World War I ended with uprisings and revolutions in several European countries. Communists took advantage of these uprisings and tried to take control of those countries. They were successful in Russia, and also tried in Germany (where they did control parts like Bavaria briefly) and Hungary (where they took control for about five months).
Europeans possessed more advanced military technology.
In 1938, Italy invaded parts of Africa, in 1939, the nazis invaded Poland which sparked retaliation by many governments.
European explorers introduced livestock, grain, grapes, sugar cane, onions, turnips, coffee beans and many plants and animals found in Europe, parts of Africa and parts of Asia.
Countries in the present sense didn't exist in the parts of Africa that Ibn Batutta visited.
Some European countries would have controlled parts of Asia, but never all of it.
No European countries own a "colony" in Africa anymore. Spain does, however, own two small cities in North Africa (they are not colonies, they are parts of Spain). France and the United Kingdom own some islands off the coast of Africa, as well.
The British and Germa Claimed Certain Parts of East Africa
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Chimpanzees can be found in a few countries in Africa. These include Guinea, Cote d'Ivoire, parts of Nigeria, Cameroon, Gabon, Congo, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Central African Republic, parts of Sudan, and parts of Uganda.
Nigeria
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Among the European countries that established their own colonies in Africa were Great Britain, France, Germany, Belgium, Italy, Portugal, and Spain. While some countries (including France, Spain, and Portugal) had colonized parts of Africa as far back as the 1500s, the majority of the colonization by the European powers occurred in the mid-to late 1800s. To a certain extent, the Dutch were apart of this colonization as they formed a group of other Europeans who settled in what was South Africa. They were called Afrikaners.
The European Empire
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Germany.