Algeria (1872–74) Soleillet returned to Algeria in 1872 and visited South Algeria as far as the
Amour Range and
M'zab. This first expedition took from September 1872 to April 1873. He wore Arab dress and travelled light with a small escort of four men. However, he had no scientific training and did not understand any Arabic, so was poorly qualified to be an explorer. He had borrowed 1,500 francs to finance the Algerian trip and was slow to return it. He returned to
Algiers after completing this first expedition. There he gained the friendship of
Auguste Warnier, the Deputy for Algeria, who introduced him to General
Hippolyte Mircher (1820–78), another specialist in the Sahara. He met generals Loverdo and
Wimpffen, the geographer MacCarthy(
fr) and the professor
Masqueray. He returned to France to try to raise money from official and private sources to fund an expedition to the oasis of
In-Salah in the
Tuat, which he thought was a central point where all the routes converged that linked the Mediterranean basin with the Niger basin, but which was at that time more impenetrable than
Timbuktu. Soleillet proposed to create a great commercial center in the South of Algeria, with roads uniting Algeria to Niger. He suggested starting an annual fair in El Goléah, and proposed to open a commercial agency in In-Salah. Although there was nothing new in his proposal, it caught the imagination of the Algerian press, who enthusiastically supported the plan. The colonists in Algiers had long seen great promise in the
trans-Saharan trade. Soleillet said later the goal of his trip from September 1872 to April 1873, and from 1873 to 1874, was to determine the needs and resources of the countries with which France would open commercial links and bring the benefits of French civilization. France would thus peacefully conquer the Sahara and Sudan. The president of the Algiers Chamber of Commerce, M. Henry, backed Soleillet's plan. In August 1874 General
Antoine Chanzy, governor general of Algeria, gave his support to the Henry-Soleillet project. The goal was to open a commercial agency in In-Salah, not to make a new conquest. The Societé de Géographie de Lyon, an association of French companies trading in Africa, sponsored his expedition to In-Salah. However, Soleillet had difficulty raising money and did not get support from traders in
Oran and
Constantine.
In-Salah (1874) Soleillet adopted Arab costume for his 1874 trip to In-Salah so he would be seen not as a conqueror but as a brother. He thought that taking astronomical observations might make the natives suspicious, so just used a chronometer to estimate the duration of each stage of the journey and took the general direction of the route several times a day. Soleillet was accompanied on his trip to In-Salah by four merchants who brought goods from Algiers such as sugar, matches, candles and shot pellets. The interior merchants had nothing of great interest to sell, apart from second-rate ostrich plumes and ivory, and poorly salted hides. Soleillet only spent a few hours at In-Salah, where the notables refused to meet him or read his messages, and made it clear their loyalty was to the Sultan of Morocco. There is no evidence that Soleillet was greatly interested in personal gain. He was always a Romantic, eager for adventure. He wrote of his arrival in In-Salah in 1874, accompanied by four Muslims, Of In-Salah he reported that "the trade in Negro slaves is undertaken on a large scale throughout the Sahara. In-Salah, like the other oases, receives and buys a large quantity of slaves." Soleillet considered that the abolition of slavery would solve nothing, since the African tribes would continue to make war, and if they could not sell their captives would simply massacre them. He proposed that the solution was for France to buy the slaves and use them to repopulate the Sahara, where they would be introduced to agriculture and the arts and the civilization of Europe. They would be helped to build towns and villages and after a commitment of ten years, for example, would be granted their liberty, their homes, the lands they had cultivated and their work tools. Based on his report on the In-Salah expedition the Avignon Chamber of Commerce argued that the French government should help the French trading monopolies by increasing their official presence in the Sahara and the Western Sudan.
France and Senegal (1874–78) On returning to France Soleillet became a key advocate of the proposed trans-Saharan railway. Although he was shy and a poor public speaker, he managed to stir his audiences to enthusiasm to the project. In 1874 and 1875 he spoke in Avignon, Lyon, Montpellier and Paris. He was invited to Spain, Holland and Belgium, and spoke at the International Congress of Geography in 1875. He talked of "peaceful civilization" and of the great commercial opportunities for France. It was thought by the French trading companies that the trade in Senegal and that in Algeria must be linked by a route through the
Tukulor country of the Western Sudan. Soleillet's next exploration was to travel from Algiers to
Saint-Louis, Senegal, by way of In-Salah and Timbuktu. In December 1875 the proposed expedition was downsized to one to the interior from Senegal. Soleillet faced opposition from specialists in exploration projects.
Henri Duveyrier constantly denounced the lack of science in Soleillet's reports. In 1876 Soleillet asked for financial support for an expedition to Timbuktu, but was turned down. The tide changed in 1877 when the Republicans took power, and an influential group gave their support to Soleillet's plans. In February 1877 General Chanzy encouraged the Missions Commission to give Soleillet the subsidy he had requested to go to Timbuktu in one of the annual native caravans. In 1877
Ferdinand de Lesseps began defending the railway project. In December 1877 a new cabinet included several supporters of Saharan penetration including
Jules Armand Dufaure,
Léon Teisserenc de Bort,
Charles de Freycinet and
Georges Perin. In April 1878 Soleillet was granted a subsidy of 1,000 francs.
Saint-Louis to Ségou (1878–79) around 1864 c.1865 by Camille Pietri In 1878 Governor
Louis Brière de l'Isle of Senegal charged Soleillet with an official mission to
Ségou in the Western Sudan funded by his administration, with the support of the merchants of Saint-Louis. The purpose was to collect information about the economic potential of the Western Sudan and about how France could expand its influence in the region.
Ahmadou Sekou Tall, son of
Umar Tall, had inherited his father's
Toucouleur Empire in the Western Sudan on the upper
Niger River and upper
Senegal River. Umar's armies were mainly Futanke,
Pulaar speakers from
Futa Tooro on the middle
Senegal River. The French conceded Umar's authority over the upper Senegal and lands further east. Ahmadou tried to consolidate an imperial state with its capital at
Ségou on the Niger, and tried without success to get the Futanke to move to Ségou. He had defeated a rebellion by two of his half brothers in
Kaarta in 1871. By the late 1870s Ahmadou's half brother Muntaga was again showing signs of independence. The French wanted to arrange treaties with Ahmadou Sekou through which they could extend their influence into the interior. On his side, Ahmadou wanted the French to supply weapons and let him raise fighters in Futa Toro. Soleillet left Saint-Louis for Ségou on 28 April 1878 and travelled eastward through Kaarta and Bélédougou. He took two African servants and less than a dozen donkeys with him. One of the servants, Yaguelli, was both his domestic servant and his interpreter. Soleillet felt that his lack of pomp and peaceful disposition would almost always win him friendly treatment. He visited the area when Muntaga's rebellion was starting to develop, and when the French were starting to push eastward. Soleillet passed through the western Umarian garrisons of Kooniakary and Dialla. At Kooniakary Soleillet found several Futanke who could speak some French, and these were used to watch him and make sure he was told only the official line. However, Soleillet heard of the rebellion from one of the dissident brothers, whom he met at Dialla, and from then on constantly tried to get information about any challenges to Amadu. Soleillet reached Ségou in October 1878. In the capital he was always accompanied by Samba Njay, who had in the past lived in Saint-Louis. In late December 1878 he saw a masquerade procession in a village just south of Ségou. He wrote in his journal, "...and I stopped there....Why...to see Guignol! A square tent of white and blue striped fabric is installed in a boat with two paddlers, an ostrich head fixed upon a long neck extends from the front...then two marionettes appear suddenly out of the middle of the tent, one clothed in red, the other in blue, and they abandon themselves to some grotesque pantomimes. The drums, placed in a second boat, accompany the spectacle with deafening music." He went on the describe how the bird masquerade was brought to shore into a large clearing in the village, where the bird and many other masquerade characters were performed long into the night. The French annexation of
Logo in September 1878 caused Soleillet's mission to be unsuccessful, and Ahmadou said he would not establish normal relations with the French while Brière de l'Isle remained governor of Senegal. Soleillet stayed at Ségou until 20 January 1879, then returned to Saint-Louis by way of Nioro, Kooniakary and
Médine. On his return to France Soleillet was received with pomp by the Geographical Society of Bordeaux. He met Freycinet and
Jules Ferry, and was given the palms of an officer of the
Académie française. He received an inscribed gold chronometer from the
Société de géographie de Lyon. Perin gave a short report of Soleillet's expedition to Ségou, and said this proved the administration had been right to support him.
Development plans (1879) In his reports Soleillet advocated what was to become the
Dakar–Niger Railway linking Senegal to the
middle Niger at Ségou. In July 1879 the French Chamber of Deputies discussed the credits needed for the trans-Saharan railway. In July 1879 the government charged Colonel
Paul Flatters with exploring a route to
Sokoto, between Niger and Chad. Soleillet was consulted on these plans, and on the plans for Senegal. On 1 August 1879 Soleillet read a paper to the Geographical Society of Paris on his journey to Segou-Sikoro. He said that a railway could easily be constructed from the Senegal to the Niger since the land was level, fertile and inhabited only by two races, the
Bambara and the Solenké [
Soninke?]. If a preliminary trade road were built from the Senegal to the Niger the country it crossed would provide many trade products including a type of vegetable wax that could be reduced to oil and made to serve many useful purposes. A further recommendation was to open the Senegal to navigation up to Bafoulabé, and from there to build a canal to the Niger at Bamakou. The project would bring an estimated 37 million semi-civilized people into close connection with Senegal. The total cost was estimated at $5,000,000. The High Commission had adopted the project and would start surveying the canal route at once. In December 1879 the deputies voted a grant for construction of the railway to Senegal.
Saint-Louis to Adrar (1879–80) In April 1879 the Administrative Council of Senegal said that his visit to Ségou had been successful, granted him 20,000 francs in subsidies, and announced that he was in charge of a new mission. The next January he was to travel by Tchad (
Tichit?) and
Oualata to Timbuktu, and from there return to Europe by the most convenient route. In August 1879 it was reported that Soleillet, who had been granted £800 by the Senegal government to return to France for health reasons, was to return and try again in December 1879 to pass via Ségou and Timbuktu into Algeria. If turned back, he proposed to make repeated attempts until he succeeded. He was particularly interested in exploring the land between In-Salah and Timbuktu in connection with the projected Trans-Sahara railway. While Soleillet's first three expeditions had been financed by French commercial interests, his fourth was subsidized by the French Ministry of Public Works. Soleillet's fourth expedition took him from Saint-Louis to
Adrar. This was his second attempt to travel from Senegal to Algeria. On 15 March 1880 Soleillet met Sheikh
Saadbouh at his encampment in
Inchiri, in what is now northeastern Mautitania. He gave various gifts to the Sheikh, who gave him milk, dates and mutton in return. Further north in the Akhmeyou plain in Adrar, two days walk north of
Atar, he was pillaged by a band of Moors of the Oulad Delim tribe armed with guns. The Sheikh sent his brother and nephew to rescue Soleillet and bring him back to his camp. Soleillet was forced to retrace his steps to Saint-Louis, and return to France to obtain fresh resources. In April 1880 ten notables of Saint-Louis again said they would help Soleillet in his efforts to open up the country to their business.
Fall from grace (1881) Soleillet lost support from the Senegal authorities when he sent a letter to the radical journal
Le Rappel in which he criticized the Senegal military administration for inefficiency and waste, which might cause the planned railway to fail. In February 1881 a column commanded by Captain
Joseph Gallieni, exploring a future route from the Senegal to the Niger, was stopped by Ahmadou Sekou, stripped of its baggage and held captive before being released for ransom. In April 1881 news arrived that the second Flatters expedition had ended in disaster, with most of its members killed. The day of lone explorers was clearly over.
Marie François Sadi Carnot, Minister of Public Works, said he did not want to hear about any more Saharan expeditions. The government said that anyone who visited the tribes of West Africa must have a solid understanding of the Arabic language and the Moslem religion. He must also present himself openly as a European and make it clear to the natives that he had the right to live among them and they would benefit from relations with France. Soleillet's enemy Duveyrier wrote "Nothing in Mr. Soleillet's antecedents demonstrates his abilities as explorer in Africa." On 1 December 1881 Brière de l'Isle ordered Soleillet expelled from the colony.
East Africa (1882–85) in 1882 In 1881 Soleillet was given charge of a commercial mission to the
Gulf of Tadjoura and the kingdom of
Shewa. Soleillet was recruited as general agent of the Société français d'Obock. The port of Obock had been occupied by the French since 1856, but little had been done to develop it. The commercial station at Obock was to receive the products of
Shewa, including ivory, coffee, hides and the
musk of civets for use in perfume. In January 1882 Soleillet established a factory at
Obock, Djibouti. In the middle of the year he received a caravan of hides sent by
Menilek, the Negus of Shewa and future Ethiopian Emperor. This was enough to convince him that a great emporium could be established on the shores of the Gulf of Tadjoura to the south of Obock. Soleillet built a tower at Obock that was blown down by the wind in 1885. A penitentiary was later built at this location. Soleillet set off to explore the routes of the caravans carrying salt and other goods in the
Afar trade to find an alternative to the
Issa Somali routes that terminated at
Zeila. In October 1882 Soleillet joined his associate Léon Chefneux at
Shewa. Their company, which was to have supplied arms to Menilek, went bankrupt and Soleillet found he was a dependent rather than a partner of the king. The king of Shewa gave him large tracts of land and granted him a concession to build a railway to the
Gulf of Aden. Until Soleillet had arrived the Italian and French traders had tried to avoid disputes and display a common European front. By 1883 there were constant quarrels as Pietro Antonelli(
It) tried to become the main adviser to Menilek in place of Soleillet. Soleillet visited the
Kingdom of Kaffa in 1884. He described the trade of
Bonga as primarily slaves, coffee, musk of civets, coriander and ivory, with a turnover of $200,000 and $300,000 a year. He left Shewa in the middle of 1884. In July–August 1884 Soleillet and Chefneux crossed the
Sultanate of Aussa during their return journey from Shewa, with the sultan's permission, causing some alarm to Menilek. Soleillet returned to Europe in 1884, soon afterwards returning to Shewa. For his work in Ethiopia he was awarded the cross of the
Legion of Honour. In 1884 Obock was upgraded to a naval coaling station.
Arms dealer (1885–86) Towards the end of his life Soleillet became involved in arms trafficking in Ethiopia.
Arthur Rimbaud had been established at
Harar in 1881 as the agent of an Aden-based company belonging to Alfred Bardey of Lyon. In 1885 both Soleillet and Rimbaud started their own businesses as arms dealers. They teamed up in January 1886 for a major arms deal. The goods were old rifles that cost seven or eight francs each in Liège or France, but could be sold for about 40 francs to the king of Shewa. The costs and risks were high. Rimbaud wrote that the people along the route were
Dankalis, Bedouin grazers and Muslim fanatics. Although the caravan was armed and the Bedouins only had spears, all caravans were attacked. Rimbaud's partner Pierre Labatut received the merchandise in Aden while Rimbaud installed himself at Tadjoura to organize the caravan. Meanwhile, Soleillet, after a short stay in France where he promoted Menelik's cause, embarked at Marseille on 31 January 1886 for Obock. He wrote that he intended to go from there to Shewa to continue the work of rapprochement between Shewa and France. His expedition would be funded by his agreement to accompany the convoy of arms and ammunition from Obock to Shewa. The arms were landed at Tadjoura in February, but could not be moved inland because
Léonce Lagarde, governor of the new French administration of Obock and its dependencies, issued an order on 12 April 1886 prohibiting the sale of weapons. ==Death and legacy (1886–1942)==