The Berlin Conference: How Africa Was Partitioned — Fexingo History

Kamerun: The Forgotten German Colony in Africa

6 min · 28. juni 2026
episode Kamerun: The Forgotten German Colony in Africa cover

Description

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the German colony of Kamerun, one of the lesser-known pieces of the Berlin Conference partition. They delve into the brutal suppression of the Duala people, the role of the chartered company, and the indigenous resistance led by figures like King Rudolf Douala Manga Bell. The episode covers the transition from German rule to French and British mandates after World War I, and the lasting impact on modern Cameroon. #Kamerun #GermanColonialism #Duala #RudolfDoualaMangaBell #BerlinConference #ScrambleForAfrica #Cameroon #Bismarck #GustavNachtigal #ColonialAtrocities #EffectiveOccupation #CharteredCompany #Resistance #WorldWarI #Mandate #History #FexingoHistory #ColonialAfrica Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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150 episodes

episode The Berlin Conference and the Massacre at Boma 1885 artwork

The Berlin Conference and the Massacre at Boma 1885

In 1885, as European powers carved up Africa at the Berlin Conference, a brutal massacre unfolded in the Congo River town of Boma. Hundreds of local Congolese were killed by Léopold II's Force Publique after resisting forced labor and taxation. This episode examines the Boma massacre as a microcosm of colonial violence: how the 'General Act of Berlin' promised free trade and humanitarianism while war drums beat on the ground. We explore the roles of Henry Morton Stanley, the African International Association, and the local leader Ngaliema; the use of the chicotte whip; and how the massacre foreshadowed the rubber terror. Drawing on eyewitness accounts from missionaries and traders, we piece together a forgotten episode that reveals the hypocrisy at the heart of the Scramble for Africa. #BerlinConference #BomaMassacre #CongoFreeState #LeopoldII #HenryMortonStanley #ForcePublique #Chicotte #Ngaliema #GeneralAct1885 #ScrambleForAfrica #ColonialViolence #AfricanHistory #1885 #CongoRiver #Léopoldville #ColonialHypocrisy #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

10. juli 20265 min
episode Berlin Conference: The Congo's Rubber Terror and the Force Publique artwork

Berlin Conference: The Congo's Rubber Terror and the Force Publique

In this episode, Lucas and Luna revisit the brutal legacy of King Leopold II's Congo Free State, focusing on the Force Publique and the rubber terror that devastated the Congo Basin. They discuss the enforcement of rubber quotas through hostage-taking and mutilation, the infamous chicotte whip, and the testimony of missionaries like John and Alice Harris. The episode also covers the early resistance by African leaders and the eventual global outcry led by Edmund Dene Morel and Roger Casement, which forced Leopold to cede the Congo to Belgium in 1908. #CongoFreeState #ForcePublique #RubberTerror #Chicotte #LeopoldII #EdmundDeneMorel #RogerCasement #JohnHarris #AliceHarris #CongoReformAssociation #BelgianCongo #KingLeopoldsGhost #Africa #Colonialism #Atrocities #History #FexingoHistory #ScrambleForAfrica Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

10. juli 20267 min
episode Berlin Conference: The Brass Treaty That Sealed Congo's Fate artwork

Berlin Conference: The Brass Treaty That Sealed Congo's Fate

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore a single, shocking artifact that encapsulates the Berlin Conference's legacy: the brass treaty. In 1884, King Leopold II's agents — led by Henry Morton Stanley — secured over 450 treaties with African chiefs, often using brass rods and cloth as payment. Lucas explains how these 'treaties of protection' transferred sovereignty without the signatories understanding European property law. He walks through the text of the actual treaty used at Stanley Pool in 1881, revealing the vague language that Leopold's lawyers exploited to claim ownership of the Congo Basin. Luna asks how chiefs could have possibly understood what they were signing. Lucas delves into the cultural divide over land ownership, the role of interpreters, and the specific brass rods — called mitako — that became synonymous with the swindle. The episode also touches on the subsequent rubber terror and the Force Publique, but focuses on the legalistic foundation that made the horror possible: the paper trail of a thousand fraudulent contracts. #BerlinConference #KingLeopoldII #BrassTreaty #HenryMortonStanley #CongoFreeState #Mitako #StanleyPool #ScrambleForAfrica #TreatyOfProtection #AfricanHistory #Colonialism #LeopoldII #InternationalAfricanAssociation #CongoBasin #1884 #ForcePublique #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday6 min
episode Berlin Conference: The Congo's Rubber Terror and the Force Publique artwork

Berlin Conference: The Congo's Rubber Terror and the Force Publique

In this episode, Lucas and Luna dive deep into the brutal machinery of the Congo Free State under King Leopold II. They examine the Force Publique, the colonial army that enforced rubber quotas through terror, and the infamous 'chicotte' whip made from hippo hide. They trace the rubber boom from the 1890s, when global demand for bicycle and car tires turned the Congo into a vast labor camp. The conversation covers the role of agents like Léon Fiévez, who boasted of cutting off hands, and the financial structures that made the Congo a personal fiefdom. They discuss the evidence compiled by Edmund Dene Morel and Roger Casement, and how the Congo Reform Association finally forced Leopold to cede the territory to Belgium in 1908. This episode offers a focused look at the human cost of colonial extraction, grounded in specific atrocities, names, and dates. #ForcePublique #CongoFreeState #KingLeopoldII #RubberTerror #Chicotte #LéonFiévez #EdmundDeneMorel #RogerCasement #CongoReformAssociation #BelgianColonialism #Africa #19thCentury #Atrocities #ScrambleForAfrica #BerlinConference #History #FexingoHistory #ColonialHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday9 min
episode Berlin Conference: The Bilingual Guiana They Didn't Colonize artwork

Berlin Conference: The Bilingual Guiana They Didn't Colonize

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]

8. juli 20267 min