e/Abir Congo Company

New Query

Information
has glosseng: The Abir Congo Company (founded as the Anglo-Belgian India Rubber Company (ABIR) and later known as the Compagnie du Congo Belge) was a company which harvested natural rubber in the Congo Free State, the private property of King Leopold II of Belgium. The company was founded with British and Belgian capital and was based in Belgium. By 1898 there was no longer any British shareholders and ABIR changed its name to the Abir Congo Company and changed its residence for tax purposes to the Free State. The company was granted a large concession in the north of the country and the rights to tax the inhabitants. This tax was taken in the form of rubber obtained from a relatively rare rubber vine. The collection system revolved around a series of trade posts along the two main rivers in the concession. Each post was commanded by a European agent and manned with armed sentries to enforce taxation and punish any rebels.
lexicalizationeng: Abir Congo Company
lexicalizationeng: Anglo-Belgian India Rubber Company
instance ofe/List of companies of Belgium
Media
media:imgABIR company posts.svg
media:imgABIR profit graph.JPG
media:imgCongo concessions.JPG
media:imgCongo leopold II cartoon.gif
media:imgELdelCongo.jpg
media:imgJohn Thomas North.jpeg
media:imgLeopold ii garter knight.jpg
media:imgLocationDRCongo.svg
media:imgPunch congo rubber cartoon.jpg
media:imgR Dorsey Mohun in Congo.JPG
media:imgRoger Casement.jpg

Query

Word: (case sensitive)
Language: (ISO 639-3 code, e.g. "eng" for English)


Lexvo © 2008-2024 Gerard de Melo.   Contact   Legal Information / Imprint