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1
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The man known to history as King Leopold II
of Belgium was born Prince Leopold Louis-Philippe
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00:00:11,800 --> 00:00:19,980
Marie Victor on the 9th of April 1835 in Brussels,
the capital of Belgium, where his parents
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00:00:19,980 --> 00:00:22,720
ruled as King and Queen.
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His father was King Leopold I of the Belgians,
a German prince from the dukedom of Coburg
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00:00:28,890 --> 00:00:35,180
in Saxony who came of age during the Napoleonic
Wars and served as a cavalry commander in
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00:00:35,180 --> 00:00:43,020
the Russian army fighting against the Emperor
Napoleon in 1813 and 1814, where he rose to
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the rank of lieutenant general.
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In 1816, Leopold married Princess Charlotte
of Wales, the daughter of George, Prince Regent,
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and second in line to the British throne.
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When Charlotte died giving birth to a stillborn
child in 1817, Leopold remained an influential
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figure at the British court, especially after
his sister Victoria married Prince Edward
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of Kent in 1818, giving birth to a daughter
also named Victoria, who would become Queen
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in 1837.
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Five years before Prince Leopold’s birth,
Belgium declared independence from the United
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Netherlands, but Great Britain was the only
major power to recognise Belgian independence
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at the time.
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In the immediate aftermath of the Belgian
Revolution of 1830, the British government
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was concerned that the Belgians might chose
a French prince as their king and offered
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Leopold as an alternative candidate.
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The Belgians, afraid that a French king might
annex their new nation to France, gladly accepted
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Leopold, who was sworn in as King of the Belgians
on the 21st of July 1831.
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The Dutch were unwilling to give up their
claim to Belgium so quickly, and it was only
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in 1839 that the Netherlands joined six other
European states in signing the Treaty of London
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guaranteeing Belgian independence and neutrality.
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Soon after becoming King, Leopold I married
the twenty-year-old Princess Louise d’Orléans,
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the eldest daughter of King Louis-Philippe
I of France.
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Leopold believed that not only would the marriage
encourage France to abandon its claims on
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Belgian territory, but Louise, who was a Catholic,
would help him bridge the religious gap between
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himself and his primarily Catholic subjects.
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As a Lutheran, Leopold wanted to demonstrate
that he could be a good ruler despite the
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differences in faith.
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Following their marriage in August 1832, the
couple had four children together.
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The first, Crown Prince Louis-Philippe Leopold
Ernest, was born in July 1833 but died before
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his first birthday.
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The royal couple would go on to have three
more children, sons Leopold and Philippe,
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and a daughter Charlotte, all of whom survived
into adulthood.
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In 1840, the five-year-old Prince Leopold
was granted the title of Duke of Brabant by
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his father, while his younger brother Philippe
was made Count of Flanders.
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Although Leopold was heir to the throne, he
resented the fact that his parents favoured
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his two younger siblings and proved an unruly
child.
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His first language was French, the native
language of his mother as well as the Belgian
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social elite, and he also learned to speak
English and German.
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Following the traditions of European royalty,
Leopold’s upbringing was entrusted to a
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royal governor, Count Gustave de Lannoy, who
established a strict schedule which involved
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more than eight hours of study each day.
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While his siblings excelled in their studies,
Leopold struggled, only finding success in
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drawing.
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Although he was uninterested in his education,
Leopold was fascinated by politics and even
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at the age of ten enjoyed discussing current
affairs with his father’s most distinguished
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subjects.
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As Leopold entered his teens, the King desperately
tried to force his son to become a more diligent
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student and instructed Count de Lannoy to
apply stricter discipline, but these efforts
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were counterproductive, and Leopold’s wild
behaviour continued to worry his parents.
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In October 1850, young Leopold was at his
mother’s bedside when she died of tuberculosis
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at the age of thirty-eight.
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The Duke of Brabant was devastated by the
death of his affectionate mother, and the
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sixty-year-old King proved unable or unwilling
to bridge the emotional distance with his
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eldest son.
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The King was accustomed to communicating with
Leopold via secretaries, though he ensured
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that he was kept up to date with the latest
political developments.
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In 1848, Leopold’s maternal grandfather
King Louis-Philippe had been overthrown in
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a revolution led by Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte,
the nephew of Emperor Napoleon I. By 1852,
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Louis-Napoleon followed in his uncle’s footsteps
and assumed the title Emperor Napoleon III.
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The overthrow of his father-in-law damaged
Leopold I’s prestige in Europe, and the
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King of the Belgians hoped to address this
by arranging a favourable marriage for his
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son.
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In August 1853, the eighteen-year-old Duke
of Brabant married sixteen-year-old Archduchess
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Marie-Henriette, a cousin of Emperor Franz
Joseph I of Austria, providing the Belgian
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royal family with a connection to the imperial
House of Habsburg.
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The young couple were wholly unsuited to each
other, and while Leopold was a quiet and depressive
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young man, his playful bride enjoyed horseback
riding and Hungarian gypsy music.
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In October 1853, the newlywed couple left
Belgium for a long trip to England to visit
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Leopold’s cousin Queen Victoria.
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While the English Queen was impressed by Marie-Henriette’s
intelligence, her liberal views, and her keen
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interest in the arts, she portrayed her Belgian
cousin as uninteresting and intolerant, while
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admitting his expertise on political and military
affairs.
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For many years, Leopold’s health had been
in a delicate state, and in 1854 his doctors
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advised him to take a long rest in Egypt.
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Geography was the only academic subject which
interested Leopold, and he was glad to have
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the opportunity to visit Egypt and learn more
about the world.
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After leaving Belgium in November 1854, Leopold
and Marie travelled through Germany, Austria,
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and Italy before arriving in Alexandria, Egypt
at the beginning of February 1855.
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The royal couple were welcomed by the khedive,
Sa’id Pasha, who ruled Egypt as viceroy
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of the Ottoman Empire.
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During his two-month stay in Egypt, Leopold
was delighted to take a steamship up the Nile
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past the ancient sites of Thebes and Karnak,
and while in the Egyptian capital of Cairo
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he extracted a promise from the khedive to
establish a steamship company connecting Alexandria
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and the Belgian port of Antwerp.
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During his time in Egypt, Leopold also began
to consider the potential for establishing
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a Belgian colony in Africa either in or near
Egypt, an issue which would become an obsession
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for the rest of his life.
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After leaving Egypt, the Duke and Duchess
of Brabant spent Easter week in Jerusalem
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as guests of Sultan Abdulmejid I, the ruler
of the Ottoman Empire, which included the
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Middle East and parts of south-eastern Europe.
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The royal party then travelled to Syria and
Lebanon before sailing across the Mediterranean
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to Athens, meeting King Otto and Queen Amalia
of Greece.
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On their way home they made another stop in
Italy, moving up the peninsula to meet King
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Ferdinand of Naples, the pope in Rome, and
King Victor Emmanuel of Sardinia-Piedmont,
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who would become King of Italy within a decade.
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Soon after returning to Belgium in August
1855, Leopold made a diplomatic visit to Paris
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in October where he failed to charm the court,
who had become endeared to his young wife.
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Visiting and receiving foreign royalty was
a large part of the Duke of Brabant’s responsibilities,
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and in May 1856 he received his wife’s cousin
Archduke Maximilian, the younger brother of
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the Austrian emperor.
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King Leopold hoped that Maximilian would marry
his daughter Charlotte, and the Austrian archduke
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immediately took a liking to the beautiful
Belgian princess.
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In July 1857 the couple married in Brussels,
much to the satisfaction of various royal
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family members.
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Despite being a small country, Belgium’s
industry and economy developed rapidly during
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the middle of the 19th century, and the issue
of commercial development was particularly
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close to Leopold’s heart.
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In December 1855, he made his first substantive
speech in the Belgian Senate about the subject
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of a steamship service from Antwerp to Egypt,
which he had discussed with the khedive earlier
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in the year.
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Leopold was only interested in domestic affairs
when it had something to do with Belgium’s
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international prestige or its international
trade relations, and he was a strong advocate
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for investment in the Belgian railway network
and the ports of Antwerp and Ostend.
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Independence from the Netherlands had deprived
Belgium of its access to the Dutch colonies
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in the Caribbean and the East Indies, and
King Leopold was desperate to acquire colonies
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for Belgium.
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The extensive search for a potential colony
covered the entire globe, including the Greek
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island of Crete, then under Ottoman rule,
the Faroe Islands, Cuba and other Caribbean
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islands, Latin America, Africa, and even parts
of Texas, which had declared independence
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from Mexico but had not yet joined the United
States.
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A Belgian mission to establish a colony in
Guatemala in Central America in 1845 was abandoned
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after many of the colonists died of heat exhaustion
and disease.
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In 1850s the Duke of Brabant was an enthusiastic
supporter of his father’s quest to acquire
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an overseas colony.
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An opportunity appeared to present itself
in 1859, when a joint Anglo-French military
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force prepared to go to war with China seeking
further liberalisation of the opium trade
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and greater access to Chinese ports in what
became known as the Second Opium War.
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King Leopold I hoped that by sending a small
Belgian force alongside the British and the
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French, he might also be able to obtain access
to Chinese markets.
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Though Napoleon III was open to the idea of
a Belgian contingent of around 1,500 men,
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the Belgian Parliament refused to finance
the expedition.
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In response to this setback, the Duke of Brabant
worked with Auguste Lambermont, an official
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in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Captain
Henri-Alexis Brialmont, a military engineer,
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to produce a 219-page pamphlet making a forceful
case for Belgian colonisation.
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By the early 1860s King Leopold’s health
was in decline and with his declining health
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came a declining interest in colonial schemes,
but his son Leopold was undeterred.
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The Duke explored colonisation schemes in
Borneo and the Pacific islands and was constantly
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in contact with Brialmont researching potential
leads.
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The two men planned to write a book with the
title Belgians Abroad, and Leopold made plans
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to carry out research for the project by visiting
the colonial powers and their colonies.
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In 1860 he travelled to Constantinople to
meet the Ottoman Sultan, while in 1862 he
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went to Spain and North Africa.
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In 1864 he embarked on his most ambitious
adventure, travelling to the British imperial
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possessions of India and Ceylon, now Sri Lanka,
as well as Burma, now Myanmar, Singapore,
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and the Chinese ports of Canton and Hong Kong.
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By the time Leopold returned from his Asian
tour in May 1865, his father’s health was
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in terminal decline, and on the 10th of December
1865 King Leopold I of the Belgians died at
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the age of seventy-five.
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A week later, on the 17th of December, the
Duke of Brabant was sworn in as King Leopold
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II of the Belgians.
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After an uncertain start, Leopold impressed
his ministers with his political judgement.
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Not long after his accession, Belgium became
the target of another French attempt at annexation,
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prompted by French anxieties about the expansion
of the Kingdom of Prussia.
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The energetic Prussian Chancellor Otto von
Bismarck sought to fuse the German states
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into a united German empire, and Prussian
armies had defeated Denmark and Austria in
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quick succession in the mid-1860s.
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These victories strengthened the Prussian
state, which loomed menacingly on France’s
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eastern border, and Napoleon hoped to redress
the balance by annexing all or parts of Belgium.
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Napoleon III also hoped to restore his prestige
after his failure to establish a Mexican empire
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friendly to French interests ruled by Leopold’s
brother-in-law Archduke Maximilian of Austria.
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After arriving in Mexico in 1864, Maximilian’s
small army had little chance of success against
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the resurgent republican forces of President
Benito Juarez.
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00:14:52,240 --> 00:14:59,139
While Maximilian begged for European assistance
to defend his empire, by 1866 Napoleon decided
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to abandon Maximilian to his fate.
169
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With her husband in grave danger, Empress
Charlotte, now known by her Spanish name of
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Carlota, returned to Europe to seek assistance
in person.
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With her cries for help falling on deaf ears
at both the French and Austrian courts, Charlotte’s
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mental health began to decline, to the point
of displaying signs of mental instability,
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and the news of her husband’s capture and
execution in June 1867 was kept from her until
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the end of the year after her return to Belgium,
where she remained in her state of insanity
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until her death in 1927 at the age of eighty-six.
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Napoleon was unsuccessful in his efforts to
obtain territorial compensation, and in July
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00:15:48,360 --> 00:15:54,470
1870 France pre-emptively declared war on
Prussia before the power imbalance became
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00:15:54,470 --> 00:15:56,009
unassailable.
179
00:15:56,009 --> 00:16:00,950
Although both belligerent states had signed
the Treaty of London, Leopold was uncertain
180
00:16:00,950 --> 00:16:06,829
that Belgian neutrality would be respected
and requested a further guarantee from England.
181
00:16:06,829 --> 00:16:12,139
Although the British were initially reluctant
to do so, the emergence of a secret agreement
182
00:16:12,139 --> 00:16:18,810
between France and Prussia in 1866 sanctioning
the French annexation of Belgium caused the
183
00:16:18,810 --> 00:16:21,250
British government to respond.
184
00:16:21,250 --> 00:16:26,440
In early August, the French and Prussians
signed a new treaty with Britain affirming
185
00:16:26,440 --> 00:16:28,649
Belgian neutrality.
186
00:16:28,649 --> 00:16:33,450
Regardless of the renewed guarantees, Leopold
authorised the mobilisation of the Belgian
187
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army to defend its borders if necessary.
188
00:16:36,850 --> 00:16:43,389
The King was disappointed to learn that of
the 105,000 men that existed on paper, only
189
00:16:43,389 --> 00:16:46,649
85,000 could be mobilised.
190
00:16:46,649 --> 00:16:52,170
The fighting between French and Prussian forces
was uncomfortably close to the Belgian border,
191
00:16:52,170 --> 00:16:58,550
but the war was effectively over on the 2nd
of September 1870 when the Prussian army won
192
00:16:58,550 --> 00:17:03,560
a decisive victory at Sedan and captured Napoleon
III.
193
00:17:03,560 --> 00:17:08,980
With the railway lines to Germany carrying
troop trains, Napoleon was granted passage
194
00:17:08,980 --> 00:17:13,299
through Belgium from Leopold as a German prisoner
of war.
195
00:17:13,299 --> 00:17:19,230
After the Franco-Prussian War, most Belgians
decided that neutrality served as a sufficient
196
00:17:19,230 --> 00:17:25,250
guarantee of Belgian independence, but Leopold
drew the opposite conclusion, believing that
197
00:17:25,250 --> 00:17:30,840
Belgium could only enforce neutrality with
a large army.
198
00:17:30,840 --> 00:17:36,720
As with many European monarchs, Leopold considered
it his duty to his family and his country
199
00:17:36,720 --> 00:17:41,340
to produce a son and an heir to succeed him
to the throne.
200
00:17:41,340 --> 00:17:48,020
In 1858, Marie-Henriette had given birth to
a daughter Louise, and the following June
201
00:17:48,020 --> 00:17:53,659
she produced the desired son, Prince Leopold,
Count of Hainault.
202
00:17:53,659 --> 00:17:59,900
The young Leopold succeeded to the Dukedom
of Brabant in 1865 when his father became
203
00:17:59,900 --> 00:18:07,179
King, but he was frequently ill and died of
pneumonia in January 1869.
204
00:18:07,179 --> 00:18:14,000
The King and Queen had already grown distant,
but their son’s death led to a brief reconciliation
205
00:18:14,000 --> 00:18:16,770
in which they tried to have another son.
206
00:18:16,770 --> 00:18:23,200
In 1872, shortly after Marie-Henriette gave
birth to a daughter, Princess Clementine,
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00:18:23,200 --> 00:18:29,150
the royal couple separated and only remained
together on ceremonial occasions.
208
00:18:29,150 --> 00:18:34,450
Leopold accepted that he would not have a
legitimate heir and focused his attentions
209
00:18:34,450 --> 00:18:39,120
on Baudouin, his brother Philippe’s eldest
son.
210
00:18:39,120 --> 00:18:46,050
By 1875, the forty-five-year-old Leopold had
been on the throne for ten years.
211
00:18:46,050 --> 00:18:51,320
He and Belgium had survived challenges to
its independence during the Franco-Prussian
212
00:18:51,320 --> 00:18:56,310
War, and had he carried on in this vein he
would have been regarded by posterity as a
213
00:18:56,310 --> 00:19:01,750
patriotic Belgian monarch who promoted the
country’s economic prosperity.
214
00:19:01,750 --> 00:19:06,350
He was popular among his subjects, though
he cared little for them and was known to
215
00:19:06,350 --> 00:19:11,419
have said, “I am King of a small country
and small-minded people.”
216
00:19:11,419 --> 00:19:16,840
He was nevertheless interested in promoting
Belgium’s standing on the international
217
00:19:16,840 --> 00:19:22,430
stage, but it was his continued interest in
colonisation projects that would make him
218
00:19:22,430 --> 00:19:26,340
one of the most controversial monarchs of
his day.
219
00:19:26,340 --> 00:19:27,929
Following the death of his son.
220
00:19:27,929 --> 00:19:35,270
Leopold turned his energies to finding a suitable
colony, and in the late 1860s he made enquiries
221
00:19:35,270 --> 00:19:41,260
about acquiring the Portuguese colonies of
Mozambique and Angola in Africa, and in the
222
00:19:41,260 --> 00:19:47,500
1870s he was involved in prolonged negotiations
with Spain over the Philippines.
223
00:19:47,500 --> 00:19:54,919
An attempt in 1875 to secure a Belgian foothold
in South Africa was disrupted by the British,
224
00:19:54,919 --> 00:20:00,490
and delicate negotiations with France to establish
a Belgian colony in Vietnam, part of French
225
00:20:00,490 --> 00:20:10,250
Indochina, collapsed after French prime minister
Leon Gambetta fell from power in early 1882.
226
00:20:10,250 --> 00:20:17,020
Leopold also sought to improve Belgian prestige
by marrying off his daughters to foreign princes.
227
00:20:17,020 --> 00:20:24,400
In 1875 his eldest daughter Princess Louise
married a distant cousin, Prince Philipp of
228
00:20:24,400 --> 00:20:26,780
Coburg, who was then in Vienna.
229
00:20:26,780 --> 00:20:33,000
In 1880, Prince Philipp’s best friend, Crown
Prince Rudolf of Austria, the son and heir
230
00:20:33,000 --> 00:20:39,570
of Emperor Franz Josef I and Empress Elisabeth
of Austria, married Louise’s younger sister
231
00:20:39,570 --> 00:20:41,280
Princess Stephanie.
232
00:20:41,280 --> 00:20:46,880
King Leopold was delighted that his daughter
might one day become Empress of Austria, but
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00:20:46,880 --> 00:20:52,220
the marriage proved unhappy, especially after
Stephanie’s doctors determined that she
234
00:20:52,220 --> 00:20:58,280
could not have any more children after the
birth of her daughter Elisabeth in 1883.
235
00:20:58,280 --> 00:21:05,850
Rudolf found consolation in the arms of various
mistresses, and in January 1889 he and his
236
00:21:05,850 --> 00:21:13,980
mistress Mary Vetsera committed suicide at
the imperial hunting lodge at Mayerling.
237
00:21:13,980 --> 00:21:20,309
As Leopold II continued his search for a location
for a Belgian colony, Leopold was taking a
238
00:21:20,309 --> 00:21:23,850
greater interest in the continent of Africa.
239
00:21:23,850 --> 00:21:28,340
Leopold was familiar with the discoveries
of English missionaries and explorers in Central
240
00:21:28,340 --> 00:21:34,100
Africa including David Livingstone, Henry
Morton Stanley, and John Speke, as well as
241
00:21:34,100 --> 00:21:37,340
various French expeditions in West Africa.
242
00:21:37,340 --> 00:21:44,070
The King was a shareholder in the Suez Canal
in Egypt, which opened in 1870 and facilitated
243
00:21:44,070 --> 00:21:46,960
access to the East Coast of Africa.
244
00:21:46,960 --> 00:21:52,700
Leopold took a close interest in the expedition
led by Verney Lovett Cameron, who had been
245
00:21:52,700 --> 00:22:00,110
dispatched by the British Royal Geographical
Society in 1873 to assist David Livingstone.
246
00:22:00,110 --> 00:22:05,190
By the time Cameron arrived on the shores
of Lake Tanganyika Livingstone was already
247
00:22:05,190 --> 00:22:10,230
dead, but after collecting Livingstone’s
papers he decided to continue his work to
248
00:22:10,230 --> 00:22:15,970
determine whether a north-flowing river that
Livingstone referred to as the Lualaba flowed
249
00:22:15,970 --> 00:22:17,620
into the Nile.
250
00:22:17,620 --> 00:22:22,940
Cameron hoped to follow the course of the
river downstream but was forced to turn south
251
00:22:22,940 --> 00:22:31,059
into Angola by Arab slave traders, emerging
on the Angolan coast in November 1875 and
252
00:22:31,059 --> 00:22:37,640
becoming the first European to cross equatorial
Africa in the process.
253
00:22:37,640 --> 00:22:42,150
Although Cameron claimed the territory he
traversed for Britain, the British government
254
00:22:42,150 --> 00:22:44,029
was not interested.
255
00:22:44,029 --> 00:22:50,690
When Leopold visited England in May 1876,
he met Cameron, who informed him about the
256
00:22:50,690 --> 00:22:56,020
rich agricultural and mineral resources in
the region as well as the brutality of the
257
00:22:56,020 --> 00:22:58,490
slave trade under the Arabs.
258
00:22:58,490 --> 00:23:05,130
Leopold decided that a moral crusade to suppress
the slave trade in Africa would serve as a
259
00:23:05,130 --> 00:23:10,510
convenient pretext for a Belgian colonial
presence in Africa.
260
00:23:10,510 --> 00:23:15,870
The purpose of Leopold’s visit to England
was to promote such a philanthropic initiative
261
00:23:15,870 --> 00:23:21,190
among English missionaries and members of
the Royal Geographical Society, preparing
262
00:23:21,190 --> 00:23:26,880
the ground for the Geographical Conference
of Brussels, which opened in the Belgian capital
263
00:23:26,880 --> 00:23:30,660
on the 12th of September 1876.
264
00:23:30,660 --> 00:23:35,620
After introducing the agenda of the conference,
namely, to discuss how to tackle the slave
265
00:23:35,620 --> 00:23:42,059
trade along the Congo and the Zanzibar coast
in west and east Africa respectively, Leopold
266
00:23:42,059 --> 00:23:47,750
relinquished the chair in favour of the Russian
explorer Pyotr Semenov, who was famous for
267
00:23:47,750 --> 00:23:54,110
his expeditions in Central Asia but knew nothing
about Africa, allowing the King to exert his
268
00:23:54,110 --> 00:23:57,110
influence behind the scenes.
269
00:23:57,110 --> 00:24:01,770
The conference was a success for Leopold,
who was elected chairman of the International
270
00:24:01,770 --> 00:24:07,590
African Association, a body to coordinate
the newly-created national committees formed
271
00:24:07,590 --> 00:24:12,690
to promote knowledge and awareness of Africa
among the European nations represented at
272
00:24:12,690 --> 00:24:14,220
the conference.
273
00:24:14,220 --> 00:24:20,060
While Leopold had a genuine interest in obtaining
and disseminating scientific and geographic
274
00:24:20,060 --> 00:24:25,919
knowledge of the continent, he used his presidency
of the International Association to further
275
00:24:25,919 --> 00:24:28,620
his own colonial ends.
276
00:24:28,620 --> 00:24:34,330
After establishing a Belgian national committee
chaired by his brother the Count of Flanders,
277
00:24:34,330 --> 00:24:40,070
Leopold appointed Belgian diplomat Jules Greindl
as secretary-general of the International
278
00:24:40,070 --> 00:24:41,610
Association.
279
00:24:41,610 --> 00:24:46,799
While the French, German, and Dutch representatives
at the conference set up their respective
280
00:24:46,799 --> 00:24:52,580
national committees, a British attempt to
do so was blocked by the Foreign Office, which
281
00:24:52,580 --> 00:24:59,390
began to have its suspicions about the humanitarian
nature of King Leopold’s enterprise.
282
00:24:59,390 --> 00:25:04,990
Despite his promise to serve only one year
as chairman of the International Association,
283
00:25:04,990 --> 00:25:12,780
in June 1877 the international committee re-elected
him for another year, and no more meetings
284
00:25:12,780 --> 00:25:18,740
of the organisation were held thereafter,
allowing Leopold to continue to direct the
285
00:25:18,740 --> 00:25:24,520
organisation’s activities under the guise
of international support.
286
00:25:24,520 --> 00:25:32,630
In 1877 Leopold sent four inexperienced Belgians
on an expedition into Central Africa, but
287
00:25:32,630 --> 00:25:37,720
after two of them died en route the others
decided to return home.
288
00:25:37,720 --> 00:25:42,890
As the King searched for an experienced explorer
who could lead an expedition to the Congo
289
00:25:42,890 --> 00:25:51,410
to establish a Belgian colony, in August 1877
Henry Morton Stanley emerged at the trading
290
00:25:51,410 --> 00:25:57,529
post of Boma near the mouth of the Congo after
starting his journey from the Zanzibar coast
291
00:25:57,529 --> 00:25:59,370
three years earlier.
292
00:25:59,370 --> 00:26:05,370
A Welshman born in the United States, Stanley
was best known for leading an expedition in
293
00:26:05,370 --> 00:26:13,929
1871-72 which located and re-established communications
with David Livingstone, who had lost contact
294
00:26:13,929 --> 00:26:16,289
with Europe for several years.
295
00:26:16,289 --> 00:26:23,840
In 1874 Stanley led an Anglo-American expedition
to explore the Great Lakes in Central Africa
296
00:26:23,840 --> 00:26:26,789
and to further determine the course of the
Lualaba.
297
00:26:26,789 --> 00:26:32,220
As Stanley and his company of more than 200
men proceeded inland, they were frequently
298
00:26:32,220 --> 00:26:38,100
involved in bloody skirmishes with locals
who objected to the presence of the intruders,
299
00:26:38,100 --> 00:26:41,809
many of Stanley’s men being killed in these
battles.
300
00:26:41,809 --> 00:26:47,140
After completing the circumnavigation of Lake
Victoria and Tanganyika, Stanley followed
301
00:26:47,140 --> 00:26:52,809
the course of the Lualaba northwards until
it looped anti-clockwise to the southwest
302
00:26:52,809 --> 00:26:58,720
towards the Atlantic Ocean, negotiating the
rapids, waterfalls, and mighty tributaries
303
00:26:58,720 --> 00:27:00,590
that stood in the way.
304
00:27:00,590 --> 00:27:07,380
By the time he arrived at Boma, he had 114
men left, while his three European companions
305
00:27:07,380 --> 00:27:10,650
had all perished on the way.
306
00:27:10,650 --> 00:27:16,490
Leopold believed that Stanley was the perfect
candidate to advance his project in the Congo
307
00:27:16,490 --> 00:27:22,700
and in January 1878, while the explorer was
returning to England, the King dispatched
308
00:27:22,700 --> 00:27:28,650
Baron Greindl and General Henry Stanford,
former American ambassador to Belgium, to
309
00:27:28,650 --> 00:27:33,910
intercept Stanley in Paris with an offer to
work for the International Association.
310
00:27:33,910 --> 00:27:40,429
While flattered, Stanley declined, preferring
instead to deliver the Congo to the British
311
00:27:40,429 --> 00:27:43,730
government as Cameron had attempted earlier.
312
00:27:43,730 --> 00:27:49,799
Although Stanley was received as a popular
hero upon his return to England in February
313
00:27:49,799 --> 00:27:56,010
1878, the British government continued to
be uninterested in the Congo.
314
00:27:56,010 --> 00:28:01,800
While writing an account of his travels under
the title Through the Dark Continent, in June
315
00:28:01,800 --> 00:28:10,200
1878 Stanley went to Brussels to signal interest
in Leopold’s offer, and by November a Committee
316
00:28:10,200 --> 00:28:16,640
for the Study of the Upper Congo was set up
to manage the establishment of permanent philanthropic
317
00:28:16,640 --> 00:28:23,590
and commercial bases along the Congo, with
the King as honorary president.
318
00:28:23,590 --> 00:28:30,020
On the 10th of December 1878, Stanley signed
an agreement with the Committee to build three
319
00:28:30,020 --> 00:28:36,279
stations on the Lower Congo, a 200-mile stretch
at the mouth of the river, and to explore
320
00:28:36,279 --> 00:28:41,390
the commercial potential of the Upper Congo,
the much longer section of the river which
321
00:28:41,390 --> 00:28:44,390
extended into the heart of Africa.
322
00:28:44,390 --> 00:28:51,230
Not long after Stanley’s arrival in Africa
in February 1879 to recruit African porters
323
00:28:51,230 --> 00:28:57,001
for the expedition, one of the Dutch companies
backing the committee went bankrupt, and in
324
00:28:57,001 --> 00:29:04,600
November 1879 Leopold decided that he would
personally finance the scheme and take personal
325
00:29:04,600 --> 00:29:11,500
charge of a new organisation called the International
Association of the Congo.
326
00:29:11,500 --> 00:29:17,590
Earlier in summer, Stanley had already received
wider instructions to obtain territory for
327
00:29:17,590 --> 00:29:24,260
a new state, and in his diary remarked of
Leopold that “it has been pretty evident
328
00:29:24,260 --> 00:29:30,850
that under the guise of an International Association
he hopes to make a Belgian dependency of the
329
00:29:30,850 --> 00:29:32,260
Congo Basin.”
330
00:29:32,260 --> 00:29:37,510
Stanley was not the only explorer Leopold
approached to lead an expedition under the
331
00:29:37,510 --> 00:29:40,370
guise of the International Association.
332
00:29:40,370 --> 00:29:46,250
He made another offer to the French explorer
Pierre de Brazza, who declined before leading
333
00:29:46,250 --> 00:29:48,850
a French expedition to the Congo.
334
00:29:48,850 --> 00:29:55,440
In the early 1880s Leopold discussed an antislavery
expedition in Central Africa with the British
335
00:29:55,440 --> 00:30:01,440
military officer Charles Gordon, who had recently
served the Egyptian khedive as Governor of
336
00:30:01,440 --> 00:30:07,600
the Sudan after first winning fame in China
twenty years earlier, but for the time being
337
00:30:07,600 --> 00:30:11,399
Gordon rejected these approaches.
338
00:30:11,399 --> 00:30:17,470
Stanley began moving upriver from the mouth
of the Congo in mid-August 1879 and began
339
00:30:17,470 --> 00:30:23,320
the task of building bases and negotiating
commercial treaties with African chieftains,
340
00:30:23,320 --> 00:30:29,410
but Leopold was keen for Stanley to move inland
quicker in order to prevent De Brazza from
341
00:30:29,410 --> 00:30:33,179
laying claim on the upper reaches of the river
for France.
342
00:30:33,179 --> 00:30:38,970
Stanley’s objective was to beat de Brazza
to Stanley Pool, the lake separating Lower
343
00:30:38,970 --> 00:30:44,220
Congo from Upper Congo which he had named
in his earlier expedition.
344
00:30:44,220 --> 00:30:49,620
In November 1880 Stanley received a surprise
visit from de Brazza, and when he arrived
345
00:30:49,620 --> 00:30:54,970
at Stanley Pool the following summer, he learned
that the Frenchman had made a treaty with
346
00:30:54,970 --> 00:31:01,640
a local chieftain ceding a strip of land north
of the lake to France, taking over the existing
347
00:31:01,640 --> 00:31:05,240
town which was renamed Brazzaville.
348
00:31:05,240 --> 00:31:10,880
In response, Stanley crossed to the southern
shore of the lake and secured the rights to
349
00:31:10,880 --> 00:31:18,019
build a trading post he named Leopoldville
after the King, now the city of Kinshasa.
350
00:31:18,019 --> 00:31:23,320
Stanley had followed his initial instructions
to the letter but accepted Leopold’s demands
351
00:31:23,320 --> 00:31:25,269
to trek further upriver.
352
00:31:25,269 --> 00:31:31,710
With his supplies running low and suffering
from fever, in the summer of 1882 Stanley
353
00:31:31,710 --> 00:31:38,090
left Africa and returned to Europe to recuperate,
hoping that he would not be asked to return
354
00:31:38,090 --> 00:31:40,390
to the Congo.
355
00:31:40,390 --> 00:31:46,700
As soon as Stanley returned to Europe, the
unsympathetic Leopold demanded that he return
356
00:31:46,700 --> 00:31:48,000
to the Congo.
357
00:31:48,000 --> 00:31:55,130
October 1882 was a crucial month in the Franco-Belgian
contest for sovereignty over the Congo.
358
00:31:55,130 --> 00:32:01,570
De Brazza had returned to France in June seeking
ratification of the treaty he had obtained
359
00:32:01,570 --> 00:32:07,399
at Brazzaville, attacking Stanley’s conduct
as part of his campaign to secure recognition
360
00:32:07,399 --> 00:32:09,860
of French rights to the Congo.
361
00:32:09,860 --> 00:32:15,940
In the meantime, Portugal had reactivated
its dormant claim to the Congo with the support
362
00:32:15,940 --> 00:32:21,280
of Britain, whose main priority was to deny
the region to France.
363
00:32:21,280 --> 00:32:27,059
Leopold realised that his strategy of establishing
economic dominance over the Congo was not
364
00:32:27,059 --> 00:32:33,419
enough and instructed Stanley to return to
Africa to draw up treaties with the chiefs
365
00:32:33,419 --> 00:32:39,750
to surrender their territory to the International
Association of the Congo.
366
00:32:39,750 --> 00:32:45,929
In December 1882, Stanley returned to the
Congo to find that the men he placed in charge
367
00:32:45,929 --> 00:32:49,620
in his absence had abandoned their posts.
368
00:32:49,620 --> 00:32:55,510
In spite of the setback, Stanley sent three
expeditions to establish control of the valley
369
00:32:55,510 --> 00:33:00,870
of the Kouilou-Niari River to the north of
the Congo, cutting off French West Africa
370
00:33:00,870 --> 00:33:02,480
from Brazzaville.
371
00:33:02,480 --> 00:33:09,179
In May 1883 he then returned his attention
to building stations in the Upper Congo up
372
00:33:09,179 --> 00:33:13,889
to the Stanley Falls more than 1,000 miles
upriver.
373
00:33:13,889 --> 00:33:19,390
Stanley made his way back to the Atlantic
coast in the spring of 1884 after signing
374
00:33:19,390 --> 00:33:26,240
treaties with more than 450 native chiefs,
though in most cases the African chiefs may
375
00:33:26,240 --> 00:33:31,460
have thought they were signing treaties of
alliance rather than treaties of cession.
376
00:33:31,460 --> 00:33:38,930
At the end of 1883, with Stanley’s five-year
contract with Leopold set to expire, General
377
00:33:38,930 --> 00:33:45,120
Gordon was finally persuaded to accept Leopold’s
offer to become his new agent in the Congo,
378
00:33:45,120 --> 00:33:52,639
but a week after confirming the details of
his employment in January 1884, Gordon agreed
379
00:33:52,639 --> 00:33:59,300
to lead a British expedition to Khartoum that
would ultimately prove fatal, infuriating
380
00:33:59,300 --> 00:34:01,039
Leopold in the process.
381
00:34:01,039 --> 00:34:07,159
In the meantime, amidst competing French,
Portuguese, and Belgian claims to the Congo,
382
00:34:07,159 --> 00:34:13,060
Leopold sent General Stanford to Washington
DC to seek American support.
383
00:34:13,060 --> 00:34:18,320
Leopold was intentionally vague over whether
he was claiming the Congo on behalf of the
384
00:34:18,320 --> 00:34:24,290
International African Association or the more
exploitative International Association of
385
00:34:24,290 --> 00:34:30,919
the Congo, Leopold secured American recognition
in April 1884.
386
00:34:30,919 --> 00:34:36,839
An Anglo-Portuguese Treaty signed in February
recognising Portuguese claims to the Lower
387
00:34:36,839 --> 00:34:43,990
Congo was not only opposed by France and Belgium,
but also by Bismarck’s Germany.
388
00:34:43,990 --> 00:34:49,379
When Bismarck asked Leopold to define the
territory he claimed for the Association,
389
00:34:49,379 --> 00:34:55,639
the King sketched out a large area including
the Congo basin, Sudanese provinces recently
390
00:34:55,639 --> 00:35:01,280
abandoned by the Egyptian government during
the rebellion led by the Mahdi, the messianic
391
00:35:01,280 --> 00:35:06,260
leader of an Islamic movement, stretching
east beyond Lake Tanganyika.
392
00:35:06,260 --> 00:35:11,690
After Bismarck broke off negotiations over
the scale of Belgian ambitions, in August
393
00:35:11,690 --> 00:35:18,980
1884 Stanley advised Leopold to abandon the
claims to Sudan and territories east of Lake
394
00:35:18,980 --> 00:35:20,420
Tanganyika.
395
00:35:20,420 --> 00:35:25,910
Bismarck accepted these borders after being
promised by Leopold that European nations
396
00:35:25,910 --> 00:35:30,380
would be allowed to trade freely in the Congo.
397
00:35:30,380 --> 00:35:35,711
With the British and Portuguese diplomatically
isolated, they agreed to an international
398
00:35:35,711 --> 00:35:41,869
conference in Berlin chaired by Bismarck and
attended by representatives of twelve European
399
00:35:41,869 --> 00:35:44,630
states and the United States.
400
00:35:44,630 --> 00:35:49,819
In deference to French wishes, Bismarck kept
the question of sovereignty over the Congo
401
00:35:49,819 --> 00:35:55,760
off the agenda and limited discussions to
trading rights, but British and German fears
402
00:35:55,760 --> 00:36:01,619
of a French or Portuguese trading monopoly
at the mouth the Congo led Bismarck to advise
403
00:36:01,619 --> 00:36:06,220
France and Portugal to come to an agreement
with the Association.
404
00:36:06,220 --> 00:36:11,670
To facilitate this, Leopold proposed giving
up the Kouliou-Niari valley in return for
405
00:36:11,670 --> 00:36:17,360
the province of Katanga in the southeast,
while the Portuguese were satisfied with sovereignty
406
00:36:17,360 --> 00:36:22,120
over lands south of the Congo which would
become Angola.
407
00:36:22,120 --> 00:36:29,210
On the 25th of February 1885, the Berlin Conference
closed with recognition of the Congo basin
408
00:36:29,210 --> 00:36:36,109
as a large free trade zone under the sovereignty
of the International Association of the Congo.
409
00:36:36,109 --> 00:36:41,991
When the Berlin Act went to Brussels for ratification,
Leopold agreed that he would govern the Congo
410
00:36:41,991 --> 00:36:46,160
personally and pay all the new government’s
expenses.
411
00:36:46,160 --> 00:36:54,510
On the 29th of May 1885, Leopold issued a
royal decree establishing the Etat Independent
412
00:36:54,510 --> 00:37:01,450
du Congo, or the Congo Free State, a country
over a million square miles with a population
413
00:37:01,450 --> 00:37:04,380
of up to 20 million.
414
00:37:04,380 --> 00:37:10,810
In less than a decade, the fifty-five-year-old
Leopold had personally sponsored the exploration
415
00:37:10,810 --> 00:37:17,109
of a large piece of territory in Central Africa
almost eighty times the size of Belgium and
416
00:37:17,109 --> 00:37:22,060
had secured international recognition from
the world’s great powers for his right to
417
00:37:22,060 --> 00:37:26,090
govern it as if it were his personal property.
418
00:37:26,090 --> 00:37:30,920
Leopold had achieved his ambitions in the
Congo with little support from his Belgian
419
00:37:30,920 --> 00:37:34,210
subjects or his government ministers.
420
00:37:34,210 --> 00:37:39,950
While his primary focus had been the governing
and creation of his own personal colony, he
421
00:37:39,950 --> 00:37:43,450
remained a part of the Belgian political system.
422
00:37:43,450 --> 00:37:48,950
As a constitutional monarch, Leopold’s political
powers in Belgium were limited, and it was
423
00:37:48,950 --> 00:37:53,839
left to government officials and parliament
to set the political agenda.
424
00:37:53,839 --> 00:38:00,700
In 1878, the Belgian Liberal Party had returned
to power after eight years in opposition and
425
00:38:00,700 --> 00:38:07,300
chief minister Hubert Frère-Orban proposed
a law to create a new state-sponsored education
426
00:38:07,300 --> 00:38:11,950
system while withholding state support for
church schools.
427
00:38:11,950 --> 00:38:17,819
The law was passed the following year and
caused an outcry among the Catholic Party,
428
00:38:17,819 --> 00:38:24,040
who returned to power in 1884 after a split
between the Liberals and their more radical
429
00:38:24,040 --> 00:38:25,140
supporters.
430
00:38:25,140 --> 00:38:30,119
After their return to power the Catholics
were determined to take revenge on the Liberals,
431
00:38:30,119 --> 00:38:35,920
but following protests around the country
Leopold encouraged a compromise to restore
432
00:38:35,920 --> 00:38:41,180
support for Catholic schools but to go no
further.
433
00:38:41,180 --> 00:38:47,190
During the first two decades of Leopold’s
reign, the Belgian economy continued its rapid
434
00:38:47,190 --> 00:38:53,140
development, exporting coal and iron to the
industrialising economies of France and Germany,
435
00:38:53,140 --> 00:38:58,720
while constructing the densest railway network
in Europe, enabling Antwerp to become a major
436
00:38:58,720 --> 00:39:00,540
European port.
437
00:39:00,540 --> 00:39:06,980
The rapid industrialisation did little to
improve the conditions of working-class Belgians,
438
00:39:06,980 --> 00:39:13,010
and poverty worsened following an economic
downturn in the latter half of the 1870s.
439
00:39:13,010 --> 00:39:18,400
The economic crisis led to the creation of
several socialist political parties, which
440
00:39:18,400 --> 00:39:23,170
united in 1885 to form the Belgian Labour
Party.
441
00:39:23,170 --> 00:39:30,579
In response to a series of workers’ riots
in 1886, Catholic chief minister Auguste Beerneart
442
00:39:30,579 --> 00:39:37,000
launched a transport infrastructure construction
programme to reduce unemployment, labour councils
443
00:39:37,000 --> 00:39:43,819
were set up in factories to arbitrate between
managers and workers, and in 1889 the minimum
444
00:39:43,819 --> 00:39:46,990
age of work was set at twelve.
445
00:39:46,990 --> 00:39:53,119
The government’s reforms encouraged the
workers to ask for more, and 100,000 workers
446
00:39:53,119 --> 00:39:58,780
went on strike in Brussels in 1890 demanding
universal suffrage.
447
00:39:58,780 --> 00:40:04,119
While Leopold was prepared to support an extension
of voting rights, he obtained a concession
448
00:40:04,119 --> 00:40:06,960
to strengthen the powers of the Senate.
449
00:40:06,960 --> 00:40:14,369
In 1893 universal male suffrage was introduced,
though more prominent members of society were
450
00:40:14,369 --> 00:40:16,690
given up to three votes.
451
00:40:16,690 --> 00:40:21,160
The extension of the vote strengthened the
socialists at the expense of the Liberals
452
00:40:21,160 --> 00:40:26,970
and Catholics, a development which played
to the King’s advantage.
453
00:40:26,970 --> 00:40:32,849
By the 1890s, Leopold’s interest in domestic
Belgian politics was confined to the military
454
00:40:32,849 --> 00:40:34,700
and urban planning.
455
00:40:34,700 --> 00:40:40,080
Although he was not particularly interested
in art and architecture for its own sake,
456
00:40:40,080 --> 00:40:45,550
Leopold initiated grand building projects
to increase Belgian prestige in Europe and
457
00:40:45,550 --> 00:40:47,060
the wider world.
458
00:40:47,060 --> 00:40:53,349
For the fiftieth anniversary of Belgian independence
in 1880, he commissioned the construction
459
00:40:53,349 --> 00:41:00,380
of the Cinquantenaire Park and two exhibition
halls, and a quarter-century later in 1905
460
00:41:00,380 --> 00:41:05,740
his ambitions to connect the two structures
with a triumphal arch were realised.
461
00:41:05,740 --> 00:41:11,869
That same year, construction began on the
Basilica of the Sacred Heart, a Roman Catholic
462
00:41:11,869 --> 00:41:17,460
cathedral inspired by its French namesake,
the Sacre-Coeur in Paris.
463
00:41:17,460 --> 00:41:24,380
In 1904, construction began on a grand palatial
building to house the Royal Central African
464
00:41:24,380 --> 00:41:30,450
Museum in nearby Tervuren, while the King
also presided over an expansion of his palace
465
00:41:30,450 --> 00:41:32,020
at Laeken.
466
00:41:32,020 --> 00:41:36,670
Outside the capital, Leopold’s building
projects were concentrated in the port of
467
00:41:36,670 --> 00:41:43,420
Antwerp and the seaside town of Ostend, where
he built a horse-racing track in 1883 named
468
00:41:43,420 --> 00:41:49,390
Hippodrome Wellington after the British general
who defeated Napoleon on Belgian soil at the
469
00:41:49,390 --> 00:41:52,280
Battle of Waterloo in 1815.
470
00:41:52,280 --> 00:41:58,480
Leopold’s grand public construction projects
earned him the nickname of “Builder King”
471
00:41:58,480 --> 00:42:00,690
from his subjects.
472
00:42:00,690 --> 00:42:05,850
Leopold’s construction projects for the
benefit of the Belgians were funded by the
473
00:42:05,850 --> 00:42:11,640
profits generated from the economic exploitation
of the Congo Free State.
474
00:42:11,640 --> 00:42:17,380
When he took control of the Congo in 1885,
he desperately needed financial backing to
475
00:42:17,380 --> 00:42:23,000
augment his dwindling personal fortune, 10
million francs of which had already been spent
476
00:42:23,000 --> 00:42:26,470
on the Congo over the previous five years.
477
00:42:26,470 --> 00:42:33,660
He attempted to raise loans of up to 150 million
francs but interest among European financiers
478
00:42:33,660 --> 00:42:35,140
was limited.
479
00:42:35,140 --> 00:42:41,060
The government of the Free State was largely
directed by Leopold himself, alongside a cabinet
480
00:42:41,060 --> 00:42:46,050
of three officials based in Brussels: the
administrator-general for foreign affairs
481
00:42:46,050 --> 00:42:51,710
and justice, the head of the finance department,
and the administrator-general for the interior.
482
00:42:51,710 --> 00:42:56,820
The most senior official in the Congo was
the governor-general, based in the capital
483
00:42:56,820 --> 00:43:03,450
of Boma, who led a team of around 400 European
administrators to manage the vast territory
484
00:43:03,450 --> 00:43:05,950
of the Free State.
485
00:43:05,950 --> 00:43:11,809
The King’s first task was to build a railway
to avoid the unnavigable rapids between the
486
00:43:11,809 --> 00:43:18,730
Lower and Upper Congo, and in December 1886
he came to an agreement with Belgian officer
487
00:43:18,730 --> 00:43:26,339
Captain Albert Thys to form the Congo Company
for Commerce and Industry with private investment.
488
00:43:26,339 --> 00:43:32,770
In 1887 Thys led an expedition to study the
feasibility of the project and returned to
489
00:43:32,770 --> 00:43:39,620
Brussels in March 1888 presenting plans to
construct a railway from the port of Matadi
490
00:43:39,620 --> 00:43:41,480
to Leopoldville.
491
00:43:41,480 --> 00:43:45,920
After being appointed administrator-general
of the interior in the government of the Free
492
00:43:45,920 --> 00:43:51,369
State, Thys raised 25 million francs for the
project.
493
00:43:51,369 --> 00:43:58,559
Work began on the railroad in 1890 and was
completed in 1898, enabling Leopold and his
494
00:43:58,559 --> 00:44:02,740
backers to better exploit the local economies.
495
00:44:02,740 --> 00:44:09,369
Since Stanley’s expedition in the late 1870s,
the Belgian outposts along the river had served
496
00:44:09,369 --> 00:44:15,230
as collection points for precious commodities,
primarily ivory, which were then transported
497
00:44:15,230 --> 00:44:18,280
to the port for export to Europe.
498
00:44:18,280 --> 00:44:22,970
Before the construction of the railroad, the
journey from Leopoldville to Matadi took three
499
00:44:22,970 --> 00:44:26,109
weeks, and many African porters died.
500
00:44:26,109 --> 00:44:32,810
In December 1889 Thys created the Belgian
Society of the Upper Congo to take over the
501
00:44:32,810 --> 00:44:39,700
existing trading activities in ivory, rubber,
palm oil, and other commodities.
502
00:44:39,700 --> 00:44:44,619
The creation of these companies and the commercial
potential for the Belgian business community
503
00:44:44,619 --> 00:44:49,500
inspired greater support for Leopold’s Congolese
enterprise in Belgium, allowing the King to
504
00:44:49,500 --> 00:44:56,569
obtain a 25 million franc interest-free loan
from parliament in 1890, the year of his Silver
505
00:44:56,569 --> 00:44:57,589
Jubilee.
506
00:44:57,589 --> 00:45:03,809
In his haste to recoup his personal investment
in the Congo, from late 1891 Leopold issued
507
00:45:03,809 --> 00:45:10,110
a series of decrees which effectively created
a state monopoly in ivory and rubber.
508
00:45:10,110 --> 00:45:15,730
These decisions caused an outcry among Belgian
business interests, many of whom were influential
509
00:45:15,730 --> 00:45:22,380
in parliament, and forced Leopold to agree
to a compromise in 1892 to divide land deemed
510
00:45:22,380 --> 00:45:27,700
vacant, reserving two-thirds of the country
as the private domain of the King but allowing
511
00:45:27,700 --> 00:45:33,310
a free trade zone including the Lower Congo
region and the river up to the Stanley Falls,
512
00:45:33,310 --> 00:45:38,359
in which private companies could lease commercial
rights in return for paying an annual dividend
513
00:45:38,359 --> 00:45:44,280
to the King, though Leopold would also set
up anonymous companies for his own benefit.
514
00:45:44,280 --> 00:45:48,800
Leopold ordered his officials to increase
the production and cultivation of ivory and
515
00:45:48,800 --> 00:45:56,850
rubber, and by 1895 the Free State was generating
vast amounts of wealth for Leopold.
516
00:45:56,850 --> 00:46:01,790
Despite using coercive methods to extract
wealth from the Congo, Leopold retained his
517
00:46:01,790 --> 00:46:07,060
international reputation as a philanthropist
and an opponent of the slave trade, and in
518
00:46:07,060 --> 00:46:13,950
November 1889 the Brussels Anti-Slavery Conference
met at the Belgian capital.
519
00:46:13,950 --> 00:46:18,819
While the British, French, and German delegates
disagreed on what to do and how much they
520
00:46:18,819 --> 00:46:25,460
were willing to invest in the effort, Leopold
presented an extensive plan to establish fortified
521
00:46:25,460 --> 00:46:31,770
outposts in the African interior to serve
as refuge points for natives to defend themselves
522
00:46:31,770 --> 00:46:33,819
against the slavers.
523
00:46:33,819 --> 00:46:38,710
Leopold took advantage of the fact that none
of the other participants were minded to make
524
00:46:38,710 --> 00:46:44,500
such a substantial commitment to set up bases
in the Congo to consolidate his control over
525
00:46:44,500 --> 00:46:45,990
the country.
526
00:46:45,990 --> 00:46:52,579
In 1888 he had organised his African mercenaries
into the Force Publique, which over time would
527
00:46:52,579 --> 00:46:57,869
become central Africa’s largest army with
around 20,000 officers and men.
528
00:46:57,869 --> 00:47:03,530
In addition to protecting the Free State from
hostile tribes, the Force Publique served
529
00:47:03,530 --> 00:47:09,470
to maintain internal order and to coerce African
labourers working for the Free State.
530
00:47:09,470 --> 00:47:15,819
Leopold’s colony faced frequent rebellions,
such as one in 1893 near the rapids of the
531
00:47:15,819 --> 00:47:19,849
Lower Congo led by a local chief named Nzansu.
532
00:47:19,849 --> 00:47:25,880
When the Belgian state agent Eugene Rommel
attempted to recruit porters by force to carry
533
00:47:25,880 --> 00:47:32,150
goods to Matadi, the chief led an uprising
which killed Rommel and burned his station,
534
00:47:32,150 --> 00:47:36,181
remaining at large for eight months before
the rebellion was suppressed by the Force
535
00:47:36,181 --> 00:47:38,329
Publique.
536
00:47:38,329 --> 00:47:44,160
Leopold also hoped to use his antislavery
credentials as a means to gain control of
537
00:47:44,160 --> 00:47:46,040
the upper Nile.
538
00:47:46,040 --> 00:47:52,240
During his discussions with General Gordon
in January 1884, Leopold was informed that
539
00:47:52,240 --> 00:47:57,730
the Sudanese province of Bahr-el-Ghazal was
the centre of the slave trade in East and
540
00:47:57,730 --> 00:47:59,700
Central Africa.
541
00:47:59,700 --> 00:48:06,369
After the death of Gordon at Khartoum at the
hands of Mahdist forces in January 1885, the
542
00:48:06,369 --> 00:48:10,760
British government decided to abandon its
interests in Sudan.
543
00:48:10,760 --> 00:48:16,730
Emin Pasha, the German governor of the province
of Equatoria in southern Sudan, continued
544
00:48:16,730 --> 00:48:21,329
to hold out against the Mahdi and pleaded
for support from Britain.
545
00:48:21,329 --> 00:48:27,079
Henry Morton Stanley accepted an offer from
the Scottish businessman William Mackinnon
546
00:48:27,079 --> 00:48:32,050
to lead an expedition for the relief of Emin
Pasha, and as Stanley was still employed by
547
00:48:32,050 --> 00:48:39,750
Leopold, the Belgian King saw an opportunity
to incorporate Equatoria into the Free State.
548
00:48:39,750 --> 00:48:44,960
Stanley arrived at the mouth of the Congo
in March 1887, but by the time he joined up
549
00:48:44,960 --> 00:48:50,290
with Emin Pasha the following April what remained
of his rescue mission was in a worse state
550
00:48:50,290 --> 00:48:53,089
than the man he was supposed to be rescuing.
551
00:48:53,089 --> 00:48:58,030
Emin refused Leopold’s offer to remain in
Equatoria and join the Free State, and after
552
00:48:58,030 --> 00:49:03,560
his evacuation he instead chose to work on
German schemes for the colonisation of East
553
00:49:03,560 --> 00:49:04,700
Africa.
554
00:49:04,700 --> 00:49:10,540
Though Leopold was disappointed by the outcome
of the failed rescue mission, he sought to
555
00:49:10,540 --> 00:49:15,780
take advantage of the political vacuum left
by Emin Pasha in Equatoria.
556
00:49:15,780 --> 00:49:20,690
When William Mackinnon’s Imperial British
East Africa Company supported the British
557
00:49:20,690 --> 00:49:25,910
imperialist Cecil Rhodes’ plans to build
a railway from South Africa across the length
558
00:49:25,910 --> 00:49:31,540
of the continent to Egypt, Leopold agreed
to exchange a strip of Free State territory
559
00:49:31,540 --> 00:49:37,000
for construction of the railroad west of Lake
Tanganyika in return for land west of the
560
00:49:37,000 --> 00:49:44,200
Nile down to Lado in Bahr-el-Ghazal, subsequently
known as the Lado Enclave.
561
00:49:44,200 --> 00:49:49,910
In 1892 the British government took control
of the East Africa Company and attempted to
562
00:49:49,910 --> 00:49:55,190
repudiate the agreement, but in response to
Leopold’s threats to cooperate with France,
563
00:49:55,190 --> 00:50:01,910
a British-Congolese Treaty was signed in May
1894 offering Leopold the Lado Enclave for
564
00:50:01,910 --> 00:50:08,080
his lifetime and the larger area of the Bahr-el-Ghazal
for him and his successors.
565
00:50:08,080 --> 00:50:13,900
Following protests from France and Germany,
Leopold was forced to give up the Bahr-el-Ghazal
566
00:50:13,900 --> 00:50:16,200
to France.
567
00:50:16,200 --> 00:50:20,730
Leopold faced difficulties with the British
in both the north and southern parts of the
568
00:50:20,730 --> 00:50:22,320
Congo Free State.
569
00:50:22,320 --> 00:50:27,880
As part of his negotiations with the French
during the Berlin Conference, Leopold laid
570
00:50:27,880 --> 00:50:33,590
claim to the mineral-rich province of Katanga
in the southeast, but the claim was not recognised
571
00:50:33,590 --> 00:50:39,839
by the British, and in the late 1880s Cecil
Rhodes’ British South Africa Company advanced
572
00:50:39,839 --> 00:50:43,119
its own claim to the Katanga and its copper
mines.
573
00:50:43,119 --> 00:50:49,600
Two Belgian expeditions in 1891 failed to
gain any concessions from Msiri, King of the
574
00:50:49,600 --> 00:50:52,349
Yeke Kingdom in southeast Katanga.
575
00:50:52,349 --> 00:50:58,299
A further expedition led by the Canadian-British
explorer Captain William Stairs, a veteran
576
00:50:58,299 --> 00:51:04,849
of the Emin Pasha Relief Expedition, arrived
at Msiri’s capital in December 1891.
577
00:51:04,849 --> 00:51:10,299
When Stairs realised that Msiri was dragging
negotiations out to play the Europeans off
578
00:51:10,299 --> 00:51:16,450
against each other, he resolved to eliminate
the local king, and on the 20th of December
579
00:51:16,450 --> 00:51:22,089
one of the Europeans in Stairs’ party shot
and killed Msiri before being mortally wounded
580
00:51:22,089 --> 00:51:24,099
in the struggle that ensued.
581
00:51:24,099 --> 00:51:29,920
The elimination of the king enabled Stairs
to claim Katanga on behalf of the Free State.
582
00:51:29,920 --> 00:51:35,540
With Stairs’ expedition running low on supplies,
they were relieved by a party led by Lucien
583
00:51:35,540 --> 00:51:38,130
Bia in January 1892.
584
00:51:38,130 --> 00:51:43,800
Though Bia manged to locate a rich copper
mine at Kambove, Leopold did not have the
585
00:51:43,800 --> 00:51:49,020
financial means to build a railway to link
up to the existing network in the Lower Congo,
586
00:51:49,020 --> 00:51:54,990
and in 1900 he reached an arrangement for
the British to develop the mines in the Katanga,
587
00:51:54,990 --> 00:52:00,010
retaining a 60 per cent share of the profits
of the joint venture.
588
00:52:00,010 --> 00:52:07,430
In 1892 Leopold began to act on his pledge
to eradicate the Arab slave traders at the
589
00:52:07,430 --> 00:52:13,460
Antislavery Conference, not only for humanitarian
reasons but to divert central African trade
590
00:52:13,460 --> 00:52:15,440
westwards to the Congo.
591
00:52:15,440 --> 00:52:20,630
Though the King’s attention remained on
extending his state to the north, the deaths
592
00:52:20,630 --> 00:52:26,880
of several European traders in eastern Congo
at the hands of the Arabs in May 1892 forced
593
00:52:26,880 --> 00:52:28,370
his hand.
594
00:52:28,370 --> 00:52:33,910
During the initial hostilities the Force Publique
under Captain Francis Dhanis defeated the
595
00:52:33,910 --> 00:52:40,280
forces of the chieftain Ngongo Lutete, who
switched sides to join Dhanis in September.
596
00:52:40,280 --> 00:52:48,210
In early 1893 the combined army of 1,500 men
captured the key Arab posts of Nyangwe and
597
00:52:48,210 --> 00:52:50,680
Kasongo in the east of the country.
598
00:52:50,680 --> 00:52:56,270
Meanwhile, a separate force under the command
of Captain Louis-Napoleon Chaltin defeated
599
00:52:56,270 --> 00:53:02,230
the Arabs around Stanley Falls before joining
Dhanis for the final push against the slave
600
00:53:02,230 --> 00:53:08,430
trader Rumaliza who had recruited a large
force on the eastern bank of Lake Tanganyika.
601
00:53:08,430 --> 00:53:15,540
By the end of 1893, the Free State secured
its eastern frontier and Rumaliza escaped
602
00:53:15,540 --> 00:53:20,349
to German East Africa, modern-day Tanzania.
603
00:53:20,349 --> 00:53:26,890
In 1896, Leopold turned his attention back
to the Nile as a French expedition was sent
604
00:53:26,890 --> 00:53:32,380
to Fashoda on the Nile to prevent the British
from re-establishing control over Sudan.
605
00:53:32,380 --> 00:53:39,510
He ordered a force of 3,000 men under Baron
Dhanis and another of 800 men under Chatlin
606
00:53:39,510 --> 00:53:45,260
to advance to Lado, with secret instructions
to advance downriver to the Sudanese capital
607
00:53:45,260 --> 00:53:46,580
of Khartoum.
608
00:53:46,580 --> 00:53:51,971
Dhanis’ column took a circuitous route to
conceal its true objectives, but the force
609
00:53:51,971 --> 00:53:54,369
mutinied and disintegrated.
610
00:53:54,369 --> 00:54:01,440
Chatlin’s column enjoyed more success, and
in February 1897 defeated a Mahdist army more
611
00:54:01,440 --> 00:54:08,109
than twice its size at the Battle of Rejaf,
securing the Lado Enclave for the Free State.
612
00:54:08,109 --> 00:54:14,619
The Belgians lacked the capacity to proceed
any further down the Nile, and in July 1898
613
00:54:14,619 --> 00:54:17,559
the French took possession of Fashoda.
614
00:54:17,559 --> 00:54:23,349
In September, a large British army under General
Herbert Kitchener defeated the Mahdists at
615
00:54:23,349 --> 00:54:26,359
Omdurman and recaptured Khartoum.
616
00:54:26,359 --> 00:54:32,690
Some 1,500 men proceeded upriver to confront
the much smaller French presence at Fashoda,
617
00:54:32,690 --> 00:54:37,740
and following a stand-off which threatened
war, the French withdrew from Fashoda and
618
00:54:37,740 --> 00:54:43,160
signed a treaty with the British establishing
their respective spheres of influence, which
619
00:54:43,160 --> 00:54:45,470
excluded France from the Nile valley.
620
00:54:45,470 --> 00:54:50,720
Though the French backed down, Leopold was
undeterred in his efforts to expand the Lado
621
00:54:50,720 --> 00:54:57,760
Enclave, until in 1906 he was forced to give
up his claims.
622
00:54:57,760 --> 00:55:03,280
Although most notorious for his exploitation
of Africa, Leopold was also keen to get his
623
00:55:03,280 --> 00:55:08,890
hands on a slice of the Chinese Empire, which
had been in gradual decline since the late
624
00:55:08,890 --> 00:55:14,099
18th century in the face of European technological
superiority.
625
00:55:14,099 --> 00:55:21,030
Leopold maintained an interest in China since
his visit in the 1860s, and in 1896 he persuaded
626
00:55:21,030 --> 00:55:26,930
the veteran Chinese statesman Li Hongzhang
to make a visit to Brussels while on a European
627
00:55:26,930 --> 00:55:33,160
tour to strengthen diplomatic relations following
China’s defeat in the Sino-Japanese War
628
00:55:33,160 --> 00:55:35,000
of 1894-95.
629
00:55:35,000 --> 00:55:42,200
Li agreed to grant Belgium a concession to
build a railway between the capital of Beijing
630
00:55:42,200 --> 00:55:48,890
and the city of Hankou in the Yangtze valley,
now part of the larger urban area of Wuhan.
631
00:55:48,890 --> 00:55:56,530
In March 1897 a Society for the Study of Railways
in China was founded to carry out a technical
632
00:55:56,530 --> 00:56:01,750
study of the route, and financing from French
banks for the construction work was secured
633
00:56:01,750 --> 00:56:04,339
in early 1898.
634
00:56:04,339 --> 00:56:09,890
Leopold then sought to acquire a territorial
concession at Hankou, but lacking the financial
635
00:56:09,890 --> 00:56:15,069
and military means to force a concession from
the Chinese government, Leopold personally
636
00:56:15,069 --> 00:56:23,530
acquired 115 acres of land from the Chinese
imperial railway company for 700,000 francs.
637
00:56:23,530 --> 00:56:28,130
Leopold was also in negotiations to buy out
the American company that had been granted
638
00:56:28,130 --> 00:56:33,420
the concession to construct a railway from
Hankou to the port of Canton when the Boxer
639
00:56:33,420 --> 00:56:36,359
Rebellion erupted.
640
00:56:36,359 --> 00:56:43,089
Officially known as the Society of the Righteous
and Harmonious Fists, in late 1899 the Boxers
641
00:56:43,089 --> 00:56:48,670
launched an uprising in northern China against
foreign influence in China.
642
00:56:48,670 --> 00:56:53,240
The imperial government sympathised with the
Boxers and initially did little to suppress
643
00:56:53,240 --> 00:56:59,180
the rebellion, forcing the European nations
in China to take coordinated action and send
644
00:56:59,180 --> 00:57:04,420
troops to deal with the uprising and protect
their diplomats, merchants, and missionaries
645
00:57:04,420 --> 00:57:05,839
in the country.
646
00:57:05,839 --> 00:57:12,210
The Boxers had damaged parts of the Beijing-Hankou
railway and killed six Belgian workers, and
647
00:57:12,210 --> 00:57:18,280
Leopold personally financed a contingent of
over 600 Belgian soldiers to go to China,
648
00:57:18,280 --> 00:57:24,720
but Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany considered
it a violation of neutrality and refused give
649
00:57:24,720 --> 00:57:29,150
permission for the Belgian expedition to go
ahead.
650
00:57:29,150 --> 00:57:34,089
Although Belgium was not represented in the
eight-nation force that defeated the Boxer
651
00:57:34,089 --> 00:57:41,500
Uprising, the Belgians were awarded 31 million
francs by the Chinese government in compensation.
652
00:57:41,500 --> 00:57:49,180
The capital was used to establish the Sino-Belgian
Bank in 1902, while Leopold continued to try
653
00:57:49,180 --> 00:57:52,910
and secure a controlling interest in the Hankou-Canton
railway.
654
00:57:52,910 --> 00:58:00,079
By 1904 the Americans protested against the
degree of Belgian control and the US State
655
00:58:00,079 --> 00:58:05,760
Department urged Leopold to sell his part
of the stake, while the Chinese government
656
00:58:05,760 --> 00:58:10,710
threatened to confiscate the concession altogether
on the grounds of mismanagement.
657
00:58:10,710 --> 00:58:16,580
In the end, the banker J.P. Morgan, the largest
financial backer of the company, decided to
658
00:58:16,580 --> 00:58:20,180
sell their portion of the concession back
to the Chinese government.
659
00:58:20,180 --> 00:58:26,579
Though he made a modest profit, Leopold lost
out on the prospect of controlling a north-south
660
00:58:26,579 --> 00:58:29,920
railway line all the way from Beijing to Canton.
661
00:58:29,920 --> 00:58:38,040
By 1906, with his control of the Congo at
risk, Leopold decided to sell out of China.
662
00:58:38,040 --> 00:58:43,300
Leopold’s control of the Free State had
already been at risk for over a decade.
663
00:58:43,300 --> 00:58:49,579
In 1895, after being informed that Leopold
had raised 5 million francs from a banker
664
00:58:49,579 --> 00:58:54,859
secured by 40 million acres of territory and
was unable to make repayments from the Free
665
00:58:54,859 --> 00:59:00,480
State’s treasury, the Belgian government
proposed the annexation of the Congo.
666
00:59:00,480 --> 00:59:06,260
The arrangement suited Leopold, who had intended
for the Congo to become a Belgian colony after
667
00:59:06,260 --> 00:59:12,099
his death, but the proposals were strongly
opposed by the Liberals, the Labour Party,
668
00:59:12,099 --> 00:59:15,109
and isolationists in the Catholic Party.
669
00:59:15,109 --> 00:59:22,849
In March 1895, Leopold decided against annexation
after realising that increased global demand
670
00:59:22,849 --> 00:59:28,880
for rubber would enable the Congolese economy
to sustain itself, and it later emerged that
671
00:59:28,880 --> 00:59:35,590
the 5 million franc loan was invented by Leopold
to extract a further loan of 6.5 million from
672
00:59:35,590 --> 00:59:37,359
the Belgian state.
673
00:59:37,359 --> 00:59:45,700
By 1900, the Free State was exporting 6,000
metric tons of rubber a year compared to 500
674
00:59:45,700 --> 00:59:52,260
five years earlier, and the balance of trade
increased to 25 million francs a year.
675
00:59:52,260 --> 00:59:58,180
Under the terms of the 1890 loan from the
Belgian parliament, Leopold was to pay 25
676
00:59:58,180 --> 01:00:04,010
million francs back in ten years, but by 1900
the King was in a position of strength and
677
01:00:04,010 --> 01:00:08,349
decided to ignore parliament’s claims.
678
01:00:08,349 --> 01:00:13,619
While he continued to remain popular in Belgium,
Leopold’s international reputation was in
679
01:00:13,619 --> 01:00:19,809
decline, as reports of atrocities in Congo
carried out by agents of the Free State began
680
01:00:19,809 --> 01:00:23,270
to spread around the world in the 1890s.
681
01:00:23,270 --> 01:00:30,240
In 1890 the black American historian George
Washington Williams published a report highlighting
682
01:00:30,240 --> 01:00:33,820
Belgian human rights abuses in the Congo.
683
01:00:33,820 --> 01:00:39,480
One of the accusations levelled against Leopold’s
agents was that they had claimed to have magical
684
01:00:39,480 --> 01:00:45,630
powers and gave electric shocks to native
chiefs in order to force them to sign territorial
685
01:00:45,630 --> 01:00:47,390
concessions.
686
01:00:47,390 --> 01:00:52,230
Williams reported that the military outposts
were established at the cost of immense bloodshed
687
01:00:52,230 --> 01:00:58,000
among the native population, and far from
providing humanitarian aid, the Free State
688
01:00:58,000 --> 01:01:03,210
had no hospitals or schools, and none of the
Free State’s officials could speak any African
689
01:01:03,210 --> 01:01:04,660
languages.
690
01:01:04,660 --> 01:01:10,380
Williams remarked that white officials frequently
shot at native Africans for sport or to take
691
01:01:10,380 --> 01:01:12,760
away their women as concubines.
692
01:01:12,760 --> 01:01:19,950
Finally, the American fatally undermined Leopold’s
claim to be an antislavery champion by claiming
693
01:01:19,950 --> 01:01:24,690
that the Free State bought and sold slaves
to serve in its army.
694
01:01:24,690 --> 01:01:30,400
In a letter to the American secretary of state,
Williams claimed that Leopold was guilty of
695
01:01:30,400 --> 01:01:33,260
“crimes against humanity” in the Congo.
696
01:01:33,260 --> 01:01:38,630
Leopold, who never set foot in the Congo in
his whole life, claimed to be horrified at
697
01:01:38,630 --> 01:01:44,549
these early revelations, but did little to
stop the exploitation.
698
01:01:44,549 --> 01:01:50,160
This exploitation was most apparent in the
rubber enterprises, and while rubber was sold
699
01:01:50,160 --> 01:01:57,740
in Antwerp for ten francs a kilo, the local
population received half a franc paid in kind.
700
01:01:57,740 --> 01:02:04,460
As the Congo lacked a monetary economy, taxes
were also paid in kind, in the form of labour
701
01:02:04,460 --> 01:02:06,150
obligations.
702
01:02:06,150 --> 01:02:12,420
Although in 1903 working hours were theoretically
limited to forty hours a week, the native
703
01:02:12,420 --> 01:02:17,610
labourers were set impossibly high targets
for the amount of rubber to collect, while
704
01:02:17,610 --> 01:02:23,789
workers who did not reach their quotas were
subject to imprisonment, beatings, mutilation,
705
01:02:23,789 --> 01:02:27,920
and often murder, whether intentional or accidental.
706
01:02:27,920 --> 01:02:34,789
Over the course of the 1890s allegations about
the Free State surfaced in the British press,
707
01:02:34,789 --> 01:02:39,980
prompting Colonial Secretary Joseph Chamberlain
to order the British colonies in West Africa
708
01:02:39,980 --> 01:02:44,880
not to allow the recruitment of their subjects
by agents of the Free State.
709
01:02:44,880 --> 01:02:51,660
In 1902 the publication of Joseph Conrad’s
Heart of Darkness inspired by his experience
710
01:02:51,660 --> 01:02:57,530
in the Congo in 1890 further increased scrutiny
of the Free State.
711
01:02:57,530 --> 01:03:04,900
In response to concerns from philanthropists
and businessmen, in January 1903 Lord Cromer,
712
01:03:04,900 --> 01:03:10,950
the British consul-general in Egypt, visited
parts of Sudan under Free State control and
713
01:03:10,950 --> 01:03:17,400
described the Free State as “the most extreme
and most objectionable form of mercantile
714
01:03:17,400 --> 01:03:20,859
enterprise” in his report to London.
715
01:03:20,859 --> 01:03:26,579
King Edward VII, who succeeded his mother
Queen Victoria in 1901, was convinced that
716
01:03:26,579 --> 01:03:31,369
atrocities were happening in the Congo and
placed responsibility on the shoulders of
717
01:03:31,369 --> 01:03:32,450
Leopold.
718
01:03:32,450 --> 01:03:37,710
Although the British government was not keen
on alienating Leopold while negotiations over
719
01:03:37,710 --> 01:03:44,240
the Nile were ongoing, the House of Commons
voted unanimously in favour of a motion introduced
720
01:03:44,240 --> 01:03:50,250
by the Liberal MP Herbert Samuel to approach
the signatories of the Berlin Conference and
721
01:03:50,250 --> 01:03:54,920
set up an international effort to end the
abuses.
722
01:03:54,920 --> 01:04:00,819
The Foreign Office instructed the British
consul in Boma, an Irishman named Roger Casement,
723
01:04:00,819 --> 01:04:06,390
to travel into the interior of the Free State
and prepare a report on the condition of the
724
01:04:06,390 --> 01:04:07,460
native population.
725
01:04:07,460 --> 01:04:12,280
Casement, who would be better known to history
for his role in leading the Easter Rising
726
01:04:12,280 --> 01:04:19,900
for Irish independence in 1916, had previously
worked for the Free State in the late 1880s
727
01:04:19,900 --> 01:04:25,030
before being appointed the first British consul
to the Free State in 1900.
728
01:04:25,030 --> 01:04:31,391
Already in 1901 he observed the “rotten
system” in place in Leopoldville, and in
729
01:04:31,391 --> 01:04:37,790
the summer of 1903 he steamed upriver on his
fact-finding mission to the Upper Congo, where
730
01:04:37,790 --> 01:04:42,830
he was informed by missionaries that Free
State officials and soldiers had forced the
731
01:04:42,830 --> 01:04:49,270
native population deeper and deeper into the
forests to extract rubber, and as he travelled
732
01:04:49,270 --> 01:04:55,990
further inland he witnessed many native settlements
depopulated by the brutality of Leopold’s
733
01:04:55,990 --> 01:04:58,309
regime in the Free State.
734
01:04:58,309 --> 01:05:03,510
While Leopold attempted to defend himself
by publishing and distributing a pamphlet
735
01:05:03,510 --> 01:05:09,780
entitled La Vérité sur le Congo, or The
Truth about the Congo, claiming that the British
736
01:05:09,780 --> 01:05:15,730
were smearing him in order to get their hands
on the Congo, Casement’s report was submitted
737
01:05:15,730 --> 01:05:21,640
to the Foreign Office in December 1903 and
published the following February.
738
01:05:21,640 --> 01:05:27,029
In addition to the publication of his report,
Casement led the creation of the Congo Reform
739
01:05:27,029 --> 01:05:33,839
Association in March 1904 to keep up the political
pressure on the issue.
740
01:05:33,839 --> 01:05:40,220
The British government asked Leopold to investigate
the accusations and called for an independent
741
01:05:40,220 --> 01:05:45,950
inquiry, and in July Leopold conceded to a
three-man commission of inquiry led by Belgian
742
01:05:45,950 --> 01:05:48,340
judge Emile Janssens.
743
01:05:48,340 --> 01:05:55,599
The commissioners spent three months in Congo
from October 1904 to February 1905 and gathered
744
01:05:55,599 --> 01:06:02,760
enough evidence to reach the same conclusions
as Casement in its report of December 1905.
745
01:06:02,760 --> 01:06:08,170
The report concluded that the natives ought
to be granted significantly more land and
746
01:06:08,170 --> 01:06:14,900
recommended the abolition of private monopolies
and the eventual restoration of free trade.
747
01:06:14,900 --> 01:06:19,849
While many Belgians had been unconvinced by
the Casement Report and were persuaded by
748
01:06:19,849 --> 01:06:25,099
Leopold’s propaganda that the British were
trying to seize the Congo for themselves,
749
01:06:25,099 --> 01:06:30,120
an idea that some British politicians would
not have minded, the conclusions of the Belgian
750
01:06:30,120 --> 01:06:36,660
inquiry authorised by the King himself led
to a wave of domestic opposition to Leopold’s
751
01:06:36,660 --> 01:06:40,420
administration of the Congo Free State.
752
01:06:40,420 --> 01:06:47,700
In early 1906 the Brussels lawyer and legal
professor Félicien Cattier published a critique
753
01:06:47,700 --> 01:06:53,119
of the Free State and placed sole responsibility
for its mismanagement on the shoulders of
754
01:06:53,119 --> 01:06:54,740
King Leopold.
755
01:06:54,740 --> 01:06:59,450
Cattier recommended annexation of the Congo
by the Belgian government to fundamentally
756
01:06:59,450 --> 01:07:01,339
reform the state.
757
01:07:01,339 --> 01:07:06,829
Two months later, Father Arthur Vermeersch
of the Catholic University of Leuven published
758
01:07:06,829 --> 01:07:13,279
another critique which warned that Leopold’s
atrocities in the Congo would serve to undermine
759
01:07:13,279 --> 01:07:17,780
Belgium’s international reputation if it
were allowed to carry on.
760
01:07:17,780 --> 01:07:23,829
Attacked at home and abroad, Leopold fought
back by paying sympathisers to write books
761
01:07:23,829 --> 01:07:29,299
claiming to describe British atrocities in
its African colonies while denying the existence
762
01:07:29,299 --> 01:07:31,900
of any atrocities in the Congo.
763
01:07:31,900 --> 01:07:37,690
When the Belgian Labour leader Emile Vandervelde
put forward a motion for annexation, former
764
01:07:37,690 --> 01:07:44,310
chief minister Auguste Beernaert introduced
a more moderate motion to re-examine the annexation
765
01:07:44,310 --> 01:07:48,849
bill of 1901, which was reluctantly accepted
by Leopold.
766
01:07:48,849 --> 01:07:54,880
Though Leopold agreed to carry out limited
reforms to the Free State, he refused to give
767
01:07:54,880 --> 01:08:01,089
up his personal sovereignty, which led the
Belgian government to favour immediate annexation.
768
01:08:01,089 --> 01:08:06,529
The British government and the Congo Reform
Association backed Belgian annexation, and
769
01:08:06,529 --> 01:08:13,011
despite Leopold’s sustained efforts to court
American opinion, by the end of 1906 the American
770
01:08:13,011 --> 01:08:18,529
government was prepared to join Britain at
an international conference on the Congo.
771
01:08:18,529 --> 01:08:25,040
With the threat of American intervention,
Leopold agreed to annexation in December.
772
01:08:25,040 --> 01:08:31,520
The King hoped to put behind himself the international
outrage as soon as possible, but the Belgian
773
01:08:31,520 --> 01:08:37,670
parliament preferred to take its time in developing
an appropriate and more humane system of colonial
774
01:08:37,670 --> 01:08:39,270
administration.
775
01:08:39,270 --> 01:08:44,890
When an annexation bill was introduced to
parliament in September 1907, Leopold hoped
776
01:08:44,890 --> 01:08:50,450
to exclude the 100,000 square miles of territory
known as the “Crown Foundation” which
777
01:08:50,450 --> 01:08:53,290
he hoped to keep for himself.
778
01:08:53,290 --> 01:08:57,830
Profits from the land had been used to finance
public construction works in Belgium which
779
01:08:57,830 --> 01:09:03,750
Leopold had previously been celebrated for,
however the Belgian parliament refused to
780
01:09:03,750 --> 01:09:07,380
allow the King to keep control of the Foundation.
781
01:09:07,380 --> 01:09:13,839
In February 1908, a depressed and isolated
Leopold indicated that he was prepared to
782
01:09:13,839 --> 01:09:18,859
give up the Foundation, while the Belgian
government agreed to cover the Free State’s
783
01:09:18,859 --> 01:09:25,890
debts of 110 million francs, while providing
an additional 45 million for Leopold’s building
784
01:09:25,890 --> 01:09:28,290
projects in Belgium.
785
01:09:28,290 --> 01:09:34,600
After the Catholic government of Frans Schollaert
was re-elected in May 1908, parliament passed
786
01:09:34,600 --> 01:09:42,060
the annexation bills and on the 18th of October
King Leopold II signed the Treaty of Cession,
787
01:09:42,060 --> 01:09:46,000
transforming the Congo Free State into Belgian
Congo.
788
01:09:46,000 --> 01:09:53,589
In August 1908, Leopold issued orders to burn
the Congo state archives in Brussels, telling
789
01:09:53,589 --> 01:09:59,630
an aide, “I will give them my Congo, but
they have no right to know what I did there,”
790
01:09:59,630 --> 01:10:02,880
implying that he was guilty of the crimes
he denied.
791
01:10:02,880 --> 01:10:11,100
The colony remained under Belgian rule until
its independence in 1960, and in 1964 it adopted
792
01:10:11,100 --> 01:10:16,110
its modern name of the Democratic Republic
of the Congo.
793
01:10:16,110 --> 01:10:21,510
For most of his reign, Leopold had dedicated
himself to his work, whether in Belgium, the
794
01:10:21,510 --> 01:10:25,420
Congo, or other colonial and commercial schemes
he championed.
795
01:10:25,420 --> 01:10:30,570
He had been separated from his wife, Queen
Marie-Henriette, for thirty years before her
796
01:10:30,570 --> 01:10:32,060
death in 1902.
797
01:10:32,060 --> 01:10:38,360
Two years earlier, Leopold began an affair
with Caroline Lacroix, a sixteen-year-old
798
01:10:38,360 --> 01:10:44,520
French prostitute, whom he later granted the
courtesy title of Baroness de Vaughan.
799
01:10:44,520 --> 01:10:49,469
When the affair became public following the
death of the Queen, it initially had a greater
800
01:10:49,469 --> 01:10:54,800
negative impact on Leopold’s popularity
in Belgium than the allegations about atrocities
801
01:10:54,800 --> 01:10:56,360
in the Congo.
802
01:10:56,360 --> 01:11:00,920
While Leopold had given plentiful gifts in
the form of money and estates to his mistress
803
01:11:00,920 --> 01:11:06,820
and their two illegitimate sons Lucien and
Philippe, he was less generous towards his
804
01:11:06,820 --> 01:11:13,040
three daughters, leaving them less than 4
million francs each in his will.
805
01:11:13,040 --> 01:11:19,100
After losing control of the Congo, Leopold
focused his attention on the defence of Belgium,
806
01:11:19,100 --> 01:11:22,560
an issue that he had promoted his whole life.
807
01:11:22,560 --> 01:11:28,590
In a conversation with Kaiser Wilhelm II in
1903, Leopold was surprised to hear the Kaiser
808
01:11:28,590 --> 01:11:35,230
say that he would not hesitate to invade Belgium
if strategic considerations demanded it.
809
01:11:35,230 --> 01:11:41,690
German imperial ambitions in Morocco threatened
war with France in 1904, leading to the creation
810
01:11:41,690 --> 01:11:47,110
of the entente cordiale between Britain and
France, while the Belgians took a greater
811
01:11:47,110 --> 01:11:49,920
interest in military preparations.
812
01:11:49,920 --> 01:11:55,440
When the French discovered German plans developed
by Field Marshal Alfred von Schlieffen to
813
01:11:55,440 --> 01:12:01,090
invade France through Belgium, the Belgian
military joined Anglo-French staff talks to
814
01:12:01,090 --> 01:12:04,900
discuss how to respond in such a scenario.
815
01:12:04,900 --> 01:12:11,360
Though the 1906 Algeciras Conference helped
to diffuse tensions with Germany, Leopold
816
01:12:11,360 --> 01:12:16,920
continued to urge military preparations by
strengthening the fortress of Antwerp.
817
01:12:16,920 --> 01:12:22,880
For the entirety of his reign, Leopold favoured
the introduction of national conscription
818
01:12:22,880 --> 01:12:30,270
service, and it was only in 1909, when the
King was dying, that parliament complied.
819
01:12:30,270 --> 01:12:37,340
Though he had been robust and healthy for
most of his life, in December 1909 Leopold
820
01:12:37,340 --> 01:12:41,040
fell violently ill at the palace of Laeken.
821
01:12:41,040 --> 01:12:46,520
On the 12th of December he married Baroness
de Vaughan in a religious ceremony, though
822
01:12:46,520 --> 01:12:50,880
Belgian law only recognised marriages conducted
in a civil ceremony.
823
01:12:50,880 --> 01:12:57,270
On the 14th of December, the King managed
to sign the Army Bill adopting national service
824
01:12:57,270 --> 01:12:58,900
from his deathbed.
825
01:12:58,900 --> 01:13:05,190
In the early hours of the 17th of December
1909, exactly forty-four years to the day
826
01:13:05,190 --> 01:13:12,980
of his accession to the throne, King Leopold
II of the Belgians died at the age of seventy-four.
827
01:13:12,980 --> 01:13:19,320
He was succeeded by his nephew King Albert
I, the second son of his brother Philippe.
828
01:13:19,320 --> 01:13:25,480
In August 1914, less than five years after
Leopold’s death, the German army violated
829
01:13:25,480 --> 01:13:32,440
Belgian neutrality during its invasion of
France at the start of the First World War.
830
01:13:32,440 --> 01:13:38,000
King Leopold II of Belgium is one of the most
controversial and infamous monarchs in modern
831
01:13:38,000 --> 01:13:39,650
European history.
832
01:13:39,650 --> 01:13:45,080
He reigned in Belgium during an era of political
and social reform, but as a constitutional
833
01:13:45,080 --> 01:13:51,250
monarch his powers were limited and he respected
constitutional conventions by recognising
834
01:13:51,250 --> 01:13:56,080
the will of the people as expressed by their
parliamentary representatives.
835
01:13:56,080 --> 01:14:01,520
His most apparent legacy in Belgium is the
grand public buildings that he constructed
836
01:14:01,520 --> 01:14:04,930
to elevate Belgium’s international prestige.
837
01:14:04,930 --> 01:14:10,220
While Leopold also had serious commercial
interests in China, he is best known for his
838
01:14:10,220 --> 01:14:12,880
rule over the Congo Free State.
839
01:14:12,880 --> 01:14:17,719
While presenting himself to the international
community as a champion of the antislavery
840
01:14:17,719 --> 01:14:24,280
cause, Leopold and his colonial administrators
ruled over the Congo in a way that horrified
841
01:14:24,280 --> 01:14:29,860
contemporaries and eventually forced him to
give up control of the colony a year before
842
01:14:29,860 --> 01:14:32,000
his death.
843
01:14:32,000 --> 01:14:37,090
While historians have debated the extent to
which Leopold was aware of the atrocities
844
01:14:37,090 --> 01:14:44,170
going on in the Congo, as the autocratic ruler
of Congo Free State he had ultimate responsibility
845
01:14:44,170 --> 01:14:49,810
for the brutal exploitation of the Congo between
1879 and 1908.
846
01:14:49,810 --> 01:14:55,980
There are varying estimates of the death toll
in the Congo during this period, but a Belgian
847
01:14:55,980 --> 01:15:03,690
government commission in 1919 estimated that
the Congolese population was cut in half.
848
01:15:03,690 --> 01:15:09,560
Based on an official census conducted by the
Belgian administration in 1924 which put the
849
01:15:09,560 --> 01:15:15,560
population of the Congo at around 10 million,
the historian Adam Hochschild argues that
850
01:15:15,560 --> 01:15:22,120
10 million people perished under Leopold’s
rule from a combination of murder, starvation,
851
01:15:22,120 --> 01:15:25,469
disease, and reductions in the birth rate.
852
01:15:25,469 --> 01:15:31,101
Hochschild describes the death toll as genocidal,
though it was not strictly a genocide, as
853
01:15:31,101 --> 01:15:36,960
Leopold was motivated by economic exploitation
rather than ethnic cleansing.
854
01:15:36,960 --> 01:15:41,670
Throughout his life, Leopold sought to warn
his Belgian subjects that the country was
855
01:15:41,670 --> 01:15:46,960
vulnerable to enemy invasion in spite of the
neutrality guarantees received.
856
01:15:46,960 --> 01:15:52,730
The warning would prove prescient five years
after Leopold’s death when Germany invaded
857
01:15:52,730 --> 01:16:00,480
France through Belgium in August 1914 at the
beginning of the First World War.
858
01:16:00,480 --> 01:16:03,480
What do you think of Leopold II of Belgium?
859
01:16:03,480 --> 01:16:08,900
Should he receive recognition for his domestic
achievements in Belgium and his prescient
860
01:16:08,900 --> 01:16:15,170
warnings about Belgian national security before
the First World War or is he one of history’s
861
01:16:15,170 --> 01:16:21,500
most notorious and destructive colonial advocates
who inflicted death and destruction on the
862
01:16:21,500 --> 01:16:23,150
Congolese population?
863
01:16:23,150 --> 01:16:28,340
Please let us know in the comment section
and in the meantime, thank you very much for
864
01:16:28,340 --> 01:16:28,840
watching.
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