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Isangi

Isangi
Isangi is located in Democratic Republic of the Congo
Isangi
Isangi
Coordinates: 0°46′45″N 24°16′17″E / 0.7792°N 24.2715°E / 0.7792; 24.2715Coordinates: 0°46′45″N 24°16′17″E / 0.7792°N 24.2715°E / 0.7792; 24.2715
Country Democratic Republic of the Congo
Province Tshopo
Territory Isangi Territory
Climate Af
National language Swahili

Isangi is a town in the Tshopo Province of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, headquarters of Isangi Territory.

Isangi is 130 kilometres (81 mi) downstream from Kisangani at the confluence of the Lomami and Congo rivers. There is a road running south from the town, but it is impassable in the rainy season. It rains every four or five days all year round, and there are frequent storms and tornadoes.

Henry Morton Stanley, the first European to reach Isangi, passed through the town in December 1883 and estimated the population as 8,000. He described devastation caused by Arabs seeking slaves and ivory on the river. Although the people had begun to rebuild the town, they fled to the other bank of the river when Stanley's flotilla arrived. Stanley's sponsor, King Leopold II of Belgium, formally acquired rights to the Congo territory at the Conference of Berlin in 1885 and made the land his private property and named it the Congo Free State.

Arthur Conan Doyle noted in his book The Crime of the Congo that slavery and ivory poaching continued well after the Belgians had assumed power. In 1888, the Zanzibar-based trader Tippu Tip's nephew Rachid established a station at Isangi to provide a base for slaving operations in the lower reaches of the Lomani and along the channels of the Lopori and Maringa rivers.

There were positive aspects to the Arab incursion. At Isangi, as at other trading posts, the Arabs introduced new crops and new methods of cultivation. By the time the Belgians took control of the region, the Arabs had established thriving rice farms which produced a surplus of produce for sale. However, the new colonial administrators began requisitioning labor to work on the rubber plantations, lowering the output of rice.


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