The Berlin Conference: How Africa Was Partitioned — Fexingo History
In the mid-19th century, a small, neglected patch of South America nearly escaped the European land grab altogether. The border between modern-day Suriname and French Guiana wasn't drawn at a drafting table in Berlin — it arose from a bizarre 1860 gold rush, a dispute between Dutch and French colonists, and a single river that nobody could agree was the border. This episode follows the rise and fall of a contested zone where escaped slaves, indigenous hunters, and gold prospectors carved out a no-man's-land. We look at the 1888 arbitration that handed the contested triangle to France, and the parallel between the Amazonian frontier and the simultaneous partition of Africa. Along the way we meet the Bonis (Aluku Maroons), the Cottica and Marowijne rivers, and the French colonial governor whose survey expeditions shaped the map. How a forgotten gold seam created a border that endures today. #BerlinConference #ScrambleForSouthAmerica #FrenchGuiana #Suriname #MaroniRiver #MarowijneRiver #GoldRush1860 #Bonis #AlukuMaroons #CotticaRiver #GoldProspecting #ColonialArbitration #BorderDispute #Amazonia #19thCentury #Imperialism #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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