Showing posts with label History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History. Show all posts

Saturday, December 3, 2011

History of Marin County

The history of Marin County started with its creation in February 18, 1850 and just after the adoption of the Constitution of the State of California in 1849. Marin County had the historic distinction of becoming one of the state's original 27 counties and that was several months before the state was admitted into the Union. Currently, Marin County is one of 58 counties in California and is located in the North San Francisco Bay Area and across the Golden Gate Bridge from the city of San Francisco.

As of the most recent census, the population of Marin County had surpassed 260,000 and the county seat is located in San Rafael with the county government being Marin County's largest employer.

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Marin County is recognized for its wealth of nature and its widely varied topographic beauty that includes sites such as the Muir Woods Redwood Forest, the Marin Headlands, Stinson Beach, Point Reyes National Seashore and Mount Tamalpais which is where mountain biking was allegedly invented.

Marin County is also well known for the affluence of its residents who had been drawing the highest per capita income with over ,000 per year and the third highest mean personal income with well over ,000 per year in the nation.

How Marin County got its name and the history associated with it is a mystery. One account points to the Licatiut tribe of the Coast Miwok Native Americans who inhabited the region and one of their chieftains named Marin who fiercely attempted to thwart the early Spanish explorers from settling there. Another account points back to 1775 and claims that Marin County is merely an abbreviated version of the original name for the bay between San Pedro Point and San Quentin Point, Bahía de Nuestra Señora Del Rosario la Marinera.

The Coast Miwok were one of the largest groups of the Miwok Native American people and their early ancestors dwelled in the general area of the modern day Marin County as well as southern Sonoma County in a territory stretching between the Golden Gate Bridge north to Duncan's Point and east to Sonoma Creek for approximately five thousand years. The Coast Miwok thrived peacefully off the abundant land and ocean by predominantly hunting and gathering. Archeologists, historians and researchers estimate that the Coast Miwok numbered in the thousands and were apportioned among at least 600 distinct villages scattered throughout the Marin County region. Sadly, only a few Coast Miwok are still in existence today and most of them are not even aware of their own rich heritage.

Many European explorers, privateers and missionaries began flocking to the region as early as the sixteenth century. Sir Francis Drake landed in 1579 and claimed the land for the then king of England. Following in Drake's footsteps, a Spanish explorer named Sebastian Cermeno docked his ship in what is now called Drake's Bay in 1595.

The history of Marin County was forged thousands of years ago by indigenous tribes but the Spaniards established Mission San Rafael Arcángel in 1817 at the site that is today's downtown San Rafael. This mission became the first permanent European settlement in Marin County and it seemed to have been built, at least in part, in response to the Russian building of Fort Ross in Sonoma County, Marin County's northern neighbor.

History of Marin County

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

Discover the History of the Jewish Community in Essaouira on a Day Trip From Marrakesh

Originally called Amegdoul, meaning "the well-built" or "fortified place" in Berber, and then Mogador by the Portuguese and Spaniards, this beautiful fishing town on the Atlantic Coast was finally renamed Essaouira in the 18th century. The city is full of charm and has a fascinating history and architecture that are worth discovering during a day trip from Marrakesh, located just over 100 miles east of Essaouira.

The "merchants of the king", from the ten most prestigious Jewish families in Morocco, knew about the city across Europe. These families enjoyed the prestige that they obtained from the missions for the Sultan, who was entrusted with Western powers. They actually held much of the trade and economy of the port, the latter providing 40% of all trade on the Atlantic coast between Timbuktu and Europe. The traded goods mostly consisted of ostrich feathers, gold dust, salt, ivory, slaves, etc.

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Under the reign of Sultan Moulay Yazid, the Jewish community was relatively spared from persecution and settled in a new Jewish quarter from 1807. Unlike the former Mellah or Jewish quarter, the new one was located inside the medina in order to protect the Jews from possible abuses and helps maintain a high level of culture and education.

In the 19th century, the city started its decline, but it remained a major economical and military centre. Following the French invasion after 1844 and sacked the city by surrounding tribes, the Jews had to leave Essaouira to settle in Marrakech. However, they eventually returned later during difficult economic conditions.

When the Spanish attacked in 1860, the Jews took refuge again in the province of Haza and their plight drew the attention of Sir Moses Montefiore, who obtained the grant of new land to build a second Mellah. At that time, a strong community organisation could meet the needs of a population from 4,000 to up to 14,000 people. While the Jewish quarter was represented by a Sheikh in the political and civil affairs, its religious status was supported by a court of three rabbis.

The expenses of the community came from taxes on kosher meat, on imported products, and from various donations from international sources. Many religious schools, a yeshiva, and several English-French Jewish schools were founded in Essaouira in the 1800s. In the early 20th century, the Jewish population in Essaouira was still higher than the Muslim population, and urban life was regulated by the Jewish calendar. While in 1901 the Jewish community counted 19,000 people, the number went down to 5,000 at the beginning of the French Protectorate and continued to decline during the 1950s and 1960s.

Among the figures that shaped the history of the Jewish Community of Essaouira we could mention Rabbi Abraham Coriat, Abrahm Ibn Attar Messod Knafo, Rabbi Haim Pinto and the Corcos family.Today, there are few Jewish families living in Essaouira, and the Community Council has undertaken to restore the Attias and Pinto synagogues. Led by Andre Azoulay, adviser to the king, the city is experiencing a renaissance and is one of Morocco's main destinations for cultural tourism.

The best way to visit Essaouira is from one of Morocco's major cities, well-connected by land and air. Essaouira is a favourite destination on a day trip from Marrakesh, since it can be visited in one day and it is just a couple hours' drive from the Ochre City.

Discover the History of the Jewish Community in Essaouira on a Day Trip From Marrakesh

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Friday, October 14, 2011

The History of Tag Heuer Watches

Founded in 1860 by Edouard Heuer in the Swiss Jura region, under the name "Edouard Heuer, Fabrique d'Horlogerie." The company would go on to experience many name changes until it placed on Tag Heuer in 1985.

In 1887, Heuer created the oscillating pinion, which he acquired a patent for.

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Heuer went on to gain an unprecedented credit for style, quality, and innovation. With a love for automobiles, Heuer launched "Time of Trip", the first dashboard chronograph for cars as well as aircraft, in 1911.

The company was handed down to Charles-Auguste Heuer, who kept tradition by following strict quality control and innovative ideas. In 1916, Charles-Auguste invented the Mikrograph and Microsplit (with split-seconds), the first stopwatches with 1/100th of a second accuracy.

Heuer gained world recognition and notoriety for its quality to innovate and in 1920, Heuer's split-seconds pocket chronographs were chosen as official timekeeping instruments for the Olympic Games in Antwerp. They would also go on to be the official timekeeping instruments for the games of 1924 in Paris and 1928 in Amsterdam.

To one up the "Time of Trip", Heuer created the Autavia, the first stopwatch for dashboards and aircraft instrument panels, in 1933.

Another breakthrough came for Heuer in 1949, when the company launched the Mareographe, the first wrist-chronograph with a tide indication and chronograph functions for sailing regattas.

Heuer gained even more worldwide recognition in 1962, when astronaut John Glenn orbited the Earth three times aboard the Mercury mission Friendship 7 spacecraft. He wore a Heuer sports stopwatch, production Heuer the first Swiss watch brand in space.

In 1964, Heuer launched its illustrious Carrera series to commemorate the illustrious 1950's Carrera Panamericana car rally.

Topping the Mikrograph and Microsplit, Heuer released the Microtimer, the first miniaturised electronic timekeeping instrument with 1/1,000th of a second accuracy.

In 1969, Heuer launched the Chronomatic Calibre 11, the first self-operating chronograph movement with micro-rotor. This same year, the company introduced the first-rate Monaco watch, which was favored and worn by actor Steve McQueen.

Bringing the Microtimer to the wrist, Tag Heuer introduced the Microtimer wrist watch in 2003.

In 2006, Tag Heuer unveiled the Monaco Calibre 360 Ls understanding Chronograph at Baselworld. As a itsybitsy edition, the rose gold Carrera Calibre 360 won the Grand Prix d'Horlogerie de Genève in the Sports Watch category.

Tag Heuer has long been a beloved here at Urbane. The watches they create are the epitome of men's fashion and forever have a spot reserved in the top part of our list of best brands.

The History of Tag Heuer Watches

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Tuesday, August 30, 2011

The History Of San Francisco Market Street

The city of San Francisco is a beautiful city surrounded by the Pacific Ocean in Northern California. The city is famous for the vibrant Golden Gate Bridge, cable cars navigating steep hills, the historic former prison on Alcatraz island, ground shaking earthquakes, and the colorful, popular, and historic Market Street.

Market Street is a major thoroughfare that cuts through the heart of the San Francisco. It begins in the northeastern part of the city, at the historic Embarcadero on the waterfront near the Ferry Building, and continues three miles southwest to the hills of the neighborhood of Twin Peaks, after first passing historic and new hotels, world-class restaurants, the skyscrapers of downtown, the Civic Center, and the always colorful Castro District.

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The area was first settled by the Spanish in 1776. They established a military fort and mission in honor of saint Francis of Assisi. San Francisco has transformed from a small port town into a popular tourist destination and a major cultural and financial center.

In 1817, Jasper O'Farrell was born in County Wexford, Ireland. In 1843, O'Farrell came to San Francisco, which was then known as Yerba Buena where he trained as a civil engineer. At the age of 26, O'Farrell first began work repairing Portsmouth Square. Next, he began work on a grand promenade, which was to be the widest street in the city. This grand promenade became known as Market Street.

In 1846, Yerba Buena was renamed to San Francisco after the Americans captured the city during the Mexican-American War. The war between the United States and Mexico lasted from 1846 to 1848. O'Farrell Street, near downtown, has been named in honor of Jasper O'Farrell.

Market Street has been a major artery that has defined the city for many years. The street has even been compared to Fifth Avenue in New York City and Champs-Élysées in Paris, France. Locals have described the design of the street as a straight arrow which points directly at the hills of the Twin Peaks neighborhood.

Throughout its almost 170 year history, horses, street cars, cable cars, trolleys, cars, buses, and people have made their way along Market Street. Festivities on the street have brought tourists from around the world and locals together. Reconstruction and redevelopment over the years has ensured that Market Street will continue to be an important part of San Francisco for many years to come.

The History Of San Francisco Market Street

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Friday, August 5, 2011

Chronology of African History - Colonizing Nations (19th - 20th Centries)

It is the purpose of this narrative to provide the general reader with a allembracing photograph of world's most civilization originating in Africa, a continent leading modern scholars today refer to it as the 'the cradle of civilization'. This chronology seeks to address sophisticated and exciting readers who had never previously read anyone serious about Africa, from the earliest times to the most recent. Most black people have lost their confidence, their true identity, because their history has been neglected, falsified and sometimes concealed. Diana Crawford Carson has been instrumental in the compilation of the chronology as she spent many hours synchronizing facts from many sources and verifying the language usage. Note: the century headings generally refer to the first date mentioned. Example: an entry covering the 14th to the 18th century will be found under '14th Century, 1300s'. The numbers in the left hand column are arbitrary, to help those using the indexes.

The Black Holocaust

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The Black Holocaust is one of the more underreported tragedies in the annals of human history. The Black Holocaust refers to the millions of African lives lost during the centuries to slavery, colonization and oppression. The Black Holocaust refers to the horrors endured by millions of men, women, and children throughout the African Diaspora and the slave trade, from the 17th century, and lasting for at least the next two centuries. (In other guise, from and to many nations, the tragedy of slavery continues.) In sheer numbers, depth and brutality, it is a testimony to the worst elements of human behaviour and the strongest elements of survival.

Unknown numbers of Africans (possibly more than 4 million) died in slave wars and forced marches even before the other captives could be shipped to other nations. Within central Africa itself, the slave trade precipitated gigantic migrations; coastal tribes fled slave-raiding parties, and captured slaves were punished and transported, or were sold to slave owners in other regions in Africa.

The African slave trade and slave labour transformed the world. In Africa, slave trade stimulated the expansion of qualified West African kingdoms, made possible by the funds and guns provided by the income from the slave trade. In the Islamic world, African slave labour on plantations, in seaports, and within families wide the manufactures and trade of the Indian Ocean and Persian Gulf. In the Americas, both North and South, slave labour became the key component in trans-Atlantic agriculture and commerce, making possible the booming capitalist cheaper of the 17th and 18th centuries. The most demand came from Brazil (in South America) and the sugar plantations in the Caribbean islands.

84 The Resistance

Many Africans, such as Queen Nzingha of Angola and King Maremba of the Congo, fought valiantly, if vainly, against the European slavers and their African collaborators, without whom the gigantic numbers of men and women could not have been captured. Others resisted their captors by starting mutinies or even, in desperation, jumping overboard from slave ships during the horrendous 'middle passage' over the Atlantic Ocean. Many enslaved Africans destined for the Americas were subjected to a 'breaking in' process, often in the West Indies. Many of those captured, especially those of very strong spirit, were not 'broken', and managed to escape, at last forming independent communities such as that of the Maroons ('escapees') in the West Indies. Some of these Maroon communities, numbering in the thousands in the Caribbean and South American, waged guerrilla warfare against slave hunters. If the escaped slave hunters were caught, they were terribly brutally executed.

85 The Diaspora: The forced and brutal dispersal of nearly thirty million Africans into foreign lands as slaves is the Black Diaspora. African slaves and their descendants carried with them their many skills and shared community values, rich cultural traditions, resiliency, and a resistance ethos that transformed and enriched the cultures they entered around the world. Thus, as African peoples were globally scattered, they carried their many strengths, and their traditions of cultural creativity and oral arts with them. This included a rich culture of music, using a wide range of instruments, some primitive

and some very sophisticated, vibrant musical rhythms, dance, costumes in a rainbow of colours, roughly an exploration of multi-coloured and diverse textures. There is exciting use of repetition in poems, in the call-and-response of song, and story telling, all part of the rich traditions of most African peoples. African cultural musical and oral traditions

86 1789 A Nigerian slave from the Benin area of Nigeria, transportable to the States (Usa) as a young child, later achieved free time and reached England. Somehow along the way, this young man, Equiano, learned to read and write, so that, once in freedom, he was able to write his autobiography. Maybe as a matter of security, he wrote as Gustavo Vassa, though he used his true name in the title of his book, 'The exciting narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano'. This exciting and painful book by Equiano (who was also called Igbo) was a clear exposition of his life as a slave, and then in freedom. One most exciting facet is Equiano's narrative of the divergence in the middle of servitude under the African system, and the European 'chattel' slavery'. This was written in partial defence of the African principles of servitude, as being more humane than the Europeans' principles of slavery, possession of another person. As Maybe the first autobiography of a slave or former slave, this book aroused much interest. Equiano's book was followed by others, written by freed men, or smuggled out of slavery by those not yet free. All of these helped to stimulate the young but growing abolitionist movement in the States, and in Europe.

87 1790s The abolitionist movement (to abolish slavery) gained vigor in England, and also in the Usa.

88 1792 A slave uprising in Haiti (called Saint-Dominigue by the French), exciting thousands of slaves, was led by Toussant L'Ouverture (1743-1803). His army at last numbered 55,000 Africans, who waged guerrilla and frontal war against the British in Haiti for years.

89 Late 18th- mid 19th C European political, economic, and scientific interests stimulated another era of exploration, and a search for new markets. British explorer James Bruce reached the source of the Blue Nile in 1770, Scottish explorer Mungo Park explored (1795 and 1805) the procedure of the Niger River, Scottish missionary David Livingstone explored the Zambezi River and, in 1855, named Victoria Falls, and British explorers John Hanning Speke and James Augustus Grant, travelling downstream, and Sir Samuel White Baker, working upstream, located the sources of the Nile in 1863. Following the explorers (and sometimes preceding them) were Christian missionaries and European merchants.

90 1795 The British seized operate of Cape Colony, South Africa, from the Dutch.
19th century, 1800s

91 1800s and throughout the century Poetry written in the language of the Swahili had long been focussed mostly on Arab (and Muslim) themes. The new Kiswahili poetry looked at, and used, customary Bantu cultural material, such as their ritual songs, and more. The famed Swahili poet, Sayyid Abdallah Bin Masir, wrote a strong religious poem, 'The Soul's Awakening' ('Utendi wa Inkishafi'). This list of the fall of Pate, a city-state, presented a strong message about the futility of selfish earthly life.

92 1804 This was the year that the Black Republic of Haiti came into being.

93 1807 The Wilberforce Law inEngland banned the slave trade. (Slavery itself was banned in1835.)

94 1815 This was a time of lasting British immigration to South Africa,

some 20 years after wresting Cape Colony from the Dutch, and the hamlet in which the British declared formal operate over the former Dutch possession. Despite government resistance, the Boers began to move inland in search of good land and, after 1815, managed to leave British control.

95 1818-1828 Shaka, a strong Zulu chief, unified the Nguni peoples and forged an impressive fighting force, launching the 'mfecane' (wars of crushing and wandering; pronounced 'mm feh Cah neh) against the neighbouring black Africans and white Europeans throughout southern Africa. Shaka was assassinated in 1828, but Zulu power prolonged to rise.

96 1822 The American Colonization community (Acs) was set up to enable free African-Americans to return to Africa, as an alternative to emancipation in the United States. In 1822, the community established a colony on the west coast of Africa. This became the independent nation of Liberia, in 1847. This resettlement programme prolonged such that, twenty years later, more than 13,000 ex-slaves had achieved free time in Liberia, through the work of the Acs.

97 1830-1834 Seeking more land, the Boers, Europeans of Dutch descent (the word 'boers' means 'farmers') already located in South Africa, began their 'Great Trek' north, migrating to areas, possible farmlands, beyond the Orange River and into Natal. This led to the 'land transfer, or dispossession of the southern Nguni peoples (see 108).

98 1835 Slavery was banned in England, twenty-eight years after the slave trade itself was banned.

99 1839 West Africa's people and states were challenged by the disruptions and distress caused by the Atlantic slave trade, and the resultant movements of African population.

100 1839-1842 These several years saw the reality of the Amistad (slave) Revolt, on which the 1997 Steven Spielberg film was based. The 'Revolt' was on shipboard, off the coast of Cuba. The impetus of this revolt had a serious ensue even on the young United States, as the captured men of the revolt set in appeal a battle, using the law, politics and group debate, to raise the public's awareness of the terrible and inhumane aspects of slavery and the slave trade, and concern about the loss of the native homes of the slaves who had been stolen from Africa. Race was an aspect, as well, debating either or not one race had the right to enslave another. The very fibre of the young American nation was affected.

101 The Amistad Revolt was an leading lesson in the interlocked histories of: (1) West Africa, whose peoples and states were made to feel uneasy/threatened (in 1839) by the gigantic loss of people caused by the terrible depredations of the Atlantic Slave Trade; and (2) Cuba, a Spanish possession (in 1839) and both a major sugar producer, Maybe the world's biggest, and also then still a major slave-owning culture, the last in the Caribbean, and (3) a bit farther north, the still young but growing United States, in 1839 poised to become a vital political power beyond its borders, but increasingly torn asunder politically by its situation as half-free and half slave. There were those who believed there was a biblical basis for slavery (see 55 and 84), while Maybe an even greater estimate had themselves, or their long-remembered antecedents, come to the 'New World' in search of political, religious or other freedoms.

102 1832-3 The British abolished slavery in the West Indies, twenty-five years after banning the British slave trade, and two years before banning slavery itself (in 1835) in England.

103 1850s In midst of the mfecane (see 95), the white Boer Republics of the Orange Free State and the Transvaal were established.

104 1850s Black African journalists and other writers educated in Europe or in various mission and government schools in Africa, began to be recognized. One form of recognition was naturally to be published, for one's words to be in print. To this end, some newspapers published stories and poems, the latter in a 'Poets' Corner'. The writings were published in a range of indigenous African languages, as well as in several European languages.

105 1853 David Livingstone travelled three hundred miles along the upper reaches of the Zambezi River, then set off from Linyanti in present-day Botswana to Luanda on the coast of Portuguese Angola. After recovering his strength, he retraced his path to Linyanti before embarking to Quilimane in Mozambique, making him the first European to traverse the continent from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean.

106 1863 The Usa Emancipation proclamation freed all slaves in the United States, even before the end of the Civil War.

107 1870s The Zulu people took up arms against the British.

108 1871 Livingstone witnessed a horrific massacre at a town called Nyangwe in Central Africa, where Arab slave traders pulled out their guns after an seminar over the price of a chicken, and indiscriminately shot more than 400 people.

109 1871-1912 During thesedecades, European imperialism, in itsascendancy, was at its strongest and most powerful. The English were well ahead of the race in many respects, even as the other countries were endeavouring to carve themselves a piece of Africa, or invent that which they had already claimed. All the European countries set their own boundaries in Africa, totally heedless of the traditionally recognised boundaries, or tribal/ethnic lands already occupied/possessed by tribes, ethnic groups or even small nations.The long established rule among the colonizing nations was 'divide and rule'. Europeans had begun taking over parts of Africa in the middle of the fifteenth century, raiding them for anyone wealth could be found or created. European actions exacerbated, even encouraged, existing tensions and hostilities in the middle of tribes/language groups/ethnic units.

110 This was also a time of 'land reassignment', or 'land alienation', which should more precisely be called 'land grabbing', or 'theft of land' long owned by local people, owned for generations, farmed, and used as pasture land for the farmer's flocks, for generations. It was not 'land alienation'; land cannot be 'alienated' It was the 'alienation' of defenceless and vulnerable Africans, forced to yield to the colonials' powers. (see 76, 97)

111 At the same time, there was a resurgence of self-respect among many black African peoples, who saw the error of the European assumption that European cultures were of higher value than the indigenous, centuries-old cultures of Africa. The black Africans also were starting to reject even more strongly being governed (and oppressed) by those who believed in 'white supremacy', at the cost of the integrity of black Africans.

112 1873 Livingstone died (a disappointed man) on May first, at Ilala, by the shores of Lake Bangweolo; the slave trade seemed at that point to be ineradicable. Yet, just over a month later, the open sore of slavery did begin to heal, when the Sultan of Zanzibar (5 June, 1973) signed a treaty with the British, pledging to abolish the East African slave trade. The Old Slave shop was sold to the Universities Mission to Central Africa; they erected a astounding cathedral above the old slave cells, a fitting monument to Livingstone's posthumous success as an abolitionist.

113 1879 The British were defeated by the Zulu troops, at Isandhlwana. Not long after that, the Zulus lost to the British at Rourke's Drift, in South Africa.

114 1880s This duration saw a resurgence of African-pride writings and subsequent publication; this movement was sometimes referred to as 'self-glorification', but more properly it should be seen as glorying in one's homeland, culture and traditions.

This duration also saw increased strife in the middle of the colonizing nations and the Africans in many areas, and strong disagreements also in the middle of colonizing European nations themselves.

115 1882 At this time, Great Britain assertedits claimover Egypt.

116 1883Awareness of tensions (and respective rights) was rising among both Europeans and Africans, Maybe partially in response to theincreased concerns about the effects of colonization. There were numerous (and relevant) writers in English, leading among them at that time being the South Africa writer, Olive Schereiner. Her novel, 'The Story of an African Farm', deals brilliantly with the issues of relations in the middle of the races, and in the middle of men and women. This sensitive book was among the first in this field, and is often cited as a classic.

117 more on 1871-1912

By the end of the 1800s, and even into the 20th century, the partitioning of Africa, regardless of the wishes of the indigenous Africans, was seriously advanced. The new boundaries cut over customary lines; this had begun as early as the 1400s, becoming ever more damaging to the local communities and culture. The boundaries were set for the convenience of the colonial powers; the opportunities for trade were paramount, often to the detriment of the local producers of the materials sought by the Europeans (some historians have used the word 'steal' to reveal the ethics some of the Europe traders) who were protected by armies and armed ships. For many Europeans, the goal was cheap raw materials for European industries. Many also had a perverted 'Christian' ideology (see 55 and 84), tinged by self-righteous racism, looking all non-whites as pagan heathens. The capitalist colonists followed the earlier footsteps of Christian missionaries, and the (sometimes) even earlier traders.

Tensions in the middle of colonizing nations rose, threatening the existing but sometimes brittle peace among theEuropean nations.

118 1884 The German Chancellor, Otto von Bismarck, announced a protectorate over the Bay of Angra Pequena (Namibia).

119 1885 In August, Bismarck sent four warships to Zanzibar demanding that the Sultan hand over his empire to Germany.

121 1884-5 The possible dangers to both African and European peace led to the calling of the Berlin conference. Not only all the European colonizing powers, but also the (fairly neutral) United States (where slavery had only recently ended) met to exertion to rule some of these tensions. At the Conference, the colonizing nations corporately clarified the areas to which they laid claim. They also established 'ground rules' for hereafter development, and also for the use of the Zaire and Niger rivers, leading for shipping and other transport. In light of the attitudes of the colonizing nations, it is Maybe not surprising that no African nations were included in the deliberations; when agreements were reached at the Conference, no African nation signed these agreements. Undoubtedly, none were asked, but even had they been asked, they would not have signed and, indeed, did their best to invalidate those decisions, by their (African) opposition. Peace in Africa seemed a distant dream, as there were many revolts at about that same time, in Algeria, Ashantiland (Ghana), Dahomey, the Fulani Hausa states (these latter were finally defeated), and by the Matabele (Ndebele) and the Shona.

122 1885 The 'New Era' newspaper began publication in Sierra Leone. It was the starting of the independent African press, owned by local individuals, as was the 'New Era', or by local consortia. This was a great step towards ensuring the publication of local views, together with opposition to the 'powers that be', opposition to both the African and the non-African governors.

123 1895-1897 Among the new wave of African writers at this time, there was, in his native Boloki, a young man named Buntungu, who wrote of his experiences after a trip to England. His book is'Mokingi mwa Mputu', or 'A Trip to Europe'. The perceptions recorded in this book are of extra value, being the observations of an indigenous young educated African.

124 1896 A modern and flourishing African resistance was seen when the Italians suffered a severe defeat by the Ethiopians, under the Emperor Menelik Ii. At the Battle of Adowa (or Aduwa), his military wiped out the Italians.

125 1896-1897 There were problems in the British-dominated Rhodesia at this time, as recorded in the British South Africa company Reports on 'The Native Disturbances in Rhodesia'.

126 Late 19th c Prior to this time, and into the next century, there was evidence of expanding awareness and rising group opinion, in the western countries ('predominantly 'white' countries) against the European colonization and colonial practices.

127 1899-1902 Long periods of tensions finally led to the Anglo-Boer War in South Africa. Though the British officially won the war, it was a pyrrhic victory (one in which the victors are nearly worse off than those they defeated), for they had to make many concessions relating to internal policies. These were demanded (and won) by the Boer's (Afrikaner farmers) political organization. These concessions created the way, eventually, for the white Afrikaners to shake off the shackles of British domination. It also gave the European-descent Afrikaners power over the black African majority at that time.

Chronology of African History - Colonizing Nations (19th - 20th Centries)

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Friday, July 22, 2011

Teaching African American History - How to Do it in Creative Ways

When it comes to conferrence facts on Black History, I am a huge fan of my neighborhood social library. There is so much to be discovered; invaluable books, documentaries, even music to aid me in addition my knowledge of Blacks in America. I've recently come across a treasure entitled Black America Series: Cincinnati, by author Gina Ruffin Moore. I can't wait to dive into this one! The wonderfully informative mini-series, Roots, can be borrowed for the watching (and re-watching)! Oh, and if you are unquestionably serious about learning, Eyes on the Prize, a documentary about the African American perceive from 1954-1965, is not to be missed. I remember once stumbling across a library music Cd of the Fisk Jubilee Singers. I immediately snatched it up since I knew that I could glean much history as I listened to those splendid spirituals. I was not disappointed!

The internet as a source for teaching almost goes without saying. What a tool! If the library doesn't have it, chances are the world wide web will (and more). Just use caution when conferrence study from questionable sources such as Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia that whatever can edit.

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Take benefit of living history sources. What could be great than sitting down and listening to man tell his or her own story of being Black in America? An elderly African American grandmother can tell us all some things that we'd never find in an American History text! A good friend of mine recently passed away at age 86. I have fond memories of listening to his many colorful stories. I mean, do you know how many presidential elections, wars, and life experiences he'd lived through? Stories galore!

Search out opportunities to hear talks by surviving (their numbers are rapidly decreasing) Tuskegee Airmen. Sit at their feet and hear how they overcame seemingly insurmountable odds in their quest to serve this great country. Also, get to know African American families; ask them their story.

Speaking of field trips, I recently asked my children if they felt they received a good grounding in African American History. To my delight, they answered in the affirmative, but guess what they remembered most? Not my lectures, but the places I'd taken them to over the years. Places like old homes that were private railroad stops, and trips to meet African American scientists and astronauts. They recalled taking a trip to see a stage operation given by a splendid gentleman who has for years portrayed previous slave and abolitionist, Frederick Douglas. Now, it could be that the fondest memory they cherish from that particular event was the cookie "Mr. Douglas" gave each of them, but my point is, they remembered the event at all!

Teaching African American History means using some creativity versus depending upon former history texts. Give my suggestions a try or feel free to come up with some of your own. Just do it!

Teaching African American History - How to Do it in Creative Ways

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