History of Senegal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A map by Guillaume Delisle (1770)

The history of Senegal is commonly divided into a number of periods, encompassing the prehistoric era, the precolonial period, colonialism, and the contemporary era.

Paleolithic [ edit ]

The earliest evidence of human life is found in the valley of the Faleme in the south-east. [1]

The presence of man in the Lower Paleolithic is attested by the discovery of stone tools characteristic of Acheulean such as hand axes reported by Theodore Monod [2] at the tip of Fann in the peninsula of Cap-Vert in 1938, or cleavers found in the south-east. [3] There were also found stones shaped by the Levallois technique , characteristic of the Middle Paleolithic . Mousterian Industry is represented mainly by scrapers found in the peninsula of Cap-Vert, as well in the low and middle valleys of the Senegal and the Faleme. Some pieces are explicitly linked to hunting, like those found in Tiemassass , near M'Bour , a controversial site that some claim belongs to the Upper Paleolithic , [4] while other argue in favor of the Neolithic . [5]

Neolithic [ edit ]

In Senegambia, the period when humans became hunters, fishermen and producers (farmer and artisan) are all well represented and studied. This is when more elaborate objects and ceramics [6] emerged. But gray areas remain. Although the characteristics and manifestations of civilization from the Neolithic have been identified their origins and relationship have not yet fully defined. What can be distinguished is:

  • The dig of Cape Manuel: the Neolithic deposit Manueline Dakar was discovered in 1940. [7] Basalt rocks including ankaramite were used for making microlithic tools such as axes or planes. Such tools have been found at Goree and the Magdalen Islands , indicating the activity of shipbuilding by nearby fishermen.
  • The dig of Bel-Air : Neolithic Belarien tools, usually made out of flint , are present in the dunes of the west, near the current capital. In addition to axes, adzes and pottery, there is also a statuette, the Venus Thiaroye [8]
  • The dig of Khant: the Khanty creek, located in the north near Kayar in the lower valley of the Senegal River , gave its name to a Neolithic industry which mainly uses bone and wood. [9] This deposit is on the list of closed sites and monuments of Senegal. [10]
  • The dig the Faleme located in the south-east of Senegal, has uncovered a Neolithic Falemian tools industry that produced polished materials as diverse as sandstone , hematite , shale , quartz , and flint . Grinding equipment and pottery from the period are well represented at the site.
  • The Neolithic civilization of the Senegal River valley and the Ferlo are the least well known due to not always being separated.

Prehistory [ edit ]

In the case of Senegal, the periodization of prehistory remains controversial. It is often described as beginning with the age of metallurgy , thus placing it between the first metalworking and the appearance of writing . Other approaches exist such as that of Guy Thilmans and his team in 1980, [11] who felt that any archeology from pre-colonial could be attached to that designation or that of Hamady Bocoum , who speaks of "Historical Archaeology" from the 4th century, at least for the former Tekrur . [12]

A variety of archaeological remains have been found:

Megalithic alignments in Senegal
  • In a huge area of nearly 33,000 km 2 located in the center-south around the Gambia there have been found alignments of boulders known as the Stone Circles of Senegambia which were placed on the list of UNESCO World Heritage sites in 2006. [19] Two of these sites are located within the territory of Senegal: Sine Ngayene [20] and Sine Wanar, both located in the Nioro du Rip Department . Sine Ngayene has 52 stone circles including a double circle. At Wanar, they number 24 and the stones are smaller. There are stone-carved lyre in the laterite , Y- or A-shaped.
  • The existence of proto-historic ruins in the middle Senegal River valley was confirmed in the late 1970s. [21] Pottery, perforated ceramic discs [22] or ornaments have been unearthed. Excavations at the site of Sinthiou Bara, [23] near Matam , have proved particularly fruitful. They have revealed, for example, the flow of trans-Saharan trade from distant parts of North Africa.

Early Inhabitants [ edit ]

Maad a Sinig Kumba Ndoffene Fa Ndeb Joof . King of Sine . The Royal House of Boureh Gnilane Joof .

In the absence of written sources and monumental ruins in this region, the history of the early centuries of the modern era must be based primarily on archaeological excavations, the writing of early Arab geographers and travelers, and data derived from oral tradition. Combining these data suggests that Senegal was first populated from the north and east in several waves of migration, the last being that of the Wolof , the Fulani and the Serer who dominate the area today. Oral traditions relate that in much of northern Senegal Mande people were the earliest inhabitants, although archaeological evidence of this is slim. [24] Africanist historian Donald R. Wright has suggested that place-names in the Gambia and Casamance regions indicate "that the earliest inhabitants might be identified most closely with one of several related groups?Bainunk, Kasanga, Beafada... To these were added Serer, who moved southward during the first millennium A.D. from the Senegal River valley, and Mande-speaking peoples, who arrived later still from the east." [25] He also cautions, however, that attempting to project modern-day ethnic definitions onto people who lived hundreds or thousands of years ago is at best highly speculative and at worst counterproductive. [26]

Kingdoms and Empires [ edit ]

Location of the Ghana Empire

The medieval history of the Sahel is characterized by the consolidation of settlements into large state entities ? the Ghana Empire , the Mali Empire and the Songhai Empire . The cores of these great empires were located on the territory of the current Republic of Mali , so current-day Senegal occupied a peripheral position. [27]

The earliest of these empires is that of Ghana, probably founded in the first millennium by Soninke and whose animist populations subsisted by agriculture and trade across the Sahara, [28] including gold, salt and cloth. Its area of influence slowly spread to regions between the river valleys of the Senegal and Niger .

A contemporary empire of Ghana, but less extensive, the kingdom of Tekrur was its vassal. Ghana and Tekrur were the only organized populations before Islamization. The territory of Tekrur approximates that of the current Fouta Toro . Its existence in the 9th century is attested by Arabic manuscripts. The formation of the state may have taken place as an influx of Fulani from the east settled in the Senegal valley. [29] [30] John Donnelly Fage suggests that Takrur was formed through the interaction of Berbers from the Sahara and "Negro agricultural peoples" who were "essentially Serer" although its kings after 1000 CE might have been Soninke (northern Mande). [31] The name, borrowed from Arabic writings, may be linked to that of the ethnicity Toucouleur . [32] Trade with the Arabs was prevalent. The Kingdom imported wool , copper and pearls and exported gold and slaves . [33] Indeed, the growth of a vast empire by Arab-Muslim Jihads is not devoid of economic and political issues and brought in its wake the first real growth of the slave trade . This trade called the trans-Saharan slave trade provided North Africa and Saharan Africa with slave labor. The Tekrur were among the first converts to Islam , certainly before 1040. [34]

Wolof of Waalo , in "war costume" (1846)
Extension of the Mali Empire at its height

Two other major political entities were formed and grew during the 13th and 14th century: the Mali Empire and the Jolof Empire which become the vassal of the first in its heyday. Originating in the Mandinka invasion, Mali continued to expand, encompassing first eastern Senegal, and later almost all the present territory. Founded in the 14th century by the possibly mythical chief of the Wolof Ndiadiane Ndiaye , [35] who was a Serer of Waalo (Ndiaye is originally a Serer surname [36] [37] [38] [39] [40] which is also found among the Wolof). Djolof expanded its dominance of small chiefdoms south of the Senegal River ( Waalo , Cayor , Baol , Sine  ? Saloum ), bringing together all the Senegambia to which he gave religious and social unity: [ dubious ] the "Grand Djolof" [41] which collapsed in 1550.

The Jolof Empire was founded by a voluntary confederacy of States; it was not an empire built on military conquest in spite of what the word "empire" implies. [42] [43] The Serer tradition of Sine attests that the Kingdom of Sine never paid tribute to Ndiadiane Ndiaye nor to any member of his descendants that ruled Djolof. Historian Sylviane Diouf states that "Each vassal kingdom?Walo, Takrur, Kayor, Baol, Sine, Salum, Wuli, and Niani?recognized the hegemony of Jolof and paid tribute." [44] It went on to state that, Ndiadiane Ndiaye himself received his name from the mouth of Maissa Wali (the King of Sine). [45] In the epics of Ndiadiane and Maissa Wali, it is well acknowledged that Maissa Wali was pivotal in the founding of this Empire. [ citation needed ] It was he who nominated Ndiadiane Ndiaye and called for the other states to join this confederacy, which they did, and the "empire" headed by Ndiadiane, who took residence at Djolof. [45] [46] It is for this reason scholars propose that the empire was more like a voluntary confederacy than an empire built on military conquest. [42] [43]

The arrival of Europeans engendered autonomy of small kingdoms which were under the influence of Djolof . Less dependent on trans-Saharan trade with the new shipping lanes, they turn more readily to trade with the New World . The decline of these kingdoms can be explained by internal rivalries, then by the arrival of Europeans, who organized the mass exodus of young Africans to the New World. [47] Ghazis , wars, epidemics and famine afflicted the people, along with the Atlantic slave trade , in exchange for weapons and manufactured goods. Under the influence of Islam , these kingdoms were transformed and marabouts played an increasing role.

In Casamance , the Bainounks , the Manjaques and Diola inhabited the coastal area while the mainland ? unified 13th century under the name of Kaabu  ? was occupied by the Mandingo . In the 15th century, the king of one of the tribes, Kassas gave his name to the region: Kassa Mansa (King of Kassas). Until the French intervention The Casamance was a heterogeneous entity, weakened by internal rivalries. [48]

The era of trading posts and trafficking [ edit ]

According to several ancient sources, including occasions by the Dictionnaire de pedagogie et d'instruction primaire by Ferdinand Buisson in 1887, [49] the first French settlement in Senegal dates back to the Dieppe Mariners in the 14th century. Flattering for Norman sailors, this argument gives credence also to the idea of a precedence of the French presence in the region, but it is not confirmed by subsequent work.

In the mid-15th century, several European nations reached the coast of West Africa, vested successively or simultaneously by the Portuguese, the Dutch, the English and French. Europeans first settled along the coasts, on islands in the mouths of rivers and then a little further upstream. They opened trading posts and engaged in the "trade:" ? a term which, under the Ancien Regime , means any type of trade (wheat, pepper , ivory ...), and not necessarily, or only, the slave trade , [50] although this "infamous traffic", as it was called at the end of the 18th century, was indeed at the heart of a new economic order, controlled by powerful companies in privilege .

The Portuguese navigators [ edit ]

Portuguese colonies and posts under the reign of Joao III, 16th century

Encouraged by Henry the Navigator and always in search of the Passage to India , and not forgetting gold and slaves , Portuguese explorers explored the African coast and ventured still farther south. [51]

In 1444 Dinis Dias went off the mouth of the Senegal River to reach the westernmost point of Africa he calls Cabo Verde , Cape Vert, [52] because of the lush vegetation seen there. He also reached the island of Goree , referred to by its inhabitants as Berzeguiche , but which he called Ilha de Palma , the island of Palms. The Portuguese did not settle there permanently, but used the site for landing and engaged in commerce in the region. They built a chapel there in 1481. [53] Portuguese trading posts were installed in Tanguegueth [54] in Cayor , a town they renamed Fresco Rio (the future Rufisque ) because of the freshness of its sources in the Baol Sali (later the seaside town of Saly ) which takes the name of Portudal , or to Joal in the Kingdom of Sine .

They also traversed the lower Casamance [55] and founded Ziguinchor in 1645. The introduction of Christianity accompanied this business expansion.

The Dutch West India Company [ edit ]

After the Act of Abjuration in 1581, the United Provinces flouted the authority of the King of Spain . They based their growth on maritime trade and expanded their colonial empire in Asia, the Americas and South Africa. In West Africa trading posts were opened at some points of the current Senegal , Gambia , Ghana and Angola .

The Dutch West India Company at Amsterdam in 1655

Created in 1621, the Dutch West India Company purchased the island of Goree in 1627. [56] The company built two forts that are in ruins today: in 1628 on the face of Nassau Cove and 1639 at Nassau on the hill, as well as warehouses for goods destined for the mainland trading posts .

In his Description of Africa (1668), the humanist Dutch Olfert Dapper gives the etymology of the name given to it by his countrymen, Goe-ree Goede Reede , that is to say "good harbor"., [57] which is the name of (part of) an island in the Dutch province of Zeeland as well.

The Dutch settlers occupied the island for nearly half a century, dealing in wax, amber , gold, ivory and also participated in the slave trade , but kept away from foreign trading posts on the coast. The Dutch were dislodged several times: in 1629 by the Portuguese, in 1645 and 1659 by the French and in 1663 by the English.

Against the backdrop of Anglo-French rivalry [ edit ]

The "trade" and the slave trade intensified in the 17th century. In Senegal, the French and British competed mainly on two issues, the island of Goree and St. Louis . On 10 February 1763 the Treaty of Paris ended the Seven Years' War and reconciled, after three years of negotiations, France, Great Britain and Spain. Great Britain returned the island of Goree to France. Britain then acquired from France, among many other territories, "the river of Senegal, with forts & trading posts St. Louis, Podor, and Galam and all rights & dependencies of the said River of Senegal.". [58]

Under Louis XIII and especially Louis XIV , the privileges were quite extensively granted to certain French shipping lines, which still faced many difficulties. In 1626 Richelieu founded the Norman Company , an association of Dieppe and Rouen merchants responsible for the operation in Senegal and the Gambia . It was dissolved in 1658 and its assets were acquired by the Company of Cape Vert and Senegal , itself expropriated following the creation by Colbert in 1664 of the French West India Company .

The Company of Senegal was in turn founded by Colbert in 1673. It became the major tool of French colonialism in Senegal, but saddled with debt, it was dissolved 1681 and replaced by another that lasted until 1694, the date of creation of the Royal Company of Senegal, whose director, Andre Brue , would be captured by Lat Sukaabe Fall the Damel of Cayor and released against ransom in 1701. A third Company of Senegal was founded in 1709 and lasted until 1718. On the British side, the monopoly of trade with Africa was granted to the Royal African Company in 1698.

The List of Complaints of Saint-Louis du Senegal (1789)
≪ Plan de l'isle de Goree avec ses deux forts et le combat que nous avons rendu le premier du mois de novembre 1677 ≫

Grand Master of the naval war of Louis XIV , Admiral Jean II d'Estrees seized Goree on 1 November 1677. The island was taken by the English on 4 February 1693 before being again occupied by the French four months later. In 1698 the Director of the Company of Senegal, Andre Brue , restored the fortifications. But Goree was again captured by the British in 1758 during the Seven Years' War . [59] However, under the 1763 Treaty of Paris ending the war, although Senegal was given to the British, the island of Goree was returned to France. [60]

The excellent location of St. Louis caught the attention of the English, who occupied it three times, first for a few months in 1693, second during the Seven Years' War from 1758 until it was retaken for the French by Armand Louis de Gontaut in 1779, and lastly from 1809 to 1816 during the Napoleonic wars.

After the 1763 Treaty of Paris, the British united their colony of The Gambia with Senegal into Senegambia . The British retook Goree during the Anglo-French War ; however, British possession of Goree was brief.

In 1783 the Treaty of Versailles returned Senegal to France, [61] and Senegambia was no more.

Nine companies, in succession, received the African monopoly of gum acacia from the French Crown. Seven of them went bankrupt. Among them were the Compagnie d’Afrique and the Compagnie du Senegal . The last was the Compagnie de la Gomme which failed in 1793. [62]

Appointed governor in 1785, Knight Boufflers focuses for two years to enhance the colony, while engaged in the smuggling of gum arabic and gold with signares .

In 1789 the people of St. Louis wrote a List of Grievances . The same year the French were driven out of Fort St. Joseph in Galam (Gajaaga) and the Kingdom of Galam .

A trading economy [ edit ]

The Europeans were sometimes disappointed because they hoped to find more gold in West Africa, but when the development of plantations in the Americas, mainly in the Caribbean, in Brazil and in the south of the United States raised a great need for cheap labor, the area received more attention. The Papacy , who had sometimes opposed slavery , did not condemn it explicitly to the end of the 17th century; in fact the Church itself has an interest in the colonial system. Traffic of "ebony" was an issue for warriors who traditionally reduced the vanquished to slavery. Some people specialized in the slave trade, for example the Dyula in West Africa. States and kingdoms competed, along with private traders who became much richer in the triangular trade (although some shipments resulted in real financial disaster). Politico-military instability in the region was compounded by the slave trade.

A ball signares in St. Louis (burning 1890)

The Black Code , enacted in 1685, regulated the trafficking of slaves in the American colonies.

In Senegal, trading posts were established in Goree , St. Louis , Rufisque , Portudal and Joal and the upper valley of the Senegal River , including Fort St. Joseph, in the Kingdom of Galam , was in the 18th century a French engine of trafficking in Senegambia .

In parallel, a mestizo society develops in St. Louis and Goree.

Slavery was abolished by the National Convention in 1794, then reinstated by Bonaparte in 1802. The British Empire abolished slavery in 1833; in France it was finally abolished in the Second Republic in 1848, under the leadership of Victor Schœlcher .

The progressive weakening of the colony [ edit ]

In 1815, the Congress of Vienna condemned slavery . But this would not change much economically for the Africans.

After the departure of Governor Schmaltz (he had taken office at the end of the wreck of the Medusa ), Roger Baron particularly encouraged the development of the peanut , "the earth pistachio", whose monoculture would be long because of the severe economic backwardness of Senegal. Despite the ferocity of the Baron, the company was a failure.

The colonization of Casamance also continued. The island of Carabane , acquired by France in 1836, was profoundly transformed between 1849 and 1857 by the resident Emmanuel Bertrand Bocande , a Nantes businessman.

Modern colonialism [ edit ]

Monument near the Maison des Esclaves on Goree Island
Saint-Louis in 1780
French West Africa in 1890

Various European powers ? Portugal, the Netherlands, and England ? competed for trade in the area from the 15th century onward, until in 1677, France ended up in possession of what had become a minor slave trade departure point?the infamous island of Goree next to modern Dakar . [63] [64] In 1758 the French settlement was captured by a British expedition as part of the Seven Years' War , but was later returned to France. It was only in the 1850s that the French, under the governor, Louis Faidherbe , began to expand their foothold onto the Senegalese mainland, at the expense of the native kingdoms.

The Four Communes of Saint-Louis , Dakar , Goree , and Rufisque were the oldest colonial towns in French controlled west Africa . In 1848, the French Second Republic extended the rights of full French citizenship to their inhabitants. While those who were born in these towns could technically enjoy all the rights of native French citizens, substantial legal and social barriers prevented the full exercise of these rights, especially by those seen by authorities as full blooded Africans.

Most of the African population of these towns were termed originaires : those Africans born into the commune, but who retained recourse to African and/or Islamic law (the so-called "personal status"). Those few Africans from the four communes who were able to pursue higher education and were willing to renounce their legal protections could "rise" to be termed Evolue ("Evolved") and were nominally granted full French citizenship, including the vote. Despite this legal framework, Evolues still faced substantial discrimination in Africa and the Metropole alike.

On 27 April 1848, following the February revolution in France, a law was passed in Paris enabling the Four Communes to elect a Deputy to the French Parliament for the first time. On 2 April 1852 the parliamentary seat for Senegal was abolished by Napoleon III . Following the downfall of the French Second Empire , the Four Communes was again allowed a parliamentary seat which was granted by law on 1 February 1871. On 30 December 1875 this seat was again abolished, but only for a few years as it was reinstated on 8 April 1879, and remained the single parliamentary representation from sub-Saharan Africa anywhere in a European legislature until the fall of the third republic in 1940.

It was only in 1916 that originaires were granted full voting rights while maintaining legal protections. Blaise Diagne , who was the prime advocate behind the change, was in 1914 the first African deputy elected to the French National Assembly . From that time until independence in 1960, the deputies of the Four Communes were always African, and were at the forefront of the decolonisation struggle.

List of deputies elected to the French Parliament [ edit ]

The French Second Republic :

Arrival of Blaise Diagne , Deputy for Senegal, High Commissioner of the Government for the recruitment of black troops in Dakar in March 1918

The French Third Republic :

Flag of French Senegal (1958?1959)

1945?1959 :

Following the 1945 elections to the Constituent Assembly in France, which were held with a very limited franchise, the French authorities gradually extended the franchise until?in November 1955?the principle of universal suffrage was passed into law and implemented the following year. The first electoral contests held under universal suffrage were the municipal elections of November 1956. The first national contest was the 31 March 1957 election of the Territorial Assembly. [69]

Independence [ edit ]

The short-lived Federation du Mali

In January 1959, Senegal and the French Sudan merged to form the Mali Federation , which became fully independent on 20 June 1960. The transfer of power agreement with France was signed on 4 April 1960. Due to internal political difficulties, the Federation broke up on 20 August 1960. Senegal and Soudan (renamed the Republic of Mali ) proclaimed independence. Leopold Senghor , internationally known poet, politician, and statesman, was elected Senegal's first president in August 1960.

The 1960s and early 1970s saw the continued and persistent violating of Senegal's borders by the Portuguese military from Portuguese Guinea . In response, Senegal petitioned the United Nations Security Council in 1963 , 1965 , 1969 (in response to shelling by Portuguese artillery), 1971 and finally in 1972 .

After the breakup of the Mali Federation, President Senghor and Prime Minister Mamadou Dia governed together under a parliamentary system. In December 1962, their political rivalry led to an attempted coup by Prime Minister Dia. The coup was put down without bloodshed and Dia was arrested and imprisoned. Senegal adopted a new constitution that consolidated the President's power.

Senghor was considerably more tolerant of opposition than most African leaders became in the 1960s. Nonetheless, political activity was somewhat restricted for a time. Senghor's party, the Senegalese Progressive Union (now the Socialist Party of Senegal ), was the only legally permitted party from 1965 until 1975. In the latter year, Senghor allowed the formation of two opposition parties that began operation in 1976?a Marxist party (the African Independence Party ) and a liberal party (the Senegalese Democratic Party ).

In 1980, President Senghor retired from politics, and handed power over to his handpicked successor, Prime Minister Abdou Diouf , in 1981.

1980?present [ edit ]

Senegal joined with The Gambia to form the nominal confederation of Senegambia on 1 February 1982. However, the envisaged integration of the two countries was never carried out and the union was dissolved in 1989. Despite peace talks, a southern separatist group in the Casamance region has clashed sporadically with government forces since 1982. Senegal has a long history of participating in international peacekeeping. [70]

Abdou Diouf was president between 1981 and 2000. [71] Diouf served four terms as president. In the presidential election of 2000, he was defeated in a free and fair election by opposition leader Abdoulaye Wade . [72] Senegal experienced its second peaceful transition of power and its first from one political party to another.

On 30 December 2004, President Abdoulaye Wade announced that he would sign a peace treaty with two separatist factions of the Movement of Democratic Forces of Casamance (MFDC) in the Casamance region. [73] This will end West Africa's longest-running civil conflict. As of late 2006, it seemed the peace treaty was holding, as both factions and the Senegalese military appeared to honor the treaty. With recognized prospects for peace, refugees began returning home from neighboring Guinea-Bissau . However, at the beginning of 2007, refugees began fleeing again as the sight of Senegalese troops rekindled fears of a new outbreak of violence between the separatists and the government. [74]

Abdoulaye Wade conceded defeat to Macky Sall in the election of 2012 . [75] In February 2019, president Macky Sall was re-elected and he won a second term. The length of presidential term was reduced from seven years to five. [76]

In March 2024, Opposition candidate Bassirou Diomaye Faye won the Senegal’s presidential election over the candidate of the ruling coalition, becoming the youngest president in Senegal’s history. [77]

See also [ edit ]

References [ edit ]

  1. ^ Unless otherwise stated, the material in this part is based on Ndiouga Benga and on Mandiome Thiam, "prehistory prehistory and history", in Atlas du Senegal, op. cit. , p. 74
  2. ^ (in French) Theodore Monod , ≪ Sur la decouverte du Paleolithique ancien a Dakar ≫, Bulletin du Comite d'etudes historiques et scientifiques de l'AOF , t. XXI, 1938, pp. 518?519
  3. ^ (in French) Abdoulaye Camara et Bertrand Duboscq, La prehistoire dans le Sud-Est du Senegal, Actes du 2 e Colloque de Kedougou, 18?22 fev. 1985 , Doc. du CRA du Musee de l'Homme (Paris), n° 11, 1987, pp. 19?48
  4. ^ (in French) Th. Dagan, ≪ Le Site prehistorique de Tiemassas (Senegal) ≫, Bulletin de l'Institut francais d'Afrique noire , 1956, pp. 432?448
  5. ^ (in French) Cyr Descamps, ≪ Quelques reflexions sur le Neolithique du Senegal ≫, West African Journal of Archaeology , 1981, vol. 10?11, pp. 145?151
  6. ^ (in French) Mandiome Thiam, La ceramique au Senegal : Archeologie et Histoire , Universite de Paris I, 1991, 464 pages (these de doctorat)
  7. ^ (in French) ≪ Le gisement du Cap Manuel ≫, conference de Cyr Descamps, en ligne "Le Gisement du Cap Manuel (Dakar, Senegal)" . Archived from the original on 18 February 2010 . Retrieved 2 July 2010 .
  8. ^ (in Spanish) ≪ Prehistoria de Africa: Manifestaciones artisticas. Esculturas. Senegal ≫ [1]
  9. ^ (in French) Marie-Amy Mbow, ≪ Le site archeologique du Khant (region de Saint-Louis du Senegal) : nouveaux elements ≫, Presence africaine , 1998, n° 158, pp. 7?22
  10. ^ a b "Arrete n° 12.09.2007 portant publication de la liste des sites et monuments historiques classes" (in French). Ministre de la Culture et du Patrimoine historique classe. 12 September 2007. Archived from the original on 20 February 2012 . Retrieved 2 July 2008 .
  11. ^ (in French) Guy Thilmans, Cyr Descamps et B. Khayat, Protohistoire du Senegal : recherches archeologiques , tome 1 : Les Sites Megalithiques , IFAN, Dakar, 1980, 158 pages
  12. ^ See his third thesis supported at the Sorbonne in 1986, La Metallurgie du fer au Senegal et ses travaux des annees 1990 on this topic
  13. ^ (in French) Edmond Dioh et Mathieu Gueye, ≪ Les amas coquilliers de la lagune de Joal-Fadiouth (region de Thies) ≫, dans Senegalia , op. cit., pp. 323?328.
  14. ^ "Saloum Delta" . World Heritage Site. Archived from the original on 6 October 2012 . Retrieved 29 August 2012 .
  15. ^ (in French) Annie Ravise, Contribution a l'etude des Kjokkenmoddinger (amas artificiels de coquillages) dans la region de Saint-Louis , Dakar, Universite de Dakar, 1969 (memoire de Maitrise)
  16. ^ Olga Linares de Sapir, ≪ Shell middens of lower Casamance and problems of Diola protohistory ≫, West African Journal of Archaeology , Oxford University Press, Ibadan, 1971, vol. I, pp. 23?54.
  17. ^ (in French) Jean-Leopold Diouf, Dictionnaire wolof-francais et francais-wolof , Paris: Karthala, 2003, p. 216.
  18. ^ (in French) Raymond Mauny , Tableau geographique de l'Ouest africain au Moyen-Age d'apres les sources ecrites, la tradition et l'archeologie , Amsterdam: Swets et Zeitlinger, 1967, p. 163.
  19. ^ "Cercles megalithiques de Senegambie" (in French). UNESCO . Retrieved 2 July 2008 .
  20. ^ (in French) Augustin Holl et Hamady Bocoum , ≪ Variabilite des pratiques funeraires dans le megalithisme senegambien : le cas de Sine Ngayene ≫, dans Senegalia , op. cit., pp. 224?234
  21. ^ (in French) Bruno Chavane, Recherches archeologiques dans la moyenne vallee du fleuve Senegal , 1979 (these)
  22. ^ (in French) Guy Thilmans, ≪ Les disques perfores en ceramique des sites protohistoriques du fleuve Senegal ≫, Notes africaines , n° 162, 1979, pp. 29?35.
  23. ^ (in French) Guy Thilmans et Annie Ravise, Protohistoire du Senegal, Recherches archeologique, tome II, Sinthiou-Bara et les sites du Fleuve , 1983, Dakar, 213 pages (memoire IFAN )
  24. ^ Fall, Mamadou (2021). "Les Terroirs Historiques et la Poussee Soninke". In Fall, Mamadou; Fall, Rokhaya; Mane, Mamadou (eds.). Bipolarisation du Senegal du XVIe - XVIIe siecle (in French). Dakar: HGS Editions. p. 28.
  25. ^ Wright, Donald (2010). The World and a Very Small Place in Africa: A History of Globalization in Niumi, the Gambia (3rd ed.). M.E. Sharpe. p. 51. ISBN   978-0765624840 .
  26. ^ Wright, Donald (1985). "Beyond Migration and Conquest: Oral Traditions and Mandinka Ethnicity in Senegambia" . History in Africa . 12 : 335?348. doi : 10.2307/3171727 .
  27. ^ (in French) Gerti Hesseling, Histoire politique du Senegal. Institutions, droit et societe , Paris: Karthala, 1985, p. 103.
  28. ^ (in French) Mahamadou Maiga, Le bassin du fleuve Senegal ? De la traite negriere au developpement sous-regional autocentre , Paris: L’Harmattan, 1995, p. 20.
  29. ^ Hrbek, I. (1992). volume 3: Africa from the 7th to the 11th Century: (abridged) . General History of Africa . James Carey. p. 67. ISBN   978-0852550939 .
  30. ^ Creevey, Lucy (August 1996). "Islam, Women and the Role of the State in Senegal". Journal of Religion in Africa . 26 (3): 268?307. doi : 10.1163/157006696x00299 . JSTOR   1581646 .
  31. ^ Fage, John Donnelly (1997). "Upper and Lower Guinea" . In Roland Oliver (ed.). The Cambridge History of Africa, Volume 3 . Cambridge University Press. p. 484. ISBN   978-0521209816 .
  32. ^ (in French) ≪ Discussion sur les croisements ethniques ≫, seance du 2 fevrier 1865, Bulletin de la societe d'anthropologie , tome 6, fasc. 4, p. 67.
  33. ^ (in French) Gerti Hesseling, op. cit. , p. 104.
  34. ^ (in French) Raymond Mauny, op. cit. , p. 523
  35. ^ (in French) Samba Lampsar Sall, Njajaan Njaay. Les mythes de fondation de l'Empire du Djolof , Dakar, Universite de Dakar, 1982, 157 pages (Memoire de Maitrise)
  36. ^ William J. Foltz. From French West Africa to the Mali Federation, Volume 12 of Yale studies in political science, p136. Published by Yale University Press, 1965
  37. ^ Both Ndiadiane's name and surname are Serer in origin. For the surname Njie or Ndiaye which Ndiadiane Ndiaye got his name from see Cheikh Anta Diop and Egbuna P. Modum. "Towards the African renaissance: essays in African culture & development", 1946?1960, p28. Published by Karnak House (1996). ISBN   0-907015-85-9
  38. ^ The name comes from the Serer language. See: Victoria Bomba Coifman. History of the Wolof state of Jolof until 1860 including comparative data from the Wolof state of Walo , University of Wisconsin?Madison, 1969, p. 276.
  39. ^ See also: Godfrey Mwakikagile. Gambia and Its People: Ethnic Identities and Cultural Integration in Africa , p. 94.
  40. ^ Mam Kumba Njie (or Ndiaye) is a Serer Goddess in the Serer religion as well as the Almoravid invasion of Tekrur . See Henry Gravrand. "La Civilisation Sereer", Pangool , p. 91. See also:
    • Ed Hindson & Ergun Caner. The Popular Encyclopedia of Apologetics: Surveying the Evidence for the Truth of Christianity , p. 21. Harvest House Publishers, 2008. ISBN   0-7369-2084-6
  41. ^ (in French) Jean Boulegue, Le grand Jolof, XIII e -XVI e siecle , vol. 1: Les Anciens Royaumes Wolof , Facades, Blois ; Paris: Karthala, 207 pp.
  42. ^ a b Charles, Eunice A. Precolonial Senegal: the Jolof Kingdom, 1800?1890. African Studies Center, Boston University, 1977. p 3
  43. ^ a b Ham, Anthony. West Africa. Lonely Planet. 2009. p 670. ( ISBN   1741048214 )
  44. ^ Diouf, Sylviane , Servants of Allah: African Muslims enslaved in the Americas (New York: New York University Press, 1998), 19
  45. ^ a b Diouf, Niokhobaye. "Chronique du royaume du Sine" par suivie de Notes sur les traditions orales et les sources ecrites concernant le royaume du Sine par Charles Becker et Victor Martin. Bulletin de l'Ifan, Tome 34, Serie B, n° 4, 1972. p706
  46. ^ Stride, G.T. & C. Ifeka: "Peoples and Empires of West Africa: West Africa in History 1000?1800" page 22. Nelson, 1971
  47. ^ (in French) Gerti Hesseling, op. cit. , p. 105
  48. ^ (in French) Djibril Diop, Decentralisation et gouvernance locale au Senegal. Quelle pertinence pour le developpement local ? , Paris: L'Harmattan, 2006, p. 29.
  49. ^ (in French) Ferdinand Edouard Buisson , Dictionnaire de pedagogie et d'instruction primaire , 1887, p. 442.
  50. ^ (in French) Olivier Petre-Grenouilleau , Les traites negrieres. Documentation photographique , La Documentation francaise, n° 8032, 2003.
  51. ^ (in French) Joseph Roger de Benoist et Abdoulaye Camara (et al.), Histoire de Goree , Paris: Maisonneuve et Larose, 2003, p. 12.
  52. ^ This place corresponds to the area of Cape Vert in Senegal today and not to the iles du Cap-Vert which aren't discovered until 1456.
  53. ^ (in French) Joseph Roger de Benoist et Abdoulaye Camara, op. cit. , pp. 15 and 139.
  54. ^ (in French) Abbe David Boilat , ≪ Notice sur Tanguegueth ou Rufisque ≫, Esquisses senegalaises , Karthala, Paris, 1984 (1st edn 1853), p. 55.
  55. ^ (in French) Christian Roche, Histoire de la Casamance. Conquete et resistance : 1850?1920 , Paris: Karthala, 1985 (1st edn 1976), p. 67
  56. ^ The date of 1617, cited by Olfert Dapper in Description de l'Afrique contenant les noms, la situation & les confins de toutes ses parties, leurs rivieres, leurs villes & leurs habitations, leurs plantes & leurs animaux : les moeurs, les coutumes, la langue, les richesses, la religion & le gouvernement de ses peuples : avec des cartes des Etats, des provinces & des villes, & des figures en taille-douce, qui representent les habits & les principales ceremonies des habitants, les plantes & les animaux les moins connus , W. Waesberge, Boom et Van Someren, Amsterdam, edition de 1686, p. 229, is reprised in many sources. Implausible, given the date of creation of the company, it is challenged by two historians of Goree: J.-R. de Benoist et A. Camara, op. cit. , pp. 15?18
  57. ^ (in French) Olfert Dapper, op. cit. , p. 229
  58. ^ Wikisource : Article 10 of the Treaty of Paris of 1763 Treaty of Paris(1763)
  59. ^ McLynn, Frank (2004). 1759: The Year Britain Became Master of the World . London: Jonathan Cape. pp. 99?100. ISBN   978-0-224-06245-9 .
  60. ^ "His Britannick Majesty shall restore to France the island of Goree in the condition it was in when conquered: and his Most Christian Majesty cedes, in full right, and guaranties to the King of Great Britain the river Senegal, with the forts and factories of St. Lewis, Podor, and Galam, and with all the rights and dependencies of the said river Senegal." ? Article X of the Treaty of Paris (1763) at Wikisource .
  61. ^ Article IX of the 1783 Treaty of Versailles provided, "The King od Great Britain cedes, in full right, and guaranties to his Most Christian Majesty, the river Senegal and its dependencies, with the forts of St. Louis, Podor, Galam, Arguin, and Portendic; and his Britannik Majesty restores to France the island of Goree, which shall be delivered up in the condition it was in when the conquest of it was made." Jenkinson, Charles (1785). A Collection of All the Treaties of Peace, Alliance, and Commerce, Between Great-Britain and Other Powers: From the Treaty Signed at Munster in 1648, to the Treaties Signed at Paris in 1783 . Vol. 3. London: J. Debrett. p.  359 . OCLC   3490533 .
  62. ^ van Dalen, Dorrit (2019). Gum Arabic. The Golden Tears of the Acacia Tree . Leiden, The Netherlands: Leiden University Press. p. 74. ISBN   978-90-8728-336-0 .
  63. ^ "Goree and the Atlantic Slave Trade", Philip Curtin, History Net Archived 2 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine , accessed 9 July 2008.
  64. ^ Les Guides Bleus: Afrique de l'Ouest (1958 ed.), p. 123.
  65. ^ "Amadou Lamine-Gueye" Archived 23 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine , Assemblee nationale.
  66. ^ "Leopold Sedar Senghor" Archived 19 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine , Assemblee nationale.
  67. ^ "Abbas Gueye" Archived 20 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine , Assemblee nationale.
  68. ^ "Mamadou Dia" Archived 13 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine , Assemblee nationale.
  69. ^ *Chafer, Tony. The End of Empire in French West Africa: France's Successful Decolonization , Berg (2002), p. 145. ISBN   1-85973-557-6
  70. ^ "Senegal and the Peacekeeping Operations | Senegal" . www.un.int . Retrieved 24 August 2017 .
  71. ^ "Abdou Diouf" Archived 8 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine , Encyclopædia Britannica .
  72. ^ Cornado, Estelle, "Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade's rise and rule" Archived 16 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine , BBC News, 26 March 2012.
  73. ^ Harsch, Ernest, "Peace pact raises hope in Senegal" Archived 31 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine , Africa Renewal , Vol. 19 #1 (April 2005), p. 14.
  74. ^ "Refugees: General Peace Agreement between the Government of the Republic of Senegal and MFDC" [ permanent dead link ] , Peace Accords Matrix, University of Notre Dame.
  75. ^ Nossiter, Adam, "A Turbulence-Free Election in Senegal" Archived 30 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine , The New York Times , 25 March 2012.
  76. ^ "Senegal election: President Macky Sall wins second term" . BBC News . 28 February 2019.
  77. ^ "Senegal opposition candidate Faye won 54 percent in presidential vote" . Al Jazeera .

Further reading [ edit ]

English Language [ edit ]

  • Auchnie, Ailsa. "The commandement indigene" in Senegal. 1919?1947 , London: SOAS, 1983, 405 pages (These)
  • Cana, Frank Richardson (1911). "Senegal (colony)"  . Encyclopædia Britannica . Vol. 24 (11th ed.). pp. 640?644.
  • Chafer, Tony. The End of Empire in French West Africa: France's Successful Decolonization . Berg (2002). ISBN   1-85973-557-6
  • Gellar, Sheldon. Senegal: an African nation between Islam and the West (Boulder: Westview Press, 1982).
  • Idowu, H. Oludare. The Conseil General in Senegal, 1879?1920 , Ibadan: University of Ibadan, 1970 (These)
  • Leland, Conley Barrows. General Faidherbe, the Maurel and Prom Company, and French Expansion in Senegal , University of California, Los Angeles, 1974, XXI-t.1, pp. 1?519 ; t.2, pages 520?976, (these)
  • Nelson, Harold D., et al. Area Handbook for Senegal (2nd ed. Washington: American University, 1974) full text online , 411pp;
  • Robinson Jr, David Wallace Faidherbe, Senegal and Islam , New York, Columbia University, 1965, 104 pages (these)
  • "France: Africa: French West Africa and the Sahara: Colony of Senegal" . Statesman's Year-Book . London: Macmillan and Co. 1921. pp. 897+ – via Internet Archive .
  • Wikle, Thomas A., and Dale R. Lightfoot. "Landscapes of the Slave Trade in Senegal and The Gambia", Focus on Geography (2014) 57#1 pp. 14?24.

French language [ edit ]

Primary sources [ edit ]

  • Michel Adanson , Histoire naturelle du Senegal. Coquillages. Avec la relation abregee d'un voyage fait en ce pays pendant les annees 1749, 50, 51, 52 et 53 , Paris, 1757, reedite partiellement sous le titre Voyage au Senegal , presente et annote par Denis Reynaud et Jean Schmidt, Publications de l'Universite de Saint-Etienne, 1996.
  • Stanislas, chevalier de Boufflers , Lettres d'Afrique a Madame de Sabran , preface, notes et dossier de Francois Bessire, s. l., Babel, 1998, 453 pages (coll. Les Epistolaires)
  • Marie Brantome, Le Galant exil du marquis de Boufflers , 1786
  • Jean Baptiste Leonard Durand , Voyage au Senegal 1785?1786 , Paris: Agasse, 1802.
  • Georges Hardy, La mise en valeur du Senegal de 1817 a 1854 , Paris: Larose, 1921, XXXIV + 376 pages (These de Lettres)
  • Andre Charles, marquis de La Jaille, Voyage au Senegal pendant les annees 1784 et 1785, avec des notes jusqu’a l'an X par P. Labarthe , Paris, Denter,1802.
  • Saugnier , Relation des voyages de Saugnier a la cote d'Afrique, au Maroc, au Senegal, a Goree, a Galam , publiee par Laborde, Paris: Lamy, 1799.
  • Rene Claude Geoffroy de Villeneuve, L’Afrique ou Histoire, mœurs, usages et coutumes des Africains : le Senegal, orne de 44 planches executees la plupart d'apres des dessins originaux inedits faits sur les lieux , Paris: Nepveu,1814.

Secondary sources [ edit ]

  • Gravrand, Henry , "La Civilisation Sereer ? Pangool ", vol. 2, Les Nouvelles Editions Africaines du Senegal , 1990, pp, 9, 20 & 77, 91, ISBN   2-7236-1055-1
  • Gravrand, Henry, "La civilisation Sereer, Vol. 1, Cosaan: les origines", Nouvelles Editions africaines, 1983, ISBN   2-7236-0877-8
  • University of Calgary , Dept. of Archaeology, Society of Africanist Archaeologists in America, Society of Africanist Archaeologists, Newsletter of African archaeology , Issues 47?50, Dept. of Archaeology, University of Calgary, 1997, pp. 27, 58
  • Becker, Charles, "Vestiges historiques, tremoins materiels du passe clans les pays sereer ", Dakar (1993), CNRS ? ORS TO M
  • Foltz, William J., "From French West Africa to the Mali Federation ", Volume 12 of Yale studies in political science, p. 136, Yale University Press , 1965
  • Diop, Cheikh Anta , Modum, Egbuna P., "Towards the African renaissance: essays in African culture & development", 1946?1960, p. 28, Karnak House (1996). ISBN   0-907015-85-9
  • Coifman, Victoria Bomba, "History of the Wolof state of Jolof until 1860 including comparative data from the Wolof state of Walo", p. 276, University of Wisconsin?Madison, 1969
  • Diouf, Niokhobaye. "Chronique du royaume du Sine" par suivie de Notes sur les traditions orales et les sources ecrites concernant le royaume du Sine par Charles Becker et Victor Martin. Bulletin de l'Ifan , Tome 34, Serie B, n° 4, 1972, p. 706
  • Sarr, Alioune , "Histoire du Sine ? Saloum ", Introduction, bibliographie et Notes par Charles Becker, BIFAN, Tome 46, Serie B, n° 3?4, 1986?1987
  • Rodolphe Alexandre, La Revolte des tirailleurs senegalais a Cayenne, 24?25 fevrier 1946 , 1995, 160 pages  ISBN   2-7384-3330-8
  • Jean-Luc Angrand, Celeste ou le temps des signares , Editions Anne Pepin, 2006
  • Boubacar Barry, La Senegambie du XVe au XIXe siecle. Traite negriere, Islam et conquete coloniale , Paris, L'Harmattan, 1991 (reed.), 544 pages  ISBN   2-85802-670-X
  • Boubacar Barry, Le Royaume du Waalo : le Senegal avant la Conquete , Karthala, 2000 (reed.), 420 pages  ISBN   2-86537-141-7
  • Abdoulaye Bathily , Les Portes de l'or : le royaume de Galam (Senegal) de l'ere musulmane au temps des negriers (VIIIe-XVIIIe siecles) , Paris: L'Harmattan, 1989.
  • Claire Bernard, Les Amenagements du bassin fleuve Senegal pendant la colonisation francaise (1850?1960) , ANRT, 1996, ISBN   2-284-00077-0
  • Germaine Francoise Bocande, L’implantation militaire francaise dans la region du Cap-Vert : causes, problemes et consequences des origines a 1900 , Dakar, Universite de Dakar, 1980, 112 pages (Memoire de Maitrise)
  • Jean Boulegue, Le Grand Jolof : XIIIe-XVIe siecles, les Anciens royaumes Wolof, t. 1 , Karthala, 1987, 207 pages
  • Paul Bouteiller, Le Chevalier de Boufflers et le Senegal de son temps (1785?1788), Lettres du Monde , Paris, 1995.
  • Bruno A. Chavane, Villages de l'ancien Tekrour : recherches archeologiques dans la moyenne vallee du fleuve Senegal , Karthala-CRA, 2000 (reed.)
  • Sekene Mody Cissoko , Le Khasso face a l'empire Toucouleur et a la France dans le Haut- Senegal 1854?1890 , Paris: L' Harmattan , 1988, 351 pages  ISBN   2-7384-0133-3
  • Catherine Clement , Afrique esclave , Agnes Vienot, 1999, 200 pages  ISBN   2-911606-36-1
  • Cyr Descamps, Contribution a la prehistoire de l'Ouest-senegalais , Paris: Universite de Paris, 1972, 345 pages These de 3 e cycle publiee en 1979, Dakar, Travaux et Documents Faculte des Lettres, 286 pages
  • Falilou Diallo, Histoire du Senegal : de la conference de Brazzaville a la fondation du bloc democratique senegalais : 1944?1948 , Paris: Universite de Paris I, 1983, 318 pages (These de 3rd cycle)
  • Papa Momar Diop, Les administrateurs coloniaux au Senegal. 1900?1914 , Dakar: Universite de Dakar, 1985, 107 pages (Memoire de Maitrise)
  • Mamadou Diouf , Le Kajoor au XIX e , Karthala, 1989
  • Mamadou Diouf, Le Senegal sous Abdou Diouf , Karthala, 1990
  • Mamadou Diouf, Une histoire du Senegal : le modele islamo-wolof et ses peripheries , Paris: Maisonneuve & Larose, 2001, 250 pages  ISBN   2-7068-1503-5
  • Babacar Fall, Le Travail force en Afrique Occidentale Francaise (1900?1946) , Karthala, 2000, 336 pages  ISBN   2-86537-372-X
  • Denys Ferrando-Durfort, Lat Dior le resistant , Paris : Chiron, 1989. ? 45 pages  ISBN   2-7027-0403-4
  • Jean Girard, L'Or du Bambouk : du royaume de Gabou a la Casamance une dynamique de civilisation ouest-africaine , Geneve: Georg, 1992, 347 pages
  • Bernard Grosbellet, Le Moniteur du Senegal et dependances comme sources de l'histoire du Senegal pendant le premier gouvernement de Faidherbe (1856?1861) , Dakar: Universite de Dakar , 1967, 113 pages (Diplome d'Etudes Superieures)
  • Gerti Hesseling, Histoire politique du Senegal: institutions, droit et societe (translation Catherine Miginiac), Karthala, 2000, 437 pages  ISBN   2-86537-118-2
  • Abdoulaye Ly, La Compagnie du Senegal , Karthala, 2000, 448 pages  ISBN   2-86537-406-8
  • Mahamadou Maiga, Le Bassin du fleuve Senegal ? De la traite negriere au developpement , Paris, L’Harmattan, 1995, 330 pages  ISBN   2-7384-3093-7
  • Laurence Marfaing, Evolution du commerce au Senegal : 1820?1930 , Paris, L’Harmattan, 1991, 320 pages  ISBN   2-7384-1195-9
  • Saliou Mbaye, Le Conseil prive du Senegal de 1819 a 1854 , Paris, Universite de Paris , 1974, 431 pages (These de l'Ecole des Chartes)
  • Djibril Tamsir Niane , Soundjata ou l'epopee Mandingue , Presence africaine , 2000 (reed.) 160 pages  ISBN   2-7087-0078-2
  • Jean-Pierre Phan, Le Front Populaire au Senegal (1936?1938) , Paris, Universite de Paris I, 1974, 176 pages (Memoire de Maitrise)
  • Christian Roche, Histoire de la Casamance : Conquete et resistance 1850?1920 , Karthala, 2000, 408 pages  ISBN   2-86537-125-5
  • Christian Roche, Le Senegal a la conquete de son independance, 1939?1960. Chronique de la vie politique et syndicale, de l'Empire francais a l'Independance , Paris: Karthala, 2001, 286 pages
  • Yves-Jean Saint-Martin, Une source de l'histoire coloniale du Senegal. Les rapports de situation politique (1874?1891) , Dakar: Universite de Dakar, 1964, 147 pages (Diplome d'Etudes Superieures)
  • Yves-Jean Saint-Martin, La formation territoriale de la colonie du Senegal sous le Second Empire 1850?1871 , Nantes: Universite de Nantes, 1980, 2 vol. 1096 pages (These d'Etat)
  • Yves-Jean Saint-Martin, Le Senegal sous le Second Empire , Karthala, 2000, 680 pages  ISBN   2-86537-201-4
  • H. Y. Sanchez-Calzadilla, A l'origine de l'expansion francaise, la commission des comptoirs du Senegal , Paris: Universite de Paris I, 1973 (Memoire de Maitrise)
  • Alain Sinou, Comptoirs et villes coloniales du Senegal: Saint-Louis, Goree, Dakar , Karthala, 1999, 344 pages  ISBN   2-86537-393-2
  • Charles Uyisenga, La participation de la colonie du Senegal a l'effort de guerre 1914?1918 , Dakar: Universite de Dakar, 1978, 216 pages (Memoire de Maitrise)
  • Nicole Vaget Grangeat, Le Chevalier de Boufflers et son temps, etude d'un echec , Paris, Nizet, 1976
  • Baila Wane, Le Conseil colonial du Senegal, 1920?1946 , Paris: Universite de Paris VII , 1978, 20 pages (Diplome d'Etudes Approfondies).

External links [ edit ]