Belgian Congo Indigenous Congolese Children, Workers, Colonists, and Ceremonial Display, During Prince Regent Charles Visit, 1900-1950
No Image
- 1900
1900. Belgian colonial Congo photo archive depicting European officials, Indigenous Congolese adults and children, public ceremony, domestic labor, and railway grounds between the early twentieth century and 1950. Belgium formally ruled the Congo from 1908 until June 30, 1960, after King Leopold II's Congo Free State became notorious for forced labor and violence against Congolese people. A few scenes highlight colonial hierarchy as one photo shows white men in suits, helmets, and uniforms pose formally in chairs while Congolese men, women, and children appear as attendants or anthropological subjects surrounding the trio. A 1947 inscription identifying "le régent Charles" places part of the group during the Belgian prince regent's postwar tour of the Congo, eight years before King Baudouin visited in 1955 and thirteen years before Congolese independence on June 30, 1960.
Photo archive of 12 silver gelatin photographs, ranging from 3" x 4" to 3.5" x 4.75", Belgian Congo, 1900-1950. French inscriptions include "Congo Belge, août 1950"; "le régent Charles 1947"; "lundi le 18 janvier 1943, avec notre meilleur bonjour de tous les trois"; and "travailleur portant à l'eau," meaning "worker carrying water." Other scenes show a uniformed colonial procession outside a brick building, helmeted men posed in the bush, an elephant captioned with French notes, Congolese children at a water spout, men carrying water, a compound walkway, a railway yard, and Congolese drummers and dancers assembled before mixed local and colonial audiences. The dichotomy of colonists occupying the pose of command, travel, inspection, and ownership, while Indigenous Congolese people appear in the surrounding labor, ceremony, and service spaces make for a compelling collection.
Belgian rule in the Congo depended on racial separation, administrative paternalism, extraction, mission education, and controlled public ceremony, while Congolese political demands intensified after the Second World War and culminated in independence on June 30, 1960. Light toning, handling, and corner wear; photos remain clear and several inscriptions legible en verso; overall in very good condition. This archive gives Belgian colonialism a concrete human scale through officials posed with indigenous children, workers, ceremonial performers, industrial railway spaces, and royal reception scenes arranged around the unequal encounter between European power and Indigenous Congolese life.
Photo archive of 12 silver gelatin photographs, ranging from 3" x 4" to 3.5" x 4.75", Belgian Congo, 1900-1950. French inscriptions include "Congo Belge, août 1950"; "le régent Charles 1947"; "lundi le 18 janvier 1943, avec notre meilleur bonjour de tous les trois"; and "travailleur portant à l'eau," meaning "worker carrying water." Other scenes show a uniformed colonial procession outside a brick building, helmeted men posed in the bush, an elephant captioned with French notes, Congolese children at a water spout, men carrying water, a compound walkway, a railway yard, and Congolese drummers and dancers assembled before mixed local and colonial audiences. The dichotomy of colonists occupying the pose of command, travel, inspection, and ownership, while Indigenous Congolese people appear in the surrounding labor, ceremony, and service spaces make for a compelling collection.
Belgian rule in the Congo depended on racial separation, administrative paternalism, extraction, mission education, and controlled public ceremony, while Congolese political demands intensified after the Second World War and culminated in independence on June 30, 1960. Light toning, handling, and corner wear; photos remain clear and several inscriptions legible en verso; overall in very good condition. This archive gives Belgian colonialism a concrete human scale through officials posed with indigenous children, workers, ceremonial performers, industrial railway spaces, and royal reception scenes arranged around the unequal encounter between European power and Indigenous Congolese life.
Details
Title
Belgian Congo Indigenous Congolese Children, Workers, Colonists, and Ceremonial Display, During Prince Regent Charles Visit, 1900-1950
Author
Belgian Congo
Condition
Unknown
Date
1900