African Colonization

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Since time immemorial, the African continent has been subjected to invasions, which later on resulted in quick-paced processes of colonization and assimilation. An early and noteworthy example of the first colonizers of northern Africa includes the Romans, who fought the three Punic Wars against Carthage. What drove the Romans to engage in more than 100 years of bloody war, between 264 and 146 B.C., against the city of Carthage, situated in what had later been named the Gulf of Tunis, was the same thirst for power and land possession that animated the process of colonization of the African continent from the 15th to the early 20th century. Yet, while the Romans limited their colonization to the part of Africa extending north of the Sahara desert, dismissing what lied south of the Sahara with the derogatory remark hic sunt leones, the European colonizers settled throughout the continent indiscriminately. As mentioned above, power, a sense of superiority, and the will to bring their moral mission to completion (Khapoya, 115f) was partly what led the British, French, and the Portuguese, later on joined by the Germans and the Italians, to implement the process of colonization.

One primary and important territorial premise led the Europeans to colonize the African continent: Africa offered extensive stretches of barely inhabited land to a continent, Europe, where the last patches of territory were being gradually but quickly inhabited by an increasing population. The latter concept is especially highlighted by Diamond; the scholar explains how the passage from a hunting-gathering society to an agricultural society resulted in a sedentary kind of life, food surpluses, and the development of a technology that helped obtain commoditie...

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...ation is the general presence in Africa of a corrupted political class whose actions aim at individual benefits and political and economic advantage for the European ex-colonizers. At this point, if the process of colonization lasted more than 400 years, the question arises whether it will take just as much for Africa to gain more political, economic, and cultural independence.

Works Cited

- Jeffrey Herbst (1990) “War and the State in Africa” International Security 14 (4) pp.117-139.

- Diamond, J. (1999) Guns, Germs and Steel, New York: WW Norton and Co.

- Khapoya V. (1998) The African Experience, Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall,.

- Nathan Nunn (2005) “Slavery, Institutional Development, and Long-Run Growth in Africa, 1400-2000,” pp.1-46.

- Crawford, Y.( 1994) The African colonial State in Comparative Perspective, New Haven: Yale University Press.

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