Print

Print


 

MUST LISTEN
TO THIS !!


http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b03ffkfd/In_Our_Time_The_Berlin_Conference/


The Berlin Conference

Duration: 

43 minutes 

First broadcast: 

Thursday 31 October 2013 

Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the Berlin
Conference of 1884. In the 1880s, as colonial powers attempted to increase
their spheres of influence in Africa, tensions began to grow between European
nations including Britain, Belgium and France. In 1884 the German Chancellor,
Otto von Bismarck, brought together many of Europe's leading statesmen to
discuss trade and colonial activities in Africa. Although the original purpose
of the summit was to settle the question of territorial rights in West Africa,
negotiations eventually dealt with the entire continent. The conference was
part of the process known as the Scramble for Africa, and the decisions reached
at it had effects which have lasted to the present day. The conference is commonly
seen as one of the most significant events of the so-called Scramble for
Africa; in the following decades, European nations laid claim to most of the
continent.

With:

Richard Drayton

Rhodes Professor of Imperial History at King's College London

Richard Rathbone

Emeritus Professor of African History at SOAS, University of London

Joanna Lewis

Assistant Professor of Imperial History at the LSE, University of London.

Producer: Thomas Morris.