The
Nile ( , ,
Ancient Egyptian iteru or
Ḥ'pī,
Coptic
piaro or
phiaro) is a major
north-flowing river in Africa, generally regarded as the
longest river in the world.
The Nile
has two major tributaries, the White Nile and Blue Nile
, the latter being the source of most of the Nile's
water and fertile soil, but the former being
the longer of the two. The White Nile rises in the Great
Lakes
region of central Africa, with the most distant
source in southern Rwanda
, and flows
north from there through Tanzania, Lake Victoria
, Uganda and southern Sudan
, while the
Blue Nile starts at Lake
Tana
in Ethiopia
, flowing
into Sudan from the southeast. The two rivers meet
near the Sudanese capital Khartoum
.
The
northern section of the river flows almost entirely through
desert, from Sudan into Egypt
, a country
whose civilization has depended on
the river since ancient times. Most of the population
of Egypt and all of its cities, with the exception of those near
the coast, lie along those parts of the Nile valley north of
Aswan
; and nearly all the cultural and historical sites
of Ancient Egypt are found along the
banks of the river. The Nile ends in a large delta
that empties into the Mediterranean Sea
.
Etymology of the word Nile

Nile seen from Spot Satellite
The word "Nile" comes from Greek
Neilos ( ), of unknown
derivation. In the ancient
Egyptian
language, the Nile is called
Ḥ'pī or
iteru,
meaning "great river", represented by the
hieroglyphs shown on the right
(literally
itrw, and '
waters'
determinative). In
Coptic, the words
piaro (Sahidic)
or
phiaro (Bohairic) meaning "the river" (lit. p(h).iar-o
"the.canal-great") come from the same ancient name.
Tributaries and distributaries
The
drainage basin of the Nile covers
, about 10% of the area of Africa.
There are
two great tributaries of the Nile, joining at Khartoum
: the
White Nile, starting in equatorial East
Africa, and the Blue
Nile
, beginning in Ethiopia. Both branches are on
the western flanks of the East African Rift, the southern part of
the
Great Rift Valley. Below the
Blue and White Nile confluence the only remaining major tributary
is the
Atbara River, which originates
in Ethiopia north of Lake Tana, and is around long. It flows only
while there is rain in Ethiopia and dries very fast. It joins the
Nile approximately north of Khartoum.
The Nile is unusual in that its last tributary (the Atbara) joins
it roughly halfway to the sea. From that point north, the Nile
diminishes because of evaporation.
The course of the Nile in Sudan is distinctive. It flows over
six groups of cataracts, from
the first at Aswan to the sixth at Sabaloka (just north of
Khartoum) and then turns to flow southward for a good portion of
its course, before again returning to flow north to the sea. This
is called the "Great Bend of the Nile".

East Africa, showing the course of the
Nile River, with the "Blue" and "White" Niles marked in those
colours
North of
Cairo
, the Nile splits into two branches (or
distributaries) that feed the Mediterranean: the Rosetta
Branch to
the west and the Damietta
to the east, forming the Nile Delta
.
White Nile
The
source of the Nile is
sometimes considered to be Lake Victoria
, but the lake itself has feeder rivers of
considerable size. The most distant stream—and thus the
ultimate source of the Nile—emerges from Nyungwe Forest
in Rwanda, via the Rukarara, Mwogo, Nyabarongo and
Kagera rivers, before flowing into Lake
Victoria in Tanzania near the town of Bukoba
.
The Nile
leaves Lake Victoria at Ripon Falls near Jinja, Uganda
, as the Victoria
Nile. It flows for approximately farther, through
Lake
Kyoga
, until it reaches Lake Albert
. After leaving Lake Albert, the river is
known as the
Albert Nile. It then flows
into Sudan, where it becomes known as the
Bahr al Jabal ("River of the Mountain").
The
Bahr al
Ghazal
, itself long, joins the Bahr al Jabal at a small
lagoon called Lake
No
, after which the Nile becomes known as the Bahr
al Abyad, or the White Nile, from
the whitish clay suspended in its waters. When the
Nile flooded it left this rich material
named silt. The Ancient Egyptians used this soil to farm. From Lake
No, the river flows to Khartoum.
An anabranch
river called Bahr el
Zeraf
flows out of the Nile's Bahr al Jabal section and
rejoins the White Nile.
The term "White Nile" is used in both a general sense, referring to
the entire river above Khartoum, and a limited sense, the section
between Lake No and Khartoum.
Blue Nile
The
Blue
Nile
(Ge'ez ጥቁር ዓባይ
Ṭiqūr ʿĀbbāy (Black Abay
) to Ethiopians
; ; transliterated: an-Nīl
al-Āzraq) springs from Lake Tana
in the Ethiopian Highlands. The Blue Nile
flows about to Khartoum, where the Blue Nile and White Nile join to
form the "Nile proper".
90% of the water and 96% of the transported
sediment carried by the Nile originates in Ethiopia, with 59% of
the water from the Blue Nile alone (the rest being from the
Tekezé
, Atbarah, Sobat, and small
tributaries). The erosion and transportation of silt only
occurs during the Ethiopian rainy season in the summer, however,
when rainfall is especially high on the Ethiopian
Plateau
; the rest of the year, the great rivers draining
Ethiopia into the Nile (Sobat, Blue Nile, Tekezé, and Atbarah) flow
weakly.
Yellow Nile
The
Yellow Nile is a former tributary that connected the Ouaddaï Highlands of eastern Chad
to the Nile
River Valley ca. 8000 to ca. 1000 BCE. Its remains are known
as the
Wadi Howar.
The wadi passes
through Gharb
Darfur
near the northern border with Chad and meets up
with the Nile and near the southern point of the Great
Bend.
Lost headwaters
Formerly
Lake
Tanganyika
drained
northwards along the African Rift
Valley into the Albert Nile, making the Nile about longer,
until blocked in Miocene times by the bulk
of the Virunga
Volcanoes
. See
List of rivers by
length.
Politics
The usage of the Nile River has been closely associated with the
politics of East Africa and the
Horn of
Africa for many decades. Various countries, including Uganda,
Sudan, Ethiopia and Kenya have complained about the Egyptian
domination of the Nile water resources. The Nile Basin Initiative
was one of the most important programs to promote equal usage and
peaceful cooperation between the "Nile Basin States." Yet many
fear, the Egyptian domination of the waters still causes massive
economic obstacles in the area.
The Nile still supports much of the population living along its
banks, with the Egyptians living in otherwise inhospitable regions
of the Sahara. The river flooded every summer, depositing fertile
silt on the plains. The flow of the river is disturbed at several
points by
cataracts, which are
sections of faster-flowing water with many small islands, shallow
water, and rocks, forming an obstacle to navigation by boats.
The
Sudd
wetlands in Sudan also forms a formidable obstacle
for navigation and flow of water, to the extent that Sudan had once
attempted to dig a canal (the Jonglei
Canal) to bypass this stagnant mass of water.
The Nile was, and still is, used to transport goods to different
places along its long path; especially since winter winds in this
area blow up river, the ships could travel up with no work by using
the sail, and down using the flow of the river.
While most Egyptians
still live in the Nile valley, the construction of the Aswan High
Dam
(finished in 1970) to provide hydroelectricity
ended the summer floods and their renewal of the fertile
soil.
Cities on
the Nile include Khartoum, Aswan, Luxor
(Thebes), and the Giza
Cairo
conurbation. The first cataract, the closest to the mouth
of the river, is at Aswan to the north of the Aswan Dams
. The Nile north of Aswan is a regular
tourist route, with cruise ships and traditional wooden sailing
boats known as
feluccas.
In addition, many
"floating hotel" cruise boats ply the route between Luxor and
Aswan, stopping in at Edfu
and
Kom
Ombo
along the way. It used to be
possible to sail on these boats all the way from Cairo
to Aswan,
but security concerns have shut down the northernmost portion for
many years.
More
recently, drought during the 1980s led to widespread starvation in
Ethiopia and Sudan but Egypt was protected from drought by water
impounded in Lake
Nasser
. Beginning in the 1980s techniques of
analysis using
hydrology
transport models have been used in the Nile to analyze water
quality.
Hydrology
The flow rate of the Albert Nile at Mongalla is almost constant
throughout the year and averages . After Mongalla, the Nile is
known as the Bahr El Jebel which enters the enormous swamps of the
Sudd region of Sudan. More than half of the Nile's water is lost in
this swamp to
evaporation and
transpiration. The average flow rate in the
Bahr El Jebel at the tails of the swamps is about . From here it
soon meets with the Sobat River and forms the White Nile.
The Bahr al Ghazal and the Sobat River are the two most important
tributaries of the White Nile in terms of drainage area and
discharge. The Bahr al Ghazal's
drainage
basin is the largest of any of the Nile's sub-basins, measuring
in size, but it contributes a relatively small amount of water,
about annually, due to tremendous volumes of water being lost in
the Sudd wetlands. The Sobat River, which joins the Nile a short
distance below Lake No, drains about half as much land, , but
contributes annually to the Nile. When in flood the Sobat carries a
large amount of sediment, adding greatly to the White Nile's
color.
The average flow of the White Nile at Malakal, just below the Sobat
River, is , the peak flow is approximately in early March and
minimum flow is about in late August. The fluctuation there is due
the substantial variation in the flow of the Sobat which has a
minimum flow of about in August and a peak flow of over in early
March.
From here the White Nile flows to Khartoum where it merges with the
Blue Nile to form the Nile River. Further downstream the Atbara
River, the last significant Nile tributary, merges with the Nile.
During the dry season (January to June) the White Nile contributes
between 70% and 90% of the total discharge from the Nile. During
this period of time the natural discharge of the Blue Nile can be
as low as , although upstream dams regulate the flow of the river.
During the dry period, there will typically be no flow from the
Atbara River.
The Blue Nile contributes approximately 80-90% of the Nile River
discharge. The flow of the Blue Nile varies considerably over its
yearly cycle and is the main contribution to the large natural
variation of the Nile flow. During the wet season the peak flow of
the Blue Nile will often exceed in latter August (variation by a
factor of 50).
Before the placement of dams on the river the yearly discharge
varied by a factor of 15 at Aswan. Peak flows of over would occur
during the later portions of August and early September and minimum
flows of about would occur during later April and early May. The
Nile basin is complex, and because of this, the discharge at any
given point along the
mainstem
depends on many factors including weather, diversions,
evaporation/
evapotranspiration,
and
groundwater flow.
History
The Nile (
iteru in
Ancient
Egyptian) was the lifeline of the
ancient Egyptian civilization, with most of
the population and all of the cities of Egypt resting along those
parts of the Nile valley lying north of Aswan. The Nile has been
the lifeline for Egyptian culture since the
Stone Age. Climate change, or perhaps
overgrazing,
desiccated the
pastoral lands of Egypt to form the
Sahara desert, possibly as long ago as 8000 BC, and
the inhabitants then presumably migrated to the river, where they
developed a settled agricultural economy and a more centralized
society.
The Eonile
The present Nile is at least the fifth river that has flowed north
from the Ethiopian Highlands.
Satellite imagery was used to identify dry
watercourses in the desert to the west of the Nile. An Eonile
canyon, now filled by surface drift, represents an ancestral Nile
called the
Eonile that flowed during the later
Miocene (23–5.3 million years before the
present). The Eonile transported
clastic
sediments to the Mediterranean, where several gas fields have
been discovered within these sediments.
During the late-Miocene
Messinian Salinity Crisis, when
the Mediterranean Sea was a closed basin and evaporated empty or
nearly so, the Nile cut its course down to the new base level until
it was several hundred feet below world ocean level at Aswan and
below Cairo. This huge canyon is now full of later sediment.
Lake
Tanganyika drained northwards into the Nile until the Virunga
Volcanoes
blocked its course in Rwanda. That would have made
the Nile much longer, with its longest headwaters in northern
Zambia
.
The integrated Nile
There are two theories in relation to the age of the integrated
Nile. The first one is that the integrated drainage of the Nile is
of young age, that the Nile basin was formerly broken into series
of separate basins, only the most northerly (the Proto Nile basin)
feeding a river following the present course of the Nile in Egypt
and in the far north of the Sudan. Said (1981) stresses the idea
that Egypt itself supplied most of the waters of the Nile during
the early part of its history.
The other theory is that the drainage from
Ethiopia via rivers equivalent to the Blue Nile and the
Atbara/Takazze
flowed to the Mediterranean via the Egyptian Nile
since well back into Tertiary
times.
Salama (1987) suggested that during the Tertiary there were a
series of separate closed continental basins, each basin occupying
one of the major Sudanese Rift System: Mellut Rift, White Nile
Rift, Blue Nile Rift, Atbara Rift and Sag El Naam Rift. The Mellut
Rift Basin is nearly 12 km deep at its central part. This rift
is possibly still active, with reported tectonic activity in its
northern and southern boundaries. The Sudd swamps which forms the
central part of the Basin is possibly still subsiding.
The White Nile Rift
System, although shallower than Bahr El Arab
, is about 9 km deep. Geophysical
exploration of the Blue Nile Rift System estimated the depth of the
sediments to be 5–9 km. These basins were not interconnected
except after their subsidence ceased and the rate of sediment
deposition was enough to fill up the basins to such a level that
would allow connection to take place. The filling up of the
depressions led to the connection of the Egyptian Nile with the
Sudanese Nile, which captures the Ethiopian and Equatorial head
waters during the latest stages of tectonic activities of Eastern,
Central and Sudanese Rift Systems. The connection of the different
Niles occurred during the cyclic wet periods. The River Atbara
overflowed its closed basin during the wet periods which occurred
about 100,000 to 120,000 years B.P. The Blue Nile was connected to
the main Nile during the 70,000–80,000 years B.P. wet period. The
White Nile system in Bahr El Arab and White Nile Rifts remained a
closed lake until the connection of the Victoria Nile some 12,500
years B.P.
Role in the founding of Egyptian civilization
The Nile, an unending source of sustenance, provided a crucial role
in the development of Egyptian civilization. The Nile made the land
surrounding it extremely fertile when it flooded or was inundated
annually. The
Egyptians were able to
cultivate wheat and crops around the Nile, providing food for the
general population. Also, the Nile’s water attracted game such as
water buffalo; and after the
Persians introduced them in the 7th century BC,
camels. These animals could be killed for meat, or
could be captured, tamed and used for ploughing — or in the
camels' case, travelling. Water was vital to both people and
livestock. The Nile was also a convenient and efficient way of
transportation for people and goods.
.jpg/340px-Nile03(js).jpg)
Dhows on the Nile
The structure of Egypt’s society made it one of the most stable in
history. In fact, it might easily have surpassed many modern
societies. This stability was an immediate result of the Nile’s
fertility. The Nile also provided
flax for
trade. Wheat was also traded, a crucial crop in the Middle East
where famine was very common. This trading system secured the
diplomatic relationship Egypt had with other countries, and often
contributed to Egypt's economic stability. Also, the Nile provided
the resources such as food or money, to quickly and efficiently
raise an army for offensive or defensive roles.
The Nile played a major role in politics and social life. The
pharaoh would supposedly flood the Nile, and
in return for the life-giving water and crops, the peasants would
cultivate the fertile soil and send a portion of the resources they
had reaped to the Pharaoh. He or she would in turn use it for the
well-being of Egyptian society.
The Nile was a source of spiritual dimension. The Nile was so
significant to the lifestyle of the Egyptians, that they created a
god dedicated to the welfare of the Nile’s annual
inundation. The god’s name was
Hapy, and both he and the pharaoh were thought to
control the
flooding of the
Nile. Also, the Nile was considered as a causeway from life to
death and afterlife. The east was thought of as a place of birth
and growth, and the west was considered the place of death, as the
god
Ra, the Sun, underwent birth, death, and
resurrection each time he crossed the sky. Thus, all tombs were
located west of the Nile, because the Egyptians believed that in
order to enter the afterlife, they must be buried on the side that
symbolized death.
The Greek historian,
Herodotus, wrote that
‘Egypt was the gift of the Nile’, and in a sense that is correct.
Without the waters of the Nile River for irrigation, Egyptian
civilization would probably have been short-lived. The Nile
provided the elements that make a vigorous civilization, and
contributed much to its lasting three thousand years.
That
far-reaching trade has been carried on along the Nile since ancient
times can be seen from the Ishango
bone, possibly the earliest known indication of Ancient Egyptian
multiplication, which was discovered along the headwaters of
the Nile River (near Lake Edward
, in northeastern Congo
) and was carbon-dated to 20,000 BC.
The search for the source of the Nile
The Great Bend of the Nile in Sudan, looking north across the
Sahara Desert towards Northern Sudan.
Despite
the attempts of the Greeks and
Romans (who were unable to penetrate
the Sudd
), the upper
reaches of the Nile remained largely unknown. Various
expeditions had failed to determine the river's
source, thus yielding classical
Hellenistic and Roman representations of the river as a male god
with his face and head obscured in drapery.
Agatharcides records that in the time of
Ptolemy II Philadelphus, a
military expedition had penetrated far enough along the course of
the Blue Nile to determine that the summer floods were caused by
heavy seasonal rainstorms in the Ethiopian Highlands
, but no European in antiquity is known to have
reached Lake Tana.
Europeans learned little new information about the origins of the
Nile until the 15th and 16th centuries, when travelers to Ethiopia
visited not only Lake Tana, but the source of the Blue Nile in the
mountains south of the lake. Although
James
Bruce claimed to have been the first European to have visited
the headwaters (
Travels to Discover
the Source of the Nile, 1790), modern writers with better
knowledge give the credit to the
Jesuit
Pedro Páez. Páez’ account of the
source of the Nile (
History of Ethiopia c. 1622) was not
published in full until the early 20th century. The work is a long
and vivid account of Ethiopia. The account is however featured in
several contemporary works, including
Balthazar Telles (
Historia geral da
Ethiopia a Alta, 1660),
Athanasius Kircher (
Mundus
Subterraneus, 1664) and by
Johann Michael Vansleb (
The
Present State of Egypt, 1678).Europeans had been resident in
the country since the late 15th century, and it is entirely
possible one of them had visited the headwaters even earlier but
was unable to send a report of his discoveries out of Ethiopia.
Jerónimo Lobo also describes the
source of the Blue Nile, visiting shortly after Pedro Páez. His
account is likewise utilized by Balthazar Telles.
The White Nile was even less understood, and the ancients
mistakenly believed that the
Niger River
represented the upper reaches of the White Nile; for example,
Pliny the Elder wrote that the Nile
had its origins "in a mountain of lower
Mauretania", flowed above ground for "many days"
distance, then went underground, reappeared as a large lake in the
territories of the
Masaesyli, then sank
again below the desert to flow underground "for a distance of 20
days' journey till it reaches the nearest Ethiopians." A merchant
named
Diogenes reported the
Nile’s water attracted game such as water buffalo; and after the
Persians introduced them in the 7th century BC, camels.
Lake Victoria was first sighted by Europeans in 1858 when the
British
explorer John Hanning Speke reached its southern
shore whilst on his journey with
Richard Francis Burton to explore
central Africa and locate the great Lakes. Believing he had found
the source of the Nile on seeing this "vast expanse of open water"
for the first time, Speke named the lake after the then
Queen of the United Kingdom.
Burton, who had been recovering from illness at the time and
resting further south on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, was
outraged that Speke claimed to have proved his discovery to have
been the true source of the Nile when Burton regarded this as still
unsettled. A very public quarrel ensued, which not only sparked a
great deal of intense debate within the scientific community of the
day, but much interest by other explorers keen to either confirm or
refute Speke's discovery.
The well known British explorer and
missionary David Livingstone
failed in his attempt to verify Speke's discovery, instead pushing
too far west and entering the Congo River
system instead. It was ultimately the
Welsh-American explorer Henry
Morton Stanley who confirmed the truth of Speke's discovery,
circumnavigating Lake Victoria and reporting the great outflow at
Ripon
Falls
on the Lake's northern shore.
European involvement in Egypt goes back to the time of Napoleon.
Laird shipyard of Liverpool sent an iron steamer to the Nile in the
1830s.
With the completion of the Suez Canal
, and the British takeover of Egypt in the1870s,
more British river steamers were sure to follow.The Nile is
the natural navigation channel in the area. Access to Khartoum and
Sudan was via steamer. The
Siege of
Khartoum was ameliorated with steamers. Purpose built
sternwheelers were shipped from England and steamed up the river to
re-take the city. After this regular steam navigation came. With
British Forces in Egypt in the First World War and the inter war
years, river steamers provided both security and sight seeing to
the pyramids and Luxor. Agatha Christie stories indicate the
penetration of Nile steamer into the public consciousness. Steam
navigation remained integral to the two countries as late as
1962—Sudan steamer traffic was the lifeline as few railways or
roads were built. Most paddle steamers have been retired to
shorefront service, but modern diesel tourist boats remain on the
river.
Modern achievements

The Nile passes through Cairo, Egypt's
capital city
The White Nile Expedition, led by South African national
Hendri Coetzee, became the first to navigate
the Nile's entire length. The expedition took off from the source
of the Nile in Uganda on 17 January 2004 and arrived safely at the
Mediterranean in Rosetta, 4 months and 2 weeks later.
National
Geographic
released a feature film about the expedition
towards in late 2005 entitled The Longest
River.
On 28
April 2004, geologist Pasquale Scaturro and his partner, kayaker
and documentary filmmaker Gordon Brown became the first
people to navigate the Blue Nile, from Lake Tana in Ethiopia to the
beaches of Alexandria
on the Mediterranean. Though their
expedition included a number of others, Brown and Scaturro were the
only ones to remain on the expedition for the entire journey. They
chronicled their adventure with an
IMAX camera
and two handheld video cams, sharing their story in the IMAX film
Mystery of the Nile,
and in a book of the same title. The team was forced to use
outboard motors for most of their journey, and it was not until 29
January 2005 when Canadian Les Jickling and New Zealander Mark
Tanner reached the Mediterranean Sea, that the river had been
paddled for the first time under human power.
A team led by South Africans Peter Meredith and Hendri Coetzee on
30 April 2005, became the first to navigate the most remote
headstream, the remote source of the Nile, the
Akagera river, which starts as the Rukarara in
Nyungwe forest in Rwanda.
On 31 March 2006, three explorers from Britain and New Zealand lead
by Neil McGrigor claimed to have been the first to travel the river
from its mouth to a new "true source" deep in Rwanda's Nyungwe
rainforest. .
Crossings I
This is a
list of crossings from Khartoum
to the Mediterranean:
- Aswan
Bridge, Aswan

- Luxor
Bridge, Luxor

- Suhag Bridge, Suhag
- Assiut Bridge, Assiut

- Al
Minya Bridge, Minya

- Al
Marazeek Bridge, Helwan

- 1st
Ring Road Bridge (Moneeb Crossing), Cairo

- Abbas Bridge, Cairo
- University Bridge, Cairo
- Qasr El Nile Bridge, Cairo
- 6th of October Bridge, Cairo
- Abu El Ela Bridge, Cairo (removed)
- New Abu El Ela Bridge, Cairo
- Imbaba Bridge, Cairo
- Rod Elfarag Bridge, Cairo
- 2nd Ring Road Bridge, Cairo
Crossings II
This is a
list of crossings from Rwanda
to Khartoum
:
- Kiyira Bridge, Jinja, Uganda
- Karuma Bridge, Karuma, Uganda
Images of the Nile
File:Nile.jpg|
View of the Nile from a cruiseboat, between Luxor and Aswan
in Egypt
File:Dhows on the Nile.jpg|
A dhow traversing the Nile near Aswan
File:A
Boat in the Nile River.JPG|A boat in the Nile zamalek
area, Cairo.File:EternalNile.JPG|
Marsh along the Nile
File:Africa11 016.jpg|
The Nile in Uganda
File:Nile in Uganda - by Michael Shade.jpg|
A river boat crossing the Nile in Uganda
File:Nile riverboat, 1900.jpg|Riverboat on the Nile, Egypt
1900
Media
File:Nile-River1.ogg|River and mountain scenery on the
NileFile:Nile-River-Cruise.ogg|People living on the banks of the
Nile
See also
References
- River Encarta (Accessed 3 October 2006). Archived
2009-11-01.
- What did the ancient Egyptians call the Nile river?
Open Egyptology. (Accessed 17 October 2006 - Login required or
enter as Guest)
- EarthTrends: The Environmental Information
Portal
- Marshall et al., , 2006
- Keding, B (2000). "New data on the Holocene occupation of the
Wadi Howar region (Eastern Sahara/Sudan)." Studies in African
Archaeology 7, 89–104.
- The Nile Basin Initiative
- ; online at Google Books
- ; online at Google Books
- Said, R. (1981). The geological evolution of the River
Nile. Springer Verlag.
- Williams, M.A.J. and Williams, F. (1980). Evolution of Nile
Basin. In M.A.J. Williams and H. Faure (eds), The Sahara
and the Nile. Balkema, Rotterdam, pp 207–224.
- Salama, R.B. (1997). Rift Basins of Sudan. African Basins,
Sedimentary Basins of the World. 3. Edited by R.C. Selley
(Series Editor K.J. Hsu) p. 105–149. ElSevier, Amsterdam.
- Natural History, 5.10
- [1] News item on Expeditions official website
(via Archive.org cache )
- [2]
Annotated bibliography
An annotated bibliography of the key written documents for the
Western exploration of the Nile.
1600s
- Historia da Ethiopia, Pedro
Páez (aka Pero Pais), Portugal, 1620
- A
Jesuit missionary who was sent from Goa
to
Ethiopia
in 1589 and remained in the area until his death in
1622. Credited with being the first European to view the
source of the Blue Nile which he describes in this volume.
- Voyage historique d'Abissinie, Jerónimo Lobo (aka Girolamo Lobo), Piero
Matini, Firenze; 1693
- One of the most important and earliest sources on Ethiopia and
the Nile. Jerónimo Lobo (1595-1687), a Jesuit priest, stayed in Ethiopia, mostly in Tigre, for 9 years and travelled to Lake Tana
and the Blue Nile, reaching the province of
Damot. When the Jesuits were expelled from the
country, he too had to leave and did so via Massaua
and Suakin
.
‘He was the best expert on Ethiopian matters. After Pais, Lobo is
the second European to describe the sources of the Blue Nile and he
did so more exactly than Bruce’ (transl. from Henze)
1700s
- Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile in the
Years – 1768, 1770, 1771, 1772, and 1773, James Bruce of Kinnaird. J. Ruthven for G.GJ.
and J. Robinson et al., Edinburgh, 1790 (5 Volumes)
- With
time on his hands and at the urging of a friend, Bruce composed
this account of his travels on the African continent, including
comments on the history and religion of Egypt, an account of Indian
trade, a history of Abyssinia
, and other material. Although Bruce would
not be confused with "a great scholar or a judicious critic., few
books of equal compass are equally entertaining; and few such
monuments exist of the energy and enterprise of a single traveller"
(DNB). "The result of his travels was a very great enrichment of
the knowledge of geography and ethnography" (Cox II, p. 389.) Bruce
was one of the earliest westerners to search for the source of the
Nile. In November of 1770 he reached the source of the Blue Nile,
and though he acknowledged that the White Nile was the larger
stream, he claimed that the Blue Nile was the Nile of the ancients
and that he was thus the discoverer of its source. The account of
his travels was written twelve years after his journey and without
reference to his journals, which gave critics grounds for
disbelief, but the substantial accuracy of the book has since been
amply demonstrated
1800-1850
- St. John traveled extensively in Egypt and Nubia in 1832-33, mainly on foot. He gives a very
interesting picture of Egyptian life and politics under Mohammed Ali, a large part of volume II deals
with the Egyptian campaign in Syria
.
- Travels in Ethiopia Above the Second Cateract of the Nile;
Exhibiting the State of That Country and Its Various Inhabitants
Under the Dominion of Mohammed Ali; and Illustrating the
Antiquities, arts, and History of the Ancient Kingdom of
Meroe, G.A.Hoskins. Longman, Rees,
Orme, Brown, Green, & Longman, London; 1835.
- Modern Egypt and Thebes: Being a Description of Egypt;
Including Information Required for Travellers in That Country,
Sir Gardner Wilkinson, John
Murray, London, 1843
- The first known English travelers guide to the Lower Nile
Basin
1850-1900
- Lake Regions of Central Equatorial Africa, with Notices of
The Lunar Mountains and the Sources of the White Nile; being The
Results of an Expedition Undertaken under the Patronage of Her
Majesty's Government and the Royal Geographical Society of London,
In the Years 1857-1859, Sir
Richard Burton. W. Clowes , London; 1860
- Sir Richard Burton's presentation of his expedition with
John Speke. Ultimately, Burton's view of
the sources of the Nile failed and Speke's prevailed
- Travels, researches, and missionary labours, during
eighteen years' residence in eastern Africa. Together with
journeys to Jagga, Usambara, Ukambani, Shoa, Abessinia, and
Khartum; and a coasting voyage from Mombaz to Cape Delgado.
With an appendix respecting the snow-capped mountains of
eastern Africa; the sources of the Nile; the languages and
literature of Abessinia And eastern Africa, etc.etc., Rev Dr. J. Krapf, Trubner and Co, London; 1860;
Tickner & Fields, Boston; 1860
- Krapf
went to East Africa in the service of the English Church Missionary
Society, arriving at Mombasa
, Kenya
in 1844
and staying in East Africa until 1853. While stationed there
he was the first to report the existence of Lake Baringo
and a sighting of the snow-clad Kilimanjaro
. Krapf, during his travels, collected
information from the Arab traders operating inland from the coast.
From the traders Krapf and his companions learned of great lakes
and snow-capped mountains, which Krapf claimed to have seen for
himself, much to the ridicule of English explorers who could not
believe the idea of snow on the equator. However, Krapf was correct
and had seen Mounts Kilimanjaro and Kenya, the first European to do
so.
- Egypt, Soudan and Central Africa: With Explorations From
Khartoum on the White Nile to the Regions of the Equator, Being
Sketches from Sixteen Years' Travel, John Petherick. William Blackwood, Edinburgh;
1861
- Petherick was a well known Welsh traveler in East Central
Africa where he had adopted the profession of mining engineer. This
work describes sixteen years of his travel throughout Africa.
In 1845
he entered the service of Mehemet Ali, and was employed in
examining Upper Egypt, Nubia, the Red Sea
coast and Kordofan in an
unsuccessful search for coal. In 1848 he left the Egyptian
service and established himself at El Obeid as a trader and was, at
the same time made British Consul for the Sudan. In 1853 he removed to
Khartoum
and became an ivory trader. He traveled
extensively in the Bahr-el-Ghazal
region, then almost unknown, exploring the Jur, Yalo
and other
affluents of the Ghazal and in 1858 he
penetrated the Niam-Niam country.
Petherick's additions to the knowledge of natural history were
considerable, being responsible for the discovery of a number of
new species. In 1859 he returned to England where he became
acquainted with John Speke, then
arranging for an expedition to discover the source of the Nile.
While in England, Petherick married and published this account of
his travels. He got the idea to join Speke in his travels, and in
this volume is an actual subscription and list of subscribers to
raise money to send Petherick to join Speke. His subsequent
adventures as a consul in Africa were published in a later
work
- Journal of the Discovery of the Source of the Nile,
John Hanning Speke. Blackwood,
Edinburgh, 1863; Harper & Brothers, New York, 1864
- Speke had previously made an expedition with Sir Richard Burton
under the auspices of the Indian government, on which Speke was
convinced that he had discovered the source of the Nile. Burton,
however, disagreed and ridiculed Speke's account. Speke set off on
another expedition, recounted here, in the company of Captain
Grant. During the course of this expedition he not
only produced further evidence for his discoveries but also met up
with Sir Samuel Baker and provided him
with essential information which helped Baker in his discovery of
the Albert
Nyanza
. The importance of Speke's discoveries can
hardly be overestimated. In discovering the source reservoir of the
Nile he succeeded in solving the problem of all ages; he and Grant
were the first Europeans to cross Equatorial Eastern Africa and
gained for the world a knowledge of about of a portion of Eastern
Africa previously totally unknown
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