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Dr. Livingstone, I Presume? Missionary Icon Turns 200

By Trevor Grundy, Religion News Service
Nicku / Shutterstock.com
David Livingstone - Picture from Meyers Lexicon books written in German language. Nicku / Shutterstock.com
Mar 19, 2013
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LONDON — When journalist Henry Morton Stanley found the world’s most famous missionary barely alive at the tiny village of Ujiji on the shores of Lake Tanganyika on Nov. 10, 1871, he gave the English language one of its most famous introductions: “Dr. Livingstone, I presume?”

As Britain marks David Livingstone’s 200th birthday on Tuesday, Christians are being reintroduced to one of the greatest missionaries and explorers of the 19th century. A new book, meanwhile, introduces a darker side to Livingstone’s globe-trotting career and the corrosive effect it had on his marriage.

That 1871 meeting in the heart of Africa is the stuff of legend.

In 1864, Livingstone — already one of the world’s most famous men because of his trek across Africa and the 1855 “discovery” of the Victoria Falls that straddles modern-day Zambia and Zimbabwe — mounted an expedition to discover the source of the Nile River.

As months stretched into years, nothing was heard from the famed explorer.

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David Livingstone - Picture from Meyers Lexicon books written in German language. Nicku / Shutterstock.com
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