The story of the Hungarian woman who discovered the source of the Nile

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30 million square kilometres. 1.3 billion people. The continent of the biggest desert, longest river and the world’s second longest lake. These are some well-known facts about Earth’s second biggest continent Africa. It has many natural wonders and many explorers led their expeditions on the continent, for example, the Hungarian Sámuel Teleki who was the first European who saw and named Lake Tauranga. Besides him, there were many others and not just men.

Lady Florence Baker (born as Flóra Sass) was born on August 6, 1841, or 1842 in Transylvania which at this period was the part of the Kingdom of Hungary. She was raised in a Hungarian noble family. According to some remained written sources she was born in Nagyenyed, which today is called Aiud and is located in Romania. She was the daughter of a Szekler nobleman who had estates and land in Transylvania.

Lady Florence Baker, Hungarian, woman, explorer, Africa
Lady Florence Baker in 1875 (Photo: Wikimedia Commons by Henry Maull)

During the Hungarian revolution of 1848-1849, her family and siblings were murdered by oláh countrymen. An Armenian family found the orphaned girl. Despite her early age she already spoke Hungarian, German, Romanian and Turkish. She was around fourteen when she and her family emigrated to Turkey but during their way to their new home she was lost and later sold as a slave in Vidin (Bulgaria).

The tradesman who bought Flóra wanted to sell her to the Pasha of Vidin, but she has been spotted by Samuel Baker – English explorer, naturalist, officer, and hunter – who bought the girl back and rescued her. Other sources write that Baker paid a significant amount of money to Flóra’s guardians to let her free.

Samuel Baker, Florence Baker, Hungarian, British, explorers, Africa
Samuel and Lady Florence Baker (Photo: Wikimedia Commons by Alphonse de Neuville)

Samuel Baker took the girl to Africa to take part in his expedition to find the source of the River Nile. They travelled up on the Nile to Gondokoro (South Sudan) where Samuel and the residents had a fallout, but luckily Florence could reach an agreement and saved the expedition. They could not continue their journey on water but foot.

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