{"title":"Extending France’s empire into the desert: Régnauld de Lannoy de Bissy’s feuille 17: Timbouktou","authors":"Kory E. Olson","doi":"10.3828/cfc.2020.23","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\nUpon the 1830 landing on the shores of Algeria, France solidified control of coastal territories. Although the French had little initial desire to move into the vast desert interior of North Africa, the so-called scramble for Africa and the glorification of Britain’s Dr. Livingston after his death later in the century inspired many French politicians and scientists to reexamine their own engagement with the continent. As a result, in 1883, Richard de Régnauld de Lannoy de Bissy (Lannoy), working on behalf of the Service géographique de l’armée, published the first thirty-eight of his sixty-three-sheet Carte d’Afrique. Although much of the continent had been visited and documented by Europeans as late as the early 1880s, there remained many blank spaces on French maps. This paper will examine Lannoy’s feuille 17: Timbouktou, which presents one such relatively unknown sector of the Sahara Desert, to the French people. Lannoy documents important physical characteristics such as the flow of the Niger River, large sections of desert, and both present and past caravan routes. However, he also de-legitimizes indigenous claims to the area and presents it as open and ready to accept French control.","PeriodicalId":53563,"journal":{"name":"Contemporary French Civilization","volume":"45 1","pages":"381-392"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Contemporary French Civilization","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3828/cfc.2020.23","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Arts and Humanities","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Upon the 1830 landing on the shores of Algeria, France solidified control of coastal territories. Although the French had little initial desire to move into the vast desert interior of North Africa, the so-called scramble for Africa and the glorification of Britain’s Dr. Livingston after his death later in the century inspired many French politicians and scientists to reexamine their own engagement with the continent. As a result, in 1883, Richard de Régnauld de Lannoy de Bissy (Lannoy), working on behalf of the Service géographique de l’armée, published the first thirty-eight of his sixty-three-sheet Carte d’Afrique. Although much of the continent had been visited and documented by Europeans as late as the early 1880s, there remained many blank spaces on French maps. This paper will examine Lannoy’s feuille 17: Timbouktou, which presents one such relatively unknown sector of the Sahara Desert, to the French people. Lannoy documents important physical characteristics such as the flow of the Niger River, large sections of desert, and both present and past caravan routes. However, he also de-legitimizes indigenous claims to the area and presents it as open and ready to accept French control.
1830年登陆阿尔及利亚海岸后,法国巩固了对沿海领土的控制。尽管法国人最初几乎没有进入北非广阔沙漠内陆的愿望,但所谓的对非洲的争夺,以及本世纪末英国利文斯顿博士去世后对他的赞美,激励了许多法国政治家和科学家重新审视他们自己与非洲大陆的接触。因此,1883年,Richard de Régnauld de Lannoy de Bissy(Lannoy)代表武装部出版了他63页《非洲宪章》中的前三十八页。尽管欧洲人早在19世纪80年代初就访问并记录了欧洲大陆的大部分地区,但法国地图上仍有许多空白。本文将研究兰诺伊的《Feuille17:Timbouktou》,它向法国人展示了撒哈拉沙漠中一个相对不为人知的地区。Lannoy记录了重要的物理特征,如尼日尔河的流量、大片沙漠以及现在和过去的商队路线。然而,他也使土著人对该地区的主张合法化,并表示该地区是开放的,随时准备接受法国的控制。