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Quest for the Jade Sea - Colonial Competition Around an East African Lake (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,543
Discovery Miles 15 430
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Quest for the Jade Sea - Colonial Competition Around an East African Lake (Paperback)
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The last of the major African lakes to be visited by European
travelers in the late nineteenth century, Lake Rudolf lies in the
eastern arm of the great Rift Valley in present-day northern Kenya,
near the Ethiopian border. Also known as Lake Turkana, Lake Rudolf
is a large saltwater body two hundred miles long and forty miles
wide. Fed by the Omo River that flows south from the Ethiopian
highlands, it is surrounded by an inhospitable landscape of extinct
volcanoes, wind-driven semidesert, and old lava flows. Because of
the greenish hue of its waters, it has long been called the Jade
Sea."Quest for the Jade Sea" examines the fascinating story of
colonial competition around this remote lake. Pascal James
Imperato's account yields important insights into European colonial
policies in East Africa in the late nineteenth century and how
these policies came into conflict with a powerful indigenous and
independent African state, Ethiopia, which itself was engaged in
imperial expansion.Although the chief competitors for the lake
included the British, Italians, the French, Russians, and
Ethiopians, its colonial fate was decided by Great Britain and
Ethiopia. The role of Ethiopia as a late nineteenth-century
colonial power unfolds as Imperato provides unique insights and
analyses of Ethiopian colonial policy and its effects on the
peoples who inhabited the region of the lake.As well as examining
the political and diplomatic aspects of colonial competition for
Lake Rudolf, "Quest for the Jade Sea" focuses on the expeditions
that traveled there. Many of these were the field expressions of
colonial policy; others were undertaken in the interest of
scientific and geographical discovery. Whatever theimpetus, their
success required courage and much suffering on the part of those
who led them. Whether as willing agents of larger colonial designs,
soldiers intent on promoting their military careers, or explorers
who wished to advance scientific knowledge, expedition leaders left
behind not only fascinating chronicles of their experiences and
discoveries but also parts of the larger story of colonial
competition around an East African lake.
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