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David Livingstone, Missionary Explorer
Elizabeth Isichei | posted 10/01/1997 12:00AM
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Early Life
1813 Livingstone born on March 19 in Blantyre, Scotland
1823 Starts work in cotton mill
1838 Accepted by London Missionary Society (LMS) for work in China
1839 Start of Opium War (which lasts until 1842) makes China missions impracticable
1840 Chance meeting with Robert Moffat in London persuades Livingstone to work in Africa; qualifies as doctor, ordained as minister, and sails for South Africa
1841 Reaches Cape Town; travels to Moffat's station in Kuruman
1845 Marries Mary Moffat First Journeys
1847-52 Founds several mission stations, ending with Kolobeng
1849 Trip to Lake Ngami with William Cotton Oswell earns him fame in Britain
1851 Reaches upper Zambezi River for the first time
1852 Mary takes children to England
1853-6 Crosses southern Africa from coast to coast
1856 Returns to England and receives a hero's welcome—and the gold medal from the Royal Geographic Society
1857 Publishes Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa; leaves the LMS Zambezi Expedition
1858 Zambezi Expedition sets sail; initial objectives abandoned by the end of the year
1859 Livingstone reaches Lake Nyasa
1862 Mary joins her husband on the Zambezi and dies almost immediately
1863 Zambezi Expedition and Universities Mission are recalled; Livingstone sails 2,500 miles to India to get a good price for his ship
1864 Son, Robert, dies of wounds fighting for the Union in the American Civil War days before he turns 19.
1865 Livingstone publishes Narrative of an Expedition to the Zambezi and its Tributaries Last Journey
1866-73 On his last journey, tries (unsuccessfully) to find the source of the Nile
1871 Meets Henry M. Stanley
May 1873 Dies near Lake Bangweulu (Zambia); African companions take his body to Bagamoyo on the coast, a nine-month journey, and then to England
1874 Buried in Westminster Abbey; The Last Journals published Other Events
1815 Napoleon defeated at Waterloo
Britain suppresses Boer uprising in Cape Town (South Africa)
1830 Joseph Smith founds Mormon church
1833 Britain passes Emancipation Act: all slaves in British colonies freed
1835 P.T. Barnum begins career with exhibition of "George Washington's nurse," whom he says is 160 years old
1839 First baseball game played in Cooperstown, N.Y.
1850 14 percent of U.S. population (23 million) are slaves
1853 Cecil Rhodes born
1858 English explorers Richard Burton and John Speke discover Lake Tanganyika and Lake Victoria Nyanza
1859 Darwin publishes Origin of Species
1861-65 American Civil War
1869 Suez Canal opened
Thousands of prospectors flood South Africa in search of gold and gems
1874 British gain control of Gold Coast (Ghana)
Elizabeth Isichei is professor of religious studies at the University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand. She is the author of The History of Christianity in Africa (SPCK and Eerdmans, 1995).
Copyright © 1997 by the author or Christianity Today International/Christian History magazine. Click here for reprint information on Christian History.
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