Thursday, October 30, 2014
HISTORY: THE IGBOLAND AND WHITEMEN.
The first contact between Igboland and Europe came in the mid-fifteenth
century with the arrival of the Portuguese. From 1434-1807 the Niger
coast acted as a contact point between African and European traders,
beginning with the Portuguese, then the Dutch and finally the English.
At this stage there was an emphasis on trade rather than empire
building, in this case the trade consisting primarily of Igbo slaves.
With the abolition of the slave trade in 1807 came a new trading era,
concentrating on industry (palm products, timber, elephant tusks and
spices). At this point the British began to combine aggressive trading
with aggressive imperialism. They saw the hinterland as productive, and
refused to be confined to the coast. In 1900 the area that had been
administered by the British Niger Company became the Protectorate on
Southern Nigeria, also incorporating what had been called the Niger
Coast Protectorate. Control of this area then passed from the British
Foreign Office to the Colonial Office. Long before it had officially
been conquered, Igboland was being treated as a British colony. Between
1900 and 1914 (when Northern and Southern Nigeria were amalgamated)
there had been twenty-one British military expeditions into Igboland. In
1928 for the first time in their history, Igbo men were made to pay tax
– they were a subject people.
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