Africa
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Further concessions to France.
agreed, as part of the settlement of the French shore question in
Newfoundland, to deflect the frontier line more to the south. The new
boundary was described at some length, but provision was made for its
modification in points of detail on the return of the commissioners engaged
in surveying the frontier region. In 1906 an agreement was reached on all
points, and the frontier at last definitely settled, sixteen years after
the Say-Barrua line had been fixed. This revision of the Niger-Chad
frontier did not, however, represent the only territorial compensation
received by France in West Africa in connexion with the settlement of the
Newfoundland question. By the same convention of April 1904 the British
government consented to modify the frontier between Senegal and the Gambia
colony ``so as to give to France Yarbutenda and the lands and landing-
places belonging to that locality,'' and further agreed to cede to France
the tiny group of islands off the coast of French Guinea known as the Los
Islands.
Meantime the conclusion of the 1898 convention had left both the British
and the French governments free to devote increased attention to the
subdivision and control of their West African possessions. On the 1st of
January 1900 the imperial authorities assumed direct responsibility for the
whole of the territories of the Royal Niger Company, which became
henceforth a purely commercial undertaking. The Lagos protectorate was
extended northwards; the Niger Coast protectorate, likewise with extended
frontiers, became Southern Nigeria; while the greater part of the
territories formerly administered by the company were constituted into the
protectorate of Northern Nigeria—all three administrations being directly
under the Colonial Office In February 1906 the administration of the
Southern Nigerian protectorate was placed under that of Lagos at the same
time as the name of the latter was changed to the Colony of Southern
Nigeria, this being a step towards the eventual
Organization of the British and French protectorates.
amalgamation of all three dependencies under one governor or governor-
general. In French West Africa changes in the internal frontiers have been
numerous and important. The coast colonies have all been increased in size
at the expense of the French Sudan, which has vanished from the maps as an
administrative entity. There are carved out of the territories comprised in
what is officially known as French West Africa five colonies—Senegal,
French Guinea, the Ivory Coast, Dahomey and the Upper Senegal and Niger, this last being entirely cut off from the sea—and the civil territory of
Mauritania. To the colony of the Upper Senegal and Niger is attached the
military territory of the Niger, embracing the French Sahara up to the
limit of the Algerian sphere of influence. Not only are all these divisions
of French West Africa connected territorially, but administratively they
are united under a governor-general. Similarly the French Congo territories
have been divided into three colonies—the Gabun, the Middle Congo and the
Ubangi-Shari-Chad—all united administratively under a commissioner-general.
There are, around the coast, numerous islands or groups of islands, which
are regarded by geographers as outliers of the
Ownership of the African Islands.
African mainland. The majority of these African islands were occupied by
one or other of the European powers long before the period of continental
partition. The Madeira Islands to the west of Morocco, the Bissagos
Islands, off the Guinea coast, and Prince's Island and St Thomas' Island, in the Gulf of Guinea, are Portuguese possessions of old standing; while in
the Canary Islands and Fernando Po Spain possesses remnants of her ancient
colonial empire which are a more valuable asset than any she has acquired
in recent times on the mainland. St Helena in the Atlantic, Mauritius and
some small groups north of Madagascar in the Indian Ocean, are British
possessions acquired long before the opening of the last quarter of the
19th century. Zanzibar, Pemba and some smaller islands which the sultan was
allowed to retain were, as has already been stated, placed under British
protection in 1890, and the island of Sokotra was placed under the
``gracious favour and protection'' of Great Britain on the 23rd of April
1886. France's ownership of Reunion dates back to the 17th century, but the
Comoro archipelago was not placed under French protection until April 1886.
None of these islands, with the exception of the Zanzibar group, have, however, materially affected the partition of the continent, and they need
not be enumerated in the table which follows. But the important island of
Madagascar stands in a different category, both on account of its size and
because it was during the period under review that it passed through the
various stages which led to its becoming a French colony. The first step
was the placing of the foreign relations of the island under French
control, which was effected by the treaty of the 17th of December 1885, after the Franco-Malagasy war that had broken out in 1883. In 1890 Great
Britain and Germany recognized a French protectorate over the island, but
the Hova government declined to acquiesce in this view, and in May 1895
France sent an expedition to enforce her claims. The capital was occupied
on the 30th of September in the same year, and on the day following Queen
Ranavalona signed a convention recognizing the French protectorate. In
January 1896 the island was declared a French possession, and on the 6th of
August was declared to be a French colony. In February 1897 the last
vestige of ancient rule was swept away by the deportation of the queen.
Thus in its broad outlines the partition of Africa was begun and ended in
the short space of a quarter of a century. There are still many finishing
touches to be put to the structure. The southern frontiers of Morocco and
Tripoli remain undefined, while the mathematical lines by which the spheres
of influence of the powers were separated one from the other are being
variously modified on the do ut des principle as they come to be surveyed
and as the effective occupation of the continent progresses. Much labour is
necessary before the actual area of Africa and its subdivisions can be
accurately determined, but in the following table the figures are at least
approximately correct. Large areas of the spheres assigned to different
European powers have still to be brought under European control; but this
work is advancing by rapid strides.
BRITISH— Sq. m.
Cape Colony . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 276,995
Natal and Zululand . . . . . . . . . . . 35,371
Basutoland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10,293
Bechuanaland Protectorate . . . . . . . 225,000
Transvaal and Swaziland . . . . . . . . 117,732
Orange River Colony . . . . . . . . . . 50,392
Rhodesia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 450,000
Nyasaland Protectorate . . . . . . . . . 43,608
British East Africa Protectorate . . . . 240,000
Uganda Protectorate . . . . . . . . . . 125,000
Zanzibar Protectorate . . . . . . . . . 1,020
Somaliland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68,000
Northern Nigeria . . . . . . . . . . . 258,000
Southern Nigeria (colony and protectorate) 80,000
Gold Coast and hinterland . . . . . 82,000
Sierre Leone (colony and protectorate) . 34,000
Gambia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4,000
Total British Africa . . . . . . . 2,101,411
Egypt and Libyan Desert . . . . . . . . 650,000
Anglo-Egyptian Sudan . . . . . . . . . . 950,000
1,600,000
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