
audiobook
by Grégoire-Gaspard-Félix Coffinières de Nordeck
A vivid, first‑hand account takes you into the little‑known lands surrounding the Rio‑Nuñez, a broad river that empties into the Atlantic just north of Cape Verga. The narrator, a French naval lieutenant, sketches the geography—from hidden reefs and sandy channels to the hot, humid climate that shapes life along the waterway. He also maps the patchwork of villages and tribal groups, such as the Bagas, Landoemans, Naloes and Mandi‑Foré, whose customs differ markedly from those of mainland France.
Beyond the physical landscape, the work explores the region’s uneasy colonial legacy. It details how French authority has long been hands‑off, allowing local disputes to play out while European powers vie for influence, and it examines the shift from the historic slave trade to newer exchanges in textiles, iron goods and natural resources. Readers gain a nuanced portrait of a frontier where tradition, commerce and empire intersect, all told through the clear, observant voice of a seasoned explorer.
Full title
Het land der Bagas en de Rio-Nuñez De Aarde en haar Volken, 1887
Language
nl
Duration
~1 hours (67K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the PG Distributed Proofreaders Team
Release date
2005-06-23
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1811–1887
A French army officer, engineer, and writer, he lived through some of the most turbulent decades of 19th-century France and later wrote in his own defense after the fall of Metz. His life connects military service, public works, and the political upheavals of his time.
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