Although he had never set foot in Africa, Scottish poet and linguist John Leyden (1775 1811) decided to publish in 1799 this compilation on 'discoveries and settlements' there, drawing from the published works of explorers. His aim was 'to exhibit the progress of discoveries at this period in North and West Africa', giving descriptions of places such as Guinea, the Gold Coast, and Sierra Leone, as well as accounts of their people. He begins the work by discussing a meeting of the African Association on 9 June 1788, where a map depicted the interior of the continent as 'an extended blank'....
Although he had never set foot in Africa, Scottish poet and linguist John Leyden (1775 1811) decided to publish in 1799 this compilation on 'discoveri...