The Berlin Conference: How Africa Was Partitioned — Fexingo History

King Jaja of Opobo and the Berlin Conference's Palm Oil War

7 min · 15 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio King Jaja of Opobo and the Berlin Conference's Palm Oil War

Descripción

In this episode of The Berlin Conference: How Africa Was Partitioned, Lucas and Luna explore the overlooked story of King Jaja of Opobo, a brilliant Igbo merchant-king who built a palm oil empire in the Niger Delta and defied British encroachment during the Scramble for Africa. We trace Jaja's rise from enslaved origins to becoming the richest man in the region, his strategic relocation to Opobo, his monopoly on palm oil exports, and his diplomatic gambits with the British Consul Hewett and the Royal Niger Company. The episode delves into the economic motives behind the Berlin Conference's recognition of colonial spheres of influence, the brutal reprisals against Opobo after Jaja's exile, and the broader impact on the Oil Rivers region. Along the way, we examine the role of palm oil in the Industrial Revolution, the intricate politics of the Delta city-states, and the legacy of Jaja's resistance as a symbol of anti-colonial struggle. Keywords: King Jaja, Opobo, palm oil, Oil Rivers, Berlin Conference, Royal Niger Company, Consul Hewett, Igbo history, Niger Delta, Scramble for Africa, Sir Henry Holland, George Taubman Goldie, Bonny, Yellow Jack, Juju, exile, St. Vincent. #KingJaja #Opobo #PalmOil #OilRivers #BerlinConference #RoyalNigerCompany #ConsulHewett #ScrambleForAfrica #NigerDelta #IgboHistory #GeorgeTaubmanGoldie #Bonny #YellowJack #Juju #Exile #StVincent #19thCentury #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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159 episodios

episode King Jaja of Opobo and the Berlin Conference's Palm Oil War artwork

King Jaja of Opobo and the Berlin Conference's Palm Oil War

In this episode of The Berlin Conference: How Africa Was Partitioned, Lucas and Luna explore the overlooked story of King Jaja of Opobo, a brilliant Igbo merchant-king who built a palm oil empire in the Niger Delta and defied British encroachment during the Scramble for Africa. We trace Jaja's rise from enslaved origins to becoming the richest man in the region, his strategic relocation to Opobo, his monopoly on palm oil exports, and his diplomatic gambits with the British Consul Hewett and the Royal Niger Company. The episode delves into the economic motives behind the Berlin Conference's recognition of colonial spheres of influence, the brutal reprisals against Opobo after Jaja's exile, and the broader impact on the Oil Rivers region. Along the way, we examine the role of palm oil in the Industrial Revolution, the intricate politics of the Delta city-states, and the legacy of Jaja's resistance as a symbol of anti-colonial struggle. Keywords: King Jaja, Opobo, palm oil, Oil Rivers, Berlin Conference, Royal Niger Company, Consul Hewett, Igbo history, Niger Delta, Scramble for Africa, Sir Henry Holland, George Taubman Goldie, Bonny, Yellow Jack, Juju, exile, St. Vincent. #KingJaja #Opobo #PalmOil #OilRivers #BerlinConference #RoyalNigerCompany #ConsulHewett #ScrambleForAfrica #NigerDelta #IgboHistory #GeorgeTaubmanGoldie #Bonny #YellowJack #Juju #Exile #StVincent #19thCentury #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

15 de jul de 20267 min
episode Berlin Conference: The Bight of Biafra and the Oil Rivers artwork

Berlin Conference: The Bight of Biafra and the Oil Rivers

After the Berlin Conference carved lines across Africa, a complex network of African middlemen, palm oil traders, and British consuls shaped the fate of the Niger Delta. This episode of Fexingo History follows the struggle between the Royal Niger Company and the city-states of the Bight of Biafra — Opobo, Bonny, Calabar, and Brass. Meet King Jaja of Opobo, an Igbo trader who built a palm oil monopoly and defied British annexation until his exile to Saint Vincent. Hear about the Brass Oil War of 1895, when British shelling destroyed the port of Akassa. And learn how the Conference's 'effective occupation' doctrine rewrote the rules of trade and sovereignty on one of Africa's most lucrative coastlines. #BerlinConference #ScrambleForAfrica #BightOfBiafra #OilRivers #KingJajaOfOpobo #RoyalNigerCompany #PalmOil #BrassOilWar #GeorgeTaubmanGoldie #NigerDelta #Opobo #Bonny #Calabar #Akassa #EffectiveOccupation #Colonialism #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer8 min
episode The Berlin Conference and the Scramble for Cameroon 1884 artwork

The Berlin Conference and the Scramble for Cameroon 1884

In this episode of The Berlin Conference series, Lucas and Luna explore the German annexation of Cameroon, a story of consuls, chiefs, and gunboats that unfolded just as European powers carved up Africa. They focus on the 1884 trip of German Consul General Gustav Nachtigal, who signed treaties with Duala chiefs like King Bell and King Akwa, securing German control over the Wouri River estuary. The episode delves into the Anglo-German rivalry, the role of the British Baptist missionary presence, and the controversial 'protection treaties' that gave Germany a foothold in West Africa. It highlights the Duala people's complex negotiations and the long-term consequences of this partition, including the eventual split of Cameroon into British and French mandates after World War I. Lucas and Luna also touch on the earlier history of Duala trade with Europeans and the palm oil and ivory economies that shaped the region. This episode offers a fresh angle on the Berlin Conference by zooming into a specific, lesser-known colonial acquisition that changed Central Africa's trajectory. #Cameroon #BerlinConference #GustavNachtigal #Duala #KingBell #KingAkwa #ScrambleForAfrica #GermanColonialism #WouriRiver #PalmOil #BritishEmpire #BaptistMissionaries #ProtectionTreaties #1884 #ColonialHistory #WestAfrica #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
episode Berlin Conference: King Leopold's Secret Medical Report artwork

Berlin Conference: King Leopold's Secret Medical Report

In this episode, Lucas and Luna uncover a little-known document: Dr. Joseph de Smet's 1897 medical report on the Force Publique in the Congo Free State. De Smet, a Belgian army doctor, documented the horrifying physical toll of forced rubber collection — not just on Congolese workers but on African soldiers forced into the trade. His report, buried in Belgian colonial archives, included detailed clinical observations of mutilations, starvation, and disease, contradicting Leopold II's official narrative of humanitarian progress. The hosts explore how this report was suppressed, how it contrasts with the propaganda of the Comité d'Études du Haut Congo, and why it matters for understanding the systematic brutality of the rubber economy. They also trace de Smet's own conflicted role as a colonial physician torn between duty and conscience. A gripping look at how one man's medical notes became a silent indictment of a king's regime. #BerlinConference #CongoFreeState #JosephdeSmet #ForcePublique #RubberTerror #LeopoldII #MedicalReport #ColonialMedicine #CongoHistory #BelgianColonialism #SuppressedEvidence #RubberEconomy #AtrocityDocumentation #1885GeneralAct #AfricanHistory #History #FexingoHistory #ColonialViolence Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

13 de jul de 20261 min
episode The Berlin Conference: King Leopold's Congo River Steamboats artwork

The Berlin Conference: King Leopold's Congo River Steamboats

Before the Berlin Conference even began, King Leopold II of Belgium was already creating a transportation empire deep in the Congo Basin. This episode explores how steamboats — not treaties or armies — were the real instruments of colonization. Lucas and Luna trace the arrival of the first steamer on the Upper Congo, the role of the Belgian engineer Captain Charles Liebrechts, and how steam-powered vessels allowed Leopold to project power into regions no European had ever reached overland. They discuss the logistical nightmare of carrying prefabricated boats around Livingstone Falls, the rivalry with French explorer Pierre Savorgnan de Brazza, and the brutal labor conditions forced on African porters. This is the untold mechanical backstory of the Scramble for Africa. #BerlinConference #KingLeopoldII #CongoRiver #Steamboats #CharlesLiebrechts #HenryMortonStanley #PierreSavorgnanDeBrazza #LivingstoneFalls #CongoFreeState #ScrambleForAfrica #ColonialHistory #BelgianCongo #TransportationHistory #19thCentury #AfricanHistory #Imperialism #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

13 de jul de 20266 min