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Lake Victoria was first sighted by a European in 1858 when
the British explorer John Hanning Speke reached its southern shore
while on his journey with Richard Francis Burton to explore central
Africa and locate the Great Lakes. Believing he had found the source
of the Nile on seeing this vast expanse of open water for the first
time, Speke named the lake after Queen Victoria. Burton, who had
been recovering from illness at the time and resting further south
on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, was outraged that Speke claimed to
have proved his discovery to have been the true source of the Nile,
which Burton regarded as still unsettled. A very public quarrel
ensued, which not only sparked a great deal of intense debate within
the scientific community of the day, but much interest by other
explorers keen to either confirm or refute Speke's discovery.
The famous British explorer and missionary David
Livingstone failed
in his attempt to verify Speke's discovery, instead pushing too far
west and entering the River
Congo system
instead.[53] It
was ultimately the Welsh-American explorer Henry
Morton Stanley,
on an expedition funded by the New
York Herald newspaper,
who confirmed the truth of Speke's discovery, circumnavigating the
lake and reporting the great outflow at
Ripon Falls on
the lake's northern shore.
More
maps of lake Victoria |