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This masterpiece of scholarship and compression, the second edition
of The African Experience, covers the entire span of human history
across the African continent, from the earliest emergence of
hominids in eastern and southern Africa up to the present day.
Drawing on more than forty years of teaching and research,
Professor Oliver arranges the bo
The five and a half centuries described in this volume were those
in which Iron Age cultures passed from their early and experimental
phases into stages of maturity characterized by long-distance trade
and complex, many-tiered political systems. In Egypt and North
Africa it was a period of religious and cultural consolidation when
the Arabic language and the faith of Islam were adopted by the
majority of the indigenous Copts and Berbers. In the sub-Saharan
Savanna it was a period rather of penetration when Muslim merchants
and clerics built up small but significant minorities of Negro
African converts. Muslim migrants conquered the Nilotic Sudan,
encircled Christian Ethiopia and settled the coastline of eastern
Africa. Intercontinental trade developed across the whole width of
the Sahara and also toward the Indian Ocean ports. During the last
century and a half of the period the Portuguese opened the Atlantic
coasts and competed with the Muslim traders of the Indian Ocean.
But throughout the period African states, large and small, were
strong enough, relatively, to control their visitors from the
outside world.
The core of the book is Oliver's account of his research travels
throughout tropical Africa from the 1940s to the 1980s; his efforts
to train and foster African graduate students to teach in African
universities; his role in establishing conferences and journals to
bring together the work of historians and archaeologists from
Europe and Africa; his encounters with political and religious
leaders, scholars, soldiers, and storytellers; and the political
and economic upheavals of the continent that he witnessed.
Volume VI of The Cambridge History of Africa covers the period
1870-1905, when the European powers (Britain, France, Germany,
Portugal and Italy) divided the continent into colonial territories
and vied with each other for control over vast tracts of land and
valuable mineral resources. At the same time, it was a period
during which much of Africa still had a history of its own.
Colonial governments were very weak and could exist only by playing
a large part both in opening up the continent to outside influences
and in building larger political unities. The volume begins with a
survey of the whole of Africa on the eve of the paper partition,
and continues with nine regional surveys of events as they occured
on the ground. Only in northern and southern Africa did these
develop into classical colonial forms, with basis of outright
conquest. Elsewhere, compromises emerged and most Africans were
able to pursue the politics of survival. Partition was a process,
not an event. The process was essentially one of modernisation in
the face of outside challenge.
This masterpiece of scholarship and compression, the second edition
of "The African Experience," covers the entire span of human
history across the African continent, from the earliest emergence
of hominids in eastern and southern Africa up to the present day.
Drawing on more than forty years of teaching and research,
Professor Oliver arranges the book thematically, beginning with the
human colonization of the different regions of Africa, the origins
of food production, and the formation of African languages.The
achievements of Ancient Egypt are placed in context with the
developments in the rest of the continent, and the spread of
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam - "peoples of the book." The
tradition of urban settlement is traced, especially in western
Africa, as well as the emergence of large and complex societies
formed by the interaction of pastoralists and cultivators in
eastern and southern Africa.The extent and nature of slavery in
Africa is fully discussed, together with the external slave trade
and the caravan trade in precolonial times. This leads to an
analysis of the strengths and weaknesses of African political
systems and why, from the early nineteenth century onwards, these
systems were unable to withstand political pressure from abroad and
the ensuing colonization. The colonial partition of Africa saw the
rapid amalgamation of small units, through which considerable
modernization was achieved at the expense of the indigenous
structures and through the exploitation of the African peoples.
Later chapters describe the birth of modern African nation-states,
at a time of widespread belief in state planning - now being
questioned as the political elites of black Africa begin to review
their single-party systems. This new edition sees a number of
revisions, including a new chapter on the 1990s, when the end of
the Cold War left Africa free at last to try to solve its own
problems.
This radically revised and updated companion volume to the authors' well-known Africa since 1800 (now in its fourth edition) takes African history from about 1250 AD, when African societies were expanding their political and economic scope, and when Islamic influences were already reaching across the Sahara and down the Indian Ocean coastline. It continues through the period of early European contact from the fifteenth century onward, with much emphasis on expanding Atlantic trade.
The African Middle Ages covers the period of African history from
1400 to 1800. During this period Africa was influenced by external
forces as the Islamic states of the north extended their sway and
as maritime trade with Europe and Asia increased. The notorious
slave-trade created the black population of North and South
America, the Caribbean and the Indian Ocean islands. The authors,
however, emphasize the extent to which Africans dealt with
outsiders on equal terms. The peoples of Africa were coalescing
into tribal states rather like those of early medieval Europe.
These states were often capable of providing a high degree of law
and order, of exploiting resources and organising trade; of
redistributing the products of local industries, and of defending
themselves against outside attack. Though eventually subordinated
by the colonial conquests of the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries, the tribal states of pre-colonial Africa
continue to exert a powerful residual influence upon the
post-colonial states of modern Africa.
This book begins by looking at the peoples of Africa at the turn of
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and goes on to study the
commercial and ideological penetration of Africa by the outside
world. The partition and colonisation of Africa by the European
powers are discussed, and there is comprehensive discussion of the
colonial rule between 1885 and 1960. The last third of the book is
concerned with the history of independent Africa during the last
years of the twentieth century. The new edition covers events up to
the middle of 2003, and takes account of the fresh perspectives
brought about by the end of the Cold War and the new global
situation following the events of September 11, 2001. It is also
concerned with the demographic trends, with the ravages of diseases
such as AIDS and malaria, and with the conflicts waged by warlords.
This book begins by looking at the peoples of Africa at the turn of
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and goes on to study the
commercial and ideological penetration of Africa by the outside
world. The partition and colonisation of Africa by the European
powers are discussed, and there is comprehensive discussion of the
colonial rule between 1885 and 1960. The last third of the book is
concerned with the history of independent Africa during the last
years of the twentieth century. The new edition covers events up to
the middle of 2003, and takes account of the fresh perspectives
brought about by the end of the Cold War and the new global
situation following the events of September 11, 2001. It is also
concerned with the demographic trends, with the ravages of diseases
such as AIDS and malaria, and with the conflicts waged by warlords.
This radically revised and updated companion volume to the authors' well-known Africa since 1800 (now in its fourth edition) takes African history from about 1250 AD, when African societies were expanding their political and economic scope, and when Islamic influences were already reaching across the Sahara and down the Indian Ocean coastline. It continues through the period of early European contact from the fifteenth century onward, with much emphasis on expanding Atlantic trade.
A textbook providing the only comprehensive and up-to-date account of African history between 500 B.C. and 1400 A.D. Also useful to students of archaeology.
Over the last fifty years, Roland Oliver has been both a witness to
the post-colonial history of Africa and a preeminent scholar of the
continent's pre-colonial history. Oliver was a young Cambridge
graduate in 1947 when he took a newly created position at the
University of London to research, and eventually teach, the
pre-colonial history of Africa. Seeking from the outset to
establish a unified conception of African history free from
European frameworks, Oliver and his colleague John Fage went on to
write the influential "A Short History of Africa," found the
"Journal of African History," and co-edit the eight-volume
"Cambridge History of Africa."
"In the Realms of Gold" is Oliver's account of his life and work.
He writes in a deft and lively style about the circumstances of his
early life that shaped his education and outlook: his childhood on
a river houseboat in Kashmir, the influential teachers and friends
met at Stowe and Cambridge, and his service in World War II as a
cryptographer in British intelligence, where he met his first wife,
Caroline Linehan. His interest in church history while at Cambridge
led him to study the historical effects of Christian missionaries
in Africa, and thus his career began.
The core of the book is Oliver's account of his research travels
throughout tropical Africa from the 1940s to the 1980s; his efforts
to train and foster African graduate students to teach in African
universities; his role in establishing conferences and journals to
bring together the work of historians and archaeologists from
Europe and Africa; his encounters with political and religious
leaders, scholars, soldiers, and storytellers; and the political
and economic upheavals of the continent that he witnessed.
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