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A History of The Gambia

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About this book:

A History of The Gambia offers readers a sweeping narrative that traces the nation’s story from the earliest hunter‑gatherer communities along the river’s banks to the contemporary challenges of democracy, development, and regional cooperation. By following the Gambia River as the constant thread that has shaped settlement patterns, trade routes, and political boundaries, the book reveals how a slender sliver of land became a crossroads of empires, faiths, and cultures. Readers will gain insight into the ancient stone circles, the rise of Mandinka, Fula, Wolof, and Jola societies, and the ways iron working, agriculture, and oral traditions laid the foundations of a diverse cultural tapestry.

The work delves into the centuries‑long trans‑Saharan trade that brought salt, gold, and Islamic scholarship to the region, showing how Muslim scholars, Sufi brotherhoods, and Arabic literacy intertwined with indigenous beliefs and practices. It then charts the disruptive arrival of European powers, the grim era of the transatlantic slave trade, and the British colonial re‑orientation toward groundnut cultivation that reshaped the economy, labor systems, and social hierarchies. Through detailed chapters on colonial administration, indirect rule, and the emergence of an educated Aku elite, readers will understand how the colony’s dual structure—Colony and Protectorate—created lasting divides that echoed into the independence movement.

Post‑independence sections illuminate the peaceful transfer of power in 1965, the early democratic experiment under Dawda Jawara, and the nation’s reputation as “The Smiling Coast of Africa.” The book does not shy away from darker chapters, providing a thorough analysis of the 1994 military coup, Yahya Jammeh’s authoritarian rule, the systematic human rights abuses, and the eventual 2016 electoral upset that restored democracy. Readers will experience the tension of the constitutional crisis, the regional intervention by ECOWAS, and the hopeful yet complex transition under Adama Barrow, including the truth‑and‑reconciliation process and the ongoing efforts to rebuild institutions and the economy.

Finally, the volume looks forward, examining The Gambia’s vulnerabilities—its reliance on tourism, remittances, and agriculture, the pressures of youth unemployment and climate change—and the prospects offered by its diaspora, renewable energy potential, and a renewed role in advocating for human rights on the global stage. By the end, readers will have a comprehensive understanding of how geography, trade, colonialism, resistance, and resilient cultural traditions have combined to forge a nation that, despite its size, continues to punch above its weight in African and world affairs.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • The Gambia River has been the central geographic and economic force shaping the nation's history from ancient settlements to modern borders.
  • Trans-Saharan trade brought Islamic influence, literacy, and political structures that predated European contact and laid foundations for Senegambian societies.
  • British colonial rule created a groundnut monoculture economy and indirect rule, institutionalizing a divide between the Colony and the Protectorate that persisted into independence.
  • The Gambia achieved independence through peaceful constitutional reforms, maintaining a multiparty democracy until the 1994 coup ushered in two decades of authoritarian rule under Yahya Jammeh.
  • The 2016 election crisis, resolved by ECOWAS intervention, restored democracy under Adama Barrow and initiated a process of national reconciliation and institutional reform.
Who's It For:

This book is ideal for undergraduate and graduate students of African history, scholars researching West African postcolonial development, and general readers interested in the unique story of The Gambia’s geography, democracy, and resilience. It also serves policymakers and development practitioners seeking to understand the historical roots of the nation’s contemporary challenges and opportunities.

Author:

Edward Martinez

Published By:

Ephyia Publishing


Date Published:

May 25, 2026

Language:

English

Word Count:

53,981 words

Reading Time:

3 hours 47 minutes

Sample:

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