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         Clapperton Hugh African Explorer:     more detail
  1. Hugh Clapperton into the Interior of Africa: Records of the Second Expedition, 1825-1827 (Sources for African History) by Paul E. Lovejoy, Hugh Clapperton, et all 2005-04-30

61. BBC - Scotland History - On This Day
On 13 April 1827, hugh clapperton, the Scottish explorer, died. clapperton was thefirst European explorer of northern his discoveries, but died in Africa on a
http://www.bbc.co.uk/scotland/history/onthisday/onthisday.shtml?month=04&day=13

62. Buy.com - Atlas Of Expeditions Karen Farrington ISBN
stayat-home explorer ..44 Yermak visited ..76Sir hugh clapperton and Richard in Central Africa ..80 Sir
http://www.buy.com/retail/toc/product.asp?sku=30597371&loc=2235&PageFormat=7

63. Destination Timbuktu
Kilder BBC, The Story of Africa; Mungo Park Rejser i www.enchantedlearning.com AfBirgitte Hjort Nielsen, JP explorer Undervisning. hugh clapperton (17881827
http://www.destination-timbuktu.dk/indsigt/opdagelsesrejsende.asp
Facts Ordforklaringer JP Explorer
flodekspedition i Sahara Indsigt
facts og forklaringer Undervisning
materiale for 8.-10. klasse Konkurrence
skriv en stil og vind Opdagelse
ekspedition i ungdomshøjde Opdagelsesrejsende Da europæerne drog ud på de store opdagelsesrejser til Afrika omkring starten af 1800-tallet, var et af de store mål at finde udspringet til de to store floder, Nilen og Nigeren. I omkring 100 år havde man i England haft den opfattelse, at Nigeren hang sammen med Nilen, hvis man bare fulgte floden længe nok. I 1788 dannede man i England Det Afrikanske Selskab, hvis formål var at finde Timbuktu og Niger-flodens udspring.
Den skotske opdagelsesrejsende Mungo Park drog i 1795 ud på sin første rejse for at finde Nigerens udspring. I begyndelsen vidste han ikke, om han ledte efter begyndelsen eller slutningen på floden – for man vidste på det tidspunkt ikke, hvilken vej floden løb. Mungo Park gik i land i Afrika ved Gambia-flodens udløb i Atlanterhavet i 1795. Herfra drog han ind i landet gennem det, der i dag er Senegal, og nåede ind i det nuværende Mali, hvor han første gang så Nigeren.
På Mungo Parks første tur langs med Nigeren nåede han i virkeligheden ikke særlig langt op ad floden, kun til det nuværende Segou. I 1805 drog han af sted igen – endnu engang med det formål at finde ud af, hvor Nigeren førte hen. Heller ikke denne gang lykkedes det for ham at komme hele vejen, om end han da nåede meget længere end på den første tur. Til gengæld fik han ikke set ret meget af landskabet langs floden eller mødt ret mange af de mennesker, der boede i området – for han blev i sin kano på det meste af turen ned ad floden og skød på alt og alle, der nærmede sig. Mungo Park druknede ved Bussa, der ligger i det nuværende Nigeria.

64. A Trip Is Born (Cont.)
I chose The Death of hugh clapperton. A famed Scottish explorer in his day, clappertonhad expired of Lander on an 1827 expedition to West Africa.
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65. Recent Literature In Discovery History 2002
Difficult Dangerous Roads hugh clapperton’s Travels in of William Adams, 15641620,explorer of Japan the Amazon and East to Africa Unpublished Journals
http://www.sochistdisc.org/terrae_incognitae/recent_literature.htm
Recent Literature in Discovery History, 2002 Fred Musto Adams, Eilean. Hell or High Water: James White’s Disputed Passage through Grand Canyon, 1867 Logan: Utah State University Press, 2001. 220 p. Alvarez Pelaez, Raquel. “Historia natural en tiempos del Emperador Carlos V: la importancia de la conquista del nuevo mundo.” [Natural history in the time of the Emperor Charles V; the importance of the conquest of the New World]. Revista de Indias 60, no. 218 (2000): 13-31. The American Museum of Natural History Congo Expedition, May 1909 – November 1915 New York: American Museum of Natural History, 2002. AMNH Digital Library Project. http://diglib1.amnh.org (Web site that includes a multi-media introduction, readings about the expedition and the Congo, and digitized sound recordings, artwork, photos, maps, video clips, filed notes, GIS data, and scientific publications related to the Congo.) Anderson, Grahame. The Merchant of the Zeehaen: Isaac Gilsemans and the Voyages of Abel Tasman Wellington: Te Papa Press, 2001. 162 p.

66. Mungo Park
breath, sending out yet another explorer, Henry Nicholls to the heart of West Africathan the turn, recruited his neighbor, Lieutenant hugh clapperton, a naval
http://www.redlandsfortnightly.org/mungo.htm
THE FORTNIGHTLY CLUB OF REDLANDS, CALIFORNIA Founded 24 January 1895 MEETING # 1615 4:00 P.M. March 4, 1999

THE RACE TO TIMBUKTU
by Richard N. Moersch M.D. Assembly Room, A. K. Smiley Public Library
SUMMARY
The decision of a men's discussion society meeting in London in 1788 to promote the investigation and exploration of West Africa was principally one of intellectual curiosity on the part of the members. over the next forty years however, it led to the opening of this enormous and hidden area of the world as well as setting the foundation for the commercial and military domination of this part of Africa by the British and French empires. This was accomplished at little cost to the involved governments but at a terrible price paid by the ill-equipped vainglorious young men sent out by these armchair dilettantes. BIOGRAPHY OF THE AUTHOR, Richard N. Moersch M.D. Richard N. Moersch was born in Rochester, Minnesota of parents: Herman and Charline Moersch Education : Dartmouth College BA 1948 Harvard Medical School MD 1952 Stanford University Hospital Internship 1952-1953 Mayo Foundation Fellowship 1953-1954, 1956-1960 University of Minnesota MS (Surgery) 1960 Military Service: United States Navy. Medical Officer USS Windham Bay CVE-92 1954-1956 Professional : Cardiothoracic Surgeon, Inland Heart Center, St. Bernardine Medical Center, 1961-1988

67. Lander History
He also visited South Africa. In 1825 the Scottish explorer hugh clapperton hiredLander as his assistant on an expedition to determine the course of the Niger
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~rlander/Lander history.html
OAS_AD('Top'); Home Lander/Kavanagh Hickmott/Lavin "Lander" the name ... Our Kavanaghs "Lander" the Name Lander Coat of Arms (or Blazon of Arms) Described as: "Paly of eight Sable and Or, a fesse Gules" which means eight pales or vertical stripes coloured black and gold plus a red horizontal stripe through the middle. The paly denoted military strength and courage and bestowed on defenders of the state in ancient times. The fesse is the military belt or girdle of honour. It is important to note that being a Lander is no proof that we can claim the blazon as ours. There has been no effort to trace back to the original recipient of the blazon. If it was granted long enough ago then most Landers may be able to claim it. There is another coat of arms for Lander. This is Lander of St. Ives, Cornwall. As our Thomas Lander came from Derby, it can be discounted. Lander Crest Described as "A hand issuing from a cloud holding a sword wavy all Proper" The hand is the pledge of Faith, Sincerity and Justice. All proper simply means coloured the normal colour of a sword ie blue or silver. Lander name derivation England is the Country of origin for the name Lander. The name includes the spelling variables Launder, Lavender, Landor and Launders and are derived from the occupation of a person.- one who may have washed and bleached flax, cloth or wool etc. A launderer. In the old Norman French a washer man or woman was a lavandier or lavandiere. (Defined as such in Middle English Dictionary around 1325) The name Landers is simply the son of Lander. However some researchers indicate the name Lander may be of Danish or Germanic origin. The Anglo Saxon origin Landweard is a possibility, meaning a landwarden.

68. New Statesman - The Back Half - What S Left To Discover?
David Livingstone, British bones litter the african interior; and There are stillplaces to explore if we can the lost diary of Captain hugh clapperton, one of
http://www.consider.net/forum_new.php3?newTemplate=OpenObject&newTop=20000306004

69. UNESCO - The Slave Route
hugh clapperton, second expedition into the interior of West Africa the initiativeof Haiti and african nations that teachers met in Haiti to explore the launch
http://www.ama.africatoday.com/unesco_m.htm
UNESCO - THE SLAVE ROUTE
Please click on a bulleted heading to toggle the content. The Slave Route, UNESCO - Division of Intercultural Projects, 1, rue Miollis - 75732 Paris Cedex 15 - France At the proposal of Haiti and some African countries, the General Conference of UNESCO approved at its 27 th Session in 1993 the implementation of the "The Slave Route" Project (Resolution 27 C/3.13). The project was officially launched during the First Session of the International Scientific Committee of the Slave Route in September 1994 in Ouidah (Benin), one of the former pivots of the Slave trade in the Gulf of Guinea. The official documents of Ouidah were brought out in book form by UNESCO Publishing in 1998 under the title "From Chains to Bonds: the Slave Trade Revisited". The idea of a "Route" expresses the dynamics of the movement of peoples, civilizations and cultures, while that of "slave" addresses not only the universal phenomenon of slavery, but also in a more precise and explicit way the transatlantic slave trade in the Atlantic, the Indian Ocean and Mediterranean. The Slave Route Project has a double objective: on the one hand it aims to break a silence and make universally known the subject of the transatlantic slave trade and slavery in the Indian Ocean and Mediterranean, with its causes and modalities, by means of scientific work. On the other hand, it aims to emphasize, in an objective way its consequences, especially the interactions between the peoples concerned in Europe, Africa and the Caribbean.

70. Nigeria History
had returned to after his trek with hugh clapperton on his the first European to crossthe african continent the route he had taken with clapperton and returned
http://www.ianmccall.co.uk/lagos_still.htm
NIGERIA, A PERSONAL HISTORY
by Ian McCall
BACK TO INDEX Chapter 5 - LAGOS STILL My stint at headquarters was to get to know the work involved in the marketing of produce. At that time the jobs of Marketing Officer and Produce Officer were interchangeable, the knowledge of both jobs being seen as a required background for officers performing either function. It was during this attachment that I went to Kano. I was asked if I would like to continue working in the Marketing Division but declined as I was sure I would prefer the outside work. I hadn`t come to Nigeria to spend all my time sat behind a desk. I was to have no regrets. Lander was to return to Badagri with his brother from his native Cornwall two years later in a successful attempt to prove conclusively that the Niger flowed into the Bight of Benin and not into Lake Chad or the Nile as people had earlier believed. He followed the route he had taken with Clapperton and returned down the Niger by canoe to Brass in the Niger Delta, braving all sorts of hazards on the way. He it was who heralded the possibility of water communication on the Niger and its tributaries and the water-borne trade that would follow. In the process he discovered the remains of an earlier intrepid explorer, Mungo Park, at Bussa on the Niger. Like Park, he himself had a violent death on the river. Park is commemorated suitably in his native Selkirk.

71. Historical Atlas Of ExpeditionsF‹IˆÉš ‰®‘“X
Sir Walter Raleigh The stayat-home explorer 44 (2 Thesiger The Empty Quarter 68 (2)Africa from 1600 Niger never visited 76 (2) Sir hugh clapperton and Richard
http://bookweb.kinokuniya.co.jp/htmy/0816044325.html
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72. NIGDEH
was reached from Benin by hugh clapperton, and his On clapperton s death RichardLander and his 1832 Macgregor Laird established the african Steamship Company
http://100.1911encyclopedia.org/N/NI/NIGDEH.htm
NIGDEH
NIGDEH (Arab. Nakidak), the chief town of a sanjak of the same name in the Konia vilayet of Asia Minor, situated on the Kaisarieh-Cilician Gates road. It is remarkable for the beauty of its buildings, dating from almost all ages of the Seljuk period. After the fall of the sultanate of Rum (of which it had been one of the principal cities), Nigdeh became independent, and, according to Ibu Batuta, ruinous, and did not pass into Ottoman hands till the time of Mahommed II. It represents no classical t,own hut, with Bor. has inherited the importance of Tyana, NIGELNIGER whose site lies aboutio in. S.W. A Hittite-inscribed monument, , brought perhaps from Tyana, has been found at Nigdeh. The population (20,000) includes a large Greek and a small Armenian community. The Orthodox metropolitan of Iconium resides here. NIGER ancient course of the upper river. When the upper Niger had this direction, the Wadi Taffassassent, now a dried-up river of the central Sahara, which rose in the Ahaggar mountains, is believed to have formed the upper course of the existing lower Niger. While the upper and lower parts of the Niger have all the appearance of ancient streams, the middle Niger is the result of a "recent" capture; " it has no past, it scarcely has a present " (see R. Chudeau, Sahara soudanais, Paris, 1909). o the east, between 15 and 20 E. (see Rennell's map in Horne-mann's Travels, 1802). To Rennell the Benue was an east-lowing continuation of the Niger.3 The imagined existence of mountainscalled Kong in the west and Komri (Lunar) in the eaststretching in a high and unbroken chain across Africa about 10 N. long prevented geographers from thinking of a Dossible southern bend to the Niger.

73. Hugh Clapperton
one of this order, for, while hugh found distinction the 14th of December, 1823, MrClapperton, accompanied by Chad, which may be called the Caspian of Africa.
http://www.electricscotland.com/history/other/clapperton_hugh.htm
Welcome to ElectricScotland.com
Clans Tartans History Travel ... Feedback
Significant Scots
Hugh Clapperton The result of this expedition was a work published in 1826, under the title of "Narrative of Travels and Discoveries in Northern and Central Africa, in the years 1822, 1823, and 1824, by Major Denham, F.R.S., Captain Clapperton, and the late Dr Oudney," of which a third edition was published in 1828. The greater part of this work was the composition of Denham, Clapperton only writing a minor part, respecting the excursion to Jackatoo, which, however, is not the least interesting in the book. The subject of our memoir wrote in a plain, manly, unaffected style, as might have been expected from his character. The work was published under the immediate superintendence of major Denham; and it was not the fate of Clapperton ever to see the result of his labours in print. To pursue the narrative of Lander: "My master and myself enjoyed tolerable health for some weeks after my arrival, I say tolerable

74. Clapperton, Hugh (1788–1827) - MavicaNET
clapperton, hugh English URL http//www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0812389 Britishexplorer, b. Annan, Scotland. and Canada he made two journeys to W Africa.
http://www.mavicanet.com/directory/nor/35303.html
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75. Overview Of Hugh Clapperton
hugh clapperton clapperton reached Lake Chad in 1823, which was the source of oneof the as the Journal of a Second Expedition into the Interior of Africa (1829
http://www.geo.ed.ac.uk/scotgaz/people/famousfirst402.html
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Hugh Clapperton
Explorer, born in Annan (Dumfries and Galloway). Clapperton served in both the merchant fleet and the navy, travelling to India and Canada. Invited to by the Admiralty to take part in an expedition which sought the source of the River Niger, which had been partially explored by Mungo Park (1796). Clapperton reached Lake Chad in 1823, which was the source of one of the Niger's major tributaries. On a second expedition to the same area, he died of fever near Sokoto (Nigeria). His travelling companion returned with records of the expedition which were published as the Journal of a Second Expedition into the Interior of Africa If you have found this information useful please consider
making a small donation to help maintain and improve this site.
Supported by: The Robertson Trust, The Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland,
The Royal Scottish Geographical Society,
The Institute of Geography, University of Edinburgh.

76. Explorers
Medina. clapperton, hugh, 1788 1827, Scottish, First European to exploreNorthern and Central Africa; crossed River Niger. Diaz, Bartholomew,
http://www.geocities.com/Axiom43/explorers.html
Some Well known Explorers.
Name First Names Lived Nationality Area Explored

Burke Robert O'Hara Irish Crossed Australia from south to north.
Cook James British Sailed right round New Zealand; landed at point on Australia which he named New South Wales; first to cross the Antarctic Circle; discovered New Caledonia Norfolk Island, Cook or Hervey Islands and South Georgia; explored Easter Island, the Marqesas and the Tonga Islands; rediscovered Sandwich Islands. (Hawaii); surveyed both sides of the Bering Strait.
Dampier William English Sailed round Cape of Good Hope to Australia; landed at Shark Bay on west coast; explored as far as Dampier Archipelago.
Flinders Matthew English Explored entire south coast of Australia from Cape Leeuwin to Bass Strait; charted east coast of Australia and Gulf of Carpentaria.
Forrest John Australian Led coastal expedition from Perth to Adelaide.

77. Hugh
nephews. Miscellaneous hugh clapperton (17881827) European explorerof West Africa. Sir hugh Gough (1799-1869) British soldier.
http://www.geocities.com/edgarbook/names/h/hugh.html
For many more names, please Return to Edgar's Main Page. Hugh
Gender : Masculine
Language : English
Etymology
Hugh
History
Hugh (in Northern France it was Hugues or Hugon , while in Southern France it was Hue or Huon ). It was a very common Norman and Medieval name, made more popular by St. Hugh, the Bishop of Lincoln (1135-1200).
Pronunciation : HYOO.
Diminutives
English Huey Hughie
Alternates Hughe Hue French Hugues Hawaiian Hiu Italian Ugo Latin Hugo Scottish Shug Scottish (Medieval) Huchon Welsh Hew Huw Hu Surnames Welsh Hughes Pugh Puw Famous Bearers Artists and Authors Hugo van der Goes Flemish painter. Ugo da Carpi (1480-after 1520) Italian painter. Huw Morus Welsh poet. Hugh Kelly British dramatist. Hugh Henry Brackenridge American author. Ugo Foscolo Italian poet and novelist. Hugo Wolf German composer. Hugo Erfurth German photographer. Hugo von Hofmannsthal Austrian poet. Hugh McCrae Australian poet. Hugo Wast Argentine novelist. Hugh Lofting English-American author. Sir Hugh Walpole British novelist.

78. Zoological Citation Sources -- N
Tuckey Narrative of an Expedition to explore the river discoveries in Northern andCentral Africa, in the Denham, Dixon 17861828 clapperton, hugh 1788-1827
http://www.zoonomen.net/cit/journ.html
Zoological Citation Sources N
Nachtr.Bechst.Naturgesch.Deutschlands Nachttrage zu Bechsteins Naturgeschicte Deutschlands Narr.Exped.Zaire[Tuckey] Narrative of an Expedition to explore the river Zaire, usually called the Congo, in South Africa, in 1816, under the direction of Capt. J.K. Tuckey, R.N., to which is added, the Journal of Professor Smith; and some general observations on the country and its inhabitants. Tuckey, James Kingston [1776-1816] 1818 New York. p.L,lxxxi, 1,410 Narr.Journ.PolarSea[Franklin] Narrative of a Journey to the Shores of the Polar Sea in the Years 1819,20, 21, and 22 Sir John Franklin. With an appendix on various subjects relating to science and natural history 1823 Narr.Voy.Disc.NewS.Wales Narrative of a voyage of discovery in the years 1800-2 to New South Wales. Grant, James London 1804 [1 v.] plates Narr.WhalingVoy. Narrative of a whaling voyage round the globe, from the year 1833 to 1836. Comprising sketches of Polynesia, California, the Indian Archipelago, etc. Bennett, Frederick Debell 2 vols. "Birds: v. 2 p.242-54 London NaschaOchota Nascha Ochota ? [CWR "Nasa Ochota"] Buturlin 1908-> [Note: Title is "Our Hunting" the consonant is a X, not a "ch"] ? "Nasha Ohota" would be my transliteration.

79. Today In History!
Duquesnoy, composer; 1788 hugh clapperton, Annan Scotland, Africanexplorer; 1797 - Frederik Augustus II, King of Saxon (1836-54); 1798
http://search.teach-nology.com/today/today2.pl
Search: All Months January February March April May June July August September October November December All Days without with
Search archives: Historical Events Famous Birthdays Famous Deaths Welcome to Today In History for Monday, June 7, 2004. On this day in history ..
  • - Eudocia A Athenais marries Oostromeins emperor Theodosius II
  • - Vigilius ends his reign as Catholic Pope
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  • - 2nd parliament of King James I, dissolves passing no legislation
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  • - Battle by Solebay: Dutch adm M de Ruyter beats French/English fleet
  • - Earthquake in Porte Royale, Jamaica, kills 3,000
  • - English invasion army under Thomas Talmash reaches Brest
  • - Daniel Boone begins exploring Bluegrass State of Kentucky
  • - United Colonies change name to United States
  • - Richard Lee (VA) moves Decl of Independence in Continental Congress
  • - Anti-Catholic riot in London, 100s die

80. European Travel Accounts Of Africa - Bryn Mawr College Library
Edward Bowdich, for example, was motivated to explore the continent as clapperton,hugh, 17881827 of a second expedition into the interior of Africa, from the
http://www.brynmawr.edu/library/speccoll/guides/travel/africa.html
Bryn Mawr College Library Special Collections
Travel Literature Africa
Description Census of Related BMC Library Travel Literature Geographical Groups Africa remained largely unexplored by Europeans long after commercial, colonial, and missionary activities had been established in Asia and the Americas. Christian missionaries were among the first Europeans to venture into the interior of Africa, and occasionally they had their experiences published. A seventeenth-century example is Giovanni Antonio Cavazzi's Istorica descrizione de' tre' regni Congo, Matamba et Angola . Interest in Africa increased as the wealth of the continent's resources became apparent. In 1734, a time when the commodification of the African people depended upon their dehumanization at the hands of European colonizers, William Snelgrave wrote a formulaic description of European activity in Africa entitled A New Account of Some Parts of Guinea, and the Slave-Trade Travels in the Interior Districts of Africa is a case in point.

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