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The King of Lokoja - William Balfour Baikie the Forgotten Man of Africa (Paperback)
Loot Price: R470
Discovery Miles 4 700
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The King of Lokoja - William Balfour Baikie the Forgotten Man of Africa (Paperback)
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List price R517
Loot Price R470
Discovery Miles 4 700
You Save R47 (9%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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William Balfour Baikie was a surgeon, naturalist, linguist, writer,
explorer and government consul who played a key role in opening
Africa to the Europeans. As an explorer he mapped and charted large
sections of the Niger River system as well as the overland routes
from Lagos and Lokoja to the major trading centres of Kano,
Timbuctu and Sokoto. As a naturalist, major beneficiaries of his
work included Kew Gardens and the British Museum for the rare and
undiscovered plant and animal species and yet today he remains
largely unknown. On 10th December, 1864 Baikie was on his way back
to London and was living in his temporary quarters in Sierra Leone.
There he worked to regain his health and to complete the various
reports and publications expected by the Colonial and Foreign
Offices. He had been away from England for seven years and living
conditions in West Africa had caused his health to suffer. While
his wife and children waited for his return 600 miles away in
Lokoja, the city in Nige-ria he had founded, his father waited for
his return to Kirkwall, Orkney. Baikie would never return to his
wife, nor ever see his father again. In two days, he would be dead
and buried at Sierra Leone before his fortieth birthday. In his
short life Baikie became such a hero among the Nigerian people 150
years ago that white visitors to the region today are still greeted
warmly as 'Baikie'. After studying at University of Edinburgh he
was assigned to the Royal Hospital Haslar where he worked with the
noted explorers Sir John Richardson and Sir Edward Perry. Baikie's
reputation as a naturalist, and the sphere of influence provided by
Richardson and Perry, allowed him to enter the elite British
scientific community where he also worked alongside the most famous
naturalist of the time, Charles Darwin. During his time at Haslar,
Baikie made two voyages exploring the Niger and Benue Rivers to
establish trading centres for the Liverpool merchant Macgregor
Laird. The first was a resounding success. He conducted the first
clinical trial using quinine as a preventative for malaria. For the
first time in history, his initial exploration of these rivers was
conducted without the loss of a single life to fever. Returning to
London to a hero's welcome, he was nominated for one of the Royal
Geographic Society's prestigious awards. His second voyage was a
pure disaster. His ship was wrecked; members of the expedition died
and he was stranded for over a year in the vast remote territory
known as the Sokoto Caliphate. Following his rescue, he elected to
remain alone in Africa for what would be his final years in order
to complete his personal mission. Although he was born 4,000 miles
away in Orkney, Baikie was designated the King of Lokoja by the
ruler of the Sokoto Caliphate. This book defines the man and his
accomplishments and reveals how he is so fondly remembered by the
Nigerians and yet apparently so totally forgotten by the rest of
the world.
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