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  1. Speke and Grant now returned to England, where they arrived in June 1863 and were welcomed as genuine heroes. This did not last long in Speke's case however; disputes with Burton, who was relentless in his criticisms and a very compelling public speaker and gifted writer, left Speke's discoveries in less than an ideal light.

  2. Speke and Captain James Grant mapped a portion of Lake Victoria. In July 1862, Speke, unaccompanied by Grant, found the Nile's exit from the lake and named it Ripon Falls.

  3. Sep 11, 2024 · Speke’s conclusion about the lake as a Nile source was rejected by Burton and was disputed by many in England, but the Royal Geographical Society, which had sponsored the expedition, honoured Speke for his exploits. On a second expedition (1860), he and James Grant mapped a portion of Lake Victoria.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Apr 17, 2011 · Speke and Grant returned to England in the summer of 1863, certain that they had settled the question of the source of the Nile, and on 22.6.63 Speke delivered his narrative at a public meeting of the Royal Geographical Society.

    • Overview
    • Background
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    The nineteenth-century efforts to find the source of the Nile River, one of the great rivers in the world, can be seen both in the light of genuine scientific exploration and discovery and in the light of naked imperial expansionism. On the one hand, John Hanning Speke's discovery that Lake Victoriais the source of the Nile was the culmination of c...

    Our understanding of rivers and river systems has increased greatly in the last few decades. Satellite images have shown us more about the geography of the world's major rivers than we ever knew from land exploration. What we now understand is that the Nile River is not a single flowing body of water that snakes through hundreds of miles of terrain...

    Although the goals of the expedition were in part scientific, mention must be made of the expansionist agenda of the British colonial empire that financed and carried out the trip. The southern and central African expeditions of Livingstone, Speke, Burton, and others resulted in a frenetic race between European nations to colonize Africa and introd...

    Erlich, Haggai and Israel Gershoni, eds. The Nile: Histories, Cultures, Myths.Lynne Reinner Publications, 1999. Harrison, William. Burton and Speke. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1982. Nomachi, Kazuyoshi. The Nile.(Photographic book.) Odyssey Publications, 1998. Speke, John Hanning. Journey of the Discovery of theSource of the Nile River. New York:...

  5. Speke and Grant returned to England in 1863. Several questions regarding the flow of the Nile were still unanswered, but still the men were welcomed home as heroes. This caused the bitterness between Burton and Speke to flare up and Burton once again questioned Speke’s claims.

  6. Speke later returned to lead his own expedition, 1860-3, accompanied by James Grant. They confirmed that Lake Victoria is the chief reservoir of the Nile, Speke sending a celebrated telegram to London: “The Nile is settled.”

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