The Scramble for Africa: Greed, Empire, and Borders — Fexingo History

The Arms Trade That Fueled the Scramble for Africa

6 min · 14 jul 2026
aflevering The Arms Trade That Fueled the Scramble for Africa artwork

Beschrijving

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore one of the most consequential yet overlooked forces behind the Scramble for Africa: the international arms trade. Before European conquests could begin, African kingdoms had to be outgunned—and that required a massive flow of firearms from European and American factories. They trace the journey of thousands of breech-loading rifles and millions of rounds of ammunition from Liège and Birmingham to the coasts of West and Central Africa, where they were exchanged for palm oil, ivory, and rubber. The episode examines how King Leopold II's Congo Free State used the arms trade as a tool of control, flooding the region with cheap guns to fuel conflicts and extract resources. It also looks at the unintended consequences: African armies like Samory Touré's Sofa warriors used European weapons to resist colonization for years. The conversation touches on the role of Zanzibar's sultanate as a trading hub, the impact of the 1890 Brussels Act which tried (and largely failed) to regulate the traffic, and how the gun trade reshaped power dynamics from the savannah to the rainforest. A revealing look at how commerce and violence intertwined to redraw Africa's map. #History #FexingoHistory #ScrambleForAfrica #ArmsTrade #KingLeopoldII #CongoFreeState #SamoryTouré #BrusselsAct1890 #Liège #Birmingham #BreechLoaders #IvoryTrade #RubberTrade #Zanzibar #SofaWarriors #WestAfrica #CentralAfrica #Colonialism Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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aflevering The African Queen Who Defeated the Portuguese: Nzinga of Ndongo artwork

The African Queen Who Defeated the Portuguese: Nzinga of Ndongo

This episode tells the story of Queen Nzinga of Ndongo and Matamba, the 17th-century ruler who led a decades-long war of resistance against Portuguese colonialism in present-day Angola. We dive into her brilliant diplomatic maneuvers, including her famous 1622 meeting with the Portuguese governor where she used a servant as a human chair to maintain her status. We explore her alliances with the Dutch, her use of enslaved Portuguese deserters to modernize her army, and the significance of her transformation from a monarch into a guerrilla military leader after her brother's death. We also touch on the cultural context of Ndongo society, the role of the ngola (divine king), and how Nzinga's legacy was later distorted by European accounts. The conversation highlights her strategic genius in playing European powers against each other and her complex relationship with the transatlantic slave trade. #QueenNzinga #Ndongo #Matamba #PortugueseColonialism #Angola #AfricanResistance #FemaleWarrior #17thCentury #SlaveTrade #DutchWestIndiaCompany #MilitaryHistory #Diplomacy #GuerrillaWarfare #ColonialWars #AfricanHistory #History #FexingoHistory #ScrambleForAfrica Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14 jul 20267 min
aflevering The Arms Trade That Fueled the Scramble for Africa artwork

The Arms Trade That Fueled the Scramble for Africa

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore one of the most consequential yet overlooked forces behind the Scramble for Africa: the international arms trade. Before European conquests could begin, African kingdoms had to be outgunned—and that required a massive flow of firearms from European and American factories. They trace the journey of thousands of breech-loading rifles and millions of rounds of ammunition from Liège and Birmingham to the coasts of West and Central Africa, where they were exchanged for palm oil, ivory, and rubber. The episode examines how King Leopold II's Congo Free State used the arms trade as a tool of control, flooding the region with cheap guns to fuel conflicts and extract resources. It also looks at the unintended consequences: African armies like Samory Touré's Sofa warriors used European weapons to resist colonization for years. The conversation touches on the role of Zanzibar's sultanate as a trading hub, the impact of the 1890 Brussels Act which tried (and largely failed) to regulate the traffic, and how the gun trade reshaped power dynamics from the savannah to the rainforest. A revealing look at how commerce and violence intertwined to redraw Africa's map. #History #FexingoHistory #ScrambleForAfrica #ArmsTrade #KingLeopoldII #CongoFreeState #SamoryTouré #BrusselsAct1890 #Liège #Birmingham #BreechLoaders #IvoryTrade #RubberTrade #Zanzibar #SofaWarriors #WestAfrica #CentralAfrica #Colonialism Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14 jul 20266 min
aflevering The Scramble for Africa: The Forgotten Resistance of the Mandinka Empire artwork

The Scramble for Africa: The Forgotten Resistance of the Mandinka Empire

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the resistance of the Mandinka Empire under Samory Touré against French colonial expansion in West Africa. Samory Touré, a brilliant military strategist and state-builder, created the Wassoulou Empire, modernizing his army with captured firearms and implementing a sophisticated scorched-earth strategy. The episode covers his early rise as a Dyula trader, his capture of Kankan, his conflict with the French under Colonel Borgnis-Desbordes, and the eventual fall of his empire in 1898. It also examines the role of the Sofa army, the Treaty of Niako, and Samory's legacy as a symbol of African resistance. The conversation highlights the complexities of pre-colonial statecraft and the often-overlooked African perspective on the Scramble for Africa. #SamoryTouré #WassoulouEmpire #MandinkaResistance #ScrambleForAfrica #FrenchColonialism #SofaArmy #Kankan #Niako #BorgnisDesbordes #WestAfrica #PrecolonialAfrica #AfricanHistory #ColonialResistance #19thCentury #EmpireBuilding #History #FexingoHistory #AfricanEmpires Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gisteren9 min
aflevering The Voulet-Chanoine Mission: French Atrocity in West Africa artwork

The Voulet-Chanoine Mission: French Atrocity in West Africa

In 1898, a French military column under captains Paul Voulet and Julien Chanoine set out from Senegal to conquer the lands between the Niger and Lake Chad. What began as a colonial expedition became a rampage of violence, enslavement, and destruction that shocked even the French government. This episode dives into the Voulet-Chanoine Mission, the African kingdoms it destroyed, and how the French response—a cover-up and a belated trial—revealed the brutal reality of the scramble for Africa. We follow the trail from Dakar to the Mossi states, the massacre at Boussé, and the mutiny that ended the mission. Along the way, we explore the role of African auxiliaries, the politics of the Third Republic, and how the affair was hushed up for decades. Specific names and terms: Paul Voulet, Julien Chanoine, Mossi, Zarma, Yatenga, Ouagadougou, Boussé, Niger, Lake Chad, French Sudan, tirailleurs sénégalais, Commandant Klobb. #VouletChanoine #FrenchColonialism #ScrambleForAfrica #WestAfrica #ColonialAtrocity #Mossi #BurkinaFaso #Niger #PaulVoulet #JulienChanoine #TirailleursSenegalais #LakeChad #Yatenga #Ouagadougou #19thCentury #ColonialHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Gisteren5 min
aflevering The Samorian Model: Precolonial African Statecraft and Resistance artwork

The Samorian Model: Precolonial African Statecraft and Resistance

Lucas and Luna revisit one of Africa's most formidable resistance leaders, Samory Touré, but from a fresh angle: the state-building genius behind his seventeen-year war with France. They explore how Samory constructed a centralized, professional army with firearms manufactured in his own workshops, how he used scorched-earth tactics, hostage diplomacy, and mobile governance to hold together a sprawling empire that stretched across modern Guinea, Mali, and Côte d'Ivoire. The conversation digs into Samory's early life as a Dyula trader, his alliance with the jihadist state of Tukulor, the pivotal battle of Bate, his capture of Kankan, and the French betrayal of the treaty of Niako. Lucas explains how Samory's empire was a deliberate, organized counter-colonial project—not just a resistance but an alternative political order. They also touch on the internal fractures caused by the Sofa army's reliance on enslaved soldiers and the role of his son, Saranké-Mory, who betrayed him. The episode concludes by connecting Samory's legacy to modern debates about precolonial African statecraft and the shadow it casts on postcolonial borders. #SamoryTouré #WassoulouEmpire #WestAfricanResistance #PrecolonialAfrica #SofaArmy #BattleOfBate #FrenchColonialism #ScrambleForAfrica #DyulaTraders #Kankan #Tukulor #NiakoTreaty #ScorchedEarth #HostageDiplomacy #SarankéMory #AfricanStatecraft #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

12 jul 20266 min