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Chad -- Description and travel Books

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Auguste Chevalier

L'Afrique centrale française : $b Récit du voyage de la mission

"L''Afrique centrale française : Récit du voyage de la mission" by Auguste Chevalier et al. is a scientific travel account and expedition report written in the early 20th century. It chronicles the French Chari–Lake Chad mission through Central Africa, blending route narratives with studies in botany, geology, ethnography, and colonial economics. The focus is on mapping regions between the Congo, Oubangui, and Lake Chad, establishing experimental gardens, and assessing resources such as rubber, copal, and food crops within the context of French colonial administration. The opening of this account explains how the mission was conceived, funded, and staffed, outlining official backing, scientific aims, and the team’s roles. It follows the party from France to Brazzaville via the Congo railway, contrasts the disrepair of Brazzaville with the orderly Belgian Léopoldville, and details early botanical work that identifies the so‑called “grass-root rubber” from Landolphia species. The narrative then shifts to the river journey up the Congo and Oubangui toward Bangui, with close observation of forests, islands, copal and oil palms, village agriculture, and abandoned settlements linked to recent unrest, while noting evolving local customs and the spread of introduced crops. It closes in this excerpt with vivid travel notes and a clear critique of abuses by concession agents and poorly supervised troops as the boat reaches Bondjo-country villages like Isasa.

Jean Tilho

The exploration of Tibesti, Erdi, Borkou, and Ennedi in 1912-1917 : $b a mission entrusted to the author by the French Institute

"The exploration of Tibesti, Erdi, Borkou, and Ennedi in 1912-1917: a mission…" by Lieut.-Colonel Jean Tilho is a geographical expedition report and lecture written in the early 20th century. It documents a French mission in Central Saharan Africa that combined scientific surveying with military operations. The central question is whether Lake Chad ever connected to the Nile via the Bahr el Ghazal depression, set against detailed accounts of routes, oases, climate, terrain, and local peoples during Senoussist unrest and wartime pressures. Expect systematic observation, maps, and logistical realities rather than a narrative travelogue. The opening of this work lays out the mission’s aim, Tilho’s background and route into the Lake Chad region, and the 1912–1913 campaign that seized key Senoussist strongholds at Ain Galakka, Faya, Gouro, and Ounianga. It explains why taking Borkou mattered strategically during the broader Turco‑German–Senoussist push, then sketches four demanding years of holding the oasis network. Tilho offers vivid, practical portraits of Kanem, Borkou, and Ounianga—their water, winds, heat, soils, crops (chiefly dates), pests, and trade in salt and dates—before pushing east to the Tekro and Sarra wells on the Koufra route and recounting a perilous return guided only by compass. He advances through Dimi into the little‑known plateaux of Erdi, mapping water points and altitudes, and then crosses a broad depression to Ennedi, where measurements lead him to conclude the Chad basin is a closed system, not linked to the Nile. The narrative then surveys Ennedi’s terraced sandstone plateaux, seasonal wadis, natural cisterns, rich pastures, sparse, raiding-prone tribes, and the spectacular valleys of Archeï, followed by reconnaissance west into Mortcha’s wadis and the ancient lake zones. With the Great War’s “holy war” agitation inflaming raids, he describes French counter‑raids and then turns to Tibesti, outlining the plan, hazards, and a striking ascent of Emi Koussi’s vast crater before returning to regroup for further operations.

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