Africa
it is necessary, however, to deal briefly with the part played by Germany.
She naturally could not be disposed of by the chief rivals as easily as
were Portugal and Liberia. It will be remembered that Dr Nachtigal, while
the proposals for the Berlin conference were under discussion, had planted
the German flag on the coast of Togo and in Cameroon in the month of July
1884. In Cameroon Germany found herself with Great Britain for a neighbour
to the north, and with France as her southern neighbour on the Gabun river.
The utmost activity was displayed in making treaties with native chiefs,
and in securing as wide a range of coast for German enterprise as was
possible. After various provisional agreements had been concluded between
Great Britain and Germany, a ``provisional line of demarcation'' was
adopted in the famous agreement of the 1st of July 1890, starting from the
head of the Rio del Rey creek and going to the point, about 9 deg. 8' E.,
marked ``rapids'' on the British Admiralty chart. By a further agreement of
the 14th of April 1893, the right bank of the Rio del Rey was made the
boundary between the Oil Rivers Protectorate (now Southern Nigeria) and
Cameroon. In the following November (1893) the boundary was continued from
the ``rapids'' before mentioned, on the Calabar or Cross river, in a
straight line towards the centre of the town of Yola, on the Benue river.
Yola itself, with a radius
Germany in West Central Africa.
of some 3 m., was left in the British sphere, and the German boundary
followed the circle eastwards from the point of intersection as it neared
Yola until it met the Benue river. From that point it crossed the river to
the intersection of the 13th degree of longitude with the 10th degree of
north latitude, and then made direct for a point on the southern shore of
Lake Chad ``situated 35 minutes east of the meridian of Kuka.'' By this
agreement the British government withdrew from a considerable section of
the upper waters of the Benue with which the Royal Niger Company had
entered into relations. The limit of Germany's possible extension eastwards
was fixed at the basin of the river Shari, and Darfur, Kordofan and the
Bahr-el-Ghazal were to be excluded from her sphere of influence. The object
of Great Britain in making the sacrifice she did was two-fold. By
satisfying Germany's desire for a part of Lake Chad a check was put on
French designs on the Benue region, while by recognizing the central Sudan
(Wadai, &c.) in the German sphere, a barrier was interposed to the advance
of France from the Congo to the Nile. This last object was not attained,
inasmuch as Germany in coming to terms with France as to the southern and
eastern limits of Cameroon abandoned her claims to the central Sudan. She
had already, on the 24th of December 1885, signed a protocol with France
fixing her southern frontier, where it was coterminous with the French
Congo colony. But to the east German explorers were crossing the track of
French explorers from the northern bank of the Ubangi, and the need for an
agreement was obvious. Accordingly, on the 4th of February 1894, a
protocol—which, some weeks later, was confirmed by a convention— was signed
at Berlin, by which France accepted the presence of Germany on Lake Chad as
a fait accompli and effected the best bargain she could by making the left
bank of the Shari river, from its outlet into Lake Chad to the 10th
parallel of north latitude, the eastern limit of German extension. From
this point the boundary line went due west some 230 m., then turned south,
and with various indentations joined the south-eastern frontier, which had
been slightly extended so as to give Germany access to the Sanga river— a
tributary of the Congo. Thus, early in 1894, the German Cameroon colony had
reached fairly definite limits. In 1908 another convention, modifying the
frontier, gave Germany a larger share of the Sanga, while France, among
other advantages, gained the left bank of the Shari to 10 deg. 40' N.
The German Togoland settlements occupy a narrow strip of the Guinea
coast, some 35 m. only in length, wedged in between the British Gold Coast
and French Dahomey. At first France was inclined to dispute Germany's
claims to Little Popo and Porto Seguro; but in December 1885 the French
government acknowledged the German protectorate over these
Exclusion of Germany from the Niger.
places, and the boundary between French and German territory, which runs
north from the coast to the 11th decree of latitude, was laid down by the
Franco-German convention of the 12th of July 1897. The fixing of the 11th
parallel as the northern boundary of German expansion towards the interior
was not accomplished without some sacrifice of German ambitions. Having
secured an opening on Lake Chad for her Cameroon colony, Germany was
anxious to obtain a footing on the middle Niger for Togoland. German
expeditions reached Gando, one of the tributary states of the Sokoto empire
on the middle Niger, and, notwithstanding the existence of prior treaties
with Great Britain, sought to conclude agreements with the sultan of that
country. But this German ambition conflicted both with the British and the
French designs in West Africa, and eventually Germany had to be content
with the 11th parallel as her northern frontier. On the west the Togoland
frontier on the coast was fixed in July 1886 by British and German
commissioners at 1 deg. 10' E. longitude, and its extension towards the
interior laid down for a short distance. A curious feature in the history
of its prolongation was the establishment in 1888 of a neutral zone wherein
neither power was to seek to acquire protectorates nor exclusive influence.
It was not until November 1899 that, as part of the Samoa settlement, this
neutral zone was partitioned between the two powers and the frontier
extended to the 11th parallel.
The story of the struggle between France and Great Britain in West Africa
may roughly be divided into two sections, the
Anglo-French rivalry in West Africa.
first dealing with the Coast colonies, the second dealing with the struggle
for the middle Niger and Lake Chad. As regards the Coast colonies, France
was wholly successful in her design of isolating all Great Britain's
separate possessions in that region, and of securing for herself undisputed
possession of the upper Niger and of the countries lying within the great
bend of that river. When the British government awoke to the consciousness
of what was at stake France had obtained too great a start. French
governors of the Senegal had succeeded, before the Berlin Conference, in
establishing forts on the upper Niger, and the advantage thus gained was
steadily pursued. Every winter season French posts were pushed farther and
farther along the river, or in the vast regions watered by the southern
tributaries of the Senegal and Niger rivers. This ceaseless activity met
with its reward. Great Britain found herself compelled to acknowledge
accomplished facts and to conclude agreements with France, which left her
colonies mere coast patches, with a very limited extension towards the
interior. On the 10th of August 1889 an agreement was signed by which the
Gambia colony and protectorate was confined to a narrow strip of territory
on both banks of the river for about 200 m. from the sea. In June 1882 and
in August 1889 provisional agreements were made with France fixing the
western and northern limits of Sierra Leone, and commissioners were
appointed to trace the line of demarcation agreed upon by the two
governments. But the commissioners failed to agree, and on the 21st of
January 1895 a fresh agreement was made, the boundary being subsequently
traced by a mixed commission. Sierra Leone, as now definitely constituted,
has a coast-line of about 180 m. and a maximum extension towards the
interior of some 200 m.
At the date of the Berlin conference the present colonies of Southern
Nigeria and the Gold Coast constituted a single colony under the title of
the Gold Coast colony, but on the 13th of January 1886 the territory
comprised under that title was erected into two separate colonies—Lagos and
the Gold Coast (the name of the former being changed in February 1906 to
the colony of Southern Nigeria). The coast limits of the new Gold Coast
colony were declared to extend from 5 deg. W. to 2 deg. E., but these
limits were subsequently curtailed by agreements with France and Germany.
The arrangements that fixed the eastern frontier of the Gold Coast colony
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