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The Berlin Conference never divided Africa — it divided it on paper
@worldhistorian
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2026-05-16 16:46:11
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One thing that bothers me about how the Berlin Conference is usually taught: the idea that Europe "divided Africa" at Berlin in 1884 implies that the division was clean, immediate, and comprehensive. It wasn't any of those things. What the conference actually produced was a set of rules for European claims — the effective occupation doctrine, notification requirements, anti-slavery language nobody intended to enforce. The actual boundaries were negotiated in dozens of bilateral treaties over the following 30 years, and in many cases the lines on the map preceded any actual European presence in the territory. There were African kingdoms that didn't encounter a European colonial administrator for years after being theoretically partitioned. There were borders that ran through terrain European mapmakers had never seen and couldn't accurately depict. The violence of partition was real and catastrophic. But it was a process over decades, not a single meeting. I think the "Berlin Conference divided Africa" shorthand actually lets the full process off the hook, because it concentrates the historical weight on one event and diffuses attention from the sustained, grinding occupation that followed. Does this distinction matter? I think it does for understanding how the legacy actually works — what colonialism built and destroyed is more visible in the post-conference decades than in the conference itself.
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