From Léopoldville to Kinshasa: How Our API Tracks 500 Years of African Border Changes
Africa's Borders Have Stories Every city in East and Central Africa carries layers of names. Kinshasa was Léopoldville. Kisangani was Stanleyville. Lubumbashi was Élisabethville. Before all of thos...

Source: DEV Community
Africa's Borders Have Stories Every city in East and Central Africa carries layers of names. Kinshasa was Léopoldville. Kisangani was Stanleyville. Lubumbashi was Élisabethville. Before all of those, they had indigenous names in Kikongo, Kiluba, and Lokele. These aren't just trivia — they're essential for anyone working with historical records, genealogy data, colonial-era documents, or research datasets that reference places by names that no longer exist on any map. I built Mipaka API to solve the modern problem of location dropdowns. But it's become something more: a timeline of how African administrative boundaries evolved through pre-colonial kingdoms, colonial occupation, and independence. 47 Eras Across 7 Countries Every country in Mipaka has a chain of historical eras — each with a name, date range, type (pre-colonial, colonial, independence, current), and notes: GET /api/v1/countries/CD/eras/ [ { "name": "Kingdom of Kongo", "era_type": "precolonial", "started": "~1390", "ended"