Pre-colonial history The entire Congo basin is populated by
Bantu peoples, divided into several hundred ethnic groups.
Bantu expansion is estimated to have reached the middle Congo by about 500 BC and the upper Congo by the first century AD. Remnants of the aboriginal population displaced by the Bantu migration,
Pygmies/
Abatwa of the
Ubangian phylum, remain in the remote forest areas of the Congo Basin. By the 13th century there were three main confederations of states in the western Congo Basin. In the east were the
Seven Kingdoms of Kongo dia Nlaza, considered to be the oldest and most powerful, which likely included
Nsundi,
Mbata,
Mpangu, and possibly
Kundi and
Okanga. South of these was
Mpemba which stretched from modern-day
Angola to the Congo River. It included various kingdoms such as
Mpemba Kasi and
Vunda. To its west across the Congo River was a confederation of three small states;
Vungu (its leader),
Kakongo, and
Ngoyo. The
Kingdom of Kongo was formed in the late 14th century from a merging of the kingdoms of
Mpemba Kasi and
Mbata Kingdom on the left banks of the lower Congo River. Its territorial control along the river remained limited to what corresponds to the modern
Kongo Central province. European exploration of the Congo began in 1482 when Portuguese explorer
Diogo Cão discovered the river estuary (likely in August 1482), which he marked by a
Padrão, or stone pillar (still existing, but only in fragments) erected on Shark Point. Cão sailed up the river for a short distance, establishing contact with the Kingdom of Kongo. The full course of the river remained unknown throughout the early modern period. The upper Congo basin runs west of the
Albertine Rift. Its connection to the Congo was unknown until 1877. The extreme northeast of the Congo basin was reached by the
Nilotic expansion at some point between the 15th and 18th centuries, by the ancestors of the
Southern Luo speaking
Alur people.
Francisco de Lacerda followed the Zambezi and reached the uppermost part of the Congo basin (the
Kazembe in the upper Luapula basin) in 1796. The upper Congo River was first reached by the
Arab slave trade by the 19th century.
Nyangwe was founded as a slavers' outpost around 1860.
David Livingstone was the first European to reach Nyangwe in March 1871. Livingstone proposed to prove that the Lualaba connected to the Nile, but on 15 July, he witnessed a massacre of about 400 Africans by Arab slavers in Nyangwe, which experience left him too horrified and shattered to continue his mission to find the sources of the Nile, so he turned back to Lake Tanganyika.
Early European colonization The Europeans had not reached the central regions of the Congo basin from either the east or west, until
Henry Morton Stanley's expedition of 1876–77, supported by the
Committee for Studies of the Upper Congo. At the time one of the last open questions of the
European exploration of Africa was whether the Lualaba River fed the Nile (Livingstone's theory), the Congo, or even the
Niger River. Financed in 1874,
Stanley's first trans-Africa exploration started in
Zanzibar and reached the Lualaba on 17 October 1876. Overland he reached Nyangwe, the center of a lawless area containing cannibal tribes at which
Tippu Tip based his trade in slaves. Stanley managed to hire a force from Tippu Tip to guard him for the next or so, for 90 days. The party left Nyangwe overland through the dense Matimba forest. On 19 November they reached the Lualaba again. Since the going through the forest was so heavy, Tippu Tip turned around with his party on 28 December, leaving Stanley on his own, with 143 people, including eight children and 16 women. They had 23 canoes. His first encounter with a local tribe was with the cannibal
Wenya. In total Stanley reports 32 unfriendly meetings on the river, some violent, even though he attempted to negotiate a peaceful thoroughfare. But the tribes were wary as their only experience of outsiders was with slave traders. On 6 January 1877, after , they reached Boyoma Falls (called Stanley Falls for some time after), consisting of seven cataracts spanning which they had to bypass overland. It took them to 7 February to reach the end of the falls. Here Stanley learned that the river was called
Ikuta Yacongo, proving to him that he had reached the Congo and that the Lualaba did not feed the Nile. From this point, the tribes were no longer cannibals but possessed firearms, apparently as a result of Portuguese influence. Some four weeks and later he reached Stanley Pool (now Pool Malebo), the site of the present day cities Kinshasa and Brazzaville. Further downstream were the Livingstone Falls, misnamed as Livingstone had never been on the Congo: a series of 32 falls and rapids with an elevation change of over . On 15 March they started the descent of the falls, which took five months and cost numerous lives. From the Isangile Falls, five falls from the foot, they beached the canoes and
Lady Alice and left the river, aiming for the Portuguese outpost of
Boma via land. On 3 August they reached the hamlet Nsada. From there Stanley sent four men with letters forward to Boma, asking for food for his starving people. On 7 August relief came, being sent by representatives from the
Liverpool trading firm Hatton & Cookson. On 9 August they reached Boma, 1,001 days since leaving Zanzibar on 12 November 1874. The party then consisted of 108 people, including three children born during the trip. Most probably (Stanley's own publications give inconsistent figures), he lost 132 people through disease, hunger, drowning, killing and desertion. Kinshasa was founded as a trading post by Stanley in 1881 and named Léopoldville in honor of
Leopold II of Belgium. The Congo Basin was privately claimed by Leopold II as
Congo Free State in 1885 where the many
Atrocities in the Congo Free State were committed until the region was called the
Belgian Congo. File:Advance Column of the Emin Pasha Relief Expedition 1890.jpg|Henry M. Stanley with the officers of the Advance Column, Cairo, 1890. From the left: Dr.
Thomas Heazle Parke,
Robert H. Nelson,
Henry M. Stanley,
William G. Stairs, and
Arthur J. M. Jephson File:Monument aux pionniers belges au Congo 001.jpg|Congo River Allegory by
Thomas Vinçotte. ==See also==