MAPS OF HISTORY

MAPS OF HISTORY · ON THIS DAY · October 2 · 1958

ON THIS DAY · 2 OCTOBER 1958

Conakry — Guinea says “Non”

Map: Conakry — Guinea says “Non”
2 OCTOBER 1958 · THE DECOLONIZATION OF AFRICA, 1945–1994

2 Oct 1958 — Sékou Touré’s Guinea alone rejects de Gaulle’s Community: “We prefer poverty in freedom to riches in slavery.” France withdraws its files, telephones and even light bulbs within weeks.

THE MOMENT IN CONTEXT

Now do something with this map: put the playhead in 1959 and drag it slowly through 1960. Watch the continent catch fire. In a single year seventeen states become independent — most of French Africa in one great cascade, plus the vast Belgian Congo, British Nigeria and Italian Somaliland. Cameroon in January, Togo in April, Madagascar in June, the Congo at the end of June, Somalia on 1 July, then in August a fortnight in which Dahomey, Niger, Upper Volta, Ivory Coast, Chad, the Central African Republic, Congo-Brazzaville, Gabon, Senegal all raise flags in turn, Mali in September, Nigeria — the giant, some forty-five million people — on 1 October, Mauritania in November. This is the single most spectacular moment on the timeline: seventeen colours flipping to red at once. No year in modern history redrew so much of the political map so fast.

From Chapter 5 — The Year of Africa of The Decolonization of Africa, 1945–1994 (JUL 1960).

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THE ATLAS THAT SHOWS IT

The Decolonization of Africa, 1945–1994
12 CHAPTERS · AN INTERACTIVE SITUATION MAP

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