It's not unusual for cities to share names, but it happens less frequently with countries. Yet four nations — three of which are in Africa — use the word "Guinea" in their titles: Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Equatorial Guinea, and Papua New Guinea. How is it possible to have so many countries using the same word? It has to do with the colonization of Western Africa. The exact origin of the word "Guinea" is unknown, though some linguists believe the term comes from the Portuguese word "Guiné," which appeared around the mid-1400s to describe a region south of the Senegal River along Africa's western coast. A competing theory suggests that the name comes from Djenné, an ancient city in modern Mali that was an important stop along the trans-Saharan gold trading route; it's possible "Djenné" transformed into "Genawah," which was then used to describe all people in Western Africa. By the late 1880s, many European countries had laid claim to African land in a race historians call the "Scramble for Africa." Spain, France, and Portugal (among other powers) all shared control of the Guinea region in Western Africa; the area was divided, and land was generally identified by its controlling country. However, the names we know today wouldn't emerge until well into the 20th century, when each nation broke away from European control. French Guinea retained the name Guinea after gaining independence in 1958, Spanish Guinea became Equatorial Guinea in 1963, and Portuguese Guinea took on the name Guinea-Bissau (referencing its capital city Bissau) in 1974. As for Papua New Guinea, located thousands of miles to the east across the Indian Ocean, two explorers gave it its name. In 1526, Portuguese sailor Jorge de Meneses dubbed part of the island "ilhas dos Papuas," from the Malay word papuwah (referencing the islanders' curly hair), while Spanish explorer Yñigo Ortiz de Retez declared another portion New Guinea, believing its citizens resembled the people of Africa's Guinea coast. |
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