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"Livingstone, Sir A"
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Charting the Frontier: Indigenous Geography, Arab-Nyamwezi Caravans, and the East African Expedition of 1856-59
by
Wisnicki, Adrian S.
in
African culture
,
African history
,
Burton, Richard Francis, Sir (1821-1890)
2008
This article develops a cross-cultural and material analysis of the work of the East African Expedition of 1856-59, during which Richard Burton and John Speke \"discovered\" Lakes Tanganyika and Victoria. It explores the well-developed Arab-African trading network within which the EAE operated and suggests that the network, while facilitating the expedition's survey work, likewise circumscribed its findings. The result, best evidenced in the EAE's four published maps, was an attempt to efface the Arab-African basis of the expedition's cartography by writing the narrative of the EAE in place of existing Arab-African material and cultural reality. In this way the EAE's maps showcase the early development of a key imperial cartographical strategy that would, later in the century, have a profound impact on the colonial partitioning of Africa.
Journal Article
From the Unpublished Diary of Sir Richard George Glyn, 1863 and from the (as yet) unpublished diary of Ms Patricia Glyn, 2005
2006
Sir Richard Glyn and his younger brother, Robert Carr Glyn with a friend, Henry St. George Bentley and thirteen servants left Pieterrnaritzburg on 26 March 1863 in three wagons heading to Victoria Falls. Ms Patricia Glyn, a well-known South African radio personality, journalist and motivational speaker with a three person back-up team and no servants, left Durban in March, 2005 determined to follow as precisely as possible, on foot, heading to Victoria Falls, repeating the journey made by her ancestor, Sir Richard Glyn.
Journal Article