Alexander Gordon Laing (born Dec. 27, 1793, Edinburgh, Scot.—died Sept. 26, 1826, near Timbuktu, Fulani empire [now Timbuktu, Mali]) was a Scottish explorer of western Africa and the first European known to have reached the ancient city of Timbuktu.
Serving with the British army in Sierra Leone (1822), Laing was sent among the Mande people of the region by the governor, Charles (later Sir Charles) M’Carthy, to attempt to develop trade in goods and to abolish that in slaves. He also visited the capital of the Susu people, Falaba, now in Sierra Leone. In 1823–24 Laing fought in the war between the British and the Asante empire and returned to England with the news of M’Carthy’s death in action.
His next mission was to visit Timbuktu and to explore the Niger River basin. In July 1825 he left the North African coast at Tripoli, Libya, on his journey across the Sahara. He reached Ghadāmis (Ghadames) in northern Fezzan, now in Libya, by September and then entered the vast country of the Tuareg. Before reaching Timbuktu on Aug. 18, 1826, he had to fight for his life and was severely wounded. He left Timbuktu on September 24 and was murdered two days later. The journal of his earlier explorations, Travels in the Timannee, Kooranko, and Soolima Countries in Western Africa, was published in 1825.