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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:04,339 --> 00:00:11,800 The man known to history as King Leopold II of Belgium was born Prince Leopold Louis-Philippe 2 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 3 00:00:19,980 --> 00:00:22,720 ruled as King and Queen. 4 00:00:22,720 --> 00:00:28,890 His father was King Leopold I of the Belgians, a German prince from the dukedom of Coburg 5 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 6 00:00:35,180 --> 00:00:43,020 the Russian army fighting against the Emperor Napoleon in 1813 and 1814, where he rose to 7 00:00:43,020 --> 00:00:44,150 the rank of lieutenant general. 8 00:00:44,150 --> 00:00:53,100 In 1816, Leopold married Princess Charlotte of Wales, the daughter of George, Prince Regent, 9 00:00:53,100 --> 00:00:55,980 and second in line to the British throne. 10 00:00:55,980 --> 00:01:02,789 When Charlotte died giving birth to a stillborn child in 1817, Leopold remained an influential 11 00:01:02,789 --> 00:01:08,350 figure at the British court, especially after his sister Victoria married Prince Edward 12 00:01:08,350 --> 00:01:16,090 of Kent in 1818, giving birth to a daughter also named Victoria, who would become Queen 13 00:01:16,090 --> 00:01:18,450 in 1837. 14 00:01:18,450 --> 00:01:24,420 Five years before Prince Leopold’s birth, Belgium declared independence from the United 15 00:01:24,420 --> 00:01:29,650 Netherlands, but Great Britain was the only major power to recognise Belgian independence 16 00:01:29,650 --> 00:01:30,900 at the time. 17 00:01:30,900 --> 00:01:36,030 In the immediate aftermath of the Belgian Revolution of 1830, the British government 18 00:01:36,030 --> 00:01:41,250 was concerned that the Belgians might chose a French prince as their king and offered 19 00:01:41,250 --> 00:01:44,530 Leopold as an alternative candidate. 20 00:01:44,530 --> 00:01:50,880 The Belgians, afraid that a French king might annex their new nation to France, gladly accepted 21 00:01:50,880 --> 00:01:58,610 Leopold, who was sworn in as King of the Belgians on the 21st of July 1831. 22 00:01:58,610 --> 00:02:03,159 The Dutch were unwilling to give up their claim to Belgium so quickly, and it was only 23 00:02:03,159 --> 00:02:10,369 in 1839 that the Netherlands joined six other European states in signing the Treaty of London 24 00:02:10,369 --> 00:02:15,390 guaranteeing Belgian independence and neutrality. 25 00:02:15,390 --> 00:02:22,120 Soon after becoming King, Leopold I married the twenty-year-old Princess Louise d’Orléans, 26 00:02:22,120 --> 00:02:26,280 the eldest daughter of King Louis-Philippe I of France. 27 00:02:26,280 --> 00:02:31,310 Leopold believed that not only would the marriage encourage France to abandon its claims on 28 00:02:31,310 --> 00:02:37,480 Belgian territory, but Louise, who was a Catholic, would help him bridge the religious gap between 29 00:02:37,480 --> 00:02:41,000 himself and his primarily Catholic subjects. 30 00:02:41,000 --> 00:02:46,420 As a Lutheran, Leopold wanted to demonstrate that he could be a good ruler despite the 31 00:02:46,420 --> 00:02:48,340 differences in faith. 32 00:02:48,340 --> 00:02:54,030 Following their marriage in August 1832, the couple had four children together. 33 00:02:54,030 --> 00:03:02,200 The first, Crown Prince Louis-Philippe Leopold Ernest, was born in July 1833 but died before 34 00:03:02,200 --> 00:03:04,080 his first birthday. 35 00:03:04,080 --> 00:03:10,230 The royal couple would go on to have three more children, sons Leopold and Philippe, 36 00:03:10,230 --> 00:03:15,730 and a daughter Charlotte, all of whom survived into adulthood. 37 00:03:15,730 --> 00:03:22,290 In 1840, the five-year-old Prince Leopold was granted the title of Duke of Brabant by 38 00:03:22,290 --> 00:03:27,430 his father, while his younger brother Philippe was made Count of Flanders. 39 00:03:27,430 --> 00:03:32,950 Although Leopold was heir to the throne, he resented the fact that his parents favoured 40 00:03:32,950 --> 00:03:37,450 his two younger siblings and proved an unruly child. 41 00:03:37,450 --> 00:03:42,790 His first language was French, the native language of his mother as well as the Belgian 42 00:03:42,790 --> 00:03:47,900 social elite, and he also learned to speak English and German. 43 00:03:47,900 --> 00:03:53,129 Following the traditions of European royalty, Leopold’s upbringing was entrusted to a 44 00:03:53,129 --> 00:03:59,680 royal governor, Count Gustave de Lannoy, who established a strict schedule which involved 45 00:03:59,680 --> 00:04:02,920 more than eight hours of study each day. 46 00:04:02,920 --> 00:04:08,689 While his siblings excelled in their studies, Leopold struggled, only finding success in 47 00:04:08,689 --> 00:04:09,829 drawing. 48 00:04:09,829 --> 00:04:15,400 Although he was uninterested in his education, Leopold was fascinated by politics and even 49 00:04:15,400 --> 00:04:21,789 at the age of ten enjoyed discussing current affairs with his father’s most distinguished 50 00:04:21,789 --> 00:04:22,789 subjects. 51 00:04:22,789 --> 00:04:28,820 As Leopold entered his teens, the King desperately tried to force his son to become a more diligent 52 00:04:28,820 --> 00:04:34,280 student and instructed Count de Lannoy to apply stricter discipline, but these efforts 53 00:04:34,280 --> 00:04:41,310 were counterproductive, and Leopold’s wild behaviour continued to worry his parents. 54 00:04:41,310 --> 00:04:48,380 In October 1850, young Leopold was at his mother’s bedside when she died of tuberculosis 55 00:04:48,380 --> 00:04:50,229 at the age of thirty-eight. 56 00:04:50,229 --> 00:04:55,480 The Duke of Brabant was devastated by the death of his affectionate mother, and the 57 00:04:55,480 --> 00:05:01,410 sixty-year-old King proved unable or unwilling to bridge the emotional distance with his 58 00:05:01,410 --> 00:05:02,970 eldest son. 59 00:05:02,970 --> 00:05:08,570 The King was accustomed to communicating with Leopold via secretaries, though he ensured 60 00:05:08,570 --> 00:05:12,720 that he was kept up to date with the latest political developments. 61 00:05:12,720 --> 00:05:18,960 In 1848, Leopold’s maternal grandfather King Louis-Philippe had been overthrown in 62 00:05:18,960 --> 00:05:26,410 a revolution led by Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte, the nephew of Emperor Napoleon I. By 1852, 63 00:05:26,410 --> 00:05:33,660 Louis-Napoleon followed in his uncle’s footsteps and assumed the title Emperor Napoleon III. 64 00:05:33,660 --> 00:05:39,130 The overthrow of his father-in-law damaged Leopold I’s prestige in Europe, and the 65 00:05:39,130 --> 00:05:43,780 King of the Belgians hoped to address this by arranging a favourable marriage for his 66 00:05:43,780 --> 00:05:44,800 son. 67 00:05:44,800 --> 00:05:52,280 In August 1853, the eighteen-year-old Duke of Brabant married sixteen-year-old Archduchess 68 00:05:52,280 --> 00:05:58,330 Marie-Henriette, a cousin of Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria, providing the Belgian 69 00:05:58,330 --> 00:06:03,010 royal family with a connection to the imperial House of Habsburg. 70 00:06:03,010 --> 00:06:08,960 The young couple were wholly unsuited to each other, and while Leopold was a quiet and depressive 71 00:06:08,960 --> 00:06:16,550 young man, his playful bride enjoyed horseback riding and Hungarian gypsy music. 72 00:06:16,550 --> 00:06:24,340 In October 1853, the newlywed couple left Belgium for a long trip to England to visit 73 00:06:24,340 --> 00:06:27,090 Leopold’s cousin Queen Victoria. 74 00:06:27,090 --> 00:06:32,690 While the English Queen was impressed by Marie-Henriette’s intelligence, her liberal views, and her keen 75 00:06:32,690 --> 00:06:39,960 interest in the arts, she portrayed her Belgian cousin as uninteresting and intolerant, while 76 00:06:39,960 --> 00:06:43,900 admitting his expertise on political and military affairs. 77 00:06:43,900 --> 00:06:51,100 For many years, Leopold’s health had been in a delicate state, and in 1854 his doctors 78 00:06:51,100 --> 00:06:54,340 advised him to take a long rest in Egypt. 79 00:06:54,340 --> 00:07:00,320 Geography was the only academic subject which interested Leopold, and he was glad to have 80 00:07:00,320 --> 00:07:06,169 the opportunity to visit Egypt and learn more about the world. 81 00:07:06,169 --> 00:07:12,819 After leaving Belgium in November 1854, Leopold and Marie travelled through Germany, Austria, 82 00:07:12,819 --> 00:07:20,730 and Italy before arriving in Alexandria, Egypt at the beginning of February 1855. 83 00:07:20,730 --> 00:07:26,849 The royal couple were welcomed by the khedive, Sa’id Pasha, who ruled Egypt as viceroy 84 00:07:26,849 --> 00:07:29,190 of the Ottoman Empire. 85 00:07:29,190 --> 00:07:35,069 During his two-month stay in Egypt, Leopold was delighted to take a steamship up the Nile 86 00:07:35,069 --> 00:07:40,889 past the ancient sites of Thebes and Karnak, and while in the Egyptian capital of Cairo 87 00:07:40,889 --> 00:07:47,470 he extracted a promise from the khedive to establish a steamship company connecting Alexandria 88 00:07:47,470 --> 00:07:50,200 and the Belgian port of Antwerp. 89 00:07:50,200 --> 00:07:55,500 During his time in Egypt, Leopold also began to consider the potential for establishing 90 00:07:55,500 --> 00:08:03,110 a Belgian colony in Africa either in or near Egypt, an issue which would become an obsession 91 00:08:03,110 --> 00:08:06,090 for the rest of his life. 92 00:08:06,090 --> 00:08:11,310 After leaving Egypt, the Duke and Duchess of Brabant spent Easter week in Jerusalem 93 00:08:11,310 --> 00:08:17,850 as guests of Sultan Abdulmejid I, the ruler of the Ottoman Empire, which included the 94 00:08:17,850 --> 00:08:21,110 Middle East and parts of south-eastern Europe. 95 00:08:21,110 --> 00:08:26,689 The royal party then travelled to Syria and Lebanon before sailing across the Mediterranean 96 00:08:26,689 --> 00:08:31,540 to Athens, meeting King Otto and Queen Amalia of Greece. 97 00:08:31,540 --> 00:08:36,880 On their way home they made another stop in Italy, moving up the peninsula to meet King 98 00:08:36,880 --> 00:08:42,849 Ferdinand of Naples, the pope in Rome, and King Victor Emmanuel of Sardinia-Piedmont, 99 00:08:42,849 --> 00:08:47,320 who would become King of Italy within a decade. 100 00:08:47,320 --> 00:08:54,260 Soon after returning to Belgium in August 1855, Leopold made a diplomatic visit to Paris 101 00:08:54,260 --> 00:09:01,450 in October where he failed to charm the court, who had become endeared to his young wife. 102 00:09:01,450 --> 00:09:07,140 Visiting and receiving foreign royalty was a large part of the Duke of Brabant’s responsibilities, 103 00:09:07,140 --> 00:09:14,570 and in May 1856 he received his wife’s cousin Archduke Maximilian, the younger brother of 104 00:09:14,570 --> 00:09:16,440 the Austrian emperor. 105 00:09:16,440 --> 00:09:21,709 King Leopold hoped that Maximilian would marry his daughter Charlotte, and the Austrian archduke 106 00:09:21,709 --> 00:09:25,880 immediately took a liking to the beautiful Belgian princess. 107 00:09:25,880 --> 00:09:33,880 In July 1857 the couple married in Brussels, much to the satisfaction of various royal 108 00:09:33,880 --> 00:09:36,800 family members. 109 00:09:36,800 --> 00:09:42,230 Despite being a small country, Belgium’s industry and economy developed rapidly during 110 00:09:42,230 --> 00:09:47,310 the middle of the 19th century, and the issue of commercial development was particularly 111 00:09:47,310 --> 00:09:49,790 close to Leopold’s heart. 112 00:09:49,790 --> 00:09:56,750 In December 1855, he made his first substantive speech in the Belgian Senate about the subject 113 00:09:56,750 --> 00:10:02,250 of a steamship service from Antwerp to Egypt, which he had discussed with the khedive earlier 114 00:10:02,250 --> 00:10:03,570 in the year. 115 00:10:03,570 --> 00:10:09,050 Leopold was only interested in domestic affairs when it had something to do with Belgium’s 116 00:10:09,050 --> 00:10:14,430 international prestige or its international trade relations, and he was a strong advocate 117 00:10:14,430 --> 00:10:20,880 for investment in the Belgian railway network and the ports of Antwerp and Ostend. 118 00:10:20,880 --> 00:10:25,360 Independence from the Netherlands had deprived Belgium of its access to the Dutch colonies 119 00:10:25,360 --> 00:10:31,180 in the Caribbean and the East Indies, and King Leopold was desperate to acquire colonies 120 00:10:31,180 --> 00:10:32,790 for Belgium. 121 00:10:32,790 --> 00:10:38,420 The extensive search for a potential colony covered the entire globe, including the Greek 122 00:10:38,420 --> 00:10:45,180 island of Crete, then under Ottoman rule, the Faroe Islands, Cuba and other Caribbean 123 00:10:45,180 --> 00:10:51,300 islands, Latin America, Africa, and even parts of Texas, which had declared independence 124 00:10:51,300 --> 00:10:55,670 from Mexico but had not yet joined the United States. 125 00:10:55,670 --> 00:11:02,510 A Belgian mission to establish a colony in Guatemala in Central America in 1845 was abandoned 126 00:11:02,510 --> 00:11:08,290 after many of the colonists died of heat exhaustion and disease. 127 00:11:08,290 --> 00:11:14,070 In 1850s the Duke of Brabant was an enthusiastic supporter of his father’s quest to acquire 128 00:11:14,070 --> 00:11:15,980 an overseas colony. 129 00:11:15,980 --> 00:11:21,480 An opportunity appeared to present itself in 1859, when a joint Anglo-French military 130 00:11:21,480 --> 00:11:27,889 force prepared to go to war with China seeking further liberalisation of the opium trade 131 00:11:27,889 --> 00:11:34,610 and greater access to Chinese ports in what became known as the Second Opium War. 132 00:11:34,610 --> 00:11:40,029 King Leopold I hoped that by sending a small Belgian force alongside the British and the 133 00:11:40,029 --> 00:11:44,620 French, he might also be able to obtain access to Chinese markets. 134 00:11:44,620 --> 00:11:51,110 Though Napoleon III was open to the idea of a Belgian contingent of around 1,500 men, 135 00:11:51,110 --> 00:11:55,490 the Belgian Parliament refused to finance the expedition. 136 00:11:55,490 --> 00:12:01,360 In response to this setback, the Duke of Brabant worked with Auguste Lambermont, an official 137 00:12:01,360 --> 00:12:07,390 in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Captain Henri-Alexis Brialmont, a military engineer, 138 00:12:07,390 --> 00:12:14,430 to produce a 219-page pamphlet making a forceful case for Belgian colonisation. 139 00:12:14,430 --> 00:12:21,350 By the early 1860s King Leopold’s health was in decline and with his declining health 140 00:12:21,350 --> 00:12:27,399 came a declining interest in colonial schemes, but his son Leopold was undeterred. 141 00:12:27,399 --> 00:12:33,589 The Duke explored colonisation schemes in Borneo and the Pacific islands and was constantly 142 00:12:33,589 --> 00:12:37,899 in contact with Brialmont researching potential leads. 143 00:12:37,899 --> 00:12:43,910 The two men planned to write a book with the title Belgians Abroad, and Leopold made plans 144 00:12:43,910 --> 00:12:49,449 to carry out research for the project by visiting the colonial powers and their colonies. 145 00:12:49,449 --> 00:12:56,000 In 1860 he travelled to Constantinople to meet the Ottoman Sultan, while in 1862 he 146 00:12:56,000 --> 00:12:58,700 went to Spain and North Africa. 147 00:12:58,700 --> 00:13:04,860 In 1864 he embarked on his most ambitious adventure, travelling to the British imperial 148 00:13:04,860 --> 00:13:12,110 possessions of India and Ceylon, now Sri Lanka, as well as Burma, now Myanmar, Singapore, 149 00:13:12,110 --> 00:13:16,480 and the Chinese ports of Canton and Hong Kong. 150 00:13:16,480 --> 00:13:22,570 By the time Leopold returned from his Asian tour in May 1865, his father’s health was 151 00:13:22,570 --> 00:13:30,910 in terminal decline, and on the 10th of December 1865 King Leopold I of the Belgians died at 152 00:13:30,910 --> 00:13:32,970 the age of seventy-five. 153 00:13:32,970 --> 00:13:39,060 A week later, on the 17th of December, the Duke of Brabant was sworn in as King Leopold 154 00:13:39,060 --> 00:13:41,759 II of the Belgians. 155 00:13:41,759 --> 00:13:47,230 After an uncertain start, Leopold impressed his ministers with his political judgement. 156 00:13:47,230 --> 00:13:53,920 Not long after his accession, Belgium became the target of another French attempt at annexation, 157 00:13:53,920 --> 00:13:58,680 prompted by French anxieties about the expansion of the Kingdom of Prussia. 158 00:13:58,680 --> 00:14:03,920 The energetic Prussian Chancellor Otto von Bismarck sought to fuse the German states 159 00:14:03,920 --> 00:14:10,029 into a united German empire, and Prussian armies had defeated Denmark and Austria in 160 00:14:10,029 --> 00:14:13,540 quick succession in the mid-1860s. 161 00:14:13,540 --> 00:14:18,320 These victories strengthened the Prussian state, which loomed menacingly on France’s 162 00:14:18,320 --> 00:14:26,139 eastern border, and Napoleon hoped to redress the balance by annexing all or parts of Belgium. 163 00:14:26,139 --> 00:14:32,350 Napoleon III also hoped to restore his prestige after his failure to establish a Mexican empire 164 00:14:32,350 --> 00:14:40,100 friendly to French interests ruled by Leopold’s brother-in-law Archduke Maximilian of Austria. 165 00:14:40,100 --> 00:14:47,250 After arriving in Mexico in 1864, Maximilian’s small army had little chance of success against 166 00:14:47,250 --> 00:14:52,240 the resurgent republican forces of President Benito Juarez. 167 00:14:52,240 --> 00:14:59,139 While Maximilian begged for European assistance to defend his empire, by 1866 Napoleon decided 168 00:14:59,139 --> 00:15:01,810 to abandon Maximilian to his fate. 169 00:15:01,810 --> 00:15:08,420 With her husband in grave danger, Empress Charlotte, now known by her Spanish name of 170 00:15:08,420 --> 00:15:12,630 Carlota, returned to Europe to seek assistance in person. 171 00:15:12,630 --> 00:15:18,390 With her cries for help falling on deaf ears at both the French and Austrian courts, Charlotte’s 172 00:15:18,390 --> 00:15:24,620 mental health began to decline, to the point of displaying signs of mental instability, 173 00:15:24,620 --> 00:15:30,870 and the news of her husband’s capture and execution in June 1867 was kept from her until 174 00:15:30,870 --> 00:15:36,940 the end of the year after her return to Belgium, where she remained in her state of insanity 175 00:15:36,940 --> 00:15:43,060 until her death in 1927 at the age of eighty-six. 176 00:15:43,060 --> 00:15:48,360 Napoleon was unsuccessful in his efforts to obtain territorial compensation, and in July 177 00:15:48,360 --> 00:15:54,470 1870 France pre-emptively declared war on Prussia before the power imbalance became 178 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 00:16:33,450 --> 00:16:36,850 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, 207 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 233 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. 95823

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