- William Winwood Reade
William Winwood Reade (1838 - 1875) was a British historian, explorer, and philosopher.
Born to a squire in
Perthshire , Reade took to writing at an early age, composing two novels by the age of 23. At this age he also decided to depart for Africa, arriving inGabon by steamboat in 1862. After several months of observinggorilla s and traveling down throughAngola , Reade returned home and published his first travel account, "Savage Africa". Despite what critics have called an often juvenile tone, the book is notable for its anthropological inquiries.In 1868, Reade secured the patronage of
London -based Gold Coast trader Andrew Swanzy to journey toWest Africa . After failing to get permission to enter theAshanti Confederacy , Reade set out north fromFreetown to explore the areas past theSolimana capital ofFalaba . Though Reade traveled over some unexplored territory, his findings excited little interest among geographers, due mostly to his failure to take accurate measurements of his journey; hissextant and other instruments had been left behind atPort Loko . On his return, Reade published his "African Sketch-Book" (1873), an account of his travels that also called for far greater British involvement in West Africa.His best-known work, however, is "The Martyrdom of Man" (1872), a secular history of the Western world. In it, Reade attempts to trace the development of Western civilization in terms analogous to those used in the natural sciences. He uses it to advance his philosophy, which was
secular humanism . He attacks traditional religion and morality. Reade was anatheist and asocial Darwinist and believed in survival of the fittest. He wanted to create a new civilization.Cecil Rhodes , an English-born South Africa politician and businessman, said that the book "made me what I am". The title of the book is well known to many who have not read it: inArthur Conan Doyle 's "The Sign of the Four ",Sherlock Holmes says toDr. Watson : "Let me recommend this book, -- one of the most remarkable ever penned."Reade returned to Africa in 1873 to serve as a correspondent in the
Ashanti War , but died not long after. He was buried inIpsden churchyard,Oxfordshire .References
*Hargreaves, J.D. "Winwood Reade and the Discovery of Africa." "African Affairs" 56.225 (Oct 1957): 306-316.
External links
* [http://www.exclassics.com/martyrdom/mrtintro.htm "The Martyrdom of Man" description and downloads]
* [http://www.socialaffairsunit.org.uk/blog/archives/000574.php Winwood Reade's "The Martyrdom of Man": The Boys' Book of All Knowledge?] Lincoln Allison, University of Warwick
* [http://www.oxforddnb.com/public/themes/94/94053-content.html Winwood Reade: The Literary Explorer] The active life: the explorer as biographical subject, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
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