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Town and architecture in Congo, 1885-1940

The stationer's shop "Royale" of the portugese firm Nogueira & Co in Kinshasa

The collection of photographs of the Colonial Office provides valuable information about the development of architecture and urban development of colonial Congo. The Colonial Office was founded by Leopold II in 1907 as an economic documentation service that informed potential investors about Congo. The collection of photographs was probably donated to the RMCA in 1941. It contains a total of 7,233 photos. The collection is a major addition to the Colonial Office’s archive, which is stored in the Africa archive of the Belgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

The collections of photographs of the Colonial Office treat a variety of subjects. A limited series of photos is about ethnographic topics, such as villages, markets, so-called ‘indigenous types’, etc. Part of the collection consists of landscape photography with images of mountains, rivers and waterfalls and a remarkable series of ‘cloud formations’. The majority of the collection consists of photos documenting the infrastructure of the colonial project: railways, bridges, warehouses, townscapes and various buildings.

The infrastructure photos are usually arranged in typological series: houses, hospitals, schools, post offices, commercial buildings, work camps, but sometimes also by subject, such as ‘hygiene’, or by author. The collection contains an interesting photo reportage about Katanga in the 1910-1914 period, made by Edmond Leplae, the former director of the agricultural department of the Ministry of Colonies. What is also remarkable is the photographic report of doctor Duren about the medical infrastructure in Astrida, Boende and Bukama. Although the Colonial Office was an official documentation service, the collections also contain numerous images of missionary posts.

The Colonial Office developed into a vehicle of colonial propaganda as of 1933. It also played a major role in the organisation of departments on Belgian Congo at various world fairs. The Colonial Office became part of the Ministry of Colonies after World War II. However, it was shut down and replaced by new structures in 1947.

Bibliographical references

De Meulder, B. 2000. Kuvuande Mbote. Een eeuw architectuur en stedenbouw in Kongo. Antwerpen: Hautekiet/deSingel.

Lagae, J. 2001. 'In search of a “comme chez soi”. The ideal colonial house in Congo (1885-1960)'. In Vellut, J.-L. (ed.), Itinéraires croisés de la modernité au Congo Belge (1920-1950), Tervuren/ Parijs: CEDAF/L'Harmattan, Cahiers africains/Afrika studies 43-44 : 239-282.

Toulier, B. & Lagae, J. & Gemoets, M. 2010. Kinshasa. Architecture et paysage urbains. Images du Patrimoine 262, Somogy, Paris: Editions d’Art.