situation and had to beg from Arab natives for food and clothing.

    “Dr. Livingstone, I presume?”

    In his diary, he described himself as a “beanpole” and admitted that his mood was incredibly bad. Then, suddenly, at noon on November 10, 1871, Livingstone’s English-speaking servant Susi rushed to him and shouted excitedly, “An Englishman,” “I see him!

    When Livingstone limped off to the village square, he saw the American flag waving in front of a large, rich caravan. Then a stocky, bearded man with a long leather boot, the head of the caravan, came forward solemnly, lifted his hat, and said, “Dr. Livingstone, I presume?” The New York Herald newspaper asked the English-American journalist Henry Morton Stanley to find Livingstone.

    A few minutes later, Stanley was sitting with Livingstone on the tembe, the veranda of his house, whose walls were made of clay. On Livingstone’s insistence, Stanley quickly listed the news from the outside world, including a description of the Suez Canal, which had recently opened and about which Stanley had written an article.

    The 58-year-old Scot was all ears with his faded red vest and a worn blue cap on his head. Since it had been more than five years since his departure from London, a bag of letters from his family and friends was now standing on his knees, waiting to be read.

    Stanley opened a bottle of champagne and took out two silver cups. He handed the goblet, having filled it to the brim, to Livingstone. “To your health, sir,” he said, raising his goblet. “And to yours too,” Livingstone responded softly.

    Finding the source of the Nile River

    Dr. David Livingstones Arrival At Lake Ngami, Botswana, South Africa In 1849.
    Dr. David Livingstones Arrival At Lake Ngami, Botswana, South Africa In 1849. David Livingstone, 1813.

    David Livingstone was one of the most admired people in the Western world at the time. For 30 years, he spent his energy and talents trying to bring Christianity to Central and East Africa and also end the slave trade that continued in those areas.

    He had traveled on the back of a pedestrian, a mule, or an ox for a million miles (1.6 million km) in Africa without minding the desert, forest, or marshland. He created the maps of the lands and continued his mission by saying he would either find a way inside or he would disappear.

    During his travels, he mapped the Central African river system and traced the Zambezi River to its source. His experience as an explorer led him to an inevitable goal: he had to find the source of the Nile River. He started his research in 1866, but no news was heard from him for a long time. Then, there started an intense public opinion in order for him to be found.

    There had been unfounded reports before that he was killed by African Zulu people, but this time he could have indeed died. Research delegations were sent to locate Dr. David Livingstone, and the delegation led by 30-year-old Stanley was one of them.

    Although Stanley was venturous and assertive and Livingstone was sullen and thoughtful, these two people, who are very different from each other in terms of age and creation, soon became the closest friends.

    You gave me a new life,” said Livingstone, who wanted to express his heartfelt debt while his friend was making him eat nutritious soups and meat dishes. But most of his teeth were rotten and shed, so he had difficulty eating.

    Thanks to the food and the medicines Stanley brought, David Livingstone soon regained his former health and strength. The two then took with them as many as twenty locals and went out to explore the northern stretches of Africa’s Tanganyika Lake. But when they realized that the water did not flow out of the lake, it was fairly disappointing.

    On the way back, Stanley got a fever and dysentery. This time, it was Livingstone who played the doctor and nurse. When they returned to Ujiji, the fully recovered Stanley begged Livingstone to give up the Nile obsession and return. But Livingstone refused the proposal.

    David Livingstone is dying

    After spending an unforgettable four months together, the two companions said goodbye to each other in tears on March 14, 1872, near Tabora, the largest city in Central Africa. Stanley pledged to send supplies to Livingstone, such as carriers, food, and medicine, to help him continue his research.

    Livingstone stubbornly hit the road again in August and searched for lakes and mountains to the south of Lake Tanganyika for eighteen months. He became increasingly weak, sick, and sluggish from dysentery and loss of blood due to hemorrhoids. Since he was too sick to get on the mule, he had to walk in swamps while the rain bucketed down.

    Sometimes he found himself in black mud to his knees; ants, mosquitoes, and venomous spiders never left him alone. When he could no longer eat or walk, his men carried him on logs. “Knocked up quite and remained—recovered—sent to buy milch goats,” Livingstone wrote in his diary on April 27, 1873. “We are on the banks of the Molilamo.” The next day, they moved Livingstone to Chitambo, in the southeast part of Lake Bangweulu.

    In a hut made of mud, he was laid on a bed of grass and wands. He drank some chamomile tea and told his servant, Susi, to leave him alone. Just before dawn on May 1, David Livingstone’s death was noticed by an African boy sleeping at the door of the lodge. Kneeling next to the bed, Livingstone’s gray-haired head had fallen into his hands as if he were praying.

    Who was Dr. Livingstone?

    David Livingstone, the son of a poor Scottish family, was born on March 19, 1813, in the industrial town of Blantyre in the Lanarkshire region. When he was ten years old, he started working in a cricket workshop and spent 14 years there. At the same time, he went to evening school, learned Latin and Greek, and decided to become a missionary physician in China.

    Livingstone became a doctor after studying medicine in Glasgow in 1840, and he was accepted into the priesthood by the London Missionary Association. When the Opium War prevented him from going to China, he set out for South Africa and arrived in Cape Town in March 1841. The search for people to adopt Christianity led him to the dangerous Kalahari region, and by the summer of 1842, he had gone further north than any white person before him.

    Two years later, Livingstone was attacked by a lion when he was about to set up a mission center on the border of the Kalahari Desert; he would never be able to lift his left arm higher than the shoulder.

    In 1845, he married Mary Moffat, the daughter of a missionary, who participated in many research trips with him. Livingstone also launched a campaign against the slave trade, which was mostly directed by the Arabs on the east coast.

    In 1852, he went on a four-year expedition. During this trip, he tried to determine the trade routes and place indigenous missionaries in the Transvaal region. He acquired a wealth of information on Central Africa and was welcomed as a hero when he returned to England in 1856.

    The British government made a monetary contribution to his next research trip; thus, from 1858 to 1864, he would continue exploring the Zambezi River. During this time, his wife died and was buried in Africa. Livingstone’s last expedition to search for the source of the Nile River began in January 1866.

    How did Stanley become an explorer?

    Born on January 29, 1841, in the town of Denbigh in the Wales Region, Stanley fled to Liverpool in his youth, boarded a ship as a crew, and went to New Orleans. There, he became friends with a cotton broker named Henry Stanley, who gave him his name. After serving as a Confederate soldier in the American Civil War, Stanley turned to journalism. In 1868, he joined a British force sent to save British diplomats and their families imprisoned in the capital city of Magdala, in Abyssinia.

    It was Stanley who first wrote in the New York Herald newspaper how the sent force captured Magdala, freed the British, and then looted the city. This scoop made the 27-year-old reporter, who later used the name “Morton” to be more effective, one of the leading journalists in the world. In 1869, the owner of The Herald, James Gordon Bennett’s son, called Stanley to Paris and told him to “find Livingstone.”

    After Livingstone died in 1873, Stanley took over the African expeditions from where the Scottish left off. He traveled all around Victoria and Tanganyika lakes. He went down from the Congo to the lake he called Stanley Lake, and from there to the waterfalls he called Livingstone Falls.

    In 1879, he helped establish the Congo Free State with the support of Belgian King Leopold II. When he returned to London in the 1890s, he was elected deputy for the North Lambeth area and was given the title “Sir.” He died in May 1904 and was buried near his home in Pirbright, Surrey, England, his hometown.

    Why were Livingstone and Stanley criticized?

    Despite all the praise and reward for Livingstone and Stanley, some people did not find these two researchers admirable. The Royal Geographical Society did not see Livingstone being discovered in the middle of the African forest as an exciting newspaper article. Sir Henry Rawlinson, the president of the association, said that “it was not Stanley who had discovered Livingstone, but Livingstone who had discovered Stanley.”

    Stanley was accused of treating African workers as “savages” and using unnecessary violence against the indigenous people who came his way. Although Livingstone generally got along well with the carriers, he had a fight with them on his last trip, causing several of them to escape. Scot was also chastised for failing to complete many of the tasks he set out to do.

    For example, he was not able to establish a single mission center in all his time as a missionary. He had also lost his way in researching the source of the Nile River. More specifically, he had not done anything for the illness that resulted in his wife’s death, and he had also left his children alone at home for years.

    More importantly, Livingstone and Stanley whipped up the enthusiasm of people and states for the discovery of Africa. This effort implied a desire to acquire new lands. At the beginning of the 20th century, the five countries participating in this race—England, Belgium, France, Germany, and Portugal—shared most of the African continent among themselves.