Geography of Africa. Natural objects of the earth. Africa: geographical nomenclature and guidelines

Incredibly beautiful architectural structures, mysterious ancient necropolises, extensive nature reserves with many rare animals and plants, squares of historical cities and sights, the history of which still raises many questions. Where can you see all these unique objects? In Africa! On a continent that most tourists associate exclusively with the Sahara desert and sweltering heat. Literally in every African country there are amazing sights that deserve the attention of inquisitive tourists. The continent is rich in incredibly beautiful natural reserves, many ancient cities have been preserved in it, and the pyramids of Giza are considered one of the most recognizable sights in the world. Anyone who wants an unforgettable African adventure should definitely visit the unique objects included in the list world heritage.

In the southeast of Algeria, among the lifeless landscapes of the Sahara, there is a unique plateau Tassilin-Adjer. The main value of this place are petroglyphs, some of which date back to the 7th millennium BC. Currently, the plateau, which is about 500 meters long, is part of the large Tassilin-Ajer National Reserve, with a total area of ​​​​more than 70,000 square meters. meters. In addition to incredible archaeological sites, the plateau is also remarkable for its original geological formations.


Over thousands of years, under the influence of wind, incredibly beautiful and harmonious stone arches were formed from sandstone, and geologists also managed to establish that once upon a time stormy rivers flowed through these places. Visitors to the attraction will have the opportunity to see more than 300 unique geological formations, look into hidden caves, and walk through some of the world's most valuable archaeological areas.


In 1909, bright rock paintings were discovered on the plateau, depicting people, animals, as well as various scenes from life. They are another excellent confirmation that the once desert area was full of life. Rivers flowed here, along the banks of which there were fertile soils, herds of domestic animals grazed in spacious meadows. In total, more than 15,000 rock paintings were discovered on the territory of the plateau, some of them are about 8 thousand years old, and the latest drawings were made in the first centuries of our era. The Tassilin-Ajjer Plateau is one of the largest concentrations of rock art in the world, which makes it a landmark of world importance.


In the Beninese city of Abomey, there is a unique historical complex - beautiful royal palaces, which are a reminder of the reign of the Dahomean kings. In total, there are 12 palaces in the complex, with an interesting cultural tradition associated with the history of their construction. With each change of ruler, it was customary to build a new one next to the old palace, a large-scale complex was included in the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1985.

Travelers who like to explore unusual sights should head to The Gambia. Here in the Senegambia region are located mysterious circles megaliths, the purpose and history of which scientists from all over the world have been arguing for hundreds of years. Scientists managed to find out that the mysterious rings were built in the period from the 8th to the 12th century, with a more thorough study of the area, they discovered burials of earlier periods.

There is an amazing object in Ghana that will definitely appeal to fans of unusual architectural sights. We are talking about the traditional buildings of the Ashanti people located in the Asante region. The complex of 13 buildings is incredibly beautiful, it is the only reminder of the once powerful and prosperous state of Ashanti. The heyday of the state fell on the 18th century, and from the beginning of the 19th century a number of destructive wars fell upon it.

The Theban necropolis is one of the most important sights of Egypt. Here travelers can see the unique burial places of the pharaohs, surviving funeral temples and other historical buildings, one way or another connected with the culture of the ancient Egyptian city of Thebes. Among the memorial temples, the most interesting is the temple of Queen Hatshupsut, located in the Deir el-Bahri area, it is also interesting to visit the memorial temple of Ramses III.

Travelers who find the Theban necropolises not enough should visit the ancient Egyptian city of Memphis and get acquainted with its unique sights. The history of this once mighty city lasted more than 3,000 years and ended in the 5th century AD. Today, Memphis is a unique museum under open sky. In the territory ancient city not a single building has been preserved; for many years, its entire territory has been in constant development by archaeologists.

In the center Sinai Peninsula there is a unique religious landmark - the monastery of St. Catherine. This monastery was founded in the 4th century and has been continuously operating for more than one and a half thousand years, it is one of the oldest in the world. The monastery was built on the orders of Emperor Justian, it was originally called the Monastery of the Transfiguration, and acquired its current name only in the 11th century. For many hundreds of years the monastery has been a traditional place of Christian pilgrimage, the main artifact hidden within its walls is the relics of St. Catherine.

Perhaps the most unusual nature reserve in Africa is the Sanga forest. It is so vast that it is located on the territory of three states at once - Cameroon, the Central African Republic and the Congo. For this reason, the Sanga Reserve is often referred to as the Forest of the Three Nations. A significant part of the reserve is covered with evergreens. rain forests, which are the venue not only tourist excursions but also important scientific research.

Kenya is home to one of the world's most important natural attractions - Lake Turkana, which is also known by another name - Lake Rudolf. This lake is located on the territory of the Great Reef Valley, its depth is relatively small and averages about 30 meters. At the same time, the scale of the lake is quite impressive, its length is about 290 km, and its width is about 32 km, while the total area of ​​​​the reservoir is 6,405 square meters. meters.

In the Congo, nature lovers can visit the Okapi reserve, which is located in the northeastern part of the state, the area of ​​\u200b\u200bthe reserve is about 13.7 thousand square meters. km. The main value of the national reserve is the rare animals living on its territory, some species of which are on the verge of extinction. There are 13 species of monkeys alone in the reserve, forest elephants are also found in the park, and the main inhabitants of the park are okapi.

Africa is a part of the world with an area of ​​\u200b\u200bwith islands of 30.3 million km 2, this is the second place after Eurasia, 6% of the entire surface of our planet and 20% of the land.

Geographical position

Africa is located in the Northern and Eastern Hemispheres ( most of), a small part in the South and West. Like all large fragments of the ancient Gondwana mainland, it has a massive outline, large peninsulas and there are no deep bays. The length of the continent from north to south is 8 thousand km, from west to east - 7.5 thousand km. In the north it is washed by the waters of the Mediterranean Sea, in the northeast by the Red Sea, in the southeast by the Indian Ocean, in the west by the Atlantic Ocean. Africa is separated from Asia by the Suez Canal, from Europe by the Strait of Gibraltar.

Main geographical features

Africa lies on an ancient platform, which determines its flat surface, which in some places is dissected by deep river valleys. On the coast of the mainland there are few lowlands, the northwest is the location of the Atlas Mountains, the northern part, almost completely occupied by the Sahara desert, is the Ahaggar and Tibetsi highlands, the east is the Ethiopian highlands, the southeast is the East African plateau, the extreme south is the Cape and Draconian mountains The highest point in Africa is Mount Kilimanjaro (5895 m, Masai plateau), the lowest is 157 meters below sea level in Lake Assal. Along the Red Sea, in the Ethiopian Highlands and to the mouth of the Zambezi River, the world's largest fault in the earth's crust stretches, which is characterized by frequent seismic activity.

Rivers flow through Africa: Congo (Central Africa), Niger (West Africa), Limpopo, Orange, Zambezi (South Africa), as well as one of the deepest and longest rivers in the world - the Nile (6852 km), flowing from south to north (its sources are on the East African plateau, and it flows, forming a delta, into the Mediterranean Sea). The rivers are high-water only in the equatorial zone, due to the large amount of precipitation there, most of them are characterized by a high flow rate, have many rapids and waterfalls. In lithospheric faults filled with water, lakes formed - Nyasa, Tanganyika, the largest freshwater lake in Africa and the second largest after Lake Superior ( North America) - Victoria (its area is 68.8 thousand km 2, length 337 km, max depth - 83 m), the largest saline drainless lake - Chad (its area is 1.35 thousand km 2, located on the southern outskirts of the greatest desert world of the Sahara).

Due to the location of Africa between two tropical belts, it is characterized by high total solar radiation, which gives the right to call Africa the hottest continent on Earth (the highest temperature on our planet was recorded in 1922 in El Azizia (Libya) - +58 C 0 in the shadow).

On the territory of Africa, such natural zones are distinguished as evergreen equatorial forests (the coast of the Gulf of Guinea, the Congo depression), in the north and south turning into mixed deciduous-evergreen forests, then there is a natural zone of savannahs and light forests, extending to Sudan, East and South Africa, to Sevre and southern Africa savannas are replaced by semi-deserts and deserts (Sahara, Kalahari, Namib). In the southeastern part of Africa there is a small zone of mixed coniferous-deciduous forests, on the slopes of the Atlas Mountains - a zone of hard-leaved evergreen forests and shrubs. The natural zones of mountains and plateaus are subject to the laws of altitudinal zonation.

African countries

The territory of Africa is divided among 62 countries, 54 - independent, sovereign states, 10 dependent territories belonging to Spain, Portugal, Great Britain and France, the rest - unrecognized, self-proclaimed states - Galmudug, Puntland, Somaliland, Saharan Arab Democratic Republic(SADR). For a long time, the countries of Asia were foreign colonies of various European states and only by the middle of the last century gained independence. Africa is divided into five regions based on geographic location: North, Central, West, East and South Africa.

List of African countries

Nature

Mountains and plains of Africa

Most of the African continent is a plain. There are mountain systems, uplands and plateaus. They are presented:

  • the Atlas Mountains in the northwestern part of the continent;
  • the Tibesti and Ahaggar uplands in the Sahara desert;
  • Ethiopian highlands in the eastern part of the mainland;
  • Dragon Mountains in the south.

The highest point in the country is Mount Kilimanjaro, with a height of 5,895 m, belonging to the East African Plateau in the southeastern part of the mainland ...

Deserts and savannas

The largest desert zone of the African continent is located in the northern part. This is the Sahara desert. On the southwestern side of the continent is another smaller desert, the Namib, and from it, inland to the east, is the Kalahari Desert.

The territory of the savanna occupies the main part of Central Africa. In terms of area, it is much larger than the northern and southern parts of the mainland. The territory is characterized by the presence of pastures typical for savannahs, low shrubs and trees. The height of grassy vegetation varies depending on the amount of precipitation. It can be almost desert savannas or tall grasses, with grass cover from 1 to 5 m in height...

Rivers

On the territory of the African continent is the longest river in the world - the Nile. Its direction of flow is from south to north.

In the list of major water systems of the mainland, Limpopo, Zambezi and the Orange River, as well as the Congo, which flows through the territory of Central Africa.

On the Zambezi River is the famous Victoria Falls, 120 meters high and 1,800 meters wide...

lakes

In the list large lakes The African continent has Lake Victoria, which is the second largest freshwater reservoir in the world. Its depth reaches 80 m, and its area is 68,000 square kilometers. Two more large lakes of the continent: Tanganyika and Nyasa. They are located in the faults of the lithospheric plates.

There is Lake Chad in Africa, which is one of the world's largest endorheic relict lakes that have no connection with the oceans ...

Seas and oceans

The African continent is washed by the waters of two oceans at once: the Indian and the Atlantic. Also off its coast are the Red and Mediterranean Seas. From the Atlantic Ocean in the southwestern part of the water form the deep Gulf of Guinea.

Despite the location of the African continent, coastal waters are cool. This is influenced by the cold currents of the Atlantic Ocean: the Canary in the north and the Bengal in the southwest. From the Indian Ocean, the currents are warm. The largest are Mozambique, in the northern waters, and Needle, in the southern ...

Forests of Africa

Forests from the entire territory of the African continent make up a little more than a quarter. Here are subtropical forests growing on the slopes of the Atlas Mountains and the valleys of the ridge. Here you can find holm oak, pistachio, strawberry tree, etc. Coniferous plants grow high in the mountains, represented by Aleppo pine, Atlas cedar, juniper and other types of trees.

Closer to the coast there are forests of cork oak, in the tropical region evergreen equatorial plants are common, for example, mahogany, sandalwood, ebony, etc...

Nature, plants and animals of Africa

The vegetation of the equatorial forests is diverse, there are about 1000 species of various tree species: ficus, ceiba, wine tree, olive palm, wine palm, banana palm, tree ferns, sandalwood, mahogany, rubber trees, Liberian coffee tree, etc. . It is home to many species of animals, rodents, birds and insects living right on the trees. On earth live: bush pigs, leopards, African deer - a relative of the okapi giraffe, large apes - gorillas ...

40% of the territory of Africa is occupied by savannahs, which are huge steppe areas covered with forbs, low, thorny shrubs, milkweed, and stand-alone trees (tree-like acacias, baobabs).

Here there is the largest accumulation of such large animals as: rhinoceros, giraffe, elephant, hippopotamus, zebra, buffalo, hyena, lion, leopard, cheetah, jackal, crocodile, hyena dog. The most numerous animals of the savannah are such herbivores as: bubal (family of antelopes), giraffe, impala or black-fifth antelope, various types of gazelles (Thomson, Grant), blue wildebeest, and in some places there are rare jumping antelopes - springboks.

The vegetation of deserts and semi-deserts is characterized by poverty and unpretentiousness, these are small thorny shrubs, separately growing bunches of herbs. In the oases, the unique Erg Chebbi date palm grows, as well as plants that are resistant to drought conditions and the formation of salts. In the Namib Desert, unique velvichia and nara plants grow, the fruits of which feed on porcupines, elephants and other animals of the desert.

Of the animals, various species of antelopes and gazelles live here, adapted to the hot climate and capable of traveling great distances in search of food, many species of rodents, snakes, and turtles. Lizards. Among mammals: spotted hyena, common jackal, maned ram, Cape hare, Ethiopian hedgehog, dorcas gazelle, saber-horned antelope, Anubis baboon, wild Nubian donkey, cheetah, jackal, fox, mouflon, there are permanently living and migratory birds.

Climatic conditions

Seasons, weather and climate of African countries

The central part of Africa, through which the equator line passes, is in a low pressure area and receives sufficient moisture, the territories north and south of the equator are in the subequatorial climatic zone, this is a zone of seasonal (monsoonal) moisture and arid desert climate. The extreme north and south are in the subtropical climate zone, the south receives precipitation brought by air masses from the Indian Ocean, the Kalahari Desert is located here, the north has the minimum amount of precipitation due to the formation of a high pressure area and the characteristics of the movement of the trade winds, the largest desert in the world is the Sahara, where the amount Precipitation is minimal, in some areas it does not fall at all ...

Resources

African Natural Resources

In terms of water resources, Africa is considered one of the least prosperous continents in the world. The average annual volume of water is only enough to meet primary needs, but this does not apply to all regions.

Land resources are represented by large areas with fertile lands. Only 20% of all possible land is cultivated. The reason for this is the lack of the proper volume of water, soil erosion, etc.

The forests of Africa are a source of timber, including species of valuable varieties. The countries in which they grow, the raw materials are exported. Resources are misused and ecosystems are slowly being destroyed.

In the bowels of Africa there are deposits of minerals. Among those sent for export: gold, diamonds, uranium, phosphorus, manganese ores. There are significant reserves of oil and natural gas.

Energy-intensive resources are widely represented on the continent, but they are not used due to the lack of proper investments...

Among the developed industrial sectors of the countries of the African continent, one can note:

  • the mining industry that exports minerals and fuels;
  • the oil refining industry, distributed mainly in South Africa and North Africa;
  • chemical industry specializing in the production of mineral fertilizers;
  • as well as the metallurgical and engineering industries.

The main agricultural products are cocoa beans, coffee, corn, rice and wheat. In the tropical regions of Africa, oil palm is grown.

Fishing is poorly developed and accounts for only 1-2% of the total volume of agriculture. The indicators of animal husbandry are also not high, and the reason for this is the infection of livestock with tsetse flies ...

culture

The peoples of Africa: culture and traditions

About 8,000 peoples and ethnic groups live on the territory of 62 African countries, which in total is about 1.1 billion people. Africa is considered the cradle and ancestral home of human civilization, it was here that the remains of ancient primates (hominids) were found, which, according to scientists, are considered the ancestors of people.

Most of the peoples in Africa may number from several thousand people to several hundred living in one or two villages. 90% of the population are representatives of 120 peoples, their number is more than 1 million people, 2/3 of them are peoples with more than 5 million people, 1/3 - peoples with more than 10 million people (this is 50% of the total population of Africa) - Arabs , Hausa, Fulbe, Yoruba, Igbo, Amhara, Oromo, Rwanda, Malagasy, Zulu...

There are two historical and ethnographic provinces: North African (the predominance of the Indo-European race) and Tropical-African (the majority of the population is the Negroid race), it is divided into such areas as:

  • West Africa. The peoples speaking the Mande languages ​​(Susu, Maninka, Mende, Wai), Chadic (Hausa), Nilo-Saharan (Songhai, Kanuri, Tubu, Zagawa, Mawa, etc.), Niger-Congo languages ​​(Yoruba, Igbo, Bini, nupe, gbari, igala and idoma, ibibio, efik, kambari, birom and jukun, etc.);
  • Equatorial Africa. Inhabited by Buanto-speaking peoples: Duala, Fang, Bubi (Fernandese), Mpongwe, Teke, Mboshi, Ngala, Komo, Mongo, Tetela, Cuba, Kongo, Ambundu, Ovimbundu, Chokwe, Luena, Tonga, Pygmies, etc.;
  • South Africa. Rebellious-speaking peoples, and speaking Khoisan languages: Bushmen and Hottentots;
  • East Africa. Bantu, Nilotic and Sudanese groups of peoples;
  • North East Africa. Peoples speaking Ethio-Semitic (Amhara, Tigre, Tigra.), Cushitic (Oromo, Somalis, Sidamo, Agau, Afar, Konso, etc.) and Omotian languages ​​(Ometo, Gimirra, etc.);
  • Madagascar. Malagasy and Creoles.

In the North African province, the main peoples are considered to be Arabs and Berbers, belonging to the South Caucasian minor race, mainly practicing Sunni Islam. There is also an ethno-religious group of Copts, who are direct descendants of the Ancient Egyptians, they are Monophysite Christians.

IN Lately ratings have become very popular. On the one hand, they look conceived somehow primitive, PR and subjective. On the other hand, in my opinion, they help to structure large amounts of information and squeeze out a lot of water and informational noise. I also decided to take a swing at our William Shakespeare.

It was possible, of course, to yellow the topic with a catchy headline like “10 places in Africa that you must visit” or something like that. But I will not be like top bloggers :)
Naturally, the concept of "interesting" hints at the subjectivity of the list: what is interesting to one person may be absolutely not interesting to another. Therefore, this is the most subjective, but unbiased list of African interesting things :)

The reasons why people go to Africa can be divided into 3 components - animals, people and nature. For me, this is an axiom, which formed the basis of the list.

Valley of the Omo River. Ethiopia

Brent Stirton
A unique place in Africa, and, possibly, on the entire planet, where original tribes still remain, minimally affected by civilization. Mursi, Surma, Erbore, Hamer... Each tribe is unique in its way of life, traditions, decorations of its own body. In the Omo Valley, you seem to be moving in a time machine for many centuries, or even millennia, back to the primitive communal system.
Of course, the proximity to the benefits of civilization had an impact on the tribes of this part of Ethiopia. The war that continued here for a considerable time also has an effect. Many men instead of spears and bows carry Kalashnikovs, for example. The local population has already become accustomed to the fact that tourists are regularly brought to them, and even learned to benefit from this. Do not expect that you will be able to photograph the exotic appearance of these proud sons of Africa for free. Each frame counts and payment is inevitable :)

Masai Mara National Park. Kenya

Perhaps the most promoted national park in Africa, an icon of the tourism industry in Kenya, one of the best parks on the continent. The Masai Mara is often written in superlatives and, it should be noted, deservedly so.
The park is like a continuation of the Serengeti, only in Kenya.
The Masai Mara is famous for its lion prides, and in general it is one of the best places in Africa to watch the big three cats: lions, leopards and cheetahs.

And, of course, do not forget about the great migration that takes place in the Masai Mara from July to October, when millions of wildebeest herds arrive in the park from Tanzania. at this time the most spectacular.

Amboseli National Park. Kenya

Kilimanjaro is the same symbol of Africa as the Victoria Falls or the Cape of Good Hope, and despite the fact that the mountain itself is located in Tanzania, the best and most picturesque view of it opens from the Amboseli National Reserve (Kenya). That is why even many Tanzanian travel sites and offline guides do not hesitate to illustrate articles about Kilimanjaro with photographs taken in Amboseli.
Elephants and Kilimanjaro, giraffes and Kilimanjaro, Masai and Kilimanjaro, African acacias and Kilimanjaro ... If you want to replenish your portfolio with these stories, then you are at.
The park is good in itself, there are all the big five here, but it is Kilimanjaro that makes it special and unique.

Ngorongoro Conservation Area. Tanzania

The highest concentration of wild animals in the world in their natural habitat. This argument immediately gives odds and increases attractiveness. protected area Ngorongoro. The animals here are separated from the rest of the world by the high slopes of the crater of an ancient volcano. As one client said: “Where will they go on a submarine” :)
Ngorongoro boasts the Big 5, and its relatively small size and enclosed space make it one of the most exciting safari experiences in Africa.

Volcanoes National Park. Rwanda

And - the stars of this national park located in the north of Rwanda on the border with the Congo and Uganda. I have not yet met a single person whom these animals would leave indifferent.
In the park, don't expect a traditional jeep safari where you are taken to the animals and all you have to do is press the "masterpiece" button on your precious camera. Moreover, a meeting with these majestic and cute primates must be earned by walking more than one kilometer through the mountain rainforest. But from this impressions become more vivid, and the pictures more valuable :)

Okavango Delta. Botswana

The uniqueness of the Okavango Delta speaks for itself. Not so much in the world of rivers that overflow with a delta without flowing anywhere. The wildest and still untouched by civilization place in Africa. Forget about wi-fi, telephone, TVs, etc. Real tête-à-tête with wildlife Africa in its original form. And be prepared for the fact that wild animals will be closer to you than you might think.
In a unique combination of rich wildlife (the big five is found in) and diverse landscapes. Dream gourmet safari :)

Alley of baobabs. Madagascar

Another symbol of Africa is the baobab. There are quite a few of these giants scattered throughout Africa, but like this, so that there are many in one place ...
In my opinion, just one avenue of baobabs is reason enough to visit Madagascar. And if you add lemurs and other endemics of the island to it, then doubts grow into confidence that you need to go, or rather, fly :)

Victoria Falls. Zimbabwe/Zambia

It is one of the three largest waterfalls in the world and that says it all.

Sossusvlei. Namibia

The highest and most picturesque dunes in the world are about. The most mystical valley of dead trees is about. The Namib Desert has been nominated for various New Wonders of the World, Natural Wonders of the World lists, but has never made it to the finals. And yet, in my opinion, this is one of the most interesting places in Africa where I had to visit.

Cape Town. SOUTH AFRICA. Table Mountain and Cape of Good Hope

With all the desire to ignore Cape Town does not work. Do not give Table Mountain and the Cape of Good Hope.
Table Mountain was included in the list of seven natural wonders of the world, and the Cape of Good Hope is the same iconic point in Africa as the Victoria Falls and Kilimanjaro.

P.S. I am far from thinking that this is the only possible list of the ten most interesting places in Africa. Perhaps someone will think that it lacks the Kruger National Park in South Africa or the Serengeti, the Blyde River Canyon (the world's largest overgrown canyon) or Madagascar scurvy ... And I agree, because there are many interesting places in Africa :)
I'm happy to read alternative opinions.

Africa is the second largest continent after Eurasia, washed by mediterranean sea from the north, Red from the northeast, the Atlantic Ocean from the west, and the Indian Ocean from the east and south. Africa is also called the part of the world, consisting of the mainland Africa and adjacent islands. The area of ​​Africa is 29.2 million km², with islands - about 30.3 million km², thus covering 6% of the total surface area of ​​\u200b\u200bthe Earth and 20.4% of the land surface. On the territory of Africa there are 54 states, 5 unrecognized states and 5 dependent territories (islands).

The population of Africa is about a billion people. Africa is considered the ancestral home of mankind: it was here that the oldest remains of early hominids and their probable ancestors were found, including Sahelanthropus tchadensis, Australopithecus africanus, A. afarensis, Homo erectus, H. habilis and H. ergaster.

The African continent crosses the equator and several climatic zones; it is the only continent that stretches from the northern subtropical climate zone to the southern subtropical one. Due to the lack of permanent rainfall and irrigation - as well as glaciers or the aquifer of mountain systems - there is practically no natural regulation of the climate anywhere except the coasts.

African Studies is the study of the cultural, economic, political and social problems of Africa.

extreme points

  • North - Cape Blanco (Ben Secca, Ras Engela, El Abyad)
  • South - Cape Agulhas
  • Western - Cape Almadi
  • Eastern - Cape Ras Hafun

origin of name

Initially, the inhabitants of ancient Carthage called the word "Afri" people who lived near the city. This name is usually attributed to the Phoenician afar, which means "dust". After the conquest of Carthage, the Romans named the province Africa (lat. Africa). Later, all known regions of this continent began to be called Africa, and then the continent itself.

Another theory is that the name of the people "Afri" comes from the Berber ifri, "cave", referring to the cave dwellers. The Muslim province of Ifriqiya, which arose later on this place, also retained this root in its name.

According to the historian and archaeologist I. Efremov, the word "Africa" ​​came from the ancient language Ta-Kem (Egypt. "Afros" - a foamy country). This is due to the collision of several types of currents that form foam when approaching the continent in the Mediterranean Sea.

There are other versions of the origin of the toponym.

  • Josephus, a Jewish historian of the 1st century, argued that this name comes from the name of Abraham's grandson Ether (Gen. 25:4), whose descendants settled Libya.
  • The Latin word aprica, meaning "sunny", is mentioned in Isidore of Seville's Elements, volume XIV, section 5.2 (VI century).
  • The version about the origin of the name from the Greek word αφρίκη, which means "without cold", was proposed by the historian Leo Africanus. He assumed that the word φρίκη (“cold” and “horror”), combined with the negative prefix α-, denotes a country where there is neither cold nor horror.
  • Gerald Massey, a self-taught poet and Egyptologist, in 1881 put forward a version about the origin of the word from the Egyptian af-rui-ka, "to turn to face the opening of the Ka." Ka is the energy double of each person, and the "hole of Ka" means the womb or birthplace. Africa, therefore, for the Egyptians means "homeland".

History of Africa

prehistoric period

At the beginning of the Mesozoic era, when Africa was part of the single continent of Pangea, and until the end of the Triassic period, theropods and primitive ornithischians dominated this region. The excavations carried out at the end of the Triassic period testify to the greater population of the south of the mainland, and not the north.

Human Origins

Africa is considered the birthplace of man. The remains of the oldest species of the genus Homo have been found here. Of the eight species of this genus, only one survived - a reasonable person, and in a small number (about 1000 individuals) began to settle in Africa about 100,000 years ago. And already from Africa, people migrated to Asia (about 60 - 40 thousand years ago), and from there to Europe (40 thousand years), Australia and America (35 -15 thousand years ago).

Africa during the Stone Age

The oldest archaeological finds that testify to the processing of grain in Africa date back to the thirteenth millennium BC. e. Pastoralism in the Sahara began c. 7500 BC e., and organized agriculture in the Nile region appeared in the 6th millennium BC. e.

In the Sahara, which was then a fertile territory, groups of hunters-fishers lived, archaeological finds testify to this. Throughout the Sahara (present-day Algeria, Libya, Egypt, Chad, etc.), many petroglyphs and rock paintings dating from 6000 BC have been discovered. e. until the 7th century AD. e. The most famous monument of the primitive art of North Africa is the Tassilin-Adjer plateau.

In addition to the group of Saharan monuments, rock painting also found in Somalia and South Africa (the oldest drawings date back to the 25th millennium BC).

Linguistic data show that ethnic groups speaking Bantu languages ​​migrated in a southwesterly direction, displacing the Khoisan peoples (Xhosa, Zulu, etc.) from there. Bantu settlements have yielded a characteristic array of crops suitable for tropical Africa, including cassava and yams.

A small number of ethnic groups, such as the Bushmen, continue to lead a primitive way of life, hunting, gathering, like their ancestors several millennia ago.

ancient africa

North Africa

By the 6th-5th millennium BC. e. agricultural cultures (Tasian culture, Fayum culture, Merimde) were formed in the Nile Valley, on the basis of which in the 4th millennium BC. e. Ancient Egypt emerged. To the south of it, also on the Nile, under its influence, the Kerma-Kushite civilization was formed, which was replaced in the 2nd millennium BC. e. Nubian (state formation of Napata). On its ruins, Aloa, Mukurra, the Nabataean kingdom, and others were formed, which were under the cultural and political influence of Ethiopia, Coptic Egypt and Byzantium.

In the north of the Ethiopian highlands, under the influence of the South Arabian Sabaean kingdom, the Ethiopian civilization arose: in the 5th century BC. e. immigrants from South Arabia formed the Ethiopian kingdom, in the II-XI centuries AD. e. there was the Aksumite kingdom, on the basis of which Christian Ethiopia was formed (XII-XVI centuries). These centers of civilization were surrounded by the pastoral tribes of the Libyans, as well as the ancestors of the modern Cushite- and Nilotic-speaking peoples.

As a result of the development of horse breeding (which appeared in the first centuries AD), as well as camel breeding and oasis agriculture, the Sahara appeared trading cities Telgi, Debris, Garama, the Libyan letter arose.

On the Mediterranean coast of Africa in the XII-II centuries BC. e. the Phoenician-Carthaginian civilization flourished. The neighborhood of the Carthaginian slave-owning power had an impact on the Libyan population. By the 4th century BC e. there were large alliances of Libyan tribes - Mauretans (modern Morocco to the lower reaches of the Muluya River) and Numidians (from the Muluya River to the Carthaginian possessions). By the III century BC. e. there were conditions for the formation of states (see Numidia and Mauretania).

After the defeat of Carthage by Rome, its territory became the Roman province of Africa. Eastern Numidia in 46 BC was turned into the Roman province of New Africa, and in 27 BC. e. both provinces were united into one, ruled by proconsuls. The Mauretanian kings became vassals of Rome, and in 42 the country was divided into two provinces: Mauretania Tingitana and Mauretania Caesarea.

The weakening of the Roman Empire in the III century caused a crisis in the provinces of North Africa, which contributed to the success of the invasions of the barbarians (Berbers, Goths, Vandals). With the support of the local population, the barbarians overthrew the power of Rome and formed in North Africa several states: the kingdom of the Vandals, the Berber kingdom of Jedar (between Muluya and Ores) and a number of smaller Berber principalities.

In the VI century, North Africa was conquered by Byzantium, but the position of the central government was fragile. The African provincial nobility often entered into allied relations with the barbarians and other external enemies of the empire. In 647, the Carthaginian exarch Gregory (cousin-nephew of Emperor Heraclius I), taking advantage of the weakening of imperial power due to the blows of the Arabs, broke away from Constantinople and proclaimed himself emperor of Africa. One of the manifestations of the dissatisfaction of the population with the policy of Byzantium was the widespread dissemination of heresies (Arianism, Donatism, Monophysitism). Muslim Arabs became an ally of heretical movements. In 647, the Arab troops defeated the army of Gregory in the battle of Sufetul, which led to the rejection of Egypt from Byzantium. In 665, the Arabs repeated the invasion of North Africa, and by 709, all the African provinces of Byzantium became part of the Arab Caliphate (for more details, see Arab conquests).

Africa south of the Sahara

Africa south of the Sahara in the 1st millennium BC. e. iron metallurgy spread throughout the world. This contributed to the development of new territories, primarily tropical forests, and became one of the reasons for the settlement of most of Tropical and South Africa by Bantu-speaking peoples, who displaced representatives of the Ethiopian and capoid races to the north and south.

The centers of civilizations in Tropical Africa spread from north to south (in the eastern part of the continent) and partly from east to west (especially in the western part).

The Arabs, who penetrated North Africa in the 7th century, until the advent of Europeans, became the main intermediaries between Tropical Africa and the rest of the world, including through the Indian Ocean. The cultures of Western and Central Sudan formed a single West African, or Sudanese, cultural zone that stretched from Senegal to the modern Republic of Sudan. In the II millennium, most of this zone was part of the large state formations of Ghana, Kanem-Borno Mali (XIII-XV centuries), Songhai.

South of the Sudanese civilizations in the 7th-9th centuries AD. e. the Ife state formation was formed, which became the cradle of the Yoruba and Bini civilization (Benin, Oyo); neighboring nations also experienced their influence. To the west of it, in the 2nd millennium, the Akano-Ashanti proto-civilization was formed, which flourished in the 17th-early 19th centuries.

In the region of Central Africa during the XV-XIX centuries. various state formations gradually arose - Buganda, Rwanda, Burundi, etc.

Since the 10th century, Swahili Muslim culture has flourished in East Africa (the city-states of Kilwa, Pate, Mombasa, Lamu, Malindi, Sofala, and others, the Zanzibar Sultanate).

In Southeast Africa - the Zimbabwean (Zimbabwe, Monomotapa) proto-civilization (X-XIX centuries), in Madagascar the process of state formation ended at the beginning of the XIX century with the unification of all the early political formations of the island around Imerin.

The arrival of Europeans in Africa

The penetration of Europeans into Africa began in the 15th-16th centuries; The greatest contribution to the development of the continent at the first stage was made by the Spaniards and the Portuguese after the completion of the Reconquista. Already at the end of the 15th century, the Portuguese actually controlled West Coast Africa and in the XVI century launched an active slave trade. Following them, almost all Western European powers rushed to Africa: Holland, Spain, Denmark, France, England, Germany.

The slave trade with Zanzibar gradually led to the colonization of East Africa; Morocco's attempts to seize the Sahel failed.

All North Africa (except Morocco) became part of the Ottoman Empire by the beginning of the 17th century. With the final division of Africa between the European powers (1880s), the colonial period began, forcibly introducing Africans to industrial civilization.

Colonization of Africa

The process of colonization took on a large scale in the second half of the 19th century, especially after 1885 with the start of the so-called race or fight for Africa. Almost the entire continent (except for Ethiopia and Liberia, which remained independent) by 1900 was divided between a number of European states: Great Britain, France, Germany, Belgium, Italy, Spain and Portugal retained and somewhat expanded their old colonies.

The most extensive and richest were the possessions of Great Britain. In the southern and central part of the continent:

  • cape colony,
  • Natal,
  • Bechuanaland (now Botswana)
  • Basutoland (Lesotho),
  • swaziland,
  • Southern Rhodesia (Zimbabwe),
  • Northern Rhodesia (Zambia).

East:

  • Kenya,
  • Uganda,
  • Zanzibar,
  • British Somalia.

In the north-east:

  • Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, formally considered a co-ownership of England and Egypt.

In the West:

  • Nigeria,
  • Sierra Leone,
  • Gambia
  • Golden shore.

In the Indian Ocean

  • Mauritius (island)
  • Seychelles.

The colonial empire of France was not inferior in size to the British, but the population of its colonies was several times smaller, and the natural resources were poorer. Most of the French possessions were located in West and Equatorial Africa, and a large part of their territory fell on the Sahara, the adjacent semi-desert Sahel region and tropical forests:

  • French Guinea (now the Republic of Guinea),
  • Ivory Coast (Cote d'Ivoire),
  • Upper Volta (Burkina Faso),
  • Dahomey (Benin),
  • Mauritania,
  • Niger,
  • Senegal,
  • French Sudan (Mali),
  • Gabon,
  • Middle Congo (Republic of the Congo),
  • Ubangi-Shari (Central African Republic),
  • French coast of Somalia (Djibouti),
  • Madagascar,
  • Comoros,
  • Reunion.

Portugal owned Angola, Mozambique, Portuguese Guinea (Guinea-Bissau), which included the Cape Verde Islands (Republic of Cape Verde), Sao Tome and Principe.

Belgium owned the Belgian Congo (Democratic Republic of the Congo, and in 1971-1997 - Zaire), Italy - Eritrea and Italian Somalia, Spain - Spanish Sahara (Western Sahara), Northern Morocco, Equatorial Guinea, Canary Islands; Germany - German East Africa (now - the continental part of Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi), Cameroon, Togo and German South-West Africa (Namibia).

The main incentives that led to the heated battle between the European powers for Africa are considered to be economic ones. Indeed, the desire for exploitation natural resources and the population of Africa was of paramount importance. But it cannot be said that these hopes were immediately justified. The south of the continent, where the world's largest deposits of gold and diamonds were discovered, began to give huge profits. But before generating income, large investments were first needed to explore natural resources, create communications, adapt the local economy to the needs of the metropolis, to suppress the protests of the indigenous people and find effective ways to make them work for the colonial system. All this took time. Another argument of the ideologues of colonialism was not immediately justified either. They argued that the acquisition of colonies would create many jobs in the metropolises themselves and eliminate unemployment, since Africa would become a capacious market for European products and huge construction of railways, ports, and industrial enterprises would unfold there. If these plans were implemented, then more slowly than expected, and on a smaller scale. The argument that the surplus population of Europe would move to Africa turned out to be untenable. The resettlement flows turned out to be less than expected, and were mainly limited to the south of the continent, Angola, Mozambique, Kenya - countries where the climate and other natural conditions were suitable for Europeans. The countries of the Gulf of Guinea, dubbed "the white man's grave," seduced few.

Period of colonial rule

African Theater of World War I

The First World War was a struggle for the redivision of Africa, but it did not affect the lives of most African countries particularly strongly. Military operations covered the territories of the German colonies. They were conquered by the Entente troops and after the war, by decision of the League of Nations, they were transferred to the Entente countries as mandated territories: Togo and Cameroon were divided between Great Britain and France, German South-West Africa went to the Union of South Africa (SA), part of German East Africa - Rwanda and Burundi - was transferred to Belgium, the other - Tanganyika - to Great Britain.

With the acquisition of Tanganyika, an old dream of the British ruling circles came true: a continuous strip of British possessions arose from Cape Town to Cairo. After the end of the war, the process of colonial development of Africa accelerated. The colonies were increasingly turning into agricultural and raw material appendages of the metropolises. Agriculture is increasingly export-oriented.

Interwar period

In the interwar period, the composition of agricultural crops grown by Africans changed dramatically - the production of export crops increased sharply: coffee - 11 times, tea - 10, cocoa beans - 6, peanuts - more than 4, tobacco - 3 times, etc. E. An increasing number of colonies became countries of monocultural economy. On the eve of the Second World War, in many countries from two-thirds to 98% of the value of all exports came from any one crop. In the Gambia and Senegal, peanuts became such a crop, in Zanzibar - cloves, in Uganda - cotton, on the Gold Coast - cocoa beans, in French Guinea - bananas and pineapples, in Southern Rhodesia - tobacco. In some countries there were two export crops: on the Ivory Coast and in Togo - coffee and cocoa, in Kenya - coffee and tea, etc. In Gabon and some other countries, valuable forest species became a monoculture.

The emerging industry - mainly mining - was designed for export to an even greater extent. She developed quickly. In the Belgian Congo, for example, copper mining increased more than 20 times between 1913 and 1937. By 1937, Africa occupied an impressive place in the capitalist world in the production of mineral raw materials. It accounted for 97% of all mined diamonds, 92% of cobalt, more than 40% of gold, chromites, lithium minerals, manganese ore, phosphorites and more than a third of all platinum production. In West Africa, as well as in most parts of East and Central Africa, export products were produced mainly on the farms of the Africans themselves. European plantation production did not take root there due to climatic conditions difficult for Europeans. The main exploiters of the African manufacturer were foreign companies. Export agricultural products were produced on farms owned by Europeans located in the Union of South Africa, Southern Rhodesia, part of Northern Rhodesia, Kenya, South West Africa.

African Theater of World War II

The fighting during the Second World War on the African continent is divided into two areas: the North African campaign, which affected Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco and was integral part the most important Mediterranean theater of operations, as well as the autonomous African theater of operations, the battles in which were of secondary importance.

During the Second World War, military operations in Tropical Africa were conducted only in Ethiopia, Eritrea and Italian Somalia. In 1941, British troops, together with Ethiopian partisans and with the active participation of the Somalis, occupied the territories of these countries. In other countries of Tropical and South Africa, military operations were not conducted (with the exception of Madagascar). But hundreds of thousands of Africans were mobilized in the armies of the mother countries. An even greater number of people had to serve the troops, work for military needs. Africans fought in North Africa, Western Europe, the Middle East, Burma, Malaya. On the territory of the French colonies, there was a struggle between the Vichy and supporters of the "Free France", which, as a rule, did not lead to military clashes.

Decolonization of Africa

After the Second World War, the process of decolonization of Africa quickly began. 1960 was declared the Year of Africa - the year of the liberation of the largest number of colonies. In this year, 17 states gained independence. Most of them are French colonies and UN trust territories administered by France: Cameroon, Togo, Malagasy Republic, Congo (former French Congo), Dahomey, Upper Volta, Ivory Coast, Chad, Central African Republic, Gabon, Mauritania, Niger, Senegal, Mali. The largest country in Africa in terms of population - Nigeria, which belonged to Great Britain, and the largest in terms of territory - the Belgian Congo were proclaimed independent. British Somalia and the Italian-administered Trust Somalia were merged to become the Somali Democratic Republic.

1960 changed the whole situation on the African continent. The dismantling of the rest of the colonial regimes has already become inevitable. Sovereign states were proclaimed:

  • in 1961 the British possessions of Sierra Leone and Tanganyika;
  • in 1962 - Uganda, Burundi and Rwanda;
  • in 1963 - Kenya and Zanzibar;
  • in 1964 - Northern Rhodesia (which called itself the Republic of Zambia, after the name of the Zambezi River) and Nyasaland (Malawi); in the same year, Tanganyika and Zanzibar merged to form the Republic of Tanzania;
  • in 1965 - Gambia;
  • in 1966 - Bechuanaland became the Republic of Botswana and Basutoland became the Kingdom of Lesotho;
  • in 1968 - Mauritius, Equatorial Guinea and Swaziland;
  • in 1973 - Guinea-Bissau;
  • in 1975 (after the revolution in Portugal) - Angola, Mozambique, the Cape Verde Islands and Sao Tome and Principe, as well as 3 of the 4 Comoros (Mayotte remained the possession of France);
  • in 1977 - the Seychelles, and French Somalia became the Republic of Djibouti;
  • in 1980 - Southern Rhodesia became the Republic of Zimbabwe;
  • in 1990 - Trust Territory of South West Africa - Republic of Namibia.

The declaration of independence of Kenya, Zimbabwe, Angola, Mozambique and Namibia was preceded by wars, uprisings, guerrilla struggle. But for most African countries, the final stage of the journey was passed without major bloodshed, it was the result of mass demonstrations and strikes, the negotiation process, and, in relation to the trust territories, the decisions of the United Nations.

Due to the fact that the borders of African states during the "race for Africa" ​​were drawn artificially, without taking into account the resettlement of various peoples and tribes, as well as the fact that the traditional African society was not ready for democracy, civil wars began in many African countries after gaining independence. war. Dictators came to power in many countries. The resulting regimes are characterized by disregard for human rights, bureaucracy, totalitarianism, which in turn leads to economic crisis and growing poverty.

Currently under control European countries are:

  • Spanish enclaves in Morocco Ceuta and Melilla, Canary Islands (Spain),
  • St. Helena, Ascension, Tristan da Cunha and Chagos Archipelago (UK),
  • Reunion, Eparse and Mayotte Islands (France),
  • Madeira (Portugal).

Change of state names

During the period of African countries gaining independence, many of them changed their names for various reasons. These could be secessions, unifications, regime changes or the acquisition of sovereignty by the country. The phenomenon of renaming African proper names (names of countries, personal names of people) in order to reflect African identity has been called Africanization.

Previous name Year Current title
Portuguese South West Africa 1975 Republic of Angola
Dahomey 1975 Republic of Benin
Bechuanaland Protectorate 1966 Republic of Botswana
Republic of Upper Volta 1984 Republic of Burkina Faso
Ubangi Shari 1960 Central African Republic
Republic of Zaire 1997 Democratic Republic of the Congo
Middle Congo 1960 Republic of the Congo
Ivory Coast 1985 Republic of Ivory Coast*
French territory of the Afars and Issas 1977 Republic of Djibouti
Spanish Guinea 1968 Republic of Equatorial Guinea
Abyssinia 1941 Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia
Golden shore 1957 Republic of Ghana
part of French West Africa 1958 Republic of Guinea
Portuguese Guinea 1974 Republic of Guinea-Bissau
Basutoland Protectorate 1966 Kingdom of Lesotho
Nyasaland Protectorate 1964 Republic of Malawi
French Sudan 1960 Republic of Mali
German South West Africa 1990 Republic of Namibia
German East Africa / Ruanda-Urundi 1962 Republic of Rwanda / Republic of Burundi
British Somaliland / Italian Somaliland 1960 Republic of Somalia
Zanzibar / Tanganyika 1964 United Republic of Tanzania
Buganda 1962 Republic of Uganda
Northern Rhodesia 1964 Republic of Zambia
Southern Rhodesia 1980 Republic of Zimbabwe

* The Republic of Côte d'Ivoire did not change its name as such, but required that other languages ​​use the French name of the country (French Côte d'Ivoire), and not its literal translation into other languages ​​(Ivory Coast, Ivory Coast, Elfenbeinküste, etc.).

Geographic research

David Livingston

David Livingston decided to study the rivers of South Africa and find natural passages deep into the mainland. He sailed the Zambezi, discovered the Victoria Falls, defined the watershed of Lake Nyasa, Taganika and the Lualaba River. In 1849, he was the first European to cross the Kalahari Desert and explore Lake Ngami. During his last journey, he tried to find the source of the Nile.

Heinrich Barth

Heinrich Barth established that Lake Chad is drainless, was the first European to study the rock paintings of the ancient inhabitants of the Sahara and expressed his assumptions about climate change in North Africa.

Russian explorers

Mining engineer, traveler Egor Petrovich Kovalevsky helped the Egyptians in search of gold deposits, studied the tributaries of the Blue Nile. Vasily Vasilyevich Junker explored the watershed of the main African rivers - the Nile, the Congo and the Niger.

Geography of Africa

Africa covers an area of ​​30.3 million km². The length from north to south is 8 thousand km, from west to east in the northern part - 7.5 thousand km.

Relief

For the most part - flat, in the north-west are the Atlas Mountains, in the Sahara - the highlands of Ahaggar and Tibesti. In the east - the Ethiopian Highlands, to the south of it the East African Plateau, where the volcano Kilimanjaro (5895 m) is located - the highest point on the mainland. To the south are the Cape and Dragon Mountains. The lowest point (157 meters below sea level) is located in Djibouti, this is the salt lake Assal. The deepest cave is Anu Ifflis, located in the north of Algeria in the Tel Atlas mountains.

Minerals

Africa is known primarily for its richest deposits of diamonds (South Africa, Zimbabwe) and gold (South Africa, Ghana, Mali, Republic of the Congo). There are large oil fields in Nigeria and Algeria. Bauxites are mined in Guinea and Ghana. The resources of phosphorites, as well as manganese, iron and lead-zinc ores are concentrated in the zone of the northern coast of Africa.

Inland waters

Africa has one of the longest rivers in the world - the Nile (6852 km), flowing from south to north. Other major rivers are the Niger in the west, the Congo in central Africa, and the Zambezi, Limpopo and Orange rivers in the south.

The largest lake is Victoria. Other large lakes- Nyasa and Tanganyika, located in lithospheric faults. One of the largest salt lakes is Lake Chad, located on the territory of the state of the same name.

Climate

Africa is the hottest continent on the planet. The reason for this is the geographical location of the mainland: the entire territory of Africa is located in hot climatic zones and the mainland is crossed by the equator line. It is in Africa that the hottest place on Earth is located - Dallol, and the highest temperature on Earth (+58.4 ° C) was recorded.

Central Africa and the coastal regions of the Gulf of Guinea belong to the equatorial belt, where heavy rainfall occurs throughout the year and there is no change of seasons. To the north and south of the equatorial belt are subequatorial belts. Here, humid equatorial air masses dominate in summer (rainy season), and in winter - dry air of tropical trade winds (dry season). To the north and south of the subequatorial belts are the northern and southern tropical belts. They are characterized by high temperatures with low rainfall, which leads to the formation of deserts.

To the north is the largest desert on Earth, the Sahara Desert, to the south, the Kalahari Desert. The northern and southern extremities of the mainland are included in the corresponding subtropical belts.

Fauna of Africa, Flora of Africa

The flora of the tropical, equatorial and subequatorial zones is diverse. Ceiba, pipdatenia, terminalia, combretum, brachistegia, isoberlinia, pandanus, tamarind, sundew, pemphigus, palm trees and many others grow everywhere. The savannas are dominated by low trees and thorny shrubs (acacia, terminalia, bush).

Desert vegetation, on the other hand, is sparse, consisting of small communities of grasses, shrubs, and trees growing in oases, highlands, and along waters. Salt-resistant halophyte plants are found in the depressions. On the least watered plains and plateaus grow species of grasses, small shrubs and trees that are resistant to drought and heat. The flora of the desert regions is well adapted to the irregularity of rainfall. This is reflected in a wide variety of physiological adaptations, habitat preferences, the creation of dependent and related communities, and reproduction strategies. Perennial drought-resistant grasses and shrubs have an extensive and deep (up to 15-20 m) root system. Many of the herbaceous plants are ephemera, which can produce seeds in three days after sufficient moisture and sow them within 10-15 days after that.

In the mountainous regions of the Sahara desert, there is a relict Neogene flora, often related to the Mediterranean one, and many endemics. Among the relic woody plants growing in mountainous areas are some types of olive, cypress and mastic tree. There are also species of acacia, tamarisks and wormwood, doom palm, oleander, date palm, thyme, ephedra. Dates, figs, olive and fruit trees, some citrus fruits, and various vegetables are cultivated in the oases. Herbal plants that grow in many parts of the desert are represented by the genera triostnitsa, field grass and millet. Coastal grasses and other salt-tolerant grasses grow along the coast of the Atlantic Ocean. Various combinations of ephemera form seasonal pastures called ashebs. Algae are found in water bodies.

In many desert areas (rivers, hamads, partially accumulations of sand, etc.), there is no vegetation cover at all. The vegetation of almost all regions has been strongly affected by human activities (grazing, gathering useful plants, procuring fuel, etc.).

A remarkable plant of the Namib Desert is tumboa, or Welwitschia (Welwitschia mirabilis). It grows two giant leaves slowly growing all its life (over 1000 years), which can exceed 3 meters in length. The leaves are attached to a stem that resembles a huge cone-shaped radish with a diameter of 60 to 120 centimeters, and sticks out of the ground for 30 centimeters. Welwitschia roots go down to a depth of 3 m. Welwitschia is known for its ability to grow in extremely dry conditions, using dew and fog as its main source of moisture. Welwitschia - endemic to the northern Namib - is depicted on the state emblem of Namibia.

In slightly wetter places in the desert, another famous plant Namiba - Nara (Acanthosicyos horridus), (endemic), which grows on sand dunes. Its fruits constitute a food base and a source of moisture for many animals, African elephants, antelopes, porcupines, etc.

From prehistoric times in Africa preserved the largest number members of the megafauna. The tropical equatorial and subequatorial zones are inhabited by a variety of mammals: okapi, antelopes (duikers, bongos), pygmy hippopotamus, brush-eared pig, warthog, galago, monkeys, flying squirrels (spine-tailed), lemurs (on the island of Madagascar), viverras, chimpanzees, gorillas, etc. Nowhere in the world is there such an abundance of large animals as in the African savannah: elephants, hippos, lions, giraffes, leopards, cheetahs, antelopes (cannes), zebras, monkeys, secretary bird, hyenas, African ostrich, meerkats. Some elephants, Kaffa buffaloes and white rhinoceroses live only in reserves.

Birds are dominated by jaco, turaco, guinea fowl, hornbill (kalao), cockatoo, marabou.

Reptiles and amphibians of the tropical equatorial and subequatorial zones - mamba (one of the most poisonous snakes in the world), crocodile, python, tree frogs, poison dart frogs and marble frogs.

In wet climatic zones the malarial mosquito and the tsetse fly are common, causing sleeping sickness in both humans and mammals.

Ecology

In November 2009, GreenPeace published a report indicating that two villages in Niger near the uranium mines of the French multinational company Areva have dangerously high levels of radiation. The main environmental problems of Africa: Desertification is a problem in the northern part, deforestation in the central part.

Political division

There are 55 countries and 5 self-proclaimed and unrecognized states in Africa. Most of them were colonies of European states for a long time and gained independence only in the 50-60s of the XX century. Before that, only Egypt (since 1922), Ethiopia (since the Middle Ages), Liberia (since 1847) and South Africa (since 1910) were independent; in South Africa and Southern Rhodesia (Zimbabwe), until the 80-90s of the 20th century, the apartheid regime, which discriminated against the indigenous (black) population, continued. Currently, many African countries are ruled by regimes that discriminate against the white population. According to the research organization Freedom House, in recent years in many African countries (for example, in Nigeria, Mauritania, Senegal, Congo (Kinshasa) and Equatorial Guinea), there has been a trend towards authoritarian democratic achievements.

In the north of the continent are the territories of Spain (Ceuta, Melilla, Canary Islands) and Portugal (Madeira).

Countries and territories

Area (km²)

Population

Population density

Algeria
Egypt
West Sahara
Libya
Mauritania
Mali
Morocco
Niger 13 957 000
Sudan
Tunisia
Chad

Ndjamena

Spanish and Portuguese territories in North Africa:

Countries and territories

Area (km²)

Population

Population density

Canary Islands (Spain)

Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Santa Cruz de Tenerife

Madeira (Portugal)
Melilla (Spain)
Ceuta (Spain)
Lesser Sovereign Territories (Spain)
Countries and territories

Area (km²)

Population

Population density

Benin

Cotonou, Porto-Novo

Burkina Faso

Ouagadougou

Gambia
Ghana
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Cape Verde
Ivory Coast

Yamoussoukro

Liberia

Monrovia

Nigeria
Senegal
Sierra Leone
Togo
Countries and territories

Area (km²)

Population

Population density

Gabon

Libreville

Cameroon
DR Congo
Republic of the Congo

Brazzaville

Sao Tome and Principe
CAR
Equatorial Guinea
Countries and territories

Area (km²)

Population

Population density

Burundi

Bujumbura

British Indian Ocean Territory (dependency)

Diego Garcia

Galmudug (unrecognized state)

galcayo

Djibouti
Kenya
Puntland (unrecognized state)
Rwanda
Somalia

Mogadishu

Somaliland (unrecognized state)

Hargeisa

Tanzania
Uganda
Eritrea
Ethiopia

Addis Ababa

South Sudan

Countries and territories

Area (km²)

Population

Population density

Angola
Botswana

Gaborone

Zimbabwe
Comoros
Lesotho
Mauritius
Madagascar

Antananarivo

Mayotte (dependent territory, overseas region of France)
Malawi

Lilongwe

Mozambique
Namibia
Reunion (dependent territory, overseas region of France)
Swaziland
Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha (Dependent Territory (UK)

Jamestown

Seychelles

Victoria

Eparce Islands (dependent territory, overseas region of France)
Republic of South Africa

Bloemfontein,

Cape Town,

Pretoria

African Union

In 1963, the Organization of African Unity (OAU) was created, uniting 53 African states. This organization on July 9, 2002 was officially transformed into the African Union.

The President of the African Union is elected for a year by the head of one of the African states. The African Union has its headquarters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

The objectives of the African Union are:

  • promoting the political and socio-economic integration of the continent;
  • promotion and protection of the interests of the continent and its population;
  • achieving peace and security in Africa;
  • promoting the development of democratic institutions, wise leadership and human rights.

The African Union does not include Morocco - in protest against the admission of Western Sahara, which Morocco considers its territory.

Economy of Africa

General economic and geographical characteristics of African countries

A feature of the geographical position of many countries in the region is the lack of access to the sea. At the same time, in countries facing the ocean, coastline It is poorly indented, which is unfavorable for the construction of large ports.

Africa is exceptionally rich natural resources. Especially large are the reserves of mineral raw materials - ores of manganese, chromites, bauxites, etc. Fuel raw materials are available in depressions and coastal regions. Oil and gas are produced in North and West Africa (Nigeria, Algeria, Egypt, Libya). Enormous reserves of cobalt and copper ores are concentrated in Zambia and the Democratic Republic of the Congo; manganese ores are mined in South Africa and Zimbabwe; platinum, iron ores and gold - in South Africa; diamonds - in Congo, Botswana, South Africa, Namibia, Angola, Ghana; phosphorites - in Morocco, Tunisia; uranium - in Niger, Namibia.

In Africa, there are quite large land resources, but soil erosion has become catastrophic due to improper processing. Water resources distributed very unevenly throughout Africa. Forests occupy about 10% of the territory, but as a result of predatory destruction, their area is rapidly declining.

Africa has the highest rate of natural population growth. The natural increase in many countries exceeds 30 persons per 1,000 inhabitants per year. A high proportion of children's ages (50%) and a small proportion of older people (about 5%) remain.

African countries have not yet succeeded in changing the colonial type of the sectoral and territorial structure of the economy, although the pace of economic growth has somewhat accelerated. The colonial type of the sectoral structure of the economy is distinguished by the predominance of small-scale, consumer agriculture, the weak development of the manufacturing industry, and the lag in the development of transport. African countries have achieved the greatest success in the mining industry. In the extraction of many minerals, Africa holds a leading and sometimes monopoly place in the world (in the extraction of gold, diamonds, platinoids, etc.). The manufacturing industry is represented by light and food industries, other industries are absent, with the exception of a number of areas near the availability of raw materials and on the coast (Egypt, Algeria, Morocco, Nigeria, Zambia, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo).

The second branch of the economy, which determines Africa's place in the world economy, is tropical and subtropical agriculture. Agricultural products make up 60-80% of GDP. The main cash crops are coffee, cocoa beans, peanuts, dates, tea, natural rubber, sorghum, spices. Recently, grain crops have been grown: corn, rice, wheat. Animal husbandry plays a subordinate role, with the exception of countries with arid climates. Extensive cattle breeding prevails, characterized by a huge number of livestock, but low productivity and low marketability. The continent does not provide itself with agricultural products.

Transport also retains a colonial type: railways go from the regions of extraction of raw materials to the port, while the regions of one state are practically not connected. Relatively developed rail and sea modes of transport. In recent years, other types of transport have also been developed - automobile (a road has been laid across the Sahara), air, and pipeline.

All countries, with the exception of South Africa, are developing, most of them are the poorest in the world (70% of the population lives below the poverty line).

Problems and difficulties of African states

Swollen, unprofessional and inefficient bureaucracies have emerged in most African states. Given the amorphous nature of social structures, the army remained the only organized force. The result is endless military coups. The dictators who came to power appropriated untold wealth. The capital of Mobutu, the President of the Congo, at the time of his overthrow was $ 7 billion. The economy functioned poorly, and this gave room for a "destructive" economy: the production and distribution of drugs, illegal mining of gold and diamonds, even human trafficking. Africa's share in world GDP and its share in world exports were declining, output per capita was declining.

The formation of statehood was extremely complicated by the absolute artificiality of state borders. Africa inherited them from the colonial past. They were established during the division of the continent into spheres of influence and have little in common with ethnic boundaries. The Organization of African Unity, created in 1963, realizing that any attempt to correct this or that border could lead to unpredictable consequences, called for these borders to be considered unshakable, no matter how unfair they may be. But these borders have nevertheless become a source of ethnic conflict and the displacement of millions of refugees.

The main branch of the economy of most countries in Tropical Africa is agriculture, designed to provide food for the population and serve as a raw material base for the development of the manufacturing industry. It employs the predominant part of the region's able-bodied population and creates the bulk of the total national income. In many states of Tropical Africa, agriculture occupies a leading place in exports, providing a significant part of foreign exchange earnings. In the last decade, an alarming picture has been observed with the growth rates of industrial production, which allows us to speak about the actual deindustrialization of the region. If in 1965-1980 they (on average per year) amounted to 7.5%, then for the 80s only 0.7%, a drop in growth rates took place in the 80s both in the extractive and manufacturing industries. For a number of reasons, a special role in ensuring the socio-economic development of the region belongs to the mining industry, but even this production is reduced by 2% annually. A characteristic feature of the development of the countries of Tropical Africa is the weak development of the manufacturing industry. Only in a very small group of countries (Zambia, Zimbabwe, Senegal) does its share in GDP reach or exceed 20%.

Integration processes

A characteristic feature of the integration processes in Africa is the high degree of their institutionalization. At present, there are about 200 economic associations of various levels, scales and directions on the continent. But from the point of view of studying the problem of the formation of subregional identity and its relationship with national and ethnic identity, the functioning of such large organizations as the West African Economic Community (ECOWAS), the South African Development Community (SADC), the Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS), etc. The extremely low effectiveness of their activities in previous decades and the advent of the era of globalization required a sharp acceleration of integration processes at a qualitatively different level. Economic cooperation is developing in new - in comparison with the 70s - conditions of contradictory interaction between the globalization of the world economy and the increasing marginalization of the positions of African states within its framework and, naturally, in a different coordinate system. Integration is no longer seen as a tool and basis for the formation of a self-sufficient and self-developing economy, relying on its own forces and as opposed to the imperialist West. The approach is different, which, as mentioned above, represents integration as a way and way to include African countries in the globalizing world economy, as well as an impulse and indicator of economic growth and development in general.

Population, Peoples of Africa, Demographics of Africa

The population of Africa is about 1 billion people. The population growth on the continent is the highest in the world: in 2004 it was 2.3%. Over the past 50 years, the average life expectancy has increased from 39 to 54 years.

The population consists mainly of representatives of two races: the Negroid south of the Sahara, and the Caucasoid in northern Africa (Arabs) and South Africa (Boers and Anglo-South Africans). The most numerous people are the Arabs of North Africa.

During the colonial development of the mainland, many state borders were drawn without taking into account ethnic characteristics, which still leads to interethnic conflicts. The average population density in Africa is 30.5 people/km², which is significantly less than in Europe and Asia.

In terms of urbanization, Africa lags behind other regions - less than 30%, but the rate of urbanization here is the highest in the world, many African countries are characterized by false urbanization. The largest cities on the African continent are Cairo and Lagos.

Languages

The autochthonous languages ​​of Africa are divided into 32 families, of which 3 (Semitic, Indo-European and Austronesian) "penetrated" to the continent from other regions.

There are also 7 isolated and 9 unclassified languages. The most popular native African languages ​​are the Bantu languages ​​(Swahili, Congo), Fula.

Indo-European languages ​​became widespread due to the era of colonial rule: English, Portuguese, French are official in many countries. in Namibia since the beginning of the 20th century. densely populated community that speaks German as the main one. The only language belonging to the Indo-European family that originated on the continent is Afrikaans, one of the 11 official languages ​​of South Africa. Also, communities of Afrikaans speakers live in other countries of South Africa: Botswana, Lesotho, Swaziland, Zimbabwe, Zambia. However, it is worth noting that after the fall of the apartheid regime in South Africa, the Afrikaans language is being replaced by other languages ​​(English and local African). The number of its carriers and scope is declining.

The most common language of the Afroasian language macrofamily, Arabic, is used in North, West and East Africa as a first and second language. Many African languages ​​(Hausa, Swahili) include a significant number of borrowings from Arabic (primarily in the layers of political, religious vocabulary, abstract concepts).

The Austronesian languages ​​are represented by the Malagasy language, which is spoken by the population of Madagascar, Malagasy, a people of Austronesian origin, who presumably came here in the 2nd-5th centuries AD.

The inhabitants of the African continent are characterized by the knowledge of several languages ​​​​at once, which are used in various everyday situations. For example, a representative of a small ethnic group that retains its own language can use the local language in the family circle and in communication with their fellow tribesmen, a regional interethnic language (Lingala in the DRC, Sango in the Central African Republic, Hausa in Nigeria, Bambara in Mali) in communication with representatives of other ethnic groups, and the state language (usually European) in communication with the authorities and other similar situations. At the same time, language proficiency may be limited only by the ability to speak (the literacy rate of the population in Sub-Saharan Africa in 2007 was approximately 50% of total number residents).

Religion in Africa

Islam and Christianity predominate among world religions (the most common denominations are Catholicism, Protestantism, to a lesser extent Orthodoxy, Monophysitism). There are also Buddhists and Hindus in East Africa (many of them are from India). There are also followers of Judaism and Bahaism living in Africa. Religions introduced into Africa from outside are found both in pure form and syncretized with local traditional religions. Among the "major" traditional African religions are Ifa or Bwiti.

Education in Africa

Traditional education in Africa involved preparing children for African realities and life in African society. Education in pre-colonial Africa included games, dancing, singing, painting, ceremonies and rituals. Seniors were engaged in training; Every member of society contributes to the education of the child. Girls and boys were trained separately in order to learn the system of proper gender-role behavior. The apogee of learning was the rituals of passage, symbolizing the end of childhood and the beginning of adulthood.

With the beginning of the colonial period, the education system underwent changes towards the European one, so that Africans could compete with Europe and America. Africa tried to organize the training of its own specialists.

Today, in terms of education, Africa is still lagging behind other parts of the world. In 2000, only 58% of children in sub-Saharan Africa were in school; these are the lowest rates in the world. There are 40 million children in Africa, half of them of school age, who are not in school. Two thirds of them are girls.

In the post-colonial period, African governments placed more emphasis on education; a large number of universities were established, although there was very little money for their development and support, and in some places it stopped altogether. However, universities are overcrowded, which often forces lecturers to lecture in shifts, evenings and weekends. Due to low wages, there is a drain on staff. In addition to the lack of necessary funding, other problems of African universities are the unregulated system of degrees, as well as the inequity in the system of career advancement among the teaching staff, which is not always based on professional merit. This often causes protests and teachers' strikes.

Internal conflicts

Africa has firmly established itself as the most conflicted place on the planet, and the level of stability here not only does not increase over time, but also tends to decrease. During the post-colonial period, 35 armed conflicts were recorded on the continent, during which about 10 million people died, most of which (92%) were civilians. Africa hosts almost 50% of the world's total number of refugees (more than 7 million people) and 60% of the displaced persons (20 million people). For many of them, fate has prepared the tragic fate of the daily struggle for existence.

African culture

For historical reasons, Africa can be culturally divided into two broad regions: North Africa and Sub-Saharan Africa.

African Literature

Africans themselves include both written and oral literature in the concept of African literature. In the minds of Africans, form and content are inseparable from each other. The beauty of presentation is used not so much for its own sake, but to build a more effective dialogue with the listener, and beauty is determined by the degree of truthfulness of the stated.

The oral literature of Africa exists in both verse and prose form. Poetry, often in song form, includes poems proper, epics, ritual songs, laudatory songs, love songs, etc. Prose is most often stories about the past, myths and legends, often with a trickster as a central character. The epic of Sundiata Keita, the founder of the ancient state of Mali, is an important piece of oral literature from the pre-colonial period.

The first written literature of North Africa is recorded in Egyptian papyri, and was also written in Greek, Latin and Phoenician (there are very few sources in Phoenician). Apuleius and Saint Augustine wrote in Latin. The style of Ibn Khaldun, a Tunisian philosopher, stands out prominently among the Arabic literature of that period.

During the colonial period, African literature mainly dealt with the problems of slavery. Joseph Ephrahim Caseley-Hayford's novel Free Ethiopia: Essays on Racial Emancipation, published in 1911, is considered the first English-language work. Although the novel balanced between fiction and political propaganda, it received positive reviews in Western publications.

The theme of freedom and independence was increasingly raised before the end of the colonial period. Since the independence of most countries, African literature has made a giant leap. Many writers appeared, whose works were widely recognized. The works were written both in European languages ​​(mainly French, English and Portuguese) and in the autochthonous languages ​​of Africa. The main themes of the work of the post-colonial period were conflicts: conflicts between the past and the present, tradition and modernity, socialism and capitalism, the individual and society, indigenous peoples and newcomers. Social problems such as corruption, the economic difficulties of countries with newfound independence, the rights and role of women in a new society were also widely covered. Women writers are now much more widely represented than during the colonial period.

Wole Shoyinka (1986) was the first post-colonial African writer to win the Nobel Prize in Literature. Prior to this, only Albert Camus, who was born in Algeria, had been awarded this prize in 1957.

Cinema of Africa

In general, African cinema is poorly developed, with the only exception being the film school of North Africa, where many films have been shot since the 1920s (cinemas of Algeria and Egypt).

So Black Africa did not have its own cinema for a long time, and served only as a backdrop for films shot by Americans and Europeans. For example, in French colonies the indigenous population was forbidden to make films, and only in 1955 the Senegalese director Paulin Soumanou Vieyra (en: Paulin Soumanou Vieyra) made the first francophone film L’Afrique sur Seine (“Africa on the Seine”), and then not at home, but in Paris. There were also a number of films with anti-colonial sentiment, which were banned until decolonization. Only in recent years, after gaining independence, did national schools begin to develop in these countries; first of all, these are South Africa, Burkina Faso and Nigeria (where a school of commercial cinema has already been formed, called "Nollywood"). The first film to receive international recognition was the film of the Senegalese director Ousmane Sembene "The Black Girl" about the difficult life of a black maid in France.

Since 1969 (enlisted the support of the state in 1972), Burkina Faso has hosted the largest African film festival FESPACO on the continent every two years. The North African alternative to this festival is the Tunisian "Carthage".

To a large extent, films made by African directors are aimed at destroying stereotypes about Africa and its people. Many ethnographic films from the colonial period received disapproval from Africans as distorting African realities. The desire to correct the world image Black Africa characteristic of literature.

Also, the concept of "African cinema" includes films made by the diaspora outside the homeland.

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Etymology of the names of physical and geographical objects in Africa
Gulf of Aden. Gulf of the Indian Ocean. The name was given to the city of Aden in the south of the Arabian Peninsula. According to one version, the toponym is based on the Arabic root in the meaning of "settlement". According to another interpretation, the name was formed by the term from the ancient Semitic-Hamitic languages ​​\u200b\u200bedinu - plain, steppe, which clearly reflects natural features.

Azores. Archipelago in the Atlantic Ocean. Belongs to Portugal. The Portuguese called Ilhas dos Azores - "islands of hawks" for the abundance of these birds off the coast and in the archipelago.

Amirant Islands. Archipelago in the Indian Ocean. They were discovered by the expedition of Admiral Vasco to Gama and named after him llhas de Almitante - "The Admiral's Islands".

Annobon. Island in the Gulf of Guinea. Named by the Portuguese Anno Bon - "Good Year" ( New Year), because they first set foot on the island on January 1, 1474.

Atlas. Atlas mountains. In northwest Africa. The name has a direct connection with the name of the mythical titan Atlas, who holds the earth on his mighty shoulders. The ancient Greeks deified these mountains, worshiping the mountain spirit in the form of a petrified giant supporting the Earth. So says the legend. Apparently, this was facilitated by a possible primary source from (the Berber word "adrar", which means "mountain"

Augrabis. Waterfall on the river Orange. The name comes from the Hottentot aukrebis, "great noise".

Afar. tectonic depression in Djibouti. The lowest place in Africa (-153 m above sea level). The name is given by the name of the Afar people living in Djibouti, Eritrea and Ethiopia.

Ahaggar. Mountain range in the Central Sahara. The name comes from the name of the Tuareg tribe Kel-Ahaggar. The ethnonym, apparently, is based on the Arabic term "Akhgar" - a cave, i.e. "ahaggar" - "cave dwellers", "cave spirits".

Bab el Mandeb Strait. Separates Africa and the southwest of the Arabian Peninsula. The name comes from the Arabic words "bab" - gate, "mandib" - tears, i.e. means "gate of tears". The toponym-metaphor reflects the difficult conditions of navigation in the strait.

White Nile. The name of the middle course of the Nile to the confluence of the Blue. The Arabic name for the Bahr el-Abyad river is " white river". According to experts, the definition of "white" refers either to the cloudy color of the water, or corresponds to an unknown color orientation.

Benguela current. Cold current in the Atlantic Ocean. The name is given after the city of Benguela in Angola: in one of the Bantu languages, benguela means "country of reeds".

Benue. Leyy tributary of the river. Niger. The name comes from the Batta language, where be is "water", nue is "mother", i.e. means
"mother of waters"

Bioko. Island in the Gulf of Guinea. The Portuguese, having discovered Bioko, called it Formosa - "Beautiful" for the abundance of lush vegetation and the presence of fresh water. Later, the island was called Fernando Po in honor of the Portuguese discoverer, and in the 70s of the XX century, Macias Nguema Biyogo and the honor of the President of Equatorial Guinea. Bioko is a modified name, so it is difficult to call the true meaning.

Bush. General name for shrub formations in South Africa. The Dutch and English geographic term bush is "bush".

Vaal. River, right tributary of the river. Orange, The name was given by the Dutch Boer colonists for the color of the water: vaal - "muddy", "gray". The toponym is included in the name of one of the provinces of South Africa - Transvaal (Transvaal) - "beyond the Vaal".

wadi, oueddy. The general name of the beds of temporary watercourses in North Africa, filled with water only during the rainy season. The Arabic geographical term "wadi", "wedd" - a dry channel, a valley.

Weld. The name of an arid plateau in southern Africa. In Dutch and Afrikaans (the language of Afrikaners), veld is a vernacular geographic term meaning "field".

Victoria. Lake in East Africa, the largest on the mainland. Unlike the Victoria Falls, named by D. Livingston in honor of the Queen of Great Britain, the name of Lake Victoria was given by the traveler D. Speke. Therefore, at present, in the young African countries located on the shores of the lake, other names are offered: Umoja - "unity", Uhuru - "freedom", Shirikisho - "unification", Uhuru na Umoja - the state motto of Tanzania, inscribed on the coat of arms of the state.

Victoria. Waterfall on the river Zambezi. It was discovered by the outstanding English traveler David Livingston and named after the Queen of Great Britain. locals They call the waterfall Mosi-oa-Tunya - "thundering smoke", or Seongo - "place of the rainbow".

Virunga. Volcanic mountains in East Africa. The name in the language of the Nyoro people means "volcano".

Volta. River in West Africa. The name Rio-da-Volta - "river of return" was given by the Portuguese, because. in the 15th century their ships stopped at the mouth of the river before returning to their homeland. In Ghana, on the Volta created the reservoir of the same name - one of the largest in the world (8480 km 2).

Guardafuy. Cape in the east of the Somali Peninsula. Scientists believe that the name is derived from the Portuguese word guardafu, distorted by the Arabs - "beware", which is associated with dangerous navigation conditions. There has long been a legend that, as if at the easternmost tip of the Somali peninsula, there is a magnetic mountain that attracts the iron parts of ships approaching it. As a result, the ships, approaching it, crashed against the rocks. In fact, here is the narrowest shelf zone. With strong winds, high waves, poor visibility, the ships were often carried out to the peninsula, and they crashed on the coastal reefs. The word "Guardafui" was a warning to sailors who sailed past this cape.

Gulf of Guinea. Gulf of the Atlantic Ocean off the western coast of Africa. It is named after the historical and geographical region of Guinea, washed by it. There are several versions of the origin of the toponym Guinea. According to one of them, the name is based on the name of the Berber tribe Kinava (the Arab scientist Ibn-Yakut mentioned the region of Kinava in the 13th century). Another point of view is based on the fact that the toponym is formed by the Berber words "agwinau" - "black" or "iguaven" - "mute" (i.e., those who do not know the language of the Berbers) and referred to the territory inhabited by black tribes. Later Europeans corrupted the original word into Gunua, Ginua and finally Guinea.

Strait of Gibraltar. Separates Africa from the Iberian Peninsula of Europe. Named after the rock of Gibraltar on the European side of the strait. The modern form of the name of the rock arose as a result of the centuries-old use and transformation of the primary Arabic Jebel el-Tariq - "mountain of Tariq".

Blue Nile. The largest tributary of the Nile. In Ethiopia, the river is called Abbai - "father of waters", and in the Arab countries Bahr el-Azraq - "blue river". The color name, according to some scientists, reflects the color of the water in the river, which carries bluish silt.

Good Hope. Cape in southern Africa. Discovered in 1488 by the Portuguese navigator B. Dias and named by him Cabo Tormentoso - "Cape of Storms". King João II of Portugal did not like the name and, at his behest, the cape was renamed Cabo da Bona Esperanza - "Cape of Good Hope", referring to the hope of reaching a fabulously rich and attractive India for Europeans. Some historians believe that B. Dias immediately named the cape after Good Hope, and the above version is only a historical legend. However, it is impossible to prove or disprove this hypothesis due to the lack of sources contemporary to Dias' voyage.

dragon mountains. Located in South Africa. It is assumed that the mountains are named after one of the European colonizers, the harrow Drakenstein. Etymologically, the surname consists of two words: draken - "dragon", stein - "stone".

Zambezi. River in South Africa. Previously, the name of the river on the maps was transmitted in various ways; Ambezi, Luambezi, Liambey, etc. According to modern toponymists, the primary form of the name is Ambezi (or Ambey), which in local languages Bantu means "big river". The name of the river in the middle course in the Tonga language, Murongo-Mucuri, has the same meaning, which is a tracing paper of the main toponym.

Zanzibar. An island in the Indian Ocean off the east coast of Africa. The toponym comes from the Persian term "bar" - "shore", "edge" and the ethnonym "zinj", which is based on the Arabic or Persian "zang", "zeng" - "black". Zinji is the collective name for the Negroid tribes of East Africa in medieval Muslim literature.

Green Cape. It is located on the peninsula of the same name to the east of Cape Almadi. Named in 1445 by the Portuguese D. Diasem Cabo Verde - "Green Cape", because. was the first dry land covered with tropical flora, which contrasted sharply with the sands of the Sahara.

Cape Verde Island. Archipelago in the Atlantic Ocean. Named after m. Green, against which it is located. The transfer of the name of the islands into other languages ​​is accepted in the form of a translation, in contrast to the name of the state located on them.

Needle. Cape, the southernmost tip of Africa. Discovered in 1488 by B. Dias and named by him Cabo Sao Brandao - St. Brandan's Cape, because. the discovery took place on the day of this saint. However, the name was soon changed, and the cape was mapped under the name Agulhas - Agulhas. The word agulha in Portuguese means "needle", "arrow". Modern toponymists see the Portuguese metaphorical term agulha as the basis of the name, meaning "peak", "top". Proceeding from this, the toponym is interpreted as "cape of peaks", and the reason for the nomination was the sharpness of the rocky cape.

Go-Amin-Dada; Edward. Lake in East Africa. Opened in the 19th century. and named Edward in honor of the Crown Prince of Great Britain. In 1971, President Idi Amin Dada came to power in Uganda, and the lake was named after him. To this day, both names have been preserved behind the reservoir.

Cabarega. Waterfall and national park on the river. Victoria Nile in Uganda. The waterfall was discovered in the 19th century. and named Murchison in honor of Rodrik Murchison, eminent geologist, president of the Royal Geographical Society of London. In 1962, it was renamed in honor of the national hero of Uganda, the fighter against the British colonialists Kabarega Chwa II.

Kalahari. A semi-desert region in South Africa. At the heart of the toponym is a geographical term from the Hottentot language karaha - "area of ​​sand and stone." The popular interpretation of the name from the Tswana language in the past, where karri-karri - "tormented by thirst" or "painful", is now recognized by toponymists as unlikely. The Dutch Boer settlers called the semi-desert Bosjeveld - "field of thorny bushes", which reflected the specifics of vegetation.

Cameroon. Volcanic massif in Equatorial Africa. The Portuguese slave merchant Fernand Gomizh, sailing past the coast of Africa in the equatorial waters of the Gulf of Guinea, noticed a high mountain, about which he wanted to know more. He sent a detachment of daredevils deep into the mainland. On the way, they met an obstacle in the form of a small river with clean clear water, which was very useful, since they needed to replenish their drinking water supplies. Having filled the barrels with delicious water, the sailors saw an abundance of crabs in the river, after which, for fun, they caught crabs and shrimp and delivered them to the ship. And the river flowing in close proximity to the mountain was called Rio des Camaroes (camarues), which means "river of crabs" in Portuguese. At the same time, Mount Cameroon also received this name, and later the state was named that way. Locals have long had a superstitious fear of the snowy volcanic peak of Cameroon and call it "Maongo ma Loba", which means "mountain of heaven" or "mountain of God".

Canary Islands. Archipelago in the Atlantic Ocean. Belongs to Spain. The islands were known in ancient times under the Latin name Insulas Fortunatae. The Spaniards, who visited the archipelago at the beginning of the 15th century, called them islas Canarias - "dog islands". According to one version, the sailors saw a large number of dogs on the shores of the islands, which was the reason for the appearance of the toponym. According to another version, the archipelago was named after the main island of Gran Canaria. and the island - according to the fabulous country of Canaria, mentioned in medieval European legends.

Canary Current. Cold current in the Atlantic Ocean. Named after the Canary Islands.

Cape Mountains. Located in southern Africa. They are named after the Cape Colony founded by the Dutch, which received its name from its original location on the Cape of Good Hope (Dutch. Kaar - "cape"). With the expansion of the colony, the name spread to the mountains. Folk etymology connects the toponym with the Dutch kaar - "profit", i.e. the colony was supposedly so named for the fact that it brought a lot of income to the treasury. However, there is no scientific evidence for this interpretation.

Carr. General name for semi-desert plateaus and intermountain depressions in South Africa. The name is based on the Hottentot geographical term karusa, modified by the Boers - "dry", "anhydrous", which clearly reflects the natural conditions.

Kenya. Volcanic massif in East Africa. Toponymists see the Masai term "kee-niya" - "white mountain" as the basis of the toponym, which is associated with the presence of glaciers and snow on the top of the mountain.

Kilimanjaro. Volcanic massif in East Africa. Highest point mainland. Scientists associate the origin of the name Kilimanjaro with a word distorted by Europeans from the Swahili language, which means "mountain of the god of cold", or, according to another version, "mountain that shines".

Comoros. Archipelago in the Mozambique Channel of the Indian Ocean. The islands have been known to the Arabs since the 8th century, and it was they who named the archipelago Jezair al-Komr - "Islands of the Moon", which was associated with the spread of the cult of this luminary. The Portuguese borrowed the Arabic name in a distorted form of Somoges, which was fixed on European maps.

Congo; Zaire. River in Equatorial Africa. The mouth of the river was discovered in the 15th century. Portuguese D.Kan and called it Rio da Padrao - "padran river" (padran - stone pillar, which was set by the Portuguese in honor of discoveries, carving on it a coat of arms, the name of the king and discoverer). The name did not stick, and the river was renamed Congo - that was the name of the country and the people who lived in it before the arrival of Europeans. Local residents call the river differently in different parts of the course: Nzadi or Nzari - "a river that absorbs all others" or "great river" (a distorted form of Zaire appeared from this name), Zembere - "mother of waters"; Kulla - "great water", and in the upper reaches of Lualaba - "big rea".

Red sea. Sea of ​​the Indian Ocean between Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. In ancient Egypt, it was called the Great Greens, later - the Arabian Gulf, among the Greeks Pelagos Eritre ("erythros" - "red"), from where it came into European languages ​​in a translated form. There are several versions of the origin of the toponym. According to one of them, the name is given for the red hue of the water in the sea. Another version is based on the ancient color orientation among the peoples of the East, where the south was indicated by red. Another variant of interpretation of the toponym was noted - from the ethnic name ancient tribe Khamarites, which meant "red".

Kruger. National park in South Africa. Named in honor of Stephanus Kruger - President of the Boer Republic of Transvaal: commander of the Boer army in the war with Great Britain 1899-1902.

Libyan desert. Located in the Sahara. The name is given by the ancient name of Africa - Libya, which comes from the ethnonym "libu".

livingstone waterfalls. Located in the lower reaches of the river. Congo (Zaire). Named after the outstanding explorer of Africa, a Scot by origin, D. Livingston.

Limpopo. River in South Africa. The etymology of the name is unknown. The Dutch Boer colonists called the Crocodil River - "Crocodile River" for the abundance of these reptiles in its waters.

Mauritius. Island in the Indian Ocean. The Dutch, having captured the island, named it Mauritius - Mauritius in honor of the Dutch prince Mauritius (Mauritius; Maurice) of Orange.

Maghreb. The common Arabic name for the northwest of Africa since the early Middle Ages: "Maghrib" - West.

Madagascar. Island in the Indian Ocean. Known to Arab sailors as Jezira al-Komr - "island of the moon", which is associated with the cult of this luminary. In the XVI century. The Portuguese named the island Sao Lourenzo - St. Lawrence, because saw the land of Madagascar on the day of this saint. The French, having conquered the island in the 19th century, called it Ile Dauphine - "the island of the Dauphin" (ie the heir to the throne). Malagasy call their homeland Nossi Damba - "island of wild boars" or Tani-Be - "great". The toponym Madagascar in the distorted form Madeigaskar is first found in Marco Polo (XIII century). According to scientists, it is based on the ethnic name Malagasy, as the inhabitants of the island are now called.

Madeira. Archipelago in the Atlantic Ocean. Belongs to Portugal. The Portuguese called Maderia - Forest, because. indeed was covered with forests, later completely cut down. The earliest names of the archipelago: among the Carthaginians Al-Agnam - "island of goats" (for the abundance of these animals), among the Romans Insulae Purpurinae - "islands of purple" (for the paint mined there).

Manyara. National park in Tanzania. Named after the lake Manyara, around which is located. The etymology of the hydronym is unknown.

Mascarene Islands. Archipelago in the Indian Ocean. Opened in the 16th century. Portuguese expedition of Pedro de Mascarenhas (Mascarenhas) and named after him.

Mobutu-Sese-Seko. Lake in East Africa. Opened in the 19th century. The British named Albert in honor of Queen Victoria's husband. In 1973, it was renamed in honor of the President of Zaire, Mobutu Ssse Seko. The locals call the reservoir Mbutan Nzighe - "the reservoir of dead shells" for the abundance of shellfish on the shores, or Nyasa - the geographical term for "lake" in the Bantu languages. Perhaps one of these names will become the new official, which is associated with the death of President Mobutu.

Mozambique Channel. Divides Africa and about. Madagascar. Named after the state of Mozambique. A similar origin of the name of the warm Mozambique Current in the Indian Ocean.

Nakuru. National park in Kenya. Named after the lake Nakuru, within the limits of which he was created. The etymology of the hydronym is unknown.

Namib. Desert in southwestern Africa. There are two versions of the origin of the toponym from the languages ​​of the Hottentot tribes. According to one of them namib - "shield"; on the other - "that which is bypassed" (dangerous, lifeless). The second interpretation reflects the complexity of natural conditions in the desert,

Nasser. Reservoir on the river. Nile in Egypt. It is named after the President of Egypt, Gamal Abdel Nasser, during whose reign the reservoir was created and the Aswan Dam was built.

Ngorongoro. Reserve in Tanzania. Named after vol. Ngorongoro, in the crater of which it is located. The etymology is unknown.

Niger. River in West Africa. The name is a Berber name of the river N "Egiren - "river" distorted by the Portuguese and other Europeans. In different parts of the course it has different names in local languages: in the upper Jolib - "big water"; in the middle and lower Kuara - "river", Issa Bari - "great river" Mayo - "river" Explanation of the name from the word niger in the meaning of "black" from European languages modern toponymists consider incorrect.

Nile. The longest river in Africa and the whole world. The oldest form of the name of the river Aur is "hidden" (i.e., with an unknown source). The Egyptians called her Hapi in honor of the god of fertility and harvest. Modern Arabs call the river El-Bahr - "river". The toponym Nile in the form of Neilos is first found among the ancient Greeks. The Romans borrowed it as Nilus. According to one version, the toponym is based on the ancient Semitic term "nagal" - "river", changed by the Greeks. According to another version, the Greeks borrowed from the Libyan tribes the word lil - "water", distorting it into nil. Philologists note the possibility of such a transformation.

Nubian desert. Located in northeast Africa. named after historical area Nubia, located between the Nile rapids. The toponym is based on the ancient Egyptian word "nuba" - "gold". In ancient times, the largest mines were located here, from where gold came to the palace of the pharaohs.

Nyasa; Malawi. Lake in East Africa. The toponym is formed by a popular geographical term from the Bantu languages ​​nyasa - "lake". In the Republic of Malawi, the lake is officially called Malawi after the main people of this country.

Orange. River in South Africa. The Hottentots called her Kai Garib - big river, the Dutch settlers of the Groat River Boers with the same meaning. At all times, people often gave names to objects (rivers, lakes) according to the color of the water or the coast. But the name of the Orange River has nothing to do with color. This name was given to her by settlers from the Netherlands (Holland) Boers in honor of the princes of Orange - the then rulers of the Netherlands. With someone's light hand, and perhaps through transformation, the name Oranskaya turned into Orange.

Principe. Island in the Gulf of Guinea. Opened in the 15th century. Portuguese expedition and named Principi - "first", because. was the first island discovered by this expedition. According to another version - "Prince".

Reunion. Island in the Indian Ocean. Named at the end of the 18th century by the French Reunion - "Connection", because. the inhabitants of the island decided to unite with Fr. Mauritius into a single administrative region. The name has changed several times: in the XVI century. Portuguese Santa Apollonia (in honor of St. Apollonia), in the 19th century. - Bonapart (in honor of Napoleon), Ile de Burbon - "Bourbon Island" (in honor of the dynasty of kings). Since 1848 - again Reunion.

Rwenzori. Mountain range in East Africa. The height of the mountains is reflected in their name: in the local Bantu languages ​​ruwenzori means "lord of the clouds". A national park in Uganda is also named after the mountains.

Savannah. Borrowed by the Spaniards at the end of the 15th century. from the language of the Carib Indians (or Arawaks), where sabana is "high-grass plain", "open space". General name for a zonal landscape type.

San Tome. Island in the Gulf of Guinea. Opened by the Portuguese on the day of St. Tome (Thomas) and named Sao Tome in his honor.

Sahara. Desert in North Africa. The name is formed by the Arabic geographical term "sahara" - "desert" in the plural form, i.e. Sahara - "deserts". According to philologists, the term is based on the Arabic "ashar" - "reddish", which reflects the dominant color and color background of the desert.

Sahel. A band of semi-deserts and desertified savannahs in North Africa. The name was given by the Arabs in the Middle Ages; "sahel" - "coast", "edge", "border", or rather - "coast of the desert".

Saint Helena island. Located in the Atlantic Ocean. Discovered by the Portuguese on St. Helena and is named after her. Received worldwide fame as a place of exile and death of Napoleon Bonaparte.

Seychelles. Archipelago in the Indian Ocean. Named in the 18th century. French in honor of the Minister of Finance Moro de Setelle (Seychelles)

Senegal. River in West Africa. According to one version, the toponym is based on the name of the Berber tribe Senega, go Sankhaya. Other toponymists believe that the name of the ancient city of Senegana was transferred to the river. In the past, the toponym was explained as "navigable", but due to lack of evidence, modern scientists do not consider this option.

Serengeti. National park in Tanzania. It is named after the Serengeti plateau, within which it is located. The toponym is based on the term from the Maasai language serenget - "open space", which fully corresponds to geographical realities - vast savannahs on the territory of the plateau.

Socotra. Island in the Indian Ocean. The name of the island was given by Indian sailors: Dvipa Sakhadara - "the island of the harbinger of good luck." Later this name, reflecting the importance of the island as the most important nodal point in the ancient sea ​​routes from India to the West, transformed under the influence Arabic in Socotra.