English edit

Etymology edit

Victorian nickname, referring to the fact that little was known in the West about the interior of the continent.

Proper noun edit

the Dark Continent

  1. (sometimes offensive, dated, informal) Africa.
    • 1879 March 12, The Sydney Morning Herald:
      De Lesseps, the engineer, has been visiting the Boy of Tunis, and trying to get his consent to the scheme for piercing tho isthmus of Zaber, and opening up communication with the interior of the Dark Continent by water.
    • 1903 November 10, The Advertiser Adelaide:
      Africa is still the Dark Continent, the land of the unknown, the remarkable.

Translations edit

References edit