1st Edition

African Historical Studies

By E. A. Ayandele Copyright 1979
    326 Pages
    by Routledge

    328 Pages
    by Routledge

    First Published in 1979. This is a collection of twelve lectures, essays and articles with the aim of revealing some of the too many aspects of the African past yet to be explored or sufficiently developed. Another aim was to attempt new perspectives and interpretations of the more familiar aspects. The themes—exploration, Western-style education, the reaction of Africans to the activities of Christian missions, and the thought-pattern and modernity aspirations of the educated elite—have the common denominator of Euro-African relations. Collectively the themes are related historiographic concerns and methods and, as products of a single mind, bear the stamp of one style of thought.

    1 African Exploration and Human Understanding 2 Dr Heinrich Barth as a Diplomatist and Philanthropist 3 Traditional Rulers and Missionaries in Pre-Colonial West Africa 4 The Coming of Western Education to Africa 5 A Visionary of the African Church: M?j?la Agbebi (1860–1917) 6 James Johnson: Pioneer Educationist in West Africa 7 James Africanus Beale Horton, 1835–83: Prophet of Modernization in West Africa 8 Edward Wilmot Blyden, 1832–1912: The Myth and the Man 9 An African Church: A Legitimate Branch of the Church Universal 10 Writing African Church History 11 Mission in the Context of Religions and Secularization: An African Viewpoint 12 African Studies and Nation-Building

    Biography

    E. A. Ayandele Professor of History and Vice-Chancellor, University of Calabar.