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When Europeans began imagining Africa beyond the Sahara, the continent they pictured was a dreamscape, a site for fantasies of the supernatural. Ranulf Higden, a Benedictine monk who mapped the world about 1350, claimed that Africa contained one-eyed people who used their feet to cover their heads. A geographer in the next century announced that the continent held people with one leg, three faces, and the heads of lions. In 1459, an Italian monk, Fra Mauro, declared Africa the home of the roc, a bird so large that it could carry an elephant through the air.[1]

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  1. ^ Hochschild, Adam (1998). King Leopold's ghost : a story of greed, terror, and heroism in Colonial Africa. Boston: Mariner Books. p. 6. ISBN 978-0-395-75924-0.