Survival and Repression of the Slave Trade from Gabon until Congo in 1840–1880

Volume Two

by Isaac Mampuya Samba


Formats

Softcover
$17.23
E-Book
$4.99
Softcover
$17.23

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 3/29/2018

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 186
ISBN : 9781546291039
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 186
ISBN : 9781546291022

About the Book

An author in the scale of a value as the years pass, not a descendant but rather a value perpetually rising and wanted in several countries, Isaac Mampuya Samba is a feather having a safe haven and value as gold. Such a revelation always on the internet, Isaac Mampuya Samba (IMS or IM) is becoming downright a brand factory (or, rather, a showcase) for the sale of or to sell all that we want (cell phones, iPhones, iPads, iOSs, smart connectors, jailbreaks, etc.) and the works of some other people who annoy not to display the reference of Isaac Mampuya Samba (IMS or IM). The proof? See the numerical current odds of his books published before to realize it by oneself. Here, we are so going to see that. The first men who tried to substitute the human flesh trader by exporting African products were found to be first the English and then the French. But it must be said that these abolitionists had great difficulty convincing the coastal tribes. The result was that this mutation (in the interests of economic liberalism)—the meeting of African societies where the traffic is providing the manufactured goods in exchange of the captives that were brought into the new world or the products of the African hunting and gathering—had many difficulties to achieve.


About the Author

Isaac MAMPUYA Samba (IsMaSa) was born in July 1952 in Kinshasa (at the Congo - Kinshasa [then: Belgian Congo and Kinshasa, the capital, formerly Leopoldville]). After his primary education in the Municipality of Ndjili, District 2 [Official school Ndjili-XII, in the same capital], Isaac MAMPUYA Samba dreamed already, already, already no matter what, to become much, much later in his career: “a writer”. Moreover, "a popular writer". It is therefore not dreamed of becoming any "writer" rather dreamed of becoming a "popular writer"!.