René-Auguste Caillié

French explorer
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Quick Facts
Born:
Nov. 19, 1799, Mauzé, near La Rochelle, France
Died:
c. 1838, La Badère

René-Auguste Caillié (born Nov. 19, 1799, Mauzé, near La Rochelle, France—died c. 1838, La Badère) was the first European to survive a journey to the West African city of Timbuktu (Tombouctou).

Before Caillié was 20 he had twice voyaged to Senegal and traveled through its interior. In 1824 he began to prepare for his journey to Timbuktu by learning Arabic and studying Islam. Posing as an Arab traveling to Egypt, he left the coast of West Africa in April 1827 and reached Timbuktu on April 20, 1828; his journey was interrupted along the way by five months of illness. He remained at his destination for about two weeks and then returned across the Sahara to France, via Morocco. His narrative of the trip, published in three volumes in 1830, was translated into English that same year. An account of his journey, The Unveiling of Timbuctoo: The Astounding Adventures of Caillié, by Galbraith Welch, appeared in 1938.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.