Article
Details
Citation
Outram-Leman S (2018) Mapping Senegambia: Legacies of Ambition and the Failure of an Early Colonial Venture. Britain and the World, 11 (2), pp. 212-231. https://doi.org/10.3366/brw.2018.0300
Abstract
Britain's short-lived Province of Senegambia (1765¨C1783) was part of an expansion effort in the region driven by a desire to secure access to the gum trade of the Senegal river. Drawing on Britain's knowledge of France's dealings with the Upper-Senegal region it was complemented by the adoption of French cartography, edited to illustrate a new colonial identity. It is argued here that there was an additional motive of developing closer contact with the African interior. This pre-dates the establishment of the African Association in 1788 and its subsequent and better-known expeditions to the River Niger. In contrast to the French, however, the British struggled to engage with the region. This paper approaches the topic from a perspective of cartographic history. It highlights Thomas Jeffery's map of 'Senegambia Proper' (1768), copied from Jean Baptiste Bourguingnon d'Anville's ¡¯Carte Particuli¨¦re de la C?te Occidentale de l'Afrique' (1751) and illustrative of several obstacles facing both British map-making and colonial expansion in mid-eighteenth century Africa. It is argued that the later enquiries and map-making activities of the African Association, which were hoped to lead to the colonisation of West Africa, built upon these experiences of failure in Senegambia.
Keywords
West Africa; Senegambia; cartography; colonisation; contact; eighteenth century
Journal
Britain and the World: Volume 11, Issue 2
Status | Published |
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Publication date | 30/09/2018 |
Publication date online | 30/08/2018 |
Date accepted by journal | 30/08/2018 |
ISSN | 2043-8567 |
eISSN | 2043-8575 |