Description

Book Synopsis
The Scramble for Africa in the 1880s showed European interest in Africa at its most intense and today evokes a picture of the great European powers engaged in a frantic struggle for supremacy and for control of Africa and its resources. Eve Pollecoff here tells the story of Otto Markus - 'Pioneer Merchant Trader' - who established his East African Trading Company in the wake of growing British interest in East Africa: especially Kenya and Uganda. The influence of Markus's company stretched from East Africa to Europe, and to the USA and Brazil, embracing skins and hides, domestic goods, agricultural produce and the Ford Motor Company agency. The company survived two world wars, waves of anti-Semitism in Europe, and pioneered staple crops for which Africa became famous, especially cotton and coffee. Pollecoff paints an impressive portrait of Otto Markus as a dynamic international entrepreneur, the focus of a large and traditional family, and, above all, the embodiment - perhaps unwittingly - of informal empire.

Table of Contents
Introduction Chapter 1 - Beginnings Chapter 2 - The Start of his Career Chapter 3 - And so to Africa Chapter 4 - First Up Country Trip Chapter 5 - First Journeys to Uganda Chapter 6 - Uganda Safaris and Discoveries Chapter 7 - The Trading Start 1904 to 1914 Chapter 8 - Personal Interlude Chapter 9 - Rudl’s 23 Month Congo Journey Chapter 10 - Final Pre 1914 War Developments Chapter 11 - The First World War Chapter 12 - Post War and Peace Chapter 13 - The Second East African Start Chapter 14 - Coffee Chapter 15 - The Inter War Years Chapter 16 - The Final Years Chapter 17 - Conclusion

Pioneer Merchant Trader: The Life and Times of

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    A Hardback by Eve A. Pollecoff

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      View other formats and editions of Pioneer Merchant Trader: The Life and Times of by Eve A. Pollecoff

      Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
      Publication Date: 13/12/2011
      ISBN13: 9781848859371, 978-1848859371
      ISBN10: 1848859376

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The Scramble for Africa in the 1880s showed European interest in Africa at its most intense and today evokes a picture of the great European powers engaged in a frantic struggle for supremacy and for control of Africa and its resources. Eve Pollecoff here tells the story of Otto Markus - 'Pioneer Merchant Trader' - who established his East African Trading Company in the wake of growing British interest in East Africa: especially Kenya and Uganda. The influence of Markus's company stretched from East Africa to Europe, and to the USA and Brazil, embracing skins and hides, domestic goods, agricultural produce and the Ford Motor Company agency. The company survived two world wars, waves of anti-Semitism in Europe, and pioneered staple crops for which Africa became famous, especially cotton and coffee. Pollecoff paints an impressive portrait of Otto Markus as a dynamic international entrepreneur, the focus of a large and traditional family, and, above all, the embodiment - perhaps unwittingly - of informal empire.

      Table of Contents
      Introduction Chapter 1 - Beginnings Chapter 2 - The Start of his Career Chapter 3 - And so to Africa Chapter 4 - First Up Country Trip Chapter 5 - First Journeys to Uganda Chapter 6 - Uganda Safaris and Discoveries Chapter 7 - The Trading Start 1904 to 1914 Chapter 8 - Personal Interlude Chapter 9 - Rudl’s 23 Month Congo Journey Chapter 10 - Final Pre 1914 War Developments Chapter 11 - The First World War Chapter 12 - Post War and Peace Chapter 13 - The Second East African Start Chapter 14 - Coffee Chapter 15 - The Inter War Years Chapter 16 - The Final Years Chapter 17 - Conclusion

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