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Two Trips to Gorilla Land and the Cataracts of the Congo
This two-volume 1876 work by Sir Richard Burton (1821–90) records expeditions made in West Africa in the 1860s.
Richard Francis Burton (Author)
9781108031349, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 2 June 2011
288 pages, 17 b/w illus. 1 map
21.6 x 14 x 1.6 cm, 0.37 kg
Sir Richard Burton (1821–90) is well known for his colourful career, recorded in numerous books and articles, as a diplomat, explorer and ethnographer. In 1861 he was appointed consul to Fernando Po (now Bioko) in Equatorial Guinea, remaining there for four years until he was transferred to Brazil. These volumes collate the expeditions and ethnographic observations made during his time there. In his preface, Burton writes that the 'plain truth' about the African has not been told in Britain, declaring that English occupation of West Africa has proved 'a remarkable failure'. First published in 1876, Volume 1 records Burton's landing at the Gaboon River and includes geographical details, information about local tribes, and reports of journeys to Sanga Tanga and up the Gaboon River to its source. Burton also writes about a 'specimen day' with the reputed Fán cannibals and includes a chapter on gorillas.
Preface
1. Landing at the Tio Gabão (Gaboon River)
2. The departure
3. Geography of the Gaboon
4. The minor tribes and Mpongwe
5. To Sánga-Tánga and back
6. Village life in Pongo-land
7. Return to the River
8. Up the Gaboon River
9. A specimen day with the Fán cannibals
10. To the Mbíka (Hill)
11. Mr., Mrs, and Master Gorilla
12. Corisco.
Subject Areas: African history [HBJH]