When tourists visit sub-Saharan Africa, they often wonder “Why there are no historical buildings or monuments?”
The reason is simple. Europeans destroyed
most of them. We only have a few drawings and descriptions by travelers
who visited the places before their destruction. In some places, ruins
are still visible. Many cities were abandoned when Europeans brought
exotic diseases (smallpox and influenza) which started spreading and
killing people. Most of those cities lie hidden. In fact the biggest
part of Africa history is still under the ground.
(Please note – the research supporting this post is mostly derived from Robin Walker, a distinguished panafricanist and historian who has written the book ‘When We Ruled’, and by PD Lawton, another
great panafricanist, who has an upcoming book titled “The Invisible
Empire”. All quotes and excerpts below are from the books of Robin
Walker and PD Lawton. I highly recommend you to read Walker’s book ‘When We Ruled’ to
get a full account of the beauty of the continent before its
destruction. You can get more info about PD Lawton work by visiting her
blog: AfricanAgenda.net. Robin Walter and PD Lawton have quoted quite heavily another great panafricanist Walter Rodney who wrote the book ‘How Europe Underdeveloped Africa‘. Additional information came from YouTube channel ‘dogons2k12 : African Historical Ruins’, and The Ta Neter Foundation work. Most drawings are from the book African Cities and Towns Before the European Conquest by Richard W. Hull,
published in 1976. That book alone dispels the stereotypical view of
Africans living in simple, primitive, look-alike agglomerations,
scattered without any appreciation for planning and design.)
We begin with Benin City. At the end of the
13th century, a European traveler encountered the great metropolis in
West Africa (present Nigeria, Edo State), writing:
“The town seems to be very great. When you
enter into it, you go into a great broad street, not paved, which seems
to be seven or eight times broader than the Warmoes street in
Amsterdam…The Kings palace is a collection of buildings which occupy as
much space as the town of Harlem, and which is enclosed with walls.
There are numerous apartments for the Prince`s ministers and fine
galleries, most of which are as big as those on the Exchange at
Amsterdam. They are supported by wooden pillars encased with copper,
where their victories are depicted, and which are carefully kept very
clean. The town is composed of thirty main streets, very straight and
120 feet wide, apart from an infinity of small intersecting streets. The
houses are close to one another, arranged in good order. These people
are in no way inferior to the Dutch as regards cleanliness; they wash
and scrub their houses so well that they are polished and shining like a
looking glass.” (Source: Walter Rodney, ‘How Europe Underdeveloped Africa, pg. 69)
The mediaeval Nigerian city of Benin was built to “a scale comparable
with the Great Wall of China”. There was a vast system of defensive
walling totalling 10,000 miles in all. Even before the full extent of
the city walling had become apparent the Guinness Book of Records
carried an entry in the 1974 edition that described the city as: “The largest earthworks in the world carried out prior to the mechanical era.” – Excerpt from “The Invisible Empire”, PD Lawton, Source-YouTube, uploader-dogons2k12 `African Historical Ruins`“Benin art of the Middle Ages was of the highest quality. An official of the Berlin Museum für Völkerkunde once stated that: “These works from Benin are equal to the very finest examples of European casting technique. Benvenuto Cellini could not have cast them better, nor could anyone else before or after him . . . Technically, these bronzes represent the very highest possible achievement.”
Sadly, in 1897, Benin City was destroyed by British forces under Admiral Harry Rawson. The city was looted, blown up and burnt to the ground. A collection of the famous Benin Bronzes are now in the British Museum in London. Part of the 700 stolen bronzes by the British troops were sold back to Nigeria in 1972.
Here is another account of the great Benin
City regarding the city walls “They extend for some 16 000 kilometres in
all, in a mosaic of more than 500 interconnected settlement boundaries.
They cover 6500 square kilometres and were all dug by the Edo people.
In all, they are four times longer than the Great Wall of China, and
consumed a hundred times more material than the Great Pyramid of Cheops.
They took an estimated 150 million hours of digging to construct, and
are perhaps the largest single archaeological phenomenon on the planet.”
Source: Wikipedia, Architecture of Africa.” Fred Pearce the New
Scientist 11/09/99.
Here is a view of Benin city in 1891 before the British conquest. H. Ling Roth, Great Benin, Barnes and Noble reprint. 1968.
Did you know that in the 14th century the city of Timbuktu in West Africa was five times bigger than the city of London, and was the richest city in the world?
Today, Timbuktu is 236 times smaller than
London. It has little to show of a modern city. Its population is two
times less than 5 centuries ago, impoverished with beggars and dirty
street sellers. The town itself is incapable of conserving its past
ruined monuments and archives.
Back in the 14 century, the 3 richest places
on earth was China, Iran/Irak, and the Mali empire in West Africa. From
all 3 the only one which was still independent and prosperous was the
Mali Empire. Eventually China and the whole of the Middle East were
conquered by Genghis Kan Mongol
troops which ravaged, pillaged, and raped the places. The Mali empire
lived on under the rule of the richest man ever in the history of
humanity, Mansa Musa, emperor of the 14th century Mali Empire which covered modern day Mali, Senegal, Gambia, and Guinea.
At the time of his death in 1331, Mansa Musa
was worth the equivalent of 400 billion dollars. At that time Mali
Empire was producing more than half the world’s supply of salt and gold.
Here below are some depictions of emperor Mansa Musa.
When Mansa Musa went on a pilgrimage to Mecca
in 1324, he carried so much gold, and spent them so lavishly that the
price of gold fell for ten years. 60 000 people accompanied him.
He founded the library of Timbuktu, and the famous manuscripts of Timbuktu which cover all areas of world knowledge were written during his reign.
Witnesses of the greatness of the Mali empire
came from all part of the world. “Sergio Domian, an Italian art and
architecture scholar, wrote the following about this period: ‘Thus was
laid the foundation of an urban civilisation. At the height of its
power, Mali had at least 400 cities, and the interior of the Niger Delta
was very densely populated.’
The Malian city of Timbuktu had a 14th century population of 115,000 – 5 times larger than mediaeval London.
National Geographic recently described
Timbuktu as the Paris of the mediaeval world, on account of its
intellectual culture. According to Professor Henry Louis Gates, 25,000
university students studied there.
“Many old West African families have private
library collections that go back hundreds of years. The Mauritanian
cities of Chinguetti and Oudane have a total of 3,450 hand written
mediaeval books. There may be another 6,000 books still surviving in the
other city of Walata. Some date back to the 8th century AD. There are
11,000 books in private collections in Niger.
In Timbuktu today, there are about 700,000
surviving books. They are written in Mande, Suqi, Fulani, Timbuctu, and
Sudani. The contents of the manuscripts include math, medicine, poetry,
law and astronomy. The world’s first encyclopedia was created in Mali in
the 14th century, eons before the Europeans got the idea 4 centuries
later.
A collection of one thousand six hundred
books was considered a small library for a West African scholar of the
16th century. Professor Ahmed Baba of Timbuktu is recorded as saying
that he had the smallest library of any of his friends – he had only
1600 volumes.
Concerning these old manuscripts, actor
Michael Palin, in his TV series ‘Sahara’, said the imam of Timbuktu “has
a collection of scientific texts that clearly show the planets circling
the sun. They date back hundreds of years . . . Its convincing evidence
that the scholars of Timbuktu knew a lot more than their counterparts
in Europe. In the fifteenth century in Timbuktu the mathematicians knew
about the rotation of the planets, knew about the details of the
eclipse, they knew things which we had to wait for 150 almost 200 years
to know in Europe when Galileo and Copernicus came up with these same
calculations and were given a very hard time for it.”
The old Malian capital of Niani had a 14th
century building called the Hall of Audience. It was an surmounted by a
dome, adorned with arabesques of striking colours. The windows of an
upper floor were plated with wood and framed in silver; those of a lower
floor were plated with wood, framed in gold.
Malian sailors got to America in 1311 AD, 181
years before Columbus. An Egyptian scholar, Ibn Fadl Al-Umari,
published on this sometime around 1342. In the tenth chapter of his
book, there is an account of two large maritime voyages ordered by the
predecessor of Mansa Musa, a king who inherited the Malian throne in
1312. This mariner king is not named by Al-Umari, but modern writers
identify him as Mansa Abubakari II.” Excerpt from Robin Walker’s book, ‘WHEN WE RULED’
Those event were happening at the same period
when Europe as a continent was plunged into the Dark Age, ravaged by
plague and famine, its people killing one another for religious and
ethnic reasons.
Here below are some depiction of the city of Timbuktu in the 19th century.
“Kumasi was the capital of the Asante Kingdom,
10th century-20th century. Drawings of life in Kumasi show homes, often
of 2 stories, square buildings with thatched roofs, with family
compounds arranged around a courtyard. The Manhyia Palace complex drawn in another sketch was similar to a Norman castle, only more elegant in its architecture.
“These 2 story thatched homes of the Ashanti
Kingdom were timber framed and the walls were of lath and plaster
construction. A tree always stood in the courtyard which was the central
point of a family compound. The Tree of Life was the altar for family
offerings to God, Nyame. A brass pan sat in the branches of the tree
into which offerings were placed. This was the same in every courtyard
of every household, temple and palace. The King`s representatives,
officials, worked in open-sided buildings. The purpose being that
everyone was welcome to see what they were up to.
“The townhouses of Kumase had upstairs
toilets in 1817.This city in the 1800s is documented in drawings and
photographs. Promenades and public squares, cosmopolitan lives,
exquisite architecture and everywhere spotless and ordered, a wealth of
architecture, history, prosperity and extremely modern living” – PD
Lawton, AfricanAgenda.net
Winwood Reade described his visit to the
Ashanti Royal Palace of Kumasi in 1874: “We went to the king’s palace,
which consists of many courtyards, each surrounded with alcoves and
verandahs, and having two gates or doors, so that each yard was a
thoroughfare . . . But the part of the palace fronting the street was a
stone house, Moorish in its style . . . with a flat roof and a parapet,
and suites of apartments on the first floor. It was built by Fanti
masons many years ago. The rooms upstairs remind me of Wardour Street.
Each was a perfect Old Curiosity Shop. Books in many languages, Bohemian
glass, clocks, silver plate, old furniture, Persian rugs, Kidderminster
carpets, pictures and engravings, numberless chests and coffers. A
sword bearing the inscription From Queen Victoria to the King of
Ashantee. A copy of the Times, 17 October 1843. With these were many
specimens of Moorish and Ashanti handicraft.” – Robin Walter
The beautiful city of Kumasi was blown up, destroyed by fire, and looted by the British at the end of the 19th century.
Here below are few depictions of the city.
In 1331, Ibn Battouta, described the Tanzanian city of Kilwa,
of the Zanj, Swahili speaking people, as follows ” one of the most
beautiful and well-constructed cities in the world, the whole of it is
elegantly built”. The ruins are complete with `gothic` arches and
intricate stonework, examples of exquisite architecture. Kilwa dates
back to the 9th century and was at its peak in the 13th and 14th
centuries. This international African port minted its own currency in
the 11th -14th centuries. Remains of artefacts link it to Spain, China,
Arabia and India. The inhabitants, architects and founders of this city
were not Arabs and the only influence the Europeans had in the form of
the Portuguese was to mark the start of decline, most likely through
smallpox and influenza.” – Source: UNESCO World Heritage Centre, excerpt
from “The Invisible Empire” byPD Lawton
In 1505 Portuguese forces destroyed and burned down the Swahili cities of Kilwa and Mombasa.
The picture below shows an artist’s
reconstruction of the sultan’s palace in Kilwa in the 1400’s, followed
by other ruins photographs.
“A Moorish nobleman who lived in Spain by the name of Al-Bakri questioned
merchants who visited the Ghana Empire in the 11th century and wrote
this about the king: “He sits in audience or to hear grievances against
officials in a domed pavilion around which stand ten horses covered with
gold-embroidered materials. Behind the king stand ten pages holding
shields and swords decorated with gold, and on his right are the sons of
the kings of his country wearing splendid garments and their hair
plaited with gold. The governor of the city sits on the ground before
the king and around him are ministers seated likewise. At the door of
the pavilion are dogs of excellent pedigree that hardly ever leave the
place where the king is, guarding him. Around their necks they wear
collars of gold and silver studded with a number of balls of the same
metals.” - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghana_Empire#Government – the source of the quote is given on wikipedia as p.80 of Corpus of Early Arabic Sources for West Africa by Nehemia Levtzion and John F.P. Hopkins)
Here below are few depictions of Ghana Empire.
In 15th when the Portuguese, the first
Europeans to sail the Atlantic coasts of Africa “arrived in the coast of
Guinea and landed at Vaida in West Africa, the captains were astonished
to find streets well laid out, bordered on either side for several
leagues by two rows of trees, for days they travelled through a country
of magnificent fields, inhabited by men clad in richly coloured garments
of their own weaving! Further south in the Kingdom of the Kongo(sic), a
swarming crowd dressed in fine silks’ and velvet; great states well
ordered, down to the most minute detail; powerful rulers, flourishing
industries-civilised to the marrow of their bones. And the condition of
the countries of the eastern coast-mozambique, for example-was quite the
same.”
Another example is the Kingdom of Congo in
the 15th Century was the epitome of political organization. It “was a
flourishing state in the 15th century. It was situated in the region of
Northern Angola and West Kongo. Its population was conservatively
estimated at 2 or 3 million people. The country was fivided into 6
administrative provinces and a number of dependancies. The provinces
were Mbamba, Mbata, Mpangu, Mpemba, Nsundi, and Soyo. The dependancies
included Matari, Wamdo, Wembo and the province of Mbundu. All in turn
were subject to the authority of The Mani Kongo (King). The capital of
the country(Mbanza Kongo), was in the Mpemba province. From the province
of Mbamba, the military stronghold. It was possible to put 400,000 in
the field.” – Excerpt from “The Invisible Empire” by PD Lawton
Below is an depiction by Olfert Dapper,
a Dutch physician and writer, of the 17th century city of Loango
(present Congo/Angola) based on descriptions of the place by those who
had actually seen it.
Depiction of the City of Mbanza in the Kongo Kingdom
King of Kongo Receiving Dutch Ambassadors, 1642 DO Dapper, Description de lAfrique Traduite du Flamand (1686)
Portuguese Emissaries Received by the
King of Kongo, late 16th cent Duarte Lopes, Regnum Congo hoc est
warhaffte und eigentliche , Congo in Africa (Franckfort am Mayn, 1609)
Until the end of 16 century, Africa was far
more advanced than Europe in term of political organization, science,
technology, culture. That prosperity continued, despite the European
slavery ravages, till the 17th and 18th century.
The continent was crowded with tens of great
and prosperous cities, empires and kingdoms with King Askia Toure of
Songhay, King Behanzin Hossu Bowelle of Benin, Emperor Menelik of
Ethiopia, King Shaka ka Sezangakhona of South Africa, Queen Nzinga of
Angola, Queen Yaa Asantewaa of Ghana, Queen Amina of Nigeria.
We are talking here about Empires, Kingdoms, Queendoms, Kings, emperors, the richest man in the history of humanity in Africa.
Were these Kings and Queens sleeping on banana trees in the bushes? Were they dressed with tree leaves, with no shoes?
If they were not sleeping in trees, covered with leaves, where are the remainder of their palaces, their art work?
In the mid-nineteenth century, William
Clarke, an English visitor to Nigeria, remarked that: “As good an
article of cloth can be woven by the Yoruba weavers as by any people . .
. in durability, their cloths far excel the prints and home-spuns of
Manchester.”
The recently discovered 9th century Nigerian
city of Eredo was found to be surrounded by a wall that was 100 miles
long and seventy feet high in places. The internal area was a staggering
400 square miles.” Robin Walter
Loango City in the Congo/Angola area is
depicted in another drawing from the mid 1600`s. Yet again, a vast
planned city of linear layout, stretching across several miles and
entirely surrounded by city walls, bustling with trade. The king`s
complex alone was a mile and a half enclosure with courtyards and
gardens. The people of Loango had used maths not just for arithmetic
purposes but for astrological calculations. They used advanced maths,
linear algebra. The Ishango Bone from the Congo is a calculator that is
25 000 years old. “The so-called Ishango bone`s inscriptions consist of
two columns of odd numbers that add up to 60,with the left column
containing prime numbers between 10 and 20, and the right column
containing both added and subtracted numbers.” Source: Ta Neter Foundation. It is on view in a museum in Belgium. – Excerpt from “The Invisible Empire” by PD Lawton
The beautiful city of Loango was destroyed by European fortune hunters, pseudo-missionaries and other kinds of free-booters.
“On the subject of cloth, Kongolese textiles
were also distinguished. Various European writers of the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries wrote of the delicate crafts of the peoples living
in eastern Kongo and adjacent regions who manufactured damasks,
sarcenets, satins, taffeta, cloth of tissue and velvet. Professor
DeGraft-Johnson made the curious observation that: “Their brocades, both
high and low, were far more valuable than the Italian.”
On Kongolese metallurgy of the Middle Ages,
one modern scholar wrote that: “There is no doubting . . . the existence
of an expert metallurgical art in the ancient Kongo . . . The Bakongo
were aware of the toxicity of lead vapours. They devised preventative
and curative methods, both pharmacological (massive doses of pawpaw and
palm oil) and mechanical (exerting of pressure to free the digestive
tract), for combating lead poisoning.”
In Nigeria, the royal palace in the city of
Kano dates back to the fifteenth century. Begun by Muhammad Rumfa (ruled
1463-99) it has gradually evolved over generations into a very imposing
complex. A colonial report of the city from 1902, described it as “a
network of buildings covering an area of 33 acres and surrounded by a
wall 20 to 30 feet high outside and 15 feet inside . . . in itself no
mean citadel”.
A sixteenth century traveller visited the
central African civilisation of Kanem-Borno and commented that the
emperor’s cavalry had golden “stirrups, spurs, bits and buckles.” Even
the ruler’s dogs had “chains of the finest gold”.
One of the government positions in mediaeval Kanem-Borno was Astronomer Royal.
Ngazargamu, the capital city of Kanem-Borno,
became one of the largest cities in the seventeenth century world. By
1658 AD, the metropolis, according to an architectural scholar housed
“about quarter of a million people”. It had 660 streets. Many were wide
and unbending, reflective of town planning.
The Nigerian city of Surame flourished in the
sixteenth century. Even in ruin it was an impressive sight, built on a
horizontal vertical grid. A modern scholar describes it thus: “The walls
of Surame are about 10 miles in circumference and include many large
bastions or walled suburbs running out at right angles to the main wall.
The large compound at Kanta is still visible in the centre, with ruins
of many buildings, one of which is said to have been two-storied. The
striking feature of the walls and whole ruins is the extensive use of
stone and tsokuwa (laterite gravel) or very hard red building mud,
evidently brought from a distance. There is a big mound of this near the
north gate about 8 feet in height. The walls show regular courses of
masonry to a height of 20 feet and more in several places. The best
preserved portion is that known as sirati (the bridge) a little north of
the eastern gate . . . The main city walls here appear to have provided
a very strongly guarded entrance about 30 feet wide.”
The Nigerian city of Kano in 1851 produced an estimated 10 million pairs of sandals and 5 million hides each year for export.
In 1246 AD Dunama II of Kanem-Borno exchanged
embassies with Al-Mustansir, the king of Tunis. He sent the North
African court a costly present, which apparently included a giraffe. An
old chronicle noted that the rare animal “created a sensation in Tunis”.
In Southern Africa, there are at least 600
stone built ruins in the regions of Zimbabwe, Mozambique and South
Africa. These ruins are called Mazimbabwe in Shona, the Bantu language
of the builders, and means great revered house and “signifies court”.
The Great Zimbabwe was the largest of these
ruins. It consists of 12 clusters of buildings, spread over 3 square
miles. Its outer walls were made from 100,000 tons of granite bricks. In
the fourteenth century, the city housed 18,000 people, comparable in
size to that of London of the same period.
Bling culture existed in this region. At the
time of our last visit, the Horniman Museum in London had exhibits of
headrests with the caption: “Headrests have been used in Africa since
the time of the Egyptian pharaohs. Remains of some headrests, once
covered in gold foil, have been found in the ruins of Great Zimbabwe and
burial sites like Mapungubwe dating to the twelfth century after
Christ.”
On bling culture, one seventeenth century
visitor to southern African empire of Monomotapa, that ruled over this
vast region, wrote that: “The people dress in various ways: at court of
the Kings their grandees wear cloths of rich silk, damask, satin, gold
and silk cloth; these are three widths of satin, each width four covados
[2.64m], each sewn to the next, sometimes with gold lace in between,
trimmed on two sides, like a carpet, with a gold and silk fringe, sewn
in place with a two fingers’ wide ribbon, woven with gold roses on
silk.”
Apparently the Monomotapan royal palace at
Mount Fura had chandeliers hanging from the ceiling. An eighteenth
century geography book provided the following data: “The inside consists
of a great variety of sumptuous apartments, spacious and lofty halls,
all adorned with a magnificent cotton tapestry, the manufacture of the
country. The floors, cielings [sic], beams and rafters are all either
gilt or plated with gold curiously wrought, as are also the chairs of
state, tables, benches &c. The candle-sticks and branches are made
of ivory inlaid with gold, and hang from the cieling by chains of the
same metal, or of silver gilt.”
Monomotapa had a social welfare system.
Antonio Bocarro, a Portuguese contemporary, informs us that the Emperor:
“shows great charity to the blind and maimed, for these are called the
king’s poor, and have land and revenues for their subsistence, and when
they wish to pass through the kingdoms, wherever they come food and
drinks are given to them at the public cost as long as they remain
there, and when they leave that place to go to another they are provided
with what is necessary for their journey, and a guide, and some one to
carry their wallet to the next village. In every place where they come
there is the same obligation.”
In, 1571 Portuguese forces invade
Munhumutapa, and started the destruction of the place. In 1629, Emperor
Mavhura becomes puppet ruler of Munhumutapa on behalf of the Portuguese.
Chinese records of the fifteenth century AD note that Mogadishu had houses of “four or five stories high”.
“Gedi, near the coast of Kenya, is one of the
East African ghost towns. Its ruins, dating from the fourteenth or
fifteenth centuries, include the city walls, the palace, private houses,
the Great Mosque, seven smaller mosques, and three pillar tombs.
The ruined mosque in the Kenyan city of Gedi had a water purifier made of limestone for recycling water.
The palace in the Kenyan city of Gedi
contains evidence of piped water controlled by taps. In addition it had
bathrooms and indoor toilets.
A visitor in 1331 AD considered the Tanzanian
city of Kilwa to be of world class. He wrote that it was the “principal
city on the coast the greater part of whose inhabitants are Zanj of
very black complexion.” Later on he says that: “Kilwa is one of the most
beautiful and well-constructed cities in the world. The whole of it is
elegantly built.”
Bling culture existed in early Tanzania. A
Portuguese chronicler of the sixteenth century wrote that: “[T]hey are
finely clad in many rich garments of gold and silk and cotton, and the
women as well; also with much gold and silver chains and bracelets,
which they wear on their legs and arms, and many jewelled earrings in
their ears”.
In 1961 a British archaeologist, found the
ruins of Husuni Kubwa, the royal palace of the Tanzanian city of Kilwa.
It had over a hundred rooms, including a reception hall, galleries,
courtyards, terraces and an octagonal swimming pool.
The Bamilike structures of the Cameroon are
of mind-blowing architectural delicateness and beauty. The Bamum and
Shomum scripts of the Cameroon are similar to those of Ethiopia. There
are over 7000 ancient Bamum manuscripts and the Bamum Palace is still
perfectly preserved.” Robin Walter
As historical sources described above the continent was full of monuments. Where are they?
The sad truth is that Europeans invaders have
destroyed most of them either as punitive actions or under the scramble
for Africa ‘Terra Nullius’ law.
During the scramble for Africa by Europeans,
the main way to prove that a land was qualified for colonization or take
over was ‘Terra Nullius”, a Latin expression deriving from Roman law
meaning “land belonging to no one”, which is used in international law
to describe territory which has never been subject to the sovereignty of
any state, or over which any prior sovereign has expressly or
implicitly relinquished sovereignty. Sovereignty over territory which is
terra nullius may be acquired through occupation” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terra_nullius
Many islands were acquired that way when it
was possible to slaughter the small population and easily prove that the
land was empty before the arrival of colonial powers.
But very soon, the colonial powers were
in difficulty to find “land belonging to no one”. Africa was not a Terra
Nullius. Consequently, the terra nullius law was altered to include
land inhabited by savages and uncivilized people.
Again, very quickly the colonial power found
it difficult to prove that Africa was a land of savages and uncivilized
people. Instead they found, as demonstrated above, queendoms and
kingdoms with great palaces and highly developed political and social
norms.
At this stage, the colonial power have to destroy any sign of civilization.
From then on, the colonial power spent a lot
of energy to destroy and burn African historical buildings and
monuments, slaughtered the African elite of engineers, scientists,
craftsmen, writers, philosophers, etc.
There is a museum in Paris with 18 000 human
heads of people killed by the French colonial troops and missionaries.
It’s called “Musée d’Histoire Naturelle de Paris”.
Among the heads are the ones of African
kings, kings’ families, african engineers, writers, army officers,
spiritual leaders, but also ordinary men, women, children that the
french found unusual, exotic enough or interesting to kill to enrich
their Museum of natural history where they display mainly animals skulls
to represent bio-diversity and evolution.
France was not alone in the european
competition to behead the maximum of variety of exotic people. The
skulls and heads of many Africans still could be found in museums and
unusual places around Europe.
Another consequence of the Terra Nullius law
defined as a land inhabited by savages, lead to the capture of Africans
to display in zoos and public events around Europe, in primitive
conditions, to demonstrate the inferiority and barbarism of the African
people.
From that moment till now, most Europeans
still think Africans are savages, inferior, grotesque, unintelligent
people. They more an african would display features that would fit that
stigma, the more he or she would be liked by them.
Sadly, little is left of our ancestors. When
Europeans invaded Africa they applied the 4 basic principles of any
occupant forces:
1. First, Kill the strong and loot the place
2. Second, Breed the weak
3. Third, Kill, Deport or Exile the smartest and the skilled ones
4. Fourth, Impose the golden colonial rule “My way or the Highway”.
The Kings and their descendants were all
killed. Additionally, 3 centuries of transatlantic slavery exported
over 12 millions of the finest men and women from Africa to America,
tens of millions have died in the process.
Imagine what would happen to any country or
civilization when almost all writers, storytellers, engineers,
craftsmen, artists, leaders are killed or exiled? And, Any sign of heir
past glory and ingenuity destroyed or burned? Their books and records of
knowledge stolen or destroyed.
Who will transmit the century accumulated knowledge to the ordinary men and women?
It’s that broken link to knowledge and
leadership for the last 3 centuries which has plunged the whole
continent into a dark age, its people left without guidance.
Our fearless warriors and civilization builders are gone. Our global traders, pyramid, Kingdom and Empire builders are extinct.
Unsurprisingly none of these generations have
being nurtured in creating empire, and waging wars, defending their
territory, protecting their children and women.
Reason why we don’t have anymore the modern version of the fearless African Warriors and Civilization builders.
When some people ask why are they so poor, we answer they are not poor, they have been made poor.
Today, if you want to see the glory of
Africa, you have to go to Europe, where thousands and thousands of
stolen arts objects, civilization artifacts are in public museums and
private collection (in UK, France, Germany, Belgium, Germany, etc.). If
you want to see the wealth of Africa, you have also to go to Europe
where they are stored in private and public accounts. 5 centuries of
plundering and destruction brought the continent to its knees.
As PD Lawton put
it “From Egypt to the Sudan, from Mali to Tanzania, from Zimbabwe to
Mozambique, Africa is full of the testimony to her past. In many cases
the complete destruction of structures has not been through natural
elements but deliberate acts, most notably of the British Empire. The
museums of Britain and Europe are full of the results of` pillage and
plunder`. There are numerous ancient structures that are in a state of
good preservation but in the case of many of Africa`s cities, palaces,
temples and trading ports of old we are left with nothing other than the
written reports and drawings of traders and travellers from medieval
times to the final days of complete destruction in the late 1800s.In
terms of beauty and even on occasion scale the architecture of Egypt`s
pyramids pale in comparison to other African historical structures. The
diversity of architecture from this continent is staggering. The use
traditionally of what is termed fractal scaling in building highlights a
religious tradition practiced throughout the continent. Fractal scaling
is the `Mandelbrot` idea of architecture where the smallest parts of a
structure resemble the largest parts. This cultural/religious tradition
was/is practised in all aspects of life from weaving, to grinding
cereals to the building of homes and palaces and is the incorporation of
`history` and explanation of the Universe and our place within it, into
everyday lives, lest we forget.” – “Africa Before The 20Th Century” in
“Invisible Empire”.
We need to invest time and resources to
unearth ourselves the ruins of our old cities to strengthen the faith of
a young generation in our ability to rebound.
It’s time we revive in the mind of a new
generation of Africans the true nature of their ancestors, the past
glory of their empires, the pride of its warriors, conquerors and
civilization builders, and clearly make them understand that the 5
“Centuries of Shame” under European occupation shall end with a new
generation of Leaders and Builders!
____________________________________Source:
by Mawuna Remarque KOUTONIN (paraphrased) via Silicon Africa.
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