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Nigeria & West Africa

Narrated by Richard C. Hottelet


Hear a sample from
The Golden Triangle
Nigeria & West Africa   Narrated by Richard C. Hottelet

With a culture dating back to at least 700 B.C., West Africa has a long and rich history. British influence after the 16th century, and especially in the 18th century, changed the region's course. By 1967, Nigeria was at war with itself-with the "Republic of Biafra: proclaimed in Nigeria's eastern region. Over a million people perished. This is the story of Nigeria's Struggle, which typifies the history and outlook of the West Africa region.

ca 2000 BC - Sahara changes from a fertile savannah to a desert. Caucasoids believed to emigrate north, Negroids south.
ca 1000 AD - Ghana & Empire of Mali dominated the northern "Sudan"; Yoruba, Benin, and Ibo dominate the south (present-day Nigeria).
1472 - Portuguese explorers arrive in West Africa; slave trade soon begins.
Mid-16th Century - British arrive in West Africa, followed by Dutch. Expanded slave trade supplies million slaves exported from Africa; an estimated 60% survive trans-Atlantic passage.
1807 - Slave trade abolished for English merchants; abolished throughout British Empire, 1833.
1809 - Islamic Fulani rebels conquer most of the Hausa states (northwest Africa and attack southern territory.
1842 - Methodists bring first Christian mission to West Africa.
1851 - British capture Lagos, making it a British colony in 1861. Oyo and Owu empires collapse in civil war. Void filled by Dahomey Empire and European hegemony.
1867 - Vast diamond finds in South Africa bring railways and European colonies to Africa.
1870s - Sir George Goldie merges English traders into a monopoly (National Africa Company).
1884-1885 - Berlin West African Conference carves Africa into spheres of control, Britain charters the Royal Niger Company (1886).
1893 - Britain establishes Niger Coast Protectorate.
1895 - Akassa natives massacred after they attack a Niger Company "factory".
1900 - Royal Niger Company charter revoked. Territory divided into Northern and Southern Protectorates of Nigeria.
1902 - Britain subdues the Islamic states of Northern Nigeria. Southern Nigeria is increasingly modernized and British-educated.
1914 - North and South Nigeria are united into the "Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria".
1945 - British imposes on Nigeria the Richards Constitution and four "Obnoxious Ordinances", strikes and unrest occur. Macpherson Constitution passed in 1951, Lyttleton Constitution in 1954.
1960 - The Federation of Nigeria gains independence; unrest and internal rivalry follow.
1966 - A military coup overthrows Nigerian government; public disorder erupt and the Ibos flee.
1967 - Eastern Nigeria declares independence as The Republic of Biafra. Civil War erupts. Biafra is blockaded, one million starve; Biafra surrenders, 1970.
1975 - Coups in 1975 and again in 1976 precede new constitution in Oct. 1976; elections, return to civilian rule in 1979.

On two audiotapes
Run time: about three hours total
Narrator: Richard C. Hottelet
Author: Wendy McElroy
Editor: Mike Hassell

Publisher: Knowledge Products, Inc.
Item # 10364
Price: $17.95
(You can always remove it later.)

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