538. Horror in the Congo: The Nightmare Begins (Part 1)
Join Dominic and Tom as they lead us - following in the footsteps of Henry Morton Stanley, the explorer who first pierced the shadowy veil of the Congo in Africa’s interior, and let it bleed into the hands of King Leopold himself - deep into the heart of darkness. As the curtain is lifted from the Congo’s formerly obscuring unknowability, her people's grotesque future of abominable exploitation is revealed, along with man’s capacity for evil, and the demonic greed of one man in particular…
EXCLUSIVE NordVPN Deal ➼ https://nordvpn.com/restishistory Try it risk-free now with a 30-day money-back guarantee!
_______
Twitter:
@TheRestHistory
@holland_tom
@dcsandbrook
Producer: Theo Young-Smith
Assistant Producer: Tabby Syrett + Aaliyah Akude
Editor: Vasco Andrade
Executive Producers: Jack Davenport + Tony Pastor
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Press play and read along
Transcript
Speaker 1 If you want more from the show, join the Rest is History Club. And with Christmas coming, you can also gift a whole year of access to the history lover in your life.
Speaker 1 Just head to therestishistory.com and click gifts.
Speaker 1 This episode is brought to you by the American Revolution on PBS. The American Revolution is usually staged like theater.
Speaker 1 Washington centre stage, red coats marching in step, liberty delivering its lines on queue. In reality, it was messy and uncertain, shaped by arguments over what kind of country America might become.
Speaker 1 Ken Burns' new series shows it in that light, not as polished legend, but as lived experience.
Speaker 1 Rank-and-file soldiers, women, enslaved people, and Native Americans may not have signed the Declaration, but their decisions carried weight in the struggle for independence.
Speaker 1 What makes this story gripping isn't only the speeches or the battles. It's how the questions that gave birth to the United States continue to shape American life two and a half centuries on.
Speaker 1 The revolution was never frozen in time. It was restless, conflicted, unfinished, which is precisely why it still matters.
Speaker 1 As the United States nears its 250th year, the revolution is not a relic under glass, but a mirror, still reflecting the soul of a country back at itself.
Speaker 1 The American Revolution premieres Sunday, November 16th on PBS and the PBS app.
Speaker 1
This episode is brought to you by Mint Mobile. If you're still overpaying for wireless, it's time to say yes to saying no.
Admint Mobile, their favourite word is no.
Speaker 1
No contracts, no monthly bills, no overages, no hidden fees, no BS. Just premium wireless service on the nation's largest 5G network.
Make the switch at mintmobile.com slash history.
Speaker 1
Upfront payment of $45 required, equivalent of $15 per month. Limited time, new customer offer for first three months only.
Speeds may slow above 35 gigabytes on unlimited plan. Taxes and fees extra.
Speaker 1 See Mint Mobile for details.
Speaker 1
This episode is brought to you by TikTok. Believe it or not, history isn't just in textbooks.
It comes to life every day on TikTok.
Speaker 1 Millions of people are exploring the history of music, fashion, food, and art, and discovering new facts about the things they love.
Speaker 1 One scroll could take you from the roots of jazz to the flavours of ancient kitchens. And the next might reveal a quirky fact about how modern traditions came to be.
Speaker 1 Discover the past in new ways on TikTok, where curiosity never gets old.
Speaker 1 when I was a little chap I had a passion for maps I would look for hours at South America or Africa or Australia and lose myself in all the glories of exploration
Speaker 1 at that time there were many blank spaces on the earth and when I saw one that looked particularly inviting on a map I would put my finger on it and say, when I grow up, I will go there.
Speaker 1 There was one,
Speaker 1 the biggest, the most blank, so to speak, that I had a hankering after. It had got filled since my boyhood with rivers and lakes and names.
Speaker 1 It had ceased to be a blank space of delightful mystery, a white patch for a boy to dream gloriously over. It had become a place of darkness.
Speaker 1 But there was in it one especially, a mighty big river that you could see on the map, resembling an immense snake uncoiled, with its head in the sea, its body at rest, curving afar over a vast country, and its tail lost in the depths of the land.
Speaker 1
Dash it all, I thought to myself. They can't trade without using some kind of craft on that lot of fresh water.
Steamboats.
Speaker 1 Why shouldn't I try to take charge of one?
Speaker 1 I went on along Fleet Street, but could not shake off the idea. The snake had charmed me.
Speaker 1 So that is Marlowe, the hero and the narrator of Joseph Conrad's novella Heart of Darkness, which was first published in Blackwoods magazine in 1899.
Speaker 1 It famously provided the inspiration for Apocalypse Now about the American experience in Vietnam.
Speaker 1 but it was originally written about the European colonial experience in Africa, probably the greatest, the most influential, possibly the most controversial book about that ever written, about the moral dangers of colonialism, and also about the sense of the darkness that lurks in the heart of the human soul, because the darkness in that title, Heart of Darkness, has many different levels.
Speaker 1
There's also the darkness that is London. So Marlowe is...
talking about this on a boat on the River Thames, narrating it to three friends.
Speaker 1 So the sense that the darkness in Africa is reflecting the darkness in the heart of the European is kind of at the heart of the idea of the book, isn't it, Dominic? It is indeed, Tom.
Speaker 1 Yeah, absolutely.
Speaker 1 And we'll get onto Heart of Darkness next week because we'll do an episode about Joseph Conrad and about this book, which is one of the most influential books, I would argue, of the modern age.
Speaker 1 And it's a book that I think anticipates.
Speaker 1 so much of the culture of the 20th century in wrestling with kind of man's capacity for evil and the possibilities of violence and brutality that have been opened up by kind of globalization and by history.
Speaker 1
And so we'll get onto that next week. It's a book rooted in Conrad's own experience.
So just to give people a sense, he had visited a specific place at a specific point of time.
Speaker 1 That place is the Congo Free State under the rule of King Leopold II of Belgium.
Speaker 1 Conrad had visited it nine years before he wrote the book as a merchant seaman steering a boat as Marlow does into the heart of Africa. And we'll talk about his experience, as I said, next week.
Speaker 1 But this week, week, we're going to look at the real history that underpins that story.
Speaker 1 So the story of the Congo Free State, probably the darkest stain in the history of European colonialism, what Conrad himself called, and I quote, the vilest scramble for loot that ever disfigured the history of human conscience.
Speaker 1 So to give people a sense, we are in Central Africa between 1885 and 1908.
Speaker 1 It's the country that is now known as the Democratic Republic of the Congo, an enormous country, a country that is as big as Britain, France, Germany, Italy, and Spain put together.
Speaker 1 Indeed, it's as big as the entire United States east of the Mississippi, and is actually largely unknown outside its own borders, isn't it, Tom?
Speaker 1 I guess people have a vague sense of Congo because it became Zaire under President Mabutu, who is kind of the archetype of the kleptocratic African strongman.
Speaker 1 And yet there's a sense that no one was quite as kleptocratic or brutal, actually, as Leopold II.
Speaker 1 And there's a case for saying that he is the model for much that goes wrong with Africa in the wake of independence, wouldn't you say? I would, absolutely. I would.
Speaker 1 I think lots of people would say that this is a kind of foundational moment for the Congo from which nothing ever goes right thereafter.
Speaker 1 In that 23-year period when King Leopold is in charge of the Congo, there's a fair claim that it's one of the worst places to live that has ever existed.
Speaker 1 There's a brilliant book on this called King Leopold's Ghost by the American writer Adam Hochschild.
Speaker 1 We'll be borrowing from that book very liberally, so a big shout out to Adam Hochschild's book at the beginning.
Speaker 1 Not an uncontroversial book itself, and in next week's bonus episode, we'll talk about some of the arguments about that book.
Speaker 1 But anyway, in King Leopold's Ghost, he says this is one of the great mass killings in human history. A death toll, he says, of Holocaust dimensions.
Speaker 1
Exactly how many people die in the Congo Free State is disputed. But it's millions, isn't it? It's millions.
It's almost certainly millions. And some estimates would go as high as 10 million.
Speaker 1
It's not just a story about horror. It's a story about celebrity, about international relations, royalty.
There's a lot of sex in it. There's loads of politics.
Speaker 1
It's a story about modernity as well, because this is a new age. It's the age of the camera.
So lots of photography. Photography is really important, newspapers, telegraphs, and so on.
Speaker 1 And actually, as we're getting onto in our third episode, it proves the provocation, the cause for one of the great human rights campaigns in all history, arguably the foundational human rights campaign of the 20th century.
Speaker 1 Yeah, we say of the 20th century, I mean, it joins the abolitionist movement of the late 18th and early 19th century, which gets rid of slavery, with the human rights movements of the late 20th century.
Speaker 1 And it's interesting that it's very, very Anglophone, isn't it? It's very centered in Britain and in the United States. And again,
Speaker 1
Britain's role in all this is really, really intriguing. It's quite...
I mean, intriguingly ambivalent, really. It is indeed.
Yeah, it's such a rich and interesting story.
Speaker 1
So it definitely merits a series. And like all good series, it needs a riveting central character.
In this case, a villain. And history has absolutely provided us with one.
Speaker 1 And this is King Leopold II of Belgium, who Hochscharl says is as interesting, as multi-layered, as greedy, as cunning, as charming, and as untrustworthy as any of Shakespeare's villains.
Speaker 1 And if he is the villain, the great irony is he never ever sets foot in the Congo. He never lays eyes on the Congo.
Speaker 1 His villainy, as it were, is carried out from afar, which makes him a very 20th century figure.
Speaker 1 You think of all these dictators who kill so many millions of people without ever shedding blood themselves.
Speaker 1 But also, you could say, if you were an anti-capitalist, that he's kind of the exemplification of great corporations now who leech money from distant parts of the world, rely on products made by slave labor.
Speaker 1
Leopold is kind of the archetype of that as well, wouldn't you say? He is indeed. He is.
And we'll absolutely get into that. This is the classic example,
Speaker 1 you you might say, of the rapacity of corporate capitalism carried to its ultimate murderous extreme. But let's start with Leopold himself.
Speaker 1 So he was born in 1835, when Belgium had been independent from the Netherlands for five years. So he's the son of the very first king of the Belgians, who's also called Leopold.
Speaker 1 He's brought up at a castle called Lachen, which is outside Brussels, where he spends most of his time.
Speaker 1 He speaks French and German and English, not interestingly Flemish, which is the language of most of his subjects.
Speaker 1 Now, Leopold's parents, Leopold and Louise, had a pretty miserable, loveless marriage, and they treated their son very, very coldly.
Speaker 1 So, if he wanted to talk to his father, he had to apply through a secretary for an audience. And when his father wanted to tell his son something, he got a secretary to do it for him.
Speaker 1
To be fair, that is how I communicate with Katie and Eliza. Do you know what? When I was reading this, the parallels between you and King Leopold were leaping off the page.
Unbelievable.
Speaker 1
So, yeah, what is it about me and 20th century monarchs? You're actually Kaiser, Leopold II. Yeah.
It's chilling. So Leopold, maybe this will ring a bell with you, Tom.
Speaker 1
He grows up a moody, kind of gangling and humorless boy. That's me.
But the thing is, even at the time, his father says of him, he's very cunning. His father compares him with a fox.
Speaker 1
It says Leopold is like a fox. He slowly and stealthily picks out his path.
Stalks the chickens. Exactly.
And then he makes his move. So by the 1850s, Leopold is in his teens.
Speaker 1 He's become an, I think it's fair to say, an extremely awkward and unattractive young man. Yeah.
Speaker 1
People always comment on how unbelievably tall he is. It's a bit like Baron Trump.
He's massively tall and awkward looking. But with less knowledge of crypto, presumably.
Presumably, yes.
Speaker 1 He's got an enormous beard and everybody comments on his absolutely enormous nose.
Speaker 1 So Disraeli said of it, it's such a nose as a young prince has in a fairy tale, thanks to the intervention of a kind of, of a malignant fairy. So he's not a looker, I think it's fair to say.
Speaker 1 And he's very, very charmless.
Speaker 1 So, you know, he has to compensate for that with his cunning when he's 18 years old his father takes him to vienna to get a habsburg bride and this is a 16 year old called archduchess marie henriette and she's great yeah she's like the emperor claudius and um carmen harris isn't she she has a tremendous braying laugh yes she does she's got a great laugh that echoes around belgium and she loves laughing She loves laughing.
Speaker 1
And Leopold is shocked by this because he hates laughing. They go to Venice on holiday and he behaves behaves really coldly to her.
He won't let it go on a gondola that she's booked and all this.
Speaker 1
And she bursts into tears. And people see this in public.
They say, oh, dude, this is an ill-starred marriage.
Speaker 1 And a month after they got married, she tells one of her friends, if God hears my prayers, I shan't go on living much longer.
Speaker 1 That's not what you want to hear. What do you mean?
Speaker 1 So, so much of Leopold's colonial ambitions, there is an argument that basically it stems from his own insecurity and misery, that he's it's a massive kind of displacement exercise.
Speaker 1 Anyway, he doesn't actually become king of Belgium till 1865. So he spends a lot of time waiting for his father to die.
Speaker 1 And while he's doing that, he has this kind of gnawing insecurity that he's going to be inheriting a country that is just a sort of pathetic minnow on the world stage.
Speaker 1 Of course, Belgium is kind of squashed between France and an increasingly unified Germany. And Leopold feels this very keenly.
Speaker 1 He says of Belgium, petit pay, petit Jean, a little country, little people.
Speaker 1 And he thinks, you know, I deserve better than the Belgian people. And what he really wants is an empire.
Speaker 1 He wants colonies and he's very aggrieved that he's inheriting a kingdom that doesn't have any.
Speaker 1 Three years before he becomes king of the Belgians, he goes on holiday to Spain and he goes to Seville and he spends his time in Seville. He spends weeks.
Speaker 1 at the archive at the great archive of the Indies going through the records looking at just how much money Spain had made from its colonies. So this is the 16th century, isn't it? The conquistadors.
Speaker 1 The conquistadors, how much money they had made from the territories they exploited. And this fires his imagination.
Speaker 1 He makes trips to Ceylon and to Burma to see how the British make money from their colonies. He reads a book called Java or How to Manage a Colony, which is all about the Dutch in the East Indies.
Speaker 1
And this is written unbelievably. Seen the bloke who wrote this book? Yeah, very funny.
JWB Money.
Speaker 1
You see, if he ran a bank, I'd very happily advertise his bank on the rest of the system. Would you? JWB Money Bank.
Yeah.
Speaker 1
Invest your money in it. Well, you should advertise his book.
Money's book is all about how you get a colony to turn a profit. You see, that's what Leopold is interested in.
Speaker 1 Even more than the prestige and certainly a lot more than any possible civilizing mission aspect of colonialism, what he cares about is cash.
Speaker 1 And in this book, JWB Money says the Dutch have turned a profit from Java by using forced labor to have plantations and all this kind of thing.
Speaker 1
And Dominic, yeah, the fact that it's Dutch colonies, I mean, that must really irritate him. Oh, of course.
The great rivals. The great rivals.
Speaker 1
I mean, even more than the Germans or the French having colonies. The Dutch.
Yeah. Awful.
So he looks at the Dutch and he says, yeah, they're very unsentimental. They've used forced labor.
Speaker 1 And it is clear, he writes, the only way to civilize and uplift these indolent and corrupt peoples is basically by forcing them to work so that we can make money. So here's the great paradox.
Speaker 1
Other Belgians don't really care about colonies. They are very conscious they're only a small and newly independent country.
They don't even really have a merchant navy of their own.
Speaker 1 So how could they possibly maintain a colonial empire? But for Leopold, all of his misery, all of his loneliness and awkwardness, I think he has poured into this great project of acquiring colonies.
Speaker 1 And he believes this is the only thing that will make him happy.
Speaker 1 But it's interesting, isn't it, that geography apparently was his only subject that he was interested in as a boy so it's a little bit like marlowe at the beginning of this episode this idea of looking at the world and marlowe dreams of going on adventures there and leopold dreams of basically grabbing bits of it he does and using it to make money he absolutely does indeed he reminds me reading the book by animal hochschild i was reminded of scrooge so scrooge who you know deep down what scrooge wants scrooge wants love and he's become a miser and a terrible person you are a sentimentalist well no i don't i don't i'm yeah i don't think you can be sentimental about King Leopold II, as we will see.
Speaker 1 But you're saying that all the horrors of the Congo is because he didn't have love as a child. I think his loveless life and his obsessiveness, he's not just an ordinary colonialist, as we will see.
Speaker 1 There is something really weirdly obsessive about him.
Speaker 1 And I wonder how much of that, I mean, also the way he behaves, the stuff with, as we will see, his obsession with hygiene is very, very peculiar. And with very young ladies.
Speaker 1 And with very, very young girls, exactly.
Speaker 1 There's a lot of bad things to be said, I think, it's fair to say about King Leopold II. Anyway, 1865, he becomes king at last.
Speaker 1
Now, for the next 10 years, he doesn't actually manage to get the empire he wants. He investigates various schemes.
He'd like to buy a bit of Argentina. He'd like to buy a bit of the Nile Delta.
Speaker 1
He even talks about acquiring Fiji, but he doesn't really get anywhere. But not Greenland.
No, not Greenland, no.
Speaker 1
But in 1875, he thinks he might be onto something. He's offered Spain cash for the Philippines for the second time.
And to his deep disappointment, they turn him down again.
Speaker 1
And he says to one of his courtiers, okay, I'm going to have a look at Africa now. Maybe Africa's the place.
So now at last in this story, we come to Africa.
Speaker 1 Now, the great scramble for Africa, which people think of as a 19th century thing, is actually really only concentrated in the final decades of the 19th century.
Speaker 1
So at this point, 1875, it hasn't happened. The French are in Algeria.
The Portuguese are in what become Mozambique and Angola. The British and the Burs both have footholds in South Africa.
Speaker 1 And various countries have kind of trading ports and enclaves on the coast of West Africa. But about three quarters of Africa, really meaning the interior,
Speaker 1 has not yet been penetrated by European empires. For Europeans, the wealth of Africa is associated with the coast.
Speaker 1
There's the assumption that there's nothing in the middle that would be worth the effort of colonizing. Exactly.
People just think, well, it's just impenetrable jungle. What could possibly be there?
Speaker 1
It's a blank space, as Conrad puts it. But by this point, the mid-1870s, Africa is making the news in a way it hasn't ever done before.
There have been a series of very eye-catching expeditions.
Speaker 1 And of course, the most famous one, which lots of listeners will have heard of, is the expedition by the journalist Henry Morton Stanley to find the missionary David Livingston in modern-day Tanzania in 1871, which was financed by the New York Herald.
Speaker 1 And thanks to these new innovations of cheap newspapers and the telegraph, stanley and livingston become international celebrities far beyond britain and america so they're making front page news in belgium and king leopold we know follows the story very closely and actually kept a sort of scrapbook including handwritten notes that he was making following stanley's journey And it's interesting, isn't it?
Speaker 1
Because Livingston is all about fighting slavery. His heart is in the right place.
Stanley, a much more ambivalent figure. I mean, he's looking for Livingston, basically, to make a name for himself.
Speaker 1
Exactly. For celebrity celebrity and for money, two things which will play a big part in this story.
So, the question for Leopold is, can he get them? He wants a colony that will turn a profit.
Speaker 1 Can you make money from Africa? And the answer is yes, not through slavery, as you once could, but through something that is extremely fashionable and very lucrative. And that something is ivory.
Speaker 1 Now, the Victorians are obsessed by ivory.
Speaker 1 It's exotic because, of course, it comes from elephant tusks, but it's also unbelievably useful and and malleable because it's really, really easy to carve ivory.
Speaker 1 So if we went into a sort of genteel Victorian household, anywhere in the Western world in the 1870s or 1880s, there would be the handles of cutlery, there would be billiard balls, there would be combs, fans, there would be brooches, there would be chess pieces, piano keys, false teeth.
Speaker 1 All of these kinds of things are made of ivory. Because Hochschild compares it actually to plastic, doesn't he?
Speaker 1 It's such a kind of useful product, which is brilliant for the Victorians Victorians and obviously very bad news for the elephants. Exactly, exactly.
Speaker 1 And you can make so much money from it. So two elephant tusks will give you hundreds of piano keys or thousands upon thousands of false teeth.
Speaker 1 And it sounds comical, but there is an awful lot of money to be made here.
Speaker 1 And Stanley, after returning from his expedition, has gone around telling people, my God, there is so much ivory in equatorial Africa that the people there use it for their doorposts because it's just so plentiful.
Speaker 1
So it's kind of ivory equivalent of Eldorado. Exactly.
That sense. So that this is portable wealth.
Exactly. It's the key to gold in the new world, wasn't it? In the 16th century.
Speaker 1 But the difference between the 16th century and now is that to acquire a colony, I think you have to try much harder to present it as part of a civilizing mission.
Speaker 1 So this is the high point of high Victorianism.
Speaker 1 the belief in kind of moral uplift and Europe's right to the moral leadership of the planet and all all these things that we may well think of as now as being freighted with hypocrisy or of kind of patronizing condescension.
Speaker 1 But at the time, people do actually take genuinely seriously. So Leopold knows that he will have to, I think, tick three boxes if he wants a colony.
Speaker 1 First of all, he has to present it as a scientific project, an intellectual project. So literally filling in those blank spaces, mapping
Speaker 1
what has previously been unknown. Secondly, I think he has to tick the moral uplift box.
So he has to say, well, I only want economy because I want to spread the gospel of Christianity.
Speaker 1 Of course, something that matters tremendously to the Victorians. But also, Dominic, the spreading of Christianity is also intimately associated with the campaign to abolish slavery.
Speaker 1 Yes, that's hurting.
Speaker 1 Britain has been leading that campaign since the early 19th century, and it has provided an absolutely crucial kind of moral justification for what has been a process of expansion of British imperial control.
Speaker 1 So Livingston, even though he's not overtly an imperialist, the fact that he is carving out a moral mission for Britain in the middle of Africa is obviously very useful from an imperial point of view.
Speaker 1 And I guess that Leopold is, I mean, he reads the Times, doesn't he, every morning? Yeah.
Speaker 1 He is very alert to the kind of the symbiosis between that moral mission to eradicate slavery and imperialism in the British form, and he wants a bit of it. I think you're absolutely right.
Speaker 1 I think he absolutely sees what's going on with the other empires.
Speaker 1 I think in Leopold's case, what makes him slightly unusual is that all the evidence we have of his letters and so on is that for him, the profit motive
Speaker 1
is all and that the rest of it is effectively just a justification for making money. I mean, he's pretty shameless about that, I would say.
So this is how he proceeds.
Speaker 1
And I have to say, he's a terrible man, King Leopold, but he really is a cunning and a methodical and a clever man. A volpine figure.
He is.
Speaker 1 So his first step is to convene a big geographical conference in Brussels at the end of 1876.
Speaker 1
And he invites all the big celebrities of the sort of the Africa industry. of the day.
So there are explorers from France and Germany.
Speaker 1 He's got a celebrity explorer called Gerhol Wolfs, who had actually had himself circumcised so that he could pass for a Muslim in the Sahara. So, you know, somebody who had suffered for his
Speaker 1
quest. His exploration.
His expiration. He's got the president of the British Anti-Slavery Society, Sir Thomas Fowl Buxton.
He's got the president of the Church Missionary Society, Sir John Kenway.
Speaker 1 He's even got the bloke who used to command the Royal Navy's Indian Ocean Anti-Slavery Squadron. So he is ticking all of those boxes.
Speaker 1 He's inviting a lot of people who are genuinely animated by what we might call humanitarian as well as imperialistic concerns.
Speaker 1 And he welcomes them and he says, you know, I dream of a crusade worthy of this century of progress to open to civilization the only part of our globe which it has not yet penetrated, to pierce the darkness which hangs over entire peoples.
Speaker 1
That word darkness again, which is going to come up throughout this series. And he says to them, Don't think that I want anything for myself.
He says, I have
Speaker 1
very idea of it. I have no ambition.
Shocking. No ambition other than to serve Belgium.
Now, that, as we've seen, is a lie. He despises Belgium.
Speaker 1 And he, as we will also see, he doesn't want to serve Belgium at all. He only wants to serve himself.
Speaker 1 And he says to them, look, I've assembled you because I think it would be nice for us to identify places in the blank spaces of Africa, which could be bases, which could be kind of,
Speaker 1 they could be hospitals, they could be scientific research centers, they could be trading stations.
Speaker 1 With an emphasis on the trading
Speaker 1
aspect of it. And these will be run.
I don't want to, I mean, Belgium won't run them, right? Because we don't want it. We absolutely, the last thing we'd want is a colony.
Speaker 1 He says, we'll set up an international African association. And it'll be based on, why not base it in Brussels, actually?
Speaker 1 And for its first chairman, I mean, if no one else wants to do it, I'd very happily
Speaker 1
happily put myself forward. And everybody...
you know, they all fall for this. Oh, what a lovely idea.
Speaker 1 What a kind man. I mean, we're recording this today after the Trump inauguration,
Speaker 1 where where all these heads of tech companies that until Trump won the election were all over their mission being to spread happiness and joy and
Speaker 1 promote diversity and equity. And now they've binned all that very nakedly.
Speaker 1 Do you think that this is the first example of kind of avaricious corporations dressing up their
Speaker 1 greed kind of a kind of show of piety?
Speaker 1
It's got to be one of the first, hasn't it? One of the early ones. One of the most eye-catching early ones, definitely.
Because it is a brilliant maneuver. Of course it is.
Speaker 1
If you have global ambitions. And all these people believe it.
They completely believe it. And here's the thing.
Speaker 1
The International African Association, which sounds like it's a charity and which they have all endorsed, is actually a private company run by Leopold himself. For his benefit.
For his benefit. So.
Speaker 1
The only thing he doesn't have actually is the colony. You know, he's got the association, but he doesn't have the colony.
And where is he going to get the colony?
Speaker 1
Well, the answer is from the one person who wasn't there at that meeting in Brussels. And this is the most famous of all African explorers.
We've already mentioned him, Henry Morton Stanley.
Speaker 1 Now, we'll just sketch Stanley very briefly because he really is worthy of a restaurant's history series in himself.
Speaker 1
He had an amazing life, Stanley. He was born in Wales in 1841, and he was born as John Rawlins Bastard.
He was the illegitimate son of a housemaid. That's the entry that is in the book of births.
Speaker 1 He spends his childhood in a workhouse. He emigrates to New Orleans when he's 18 years old.
Speaker 1 He fought for the Confederates, then he fought for the Union, then he joined the Union Navy, then he renamed himself Henry Morton Stanley after a New Orleans businessman.
Speaker 1 And then he became a journalist. He went to the Ottoman Empire, he went to Persia, he went to the Crimea, he went to Abyssinia with a British expedition.
Speaker 1 But most famously, the New York Herald sent him to Central Africa to find Dr. Livingston, which he did near Lake Tanganyika in 1871.
Speaker 1
And then he invented, almost certainly invented this fantastic line. So disappointing.
I know, it is disappointing. Let's pretend that he said it.
Dr. Livingston, I presume,
Speaker 1 when he met Livingston, which flashed around the world and made him a household name, a genuine international celebrity. And he writes it up in enormously long books, doesn't he?
Speaker 1
Yes, he does, which have great sellers. So he gets commissioned to write one book and he ends up writing three.
That's very, nothing wrong with that, Tom. I commend that kind of of behaviour.
Speaker 1 Very familiar.
Speaker 1 So then he went on another expedition three years later, sent this time by the New York Herald and the Daily Telegraph in London, to map the Great Lakes and to look for the source of the Nile.
Speaker 1
And that's where he's been during Leopold's conference. And he has begun that, hasn't he, on the east coast of Africa at Zanzibar? Yeah.
And he's heading westwards.
Speaker 1 And he wouldn't be the first European to have gone from east to west coast, but he is the first who does it basically by following the line of the Congo. Exactly.
Speaker 1 An incredibly well-publicized journey, one that was followed by newspaper readers across the world as you would follow reports of great sporting fixtures or something. Tremendous excitement.
Speaker 1 In August 1877, Stanley reached the trading post of Boma, which is on the right bank of the Congo River near the coast. An extraordinary, extraordinary achievement.
Speaker 1 7,000 miles, Tom, in three years he did on foot. Now, Leopold has been following this with great interest.
Speaker 1 And as soon as he hears the news that Stanley has got to the west coast, he sends him a telegram of congratulations. And then Leopold says to his ambassador in London, this is the man.
Speaker 1 This is the man I need to get me this colony in the heart of Africa. However, Leopold says, we have to be careful.
Speaker 1 And I quote, if I quite openly charged Stanley with the task of taking possession in my name of some part of Africa, the English will stop me.
Speaker 1 I don't want to risk losing a fine chance to secure for ourselves a slice of this magnificent African cake.
Speaker 1
So I will just give Stanley some job of exploration which would offend no one and will give us the bases and headquarters which we can take over later on. Oh, the fox.
The fox.
Speaker 1 So Leopold's intermediaries and emissaries keep offering Stanley. They write to Stanley and they say, you know, the International African Association, this fake charity, would love to offer you a job.
Speaker 1 Now, Stanley turns it down at first because he wants to go back to England and to see what he could get there.
Speaker 1 But when he gets back to London, although, of course, he's a big celebrity, the establishment are very suspicious of him, the royal family, the foreign office, and so on, because they have heard reports that Stanley has treated people extremely brutally.
Speaker 1 And I think reports that are completely justified.
Speaker 1 About half of Stanley's porters, African porters, had died on his trip of starvation or disease, and he had flogged them mercilessly and basically he'd driven them into the ground.
Speaker 1 And this makes people very anxious.
Speaker 1 So Richard Burton, another great explorer, and not a man who, I mean, himself is prone to doing, behaving quite extremely, but he said of Stanley that he shoots Africans as if they were monkeys. Yeah.
Speaker 1
in a tone of great disapproval. Yes.
I mean, we keep using the word darkness. That is a shadow of darkness over Stanley's reputation.
Absolutely, it is.
Speaker 1 He's also, he's very awkward in his relationship with the other sex, isn't he? The fairer sex. He is indeed.
Speaker 1 I lose track of the women he's basically left and he's kind of dreaming vaguely that he'll come back and marry them.
Speaker 1
And there's a sense that he's going off into the jungle for three years, so he doesn't have to deal with women. Exactly.
Because they will often marry somebody else while he's gone.
Speaker 1
And you can sense he comes back and he pretends to be disappointed, but actually he's quite relieved. Anyway, and there's also a class issue.
He says they despise me because I'm Welsh.
Speaker 1
You know, the English are not giving me any credence at all. They don't listen to a word I say.
They make up these lies about me and all of this kind of thing.
Speaker 1 So, in the summer of 1878, Stanley is very disappointed by his reaction and he gets an invitation from Leopold to visit him in Brussels. And he says to himself, Why not? Okay, I'll go and see him.
Speaker 1 And so, on the 10th of June, 1878, Stanley walks into Leopold's office in the Royal Palace in Brussels for the meeting that will seal the fate of the Congo and blight the lives of millions.
Speaker 1 We will be back after the break.
Speaker 1
This is an advertisement by BetterHelp. As the days turn colder and the shadows stretch longer, it's easy to mistake hibernation for harmony.
But winter is when people need warmth most.
Speaker 1
A season for reaching out, not closing in. History rewrites itself endlessly, but one habit never fades.
When the world tilts, people reach for words.
Speaker 1 However much the world evolves, conversation remains the oldest kind of therapy we have. The same principle sits at the heart of BetterHelp.
Speaker 1
BetterHelp have matched over 5 million people worldwide with more than 30,000 qualified professionals. It's therapy built for modern life.
Thoughtful, personal and entirely on your terms.
Speaker 1
This November, take that small first step. Reach out, check in, and start the conversation.
Visit betterhelp.com slash rest history for 10% off your first month.
Speaker 1 That's betterhelp.com slash rest history.
Speaker 1 This episode is brought to you by NordVPN. We love studying malicious actors, spies, plotters, masters of disguise, but Although we enjoy learning about them, we don't want to be targeted by them.
Speaker 1 This is why we need NordVPN. With one tap, Nord software ensures that everything across up to 10 devices is encrypted.
Speaker 1
And Threat Protection Pro blocks malicious links and scans downloads for any Trojan horse behavior. And it's not just for privacy.
Online retailers can sneakily change prices based on your location.
Speaker 1 Using NordVPN means you'll never pay more than you have to again. NordVPN is here to protect our privacy and our wallets.
Speaker 1 To get the best discount off your NordVPN plan, go to NordVPN.com forward slash rest is history. Our link will also give you four extra months on the two-year plan.
Speaker 1 There's no risk with Nord's 30-day money-back guarantee. The link is in the podcast episode description box.
Speaker 1 This episode is brought to you by AT ⁇ T.
Speaker 1 America's first network is is also its fastest and most reliable.
Speaker 1 Based on Route Metrics United States Route Score Report 1H2025, tested with best commercially available smartphones on three national mobile networks across all available network types.
Speaker 1
Your experiences may vary. Root Metrics rankings are not an endorsement of ATT.
When you compare, there's no comparison. ATT
Speaker 1 Going up that river was like travelling back to the earliest beginnings of the world, when vegetation rioted on the earth and the big trees were kings.
Speaker 1
An empty stream, a great silence, an impenetrable forest. The air was warm, thick, heavy, sluggish.
There was no joy in the brilliance of sunshine.
Speaker 1 The long stretches of the waterway ran on, deserted, into the gloom of overshadowed distances. On silvery sandbanks, hippos and alligators sunned themselves side by side.
Speaker 1 The broadening waters flowed through a mob of wooded islands.
Speaker 1 You lost your way on that river as you would in a desert and butted all day long against shoals, trying to find the channel, till you thought yourself bewitched and cut off forever from everything you had known once, somewhere, far away, in another existence.
Speaker 1 So that's from Heart of Darkness. It's Jose Conrad's hero Marlowe,
Speaker 1 driving a steamboat up the river Congo.
Speaker 1 And Dominic, the thing that always strikes me about that passage is it kind of has echoes of Conan Doyle's book, The Lost World, the sense that going into the jungle is somehow to go back into the prehistoric past.
Speaker 1 And in fact, in the decades that follow, there will be stories told of a great long-necked dinosaur that lurks in the depths of the Congo.
Speaker 1 And there's a sense that Conrad is kind of, I mean, he's articulating that in a very powerful and not uncontroversial way yeah it's a very controversial passage that it's a very evocative passage that they go that the deeper and deeper they go into africa the further and further they're going back in time and for conrad's critics sort of post-colonial critics they say that is so loaded and so dodgy to be basically saying that by to visit africa the deeper you go the further backwards you travel to this kind of primeval world but we'll unpack all that um next week tom but first of all the congo so when leopold and stanley Stanley sit down that day in June 1878, which we ended the first half with, what do they actually know about this world that Conrad himself visited, this landscape, the jungle, the river and whatnot?
Speaker 1 Europeans have known about the existence of the River Congo for 400 years. So the first to lay eyes on it was a Portuguese captain called Diogo Cao in 1482.
Speaker 1 And he had been sailing south along the coast of Africa like so many Portuguese sailors did. You remember Tom, their caravels with their triangular sails? That's right.
Speaker 1 And they're putting up little kind of stone markers, aren't they? They're putting up stone markers.
Speaker 1 So he put one on the far bank of the Congo in what's now Angola, that King Zhao II of Portugal did order this land to be discovered and this pillar of stone to be erected by Diogo Cao, a squire of his household.
Speaker 1 But of course, They weren't really discovering, I mean, they were discovering it from their own perspective, but they weren't the first to discover it because, of course, there were a lot of people there already.
Speaker 1 So when the Portuguese arrived at the end of the 15th century, there were probably about 3 million people who were subjects of the kingdom of the Congo with the capital K.
Speaker 1
And that was ruled by a monarch called the Mani Congo. And his capital was probably just over the border in what's now Angola.
And the people of the Congo, they were farmers.
Speaker 1
They raised pigs and yams and stuff. They didn't have wheels.
They didn't have writing, but they did have a kind of state system. They had judges.
Speaker 1 they had a calendar they had a tax system they used shells as currency and they already had slavery which was to prove a disaster for the congo because the portuguese were delighted to find people to find chiefs who were happy to sell them human beings that the portuguese could put to work particularly in brazil so Congo becomes a huge supplier of slaves to the Portuguese.
Speaker 1 By the 17th century, the Portuguese are probably shipping 15,000 slaves a year in horrific conditions, initially to Brazil. Later on, they start selling them to North America as well.
Speaker 1 So in the American South, about one in four of the slaves in the 19th century had roots in equatorial Africa, which includes the kingdom of the Congo.
Speaker 1 What the Congolese made of this is very, very hard for us to tell, because until the modern era, the Congolese had no written language, which is why this episode so far has been from a European perspective.
Speaker 1 Even in King Leopold's time, in the time of the Congo Free State, there is not a single memoir written by
Speaker 1
a Congolese African. So that's a problem for us as historians, because it means that African voices are silent compared with European ones.
Wasn't there a king? There was a king.
Speaker 1
Yes, there's a Christian king in the 16th century. He wasn't writes to the Pope.
Yeah, he wrote to the Portuguese king. And he complains about the slavery.
He did indeed.
Speaker 1 The kind of looting of his people.
Speaker 1 So I would guess from that that probably they're not thrilled about it no he wrote to the portuguese king and he said there's no you know you're taking too many slaves there's nobody left and the portuguese king actually wrote back to him sent him a letter and said i've heard there's loads of people in the congo what are you complaining about shut up and that was the extent of this meeting of minds between these two kings
Speaker 1 right in the years that followed the congo became prey to all kinds of inroads in the portuguese the spanish the dutch um there's lots of factualism the civil wars and basically the kingdom falls apart But much of this is a mystery to Europeans.
Speaker 1
Europeans can't get into the interior. They know that the Congo River is a vast river.
It's the second largest river in Africa, third largest by volume in the world. But they can't go up it.
Speaker 1 Because once you start to go upstream, once you go up river, very quickly, the river gives way to 200 miles worth of rapids and gorges and canyons and so on.
Speaker 1 So you have to get out of your ship and walk. And at that point, it's very rocky terrain, what's called the Crystal Mountains.
Speaker 1 And Europeans, as soon as they started to do that, they would get malaria or yellow fever and they'd basically all die. Dominic, there is a British expedition in 1816.
Speaker 1
There is indeed led by a Royal Navy captain who describes the scenery as beautiful and not inferior to any on the banks of the Thames. Yeah.
Which is obviously the highest praise
Speaker 1
possibly give. But he's an example.
He only gets a little bit of the way and then they basically have to go back. They have to go back because they were all fall horribly ill so
Speaker 1 even in the 1870s the vast basin of the Congo we're talking about one and a half million square miles of territory so that's about what the size of India I think yeah I mean it's a massive massive stretch of land and home to now this is very controversial but let us say somewhere between roughly eight and twelve million people it is almost completely unknown to europeans they still talk about the blank space on the map an empty space on the map, which is, of course, quite wrong.
Speaker 1 Now, Stanley has been through it, but not all of it. Stanley had tracked the river for about 1,500 miles.
Speaker 1 So that's only about half the length of the Congo River.
Speaker 1 And he's only had limited interactions with the locals, but he does know two crucial things, which he's able to tell Leopold that day in the palace.
Speaker 1
First of all, the people of the Congo, they don't have anything like the military technology. to resist a European takeover.
It's a myth that they're completely unsophisticated.
Speaker 1 They have brilliant pottery, they're brilliant woodworkers and so on. But in terms of weapons, they only have spears and arrows and some very ancient Portuguese muskets.
Speaker 1
So, you know, an invading European force would be able to wipe the floor with them. And the second thing, even more important, there is no one powerful state.
in the Congo basin.
Speaker 1
There are more than 200 different ethnic groups. They speak 400 different languages and dialects.
There's a massive variety.
Speaker 1
So some of them are pygmies who live in the forests, and some of them are more settled farming peoples who live on the savannas. But they're very fragmented.
And they're always fighting each other.
Speaker 1 It's a little bit like, you know, when Cortez arrived in Mesoamerica and found there were all kinds of rivalries and things that he could exploit. But there isn't an equivalent of the Aztecs.
Speaker 1
There's no equivalent of the Aztecs. There's no equivalent of that.
So it's even better than that. For a European predator, the people of the Congo are the perfect prey.
Speaker 1 And Dominic, isn't there one other factor that Stanley has discovered by going along the river, which is that if you can get past the rapids up kind of into the highlands, then the Congo is very, very navigable.
Speaker 1
And there are all these kind of tributaries. So there are thousands and thousands of miles of navigable water.
So it's kind of like, you know, railways have been laid or something.
Speaker 1 If you can just get your steamboat up past these rapids, then you can use the river to go very, very deep into the Congo.
Speaker 1
And if there is raw material, say ivory or perhaps in due course rubber, then you can use it to bring it back. Exactly.
In other words,
Speaker 1
there are the lineaments of your transport infrastructure right there waiting for you. So for Leopold, all of this is absolutely great news.
He seems to have hit it off with Stanley straight away.
Speaker 1 Leopold spoke perfect English, despite his enormous nose and his gangling awkwardness. He can be charming when he wants to, and he flatters Stanley.
Speaker 1 Stanley is caused desperate for flattery because he hasn't had it in London. And that autumn, 1878, Leopold says, I'd like to offer you a five-year contract.
Speaker 1 For every year you spend in Africa, I will pay you 50,000 francs and I will pay for an expeditionary force to go with you up the Congo.
Speaker 1
So in terms of Stanley's earnings, in today's money, Leopold is effectively offering him £2 million, a lot of money for a journalist. And so he's buying Stanley's knowledge, presumably.
Yes.
Speaker 1 But is he also buying Stanley's prestige as the man who knows the Congo?
Speaker 1
The sense that if he's got Stanley with him, then the project must be a realistic one. It must be a serious one.
I think he's buying three things, actually. So I think he's buying Stanley's knowledge.
Speaker 1
Stanley knows he's gone along the river. Number two, I do think you're absolutely right.
He's buying the prestige and the celebrities. Stanley will become the face of this charitable expedition.
Speaker 1 Right. But the third thing is he's genuinely buying Stanley's.
Speaker 1
You know, Stanley is going to have to do the work. He's going to have to put the work in on the ground.
And Leopold knows that Stanny
Speaker 1 is a hard worker and he drives other people very hard. He says to Stanny, what I want you to do, I want you to establish a station at the mouth of the Congo that will be our big base.
Speaker 1 Then, and this will be a really important thing, build a road or indeed a railway around these rapids, through these mountains.
Speaker 1 And basically, what I want you to do, start with a road.
Speaker 1 and get porters to carry disassembled steamboats through this territory to the other side of the rapids, 200 miles, then reassemble the steamboats and then head upriver on the steamboats for 1,000 miles, establishing trading posts and stations and whatnot as you go.
Speaker 1 So this is a pretty big operation. Stanley says, fine.
Speaker 1
Now, the fine point of this contract is deliberately ambiguous. The contract leaves it very unclear.
who Stanley is working for. Is he working for Leopold himself?
Speaker 1 Is he working for the International African Association?
Speaker 1 Or is he working for yet another organization called the Committee for Studies of the Upper Congo, which is another of Leopold's front organisations that he has set up?
Speaker 1 And Stanley must have known that something was a bit off about this because he demands, he says, I must have all the money up front.
Speaker 1
And this plan to use porters to carry bits of steamship up to the Congo. Yeah.
I mean, presumably that will require a fair degree of force. Yes.
So is Stanley knowingly buying into that? Oh, yeah.
Speaker 1 I mean, is because Stanley had employed porters on his previous journeys, and that had often involved a degree of payment, but also a degree of force as well.
Speaker 1 But to carry a steamship is a different business from carrying, you know,
Speaker 1
supplies or whatever. I mean, that's a pretty military operation.
But remember, Leopold has promised he will pay for an expeditionary force, basically a mercenary force, to go upriver with Stanley.
Speaker 1
But just to be clear, Stanley is walking into this with his eyes wide open. Oh, his eyes are definitely open.
And his subordinates, they have to sign the equivalent of non-disclosure agreements.
Speaker 1
They have to sign strict confidentiality clauses. They can't tell anybody about what they're doing.
Again, a pretty dodgy sign, I would say.
Speaker 1 Now, Leopold, of course, he wants to hide this from foreign competitors. He's paranoid that the Germans or the French will get in on the act, but he also wants to hide this from his own people.
Speaker 1 Because remember, here's the really remarkable thing. Unlike some of the rest of the Scramble of Africa, this is not being done for Belgium.
Speaker 1
It's not being done for the people or the government of Belgium. It's being done for one man, King Leopold.
And that's what makes it different.
Speaker 1
So, February 1879, Stanley sets off. And as part of the confidentiality, he travels under an alias.
He calls himself Monsieur Henri.
Speaker 1
So Monsieur Henry goes off to Africa. Meanwhile, back in Belgium, Leopold has set up yet another.
organization, another front group called the International Association of the Congo.
Speaker 1 Now this,
Speaker 1
people may have lost track at this point of all the different associations. That's the point.
That's what Leopold wants you to do. Because the names are all vaguely similar.
They're very similar.
Speaker 1
He wants you to think that this is the International African Association set up at his conference. And that's a charitable one.
A charitable one because it has the same flag, the same iconography.
Speaker 1
The flag is blue with a gold star. But this one.
is answerable just to him, the International Association of the Congo. And this is the organization that he intends will run his new fiefdom.
Speaker 1 It's like if you set up a very sinister, exploitative organization called Oxfim.
Speaker 1 Yeah,
Speaker 1
exactly. Exactly.
Help the children.
Speaker 1 Yeah.
Speaker 1
Yeah. Secretly, you're doing nothing but evil.
But if you, exactly, if you'd actually set up two groups, one called Save the Children and one called Help the Children.
Speaker 1
And Save the Children pretends to be charitable. You've got lots of pop stars.
And Help the Children is just a money-making, you're just selling merchants. You're using them to dig out gold.
Speaker 1
Right, exactly. Exactly.
That's exactly what it is. Now, Leopold, whilst Dan is gone, Leopold gets his sort of tame client journalists to start placing articles about this in the world's press.
Speaker 1 And this is brilliant. I mean, I have to say it really is brilliant because in each country, they sell a different message based on that country.
Speaker 1 So in Britain, in the Times, they place articles to say that what Leopold is doing is he's setting up a kind of, and I quote, a sort of society of the Red Cross.
Speaker 1 And they'll establish kind of hospices along the banks of the Congo to help travelers and to fight slavery. And of course people
Speaker 1 in Britain will be like, they're Victorians will be all over this.
Speaker 1 In the German papers, Leopold's agents say it's going to be a Hanseatic League of the Congo, a succession of Congolese free cities based on, and I quote, Bremen, Lubeck, and Hamburg.
Speaker 1
So lots of Marzapan. Marzipan, yeah, and that's running the line of the Congo.
That lovely kind of stepped gable architecture. Yes.
Speaker 1 And then in the American papers, Stanley has been sent to establish, and I quote, a confederation of free Negro republics.
Speaker 1 So basically like Liberia, that will become part of a United States of the Congo that will be supervised by the benevolent King Leopold. Whenever anybody reads this, they say, God, what's not to like?
Speaker 1 This sounds great. So kind.
Speaker 1 Meanwhile, Stanley is hard at work.
Speaker 1 And he's, again,
Speaker 1 as
Speaker 1 whatever you might think of him, he's good at doing it.
Speaker 1 In two years, he gets these colossal teams of workmen to carve this trail around the rapids and then to move 50 tons worth of equipment up the trail.
Speaker 1 And once they've got past the rapids, they establish a post at a place, let's say, called Leopoldville.
Speaker 1
And this is the birthplace of modern-day Kinshasa, which is now the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, the largest city in Africa. Is it? The largest city in Africa.
It is indeed.
Speaker 1
I did not know that. And this is where they will reassemble the steamboats and then head upriver.
But at this stage, I mean, we're literally talking about like a fortified blockhouse.
Speaker 1
I mean, that's all it is. Fine.
Yes.
Speaker 1 So this is an extraordinary achievement, but in a sign of things to come, it comes at a horrendous, horrendous human cost.
Speaker 1
So Stanley's subordinates, his workers, whether white or black, they die of disease, of exhaustion, of overwork. One of them is eaten by a crocodile.
Because, Dominic, just to say
Speaker 1
that it's not just humans who are are prone to the diseases, but pack animals as well. Yes.
So, you can't use oxen or donkeys or whatever to transport stuff. It has to be humans.
Speaker 1 You have to use human beings. And we know that he treated Europeans badly too.
Speaker 1 So, we have a letter from a steamboat engineer who's called Paul Nev, who fell ill, probably with malaria or yellow fever.
Speaker 1 And Nev wrote home and he said, Stanley treats me with the sort of care a blacksmith applies to repair an implement that has broken down through too rough usage.
Speaker 1 Teeth clenched in anger, he smites it again and again on the anvil. And Nev died a few weeks after writing that letter because basically Stanley had driven him into the ground.
Speaker 1 And of course, if Stanley does that to the European subordinates,
Speaker 1 what is he like with his African porters? Now, you mentioned, Tom, how does he enforce this? He has a private army. They have a thousand rifles and they have four machine guns, Maxim guns.
Speaker 1 And if any African questions his instructions, or if they even collapse, Stanley claps them in irons as an example to the others. I mean, it's not really a justification, but just a counterpoint.
Speaker 1 Stanley works himself insanely hard as well, doesn't he? He does.
Speaker 1
He's kind of relentless on his own body and health. Yeah, and he nearly dies a couple of times.
He has to be invalided home to Europe. And as soon as he's got better, he comes back out.
Speaker 1
I mean, he takes the job very seriously. He pushes himself incredibly hard, but in doing so, he kills quite a lot of other people.
All the time, Leopold is saying to him, hurry, hurry.
Speaker 1 You know, get as much land as you can,
Speaker 1 get as much ivory as you can, because Leopold is terrified that the French and the Germans will beat him to it. Now, this question of getting the land, how is Stanley going to do that?
Speaker 1 Well, as so often in the story of European colonialism, this comes down to an issue of treaties.
Speaker 1 Leopold has enlisted the aid of the former Regis Professor of Law at Oxford University, who rejoices in the name Sir Travers Twiss. A very
Speaker 1
Dickensian name. Yeah, that's from a novel.
Sir Travers Twiss has provided him with a legal opinion that a private company, i.e.
Speaker 1 the International Congo Association, is within its rights to sign treaties with African chiefs just as a sovereign country can. When Leopold has got that opinion, he sends orders to Stanley.
Speaker 1 He says, right, start signing the treaties, make them as brief as possible. And in a couple of articles, these chiefs chiefs have to give us everything.
Speaker 1 So as they go upriver, Stanley will stop and he will get out and he will start talking to the local bigwigs.
Speaker 1 Of course, when he raises the issue of treaties through various interpreters, the local chiefs have no idea what he's talking about. Remember, most of them have never seen writing before.
Speaker 1 So when Stanley says, I'd like you to make your X, your cross on this document, they have no idea what they are giving away. I mean, as you say, this is very reminiscent of episodes we've done before.
Speaker 1 Of course, 16th century Mexico or
Speaker 1
Native American Great Plains, 19th century. Absolutely.
But there's a brilliant example in the book King Leopold's Ghost, a terrifying example.
Speaker 1
On the 1st of April, 1884, the chiefs of Ngombi and Mafella signed a deal with Stanley. Leopold would give them each one piece of cloth per month.
So they're very excited at getting this cloth.
Speaker 1 In return, they give him the rights to all their territories, all tax and toll rights, all game, fishing, mining and forest rights for all time. They're giving these rights to the Congo Association.
Speaker 1 And here is the really crucial thing.
Speaker 1 The treaty that they have signed with their mark says they will assist by labor or otherwise any works, improvements or expeditions which the said association shall cause at any time to be carried out in any part of these territories.
Speaker 1 And this is the real real kicker. And this is what actually makes it different from the treaty signed with, let's say, Native Americans, the Plains Indians or whatever.
Speaker 1 Because Stanley and Leopold have not just bought their land, they've bought their labor forever, for all time.
Speaker 1 Any improvement, any work that the Congo Association wants to be carried out, you have to do for them.
Speaker 1 And there's no mention of, you know, what you'll get in return here. I mean, this is a really kind of this is they've given away everything.
Speaker 1 So as a trade deal not brilliant not it's a very poor trade deal i think it's fair to say stanley is great at getting these deals by june 1884
Speaker 1 he has signed contracts with more than 450 different chiefs he sails home to europe with the the treaties in his pocket giving these people's land and labor to king leopold so dominic a question Bearing in mind what we know is going to happen, did they need them at all?
Speaker 1 Would it have made any difference if they hadn't got these treaties? Yes, I think it would have made a difference.
Speaker 1
These treaties are not really, they're not done because Leopold cares what the Africans think. They're done to show to the rest of Europe.
So these are publicized?
Speaker 1
Yes, I've done all these deals with local chiefs. I'm very friendly with the local chiefs.
This is going to be for their benefit. Everybody wins.
This has been done completely legally.
Speaker 1
It is not 16th century style conquistador conquest. So a bit like the Chinese with their Belt and Road.
Belt and Road, yes. I suppose so, though Chinese listeners might
Speaker 1 raise an eyebrow in parallel tom.
Speaker 1 But yeah, no, I mean,
Speaker 1
it's a deal that Leopold is selling as it's a deal that benefits Africa. It benefits me.
It's great. Everybody wins.
Whether everybody does win, we will see.
Speaker 1
So he's got the treaties. He's got his steamboats going up and down the river.
What he needs now is somebody to recognize this as his
Speaker 1 because
Speaker 1 there is a problem. While Stanley has been up the Congo, a French explorer has landed on the other side of the river, a guy called Count Pierre Savonon de Braza.
Speaker 1 De Braza has established his own trading post on the north bank. And this becomes known as Brazzaville, which today is the capital of the formerly French Republic of the Congo.
Speaker 1
So a rival Congolese territory. And there's a massive media row between Stanley and Brazza.
The Portuguese hear about this and the the Portuguese say, what? We were the first of the Congo.
Speaker 1
What's going on here? Ciao, get out. And the British say, well, if there's any dispute about this, we would really much prefer that the Portuguese have the Congo.
So this is a problem for Leopold.
Speaker 1
He needs somebody to back him. And he does something here very clever.
He goes outside Europe to
Speaker 1 another relatively new country like Belgium.
Speaker 1 and another country that has a history of signing treaties with indigenous peoples, slightly one-sided treaties, some people might say, that end up not being worth the paper they're written on.
Speaker 1 But complemented by a love of liberty.
Speaker 1 Right. And this country is, of course, the United States of America.
Speaker 1 And he has the perfect intermediary, another Dickensian character called Henry Shelton Sanford, who had previously been the American ambassador to Brussels.
Speaker 1 And Henry Shelton Sanford, if you look him up, he's got a big stovepipe hat, he's got the moustache, he's got the kind of gold pincené glasses.
Speaker 1 And he's got the title general, hasn't hasn't he yeah fake um he got given he because he he donated artillery or something that's right the union during the civil war and he uses it all the time but it's completely bogus he's a fake general i mean he's perfect and he's um he's a he's a massive investor in florida yeah and he's lost loads of money in florida florida railroads so he needs money which makes him the perfect porn for leopold he needs a rich friend Leopold sends him to Washington with a personal letter to the Republican president, Chester Arthur.
Speaker 1
Leopold says, I'm setting up this colony in the Congo. And really, it's about two things.
It's about fighting slavery and about free and about free trade. And as it happens,
Speaker 1 Arthur is a Republican, and that's basically what the Republican Party
Speaker 1
in the 1870s and 1880s stands for. Arthur says, oh my God, this sounds absolutely brilliant.
And so in April 1884, the U.S.
Speaker 1 State Department becomes the first, issues the very first official recognition of Leopold's colony. And they don't understand what it is.
Speaker 1 Because at this stage, because they think it's going to be like the United States only in Africa. They absolutely think it's going to be the United States.
Speaker 1 And what is worse, in the official statement, they muddle up the International Association of the Congo and the International African Association. They use both names within about three sentences.
Speaker 1
And of course, that's exactly what Leopold wanted. That was why he did it, because he wants everybody to be confused.
He is cunning, isn't he? He is a fox. He is a fox.
Speaker 1 Now, at this point, when the Americans have recognized it, the French are the next to get on board. Why?
Speaker 1 Because even though they want it themselves, they become paranoid that Leopold is going to run out of money and sell it to the British. And is that because of Stanley? Exactly.
Speaker 1
That Stanley would be the intermediary. Hanging out in London and everything.
That is the last thing they want. And also, the French don't need to feel intimidated by Belgium, do they?
Speaker 1
No, I guess not. I guess not.
And they kind of are still thinking, well,
Speaker 1 if the Belgians get it, at least it's not the Germans. Next are the Germans.
Speaker 1 Now, Bismarck, the Chancellor of Germany, the great statesman of Germany, he sees through Leopold, I think, a little bit, because on the documents that he gets, he writes the words swindle and fantasies.
Speaker 1 And he's not wrong, is he? But Bismarck thinks,
Speaker 1
I don't want the French to get the Congo or Britain. So maybe if little Belgium gets it, yeah, fine.
It's the weakness of Belgium that Leopold is basically leveraging.
Speaker 1
Even though Belgium is not going to get it. But Leopold himself, that's the great irony of all this.
All this comes to a head at the conference in Berlin that opens at the end of 1884.
Speaker 1 So this is the great conference that marks the sort of high-end.
Speaker 1 And there are
Speaker 1
delegates from America, from Russia, from the Ottoman Empire. Of course, no Africans deciding their own destiny.
Nobody thinks that would be remotely appropriate.
Speaker 1 Now, actually, Stanley is there as an advisor to the American delegation. And it says something that Stanley himself feels a little bit queasy about this spectacle.
Speaker 1 He says that the sight of all the delegates rushing to carve up Africa reminded him of when he was on an expedition and they would kill some sort of beast.
Speaker 1
And he says, my porters, you know, they would rush with gleaming knives for slaughtered game. And that's what these delegates are like.
Well, I suppose to hack off the ivory, to hack off the ivory.
Speaker 1 To hack off the ivory, exactly.
Speaker 1
So by February 1885, the conference has reached an agreement. And for Leopold, it is the perfect result.
It's a total triumph.
Speaker 1 All the powers agree that they will recognize the International Congo Association as the owner of almost all of the Congo basin. And that's the dodgy one, not the humanitarian one.
Speaker 1
Exactly, the dodgy one. Leopold's private company.
So he has got a territory 76 times the size of Belgium. And it will belong not to Belgium, but to Leopold personally.
Speaker 1
So at last he has the fiefdom he wanted. And three months later, in May 1885, he drops all the fiction.
The International Congo Association is allowed to lapse.
Speaker 1 The only thing that remains of it is its flag, the blue flag with the gold star.
Speaker 1 And on the 29th of May, by royal decree, its lands, this huge stretch of territory, is renamed the Etat Independent du Congo, the free state of the Congo, and Leopold is named as its founding sovereign.
Speaker 1 He kind of briefly considered calling himself Emperor of the Congo, didn't he? He did. And giving all the various chieftains who'd signed treaties with him
Speaker 1 outfits modelled on the uniforms of the beef eaters, which are
Speaker 1 very hot,
Speaker 1 very sensible wearing. Inappropriate, inappropriate garbage.
Speaker 1 Exactly.
Speaker 1 But now that the Congo Free State has been set up, with Leopold as its monarch, for the people of the Congo, the real horror begins. The horror, the horror, one might almost say.
Speaker 1 And if you are a member of the Rustus History Club, then you can hear the next two episodes right now.
Speaker 1 If not, you can sign up at therestitzhistory.com and we will be back next time continuing our journey into the heart of darkness.