The coming of the Europeans to West Africa in the fifteenth century | Reasons & Effects
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- čas přidán 17. 05. 2024
- For the next 150 years, West African rulers and traders came across the Portuguese more than any other European nation. [There were also smaller trading missions led by the English and the French, but these were less frequent]. In the beginning, the Portuguese main motivations were: 1, an interest in the extensive gold production of Bono-Mansu and the Akan states; 2, competition with the Ottoman Empire to access this gold [the Ottomans had captured Constantinople in 1453, prompting a crisis in Christian Europe]; 3, the desire to find a trade route to markets in India around the Cape of Good Hope; 4, ever increasingly, the trade in enslaved persons.
By the 1590s, the Dutch began to rival the Portuguese as the major European trading nation in Africa. Their ships were bigger and better, and the goods they traded with African political leaders were of much higher quality. The Dutch had captured many of the main Portuguese trading stations in West Africa by 1650, especially at Gorée in Senegal (in 1621), at Elmina in Ghana (in 1637), and at Luanda in Angola (in 1641).
This is well explained
I find this very educative. Thanks. Keep up the good work
Edna was not the original name. Edna is also a Portuguese name. Anumaasa was the original name.
Good to hear. Thank you!
I’m a descendant of Gold Coast euro Africans being mostly Akan part European. I am of Akan/Ga lineage and Dutch, Belgian, German, French, English descent on my dad’s side. My mom is Ghanaian and caribbean which also is a mix.
That is interesting
Have you visited Ghana before?
@@nanakollynxtv Yes
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At all
This is well explained