The term
laptot probably derives from the word
lappato bi in the
Wolof language, referring to interpreters, intermediaries or brokers. Most laptots were recruited in
Senegal, especially at French outposts in
Saint-Louis and
Dakar, during the late 18th and 19th centuries. Laptots were closely linked with the
Tirailleurs sénégalais, a military unit which enlisted soldiers from France's colonies in West Africa, founded in 1857. Unlike the
tirailleurs, however, laptots served exclusively in Africa and Madagascar. The French navy hired laptots on a temporary basis, using them to guard outposts, serve aboard French naval and commercial vessels, and perform various other tasks throughout French possessions in Africa. Laptots typically signed up for two-year contracts. They were often more reliable and effective than European personnel, who were too susceptible to endemic diseases such as
malaria. Many laptots joined on a voluntary basis, although others were slaves in local communities who were forced to hand over half their wages to their owners. According to historian Francois Manchuelle, pay for some laptots—particularly those who served aboard navy boats on the
Senegal River—was competitive with salaries for French sailors at the time. Manchuelle contends that men of the
Soninke ethnic group were attracted to laptot service by the prospects of accumulating cash with which to compete for social status in their home communities. Laptots were essential not only to French administration of its West African possessions, but also to subsequent French exploration and colonial penetration of
Central Africa, parts of which became
French Equatorial Africa after 1910. When the Franco-Italian explorer
Pierre Savorgnan de Brazza first ventured into the Equatorial African interior in 1876, he was accompanied by 13 laptots and four local interpreters as well as three other Frenchmen. Brazza's second expedition, in 1880, also relied heavily on laptots to carry loads, deliver messages, and provide protection against hostile populations. One laptot on this expedition was
Malamine Camara, who achieved some renown for his exploits while serving under Brazza's command in
Congo. Camara and two other laptots manned France's first outpost on the banks of the
Congo River from October 1880 until May 1882, on the future site of
Brazzaville, and may have prevented France's newly acquired territory there from being taken over by
Belgium. Laptots provided the bulk of French manpower needs in its Equatorial African colonies until well into the 20th century, when more personnel began to be recruited locally. ==References==