Reading time:

1–2 minutes

Full Description

The rapid partition of Africa among European powers between approximately 1880 and 1900, in which almost the entire continent was divided into colonies with borders drawn to reflect European diplomatic settlements rather than African political or ethnic realities. Formalised at the Berlin Conference of 1884–85, the Scramble was driven by competition for raw materials, strategic naval routes, markets, and the prestige of empire. By 1914, only Ethiopia and Liberia remained independent.

Critical Perspective

The Berlin Conference is often cited as the origin of Africa’s “artificial borders,” but this overstates its importance — many borders were drawn in subsequent bilateral agreements and on the ground by surveyors and military officers rather than diplomats in Berlin. The more significant legacy is the speed of the Scramble: unlike India, where British power was consolidated over centuries, Africa was colonised in a generation, with devastating disruption to existing political orders and insufficient time for the administrative and institutional structures of colonial rule to develop.

If this was useful, there’s more where it came from.

Every week I publish one piece connecting a current event to its historical roots — free, every Tuesday. Paid subscribers get two additional deeper dives and full archive access.

Subscribe to Explaining History →

Leave a Reply