Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-mlc7c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T13:49:05.611Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

13 - East Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Get access

Summary

By 1905, the British and the Germans had occupied several strategic points in East Africa. They were the latest of many intruders from overseas. The coast and the offshore islands had long shared in the commerce of the Indian Ocean. The expansion of trade in the nineteenth century quickened the flow of Arab immigrants and also prompted Indian traders to settle among the black, and mostly Muslim, Swahili-speakers of the East African littoral. The British government intervened in Zanzibar and up-country mainly to secure the western flank of its Indian empire: well into the twentieth century it continued to regard East Africa as an appendage to India. But both British and Germans also came to colonise the hinterland. The British had recently completed the Uganda Railway, which ran from Mombasa through scrub and desert to the temperate uplands south of Mount Kenya, across the great Rift Valley and down to the shores of Lake Victoria. The western part of this line skirted the populous countries of the Kikuyu and Luo, and lake steamers completed the link between the coast and the kingdom of Buganda. Here the scope of British initiative was constrained by an agreement reached in 1900 with a ruling elite already converted and educated by Christian missionaries. But either side of the Rift there were fertile and lightly occupied highlands which attracted white farmers, especially from South Africa, while British planters moved into western Uganda (the name used by the British for both Buganda and much of the surrounding territory). Meanwhile, German planters and farmers clustered round the hills of Uluguru and Usambara, and the lower slopes of Kilimanjaro.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1986

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Anderson, D.The colonial state and soil conservation in East Africa during the 1930s’, African Affairs, 1984, 83, no. 332.Google Scholar
Austen, R. A. Northwest Tanzania under German and British rule 1889–1939. New Haven, 1968.
Bald, D. Deutsch-Ostafrika 1900–1914. Munich, 1970.
Bald, D. and , G. Das Forschungsinstitut AMANI. Wirtschaft und Wissenschaft in der deutschen Kolonialpolitik. Munich, 1972.
Barber, J. Imperial frontier: a study of relations between the British and the pastoral tribes of north-east Uganda. Nairobi, 1968.
Baumhögger, G. Dominanz oder Kooperation. Die Entwicklung der regionalen Integration in Ostafrika. Hamburg, 1978.
Beck, A. A history of the British medical administration of East Africa, 1900–1950. Cambridge, Mass., 1970.
Bell, H. H. J. Glimpses of a governor's life, from diaries, letters and memoranda. London, 1946.
Bennett, N. R. A history of the Arab state of Zanzibar. London, 1978.
Bennett, N. R. The Arab state of Zanzibar: a bibliography. Boston, 1984.
Berman, B. J. and Lonsdale, J. M.Crises of accumulation, coercion and the colonial state: the development of the labour control system in Kenya, 1919–1929’, Canadian journal of African Studies, 1980, 14, 1.Google Scholar
Blixen, Karen, lsak Dinesen: letters from Africa 1914–1931. ed. Lasson, F.. London, 1981.
Boell, L. Die Operationen in Ostafrika. Hamburg, 1951.
Brantley, Cynthia. The Giriama and colonial resistance in Kenya, 1800–1920. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London, 1981.
Brett, E. A. Colonialism and underdevelopment in East Africa: the politics of economic change, 1919–39. London, 1973.
Brumfit, Ann. ‘The rise and development of a language policy in German East Africa’, Sprache und Geschichte in Afrika, 1980, 2.Google Scholar
Bujra, J. M.Women “entrepreneurs” of early Nairobi’, Canadian Journal of African Studies, 1975, 9, 2.Google Scholar
Byern, G.. Shamba, Mpori und Bahari, Ostafrikaniscbe Momentbilder. Leipzig, 1916.
Carman, J. A. A medical history of the colony and protectorate of Kenya: a personal memoir. London, 1976.
Carnegie, V. M. A Kenyan farm diary. Edinburgh and London, 1930.
Cell, John W. ed. and intr. By Kenya possessed: the correspondence of Norman Leys and J. H. Oldham, 1918–1926. Chicago and London, 1976.
Chretien, J.-P.La Révoke de Ndungutse (1912). Forces traditionelles et pression coloniale au Rwanda allemand’, Revue française d'histoire d'outremer, 1972, 59, no. 217.Google Scholar
Clayton, A. and Savage, D. C. Government and labour in Kenya 1895–1963. London, 1974.
Coldham, S.Colonial policy and the Highlands of Kenya, 1934–1944’, Journal of African Law, 1979, 23, 1.Google Scholar
Cook, A. R. Uganda memories 1897–1940. Kampala, 1945.
Cooper, F. From slaves to squatters: plantation labor and agriculture in Zanzibar and coastal Kenya, 1890–1925. New Haven, 1980.
Coray, M. S.The Kenya Land Commission and the Kikuyu of Kiambu’, Agricultural History (Washington), 1978, 52, 1.Google Scholar
Doornbos, M. Not all the king's men. Inequality as apolitical instrument in Ankole, Uganda. The Hague, 1978.
Dunbar, A. R. A history of Bunyoro-Kitara. Nairobi, 1965.
Dundas, C. African crossroads. London, 1955.
East African Standard. The East African red book, 1925–26. Nairobi and Mombasa, 1925.
Ehrlich, C.The Uganda economy, 1903–1945’, in Harlow, and Chilver, , History of East Africa.
Ellis, D.The Nandi protest of 1923 in the context of African resistance to colonial rule in Kenya’, Journal of African History, 1976, 17, 4.Google Scholar
Fearn, H.The gold-mining era in Kenya colony’, Journal ofTropical Geography, 1958, 11.Google Scholar
Fearn, H. An African economy. A study of the economic development of the Nyanqa Province of Kenya 1903–1953. London, 1961.
Frontera, A. E. Persistence and change: a history of Taveta. Waltham, Mass., 1978.
Furley, O. W. and Watson, T. A history of education in East Africa. New York, 1978.
Ghai, Y. and McAuslan, J. P. W. B. Public law and political change in Kenya. London, 1970.
Goldthorpe, J. E. An African elite: Makerere College students 1922–1960. Nairobi, 1965.
Gorman, T. P.The development of language policy in Kenya, with particular reference to the educational system’, in Whiteley, W. H. ed. Language in Kenya. Nairobi, 1974.Google Scholar
Gotzen, G. A. Graf. Deutsch-Ostafrika im Aufstand 1905–06. Berlin, 1909.
Gregory, R. G. Sidney Webb and East Africa. Berkeley, 1962.
Gregory, R. G. India and East Africa: a history of race relations within the British Empire, 1890–1939. Oxford, 1971.
Gregory, R. G., Maxon, R. and Spencer, L. A guide to the Kenya National Archives. Syracuse, 1968.
Gulliver, P. H. ed. Tradition and transition in East Africa. London, 1969.
Gutkind, P. C. W. The royal capital of Buganda. The Hague, 1963.
Gwassa, G. C. K. and Iliffe, J. eds. Records of the Maji Maji rising, part 1. Nairobi, 1968.
Hailcy, Lord. An African survey. A study of problems arising in Africa south of the Sahara. London, 1938.
Hailey, Lord. Native administration in the British African territories. Part 1. East Africa: Uganda, Kenya, Tanganyika. London, 1950.
Harlow, V. and Chilver, E. M. eds. History of East Africa, vol. 11. Oxford, 1965.
Hay, M. J.Luo women and economic change during the colonial period’, in Hafkin, N. J. and Bay, E. G. eds. Women in Africa. Stanford, 1976.Google Scholar
Heussler, R. British Tanganyika: an essay and documents on district administration. Durham, NC, 1971.
Hill, M. F. Permanent way, vol. I. The story of the Kenya and Uganda railway. Nairobi, 1949; vol. 11. The story of the Tanganyika railways. Nairobi, 1957.
Hodges, G. W. T.African manpower statistics for the British forces in East Africa, 1914–1918’, Journal of African History, 1978, 19, 1.Google Scholar
Hordern, C. and Stacke, F. M. Military operations: East Africa, vol. 1. (1914–1916). London, 1941.
Huxley, Elspeth and Curtis, Arnold. Pioneers' Scrapbook. Reminiscences of Kenya 1890 to 1968. London, 1980.
Huxley, Elspeth. White man's country: Lord Delamere and the making of Kenya. London, 1935.
Huxley, Elspeth. ed. Nellie: Letters from Africa. London, 1980.
Huxley, Julian S. Africa view. London, 1931.
Iliffe, J. Tanganyika under German rule, 1905–1912. Cambridge, 1969.
Iliffe, J. ed. Modern Tanzanians. Nairobi, 1973.
Iliffe, J. ed. A modern history of Tanganyika. Cambridge, 1979.
Ingham, K. The kingdom of Toro in Uganda. London, 1975.
Jamal, V.Asians in Uganda, 1880–1972: inequality and expulsion’, Economic History Review.
Kaniki, M. and Gwassa, G. C. K. eds. Tanzania under colonial rule. London, 1979.
Kayamba, M.The story of Martin Kayamba Mdumi, MBE’, in Perham, M. ed. Ten Africans. London, 1936. Reprinted 1963.Google Scholar
Kindy, H. Life and politics in Mombasa. Nairobi, 1972.
King, A.The Yakan cult arid Lugbara response to colonial rule’, Azania, 1970, 5.Google Scholar
King, Kenneth J. Pan-Africanism and education. A study of race philanthropy and education in the southern states of America and East Africa. Oxford, 1971.
King, Kenneth J.The Kenya Maasai and the protest phenomenon, 1900–1960’, Journal of African History, 1971, 12, 1.Google Scholar
King, Kenneth J. and Salim, A. eds. Kenya historical biographies. Nairobi, 1971.
Kipkorir, B. E. ed. Biographical essays on imperialism and collaboration in colonial Kenya. Nairobi, 1980.
Kitching, Gavin. Class and economic change in Kenya: the making of an African petite-bourgeoisie 1905–1970. New Haven, 1980.
Kjekshus, H. Ecology control and economic development in Hast African history: the case of Tanganyika 1850–1950. London, 1977.
Kootz-Kretschmer, E. Die Safwa. Berlin, 1926–1929. 3 vols.
Lamphear, J.Aspects of Turkana leadership during the era of primary resistance’, journal of African History, 1976, 17, 2.Google Scholar
Lettow-Vorbeck, P.. My reminiscences of East Africa. London, n.d. [1920].
Leubuscher, C. Tanganyika Territory: a study of economic policy under mandate. London, 1944.
Leys, N. Kenya. London, 1924.
Liebenow, J. G. Colonial rule and political development in Tanzania: the case of Makonde. Evanston, 1971.
Lofchie, M. Zanzibar: background to revolution. Princeton, 1965.
Lonsdale, J. M.Some origins of nationalism in East Africa’, Journal of African History, 1968, 9, 1.Google Scholar
Lonsdale, J. M. and Berman, B.Coping with the contradictions: the development of the colonial state in Kenya, 1895–1914’, Journal of African History, 1979, 20, 4.Google Scholar
Louis, W. Roger. Ruanda-Urundi, 1884–1919. Oxford, 1963.
Low, D. A. and Smith, Alison. eds. History of East Africa, vol. III. Oxford, 1976.
Low, D. A. The mind of Buganda: documents of the modern history of an African kingdom. London, 1971.
Low, D. A. and Pratt, R. C. Buganda and British over-rule, 1900–1955. London, 1960.
Lugan, B.Le Commerce de traite au Rwanda sous le régime allemand (1896–1916)’, Canadian Journal of African Studies, 1977, 11, 2.Google Scholar
Lumley, E. K. Forgotten mandate: a British district officer in Tanganyika. Hamden, Conn., 1976.
Lury, D. A.African population estimates: back projections of recent census results’, Economic and Statistical Review, 1965, 16.Google Scholar
Macmillan, Allister. Eastern Africa and Rhodesia. London, 1930.
Mamdani, M. Politics and class formation in Uganda. New York and London, 1976.
Mangat, J. S. A history of the Asians in East Africa, c. 1886–1945. Oxford, 1969.
McCarthy, D. M. P. Colonial bureaucracy and creating underdevelopment: Tanganyika 1919–1940. Ames, Iowa, 1982.
McGregor, G. P. King‘s College, Budo: the first sixty years. Nairobi, 1967.
Meinertzhagen, R. Army diary 1899–1926. Edinburgh and London, 1960.
Methner, W. Unter drei Gouverneuren [Götzen-Rechenberg-Schnee], Breslau, 1938.
Mitchell, P. African afterthoughts. London, 1954.
Moffett, J. P. ed. Tanganyika: a review 0f its resources and their development. Dar es Salaam, 1955. ed. Handbook of Tanganyika. 2nd ed. Dar es Salaam, 1958.
Morris, H. F. and Read, J. S. Indirect rule and the search for justice. Essays in East African legal history. Oxford, 1972.
Morris, H. F.Sir Philip Mitchell and “protected rule” in Buganda’, Journal of African History, 1972, 13, 2.Google Scholar
Morris, H. F. and Read, J. S. Uganda: the development of its laws and constitution. London, 1966.
Morris-Hale, W. British administration in Tanganyika from 1920 to 1945, with special reference to the preparation of Africans for administrative positions. Geneva, 1969.
Mosley, L. Duel for Kilimanjaro. London, 1963.
Mosley, P. The settler economies. Studies in the economic history of Kenya and Southern Rhodesia, 1900–1963. Cambridge, 1983.
Motani, N. A. On His Majesty's Service in Uganda: the origins of Uganda's African civil service, 1912–1940. Syracuse, NY, 1977.
Motani, N. A.Makerere College, 1922–1940: a study in colonial rule and educational retardation’, African Affairs, 1979, 78, no. 312.Google Scholar
Moyse-Bartlett, H. The King's African Rifles. Aldershot, 1957.
Mungeam, G. H. British rule in Kenya 1895–1912. Oxford, 1966.
Mungeam, G. H. Kenya: select historical documents 1884–1923. Nairobi, 1978.
Munro, J. F.British rubber companies in East Africa before the First World War’, journal of African History, 1983, 24, 3.Google Scholar
Munro, J. F. Colonial rule and the Kamba. Oxford, 1975.
Murray, N. U.Archdeacon W. E. Owen: missionary as propagandist’, International journal of African Historical Studies, 1982, 15, 4.Google Scholar
Nayenga, P. F. B.Chiefs and the “land question” in Busoga district, Uganda, 1895–1936’, International Journal of African Historical Studies, 1979, 12, 2.Google Scholar
Nayenga, P. F. B.Commercial cotton growing in Busoga District, Uganda, 1905–23’, African Economic History, 1981, 10.Google Scholar
Newman, J. R. The Ukamba Members Association. Nairobi, 1974.
Oded, A.The Bayudaya of Uganda: a portrait of an African Jewish community’, Journal of Religion in Africa, 1974,6.
Ogot, B. A. ed. War and society in Africa. London, 1972.
Ogot, B. A. ed. Hadith. Nairobi, 1971–2, 1975–6, 1979.
Ojuka, A. and Ochieng', W. eds. Politics and leadership in Africa. Nairobi, 1975.
Perham, M. East African journey. Kenya and Tanganyika 1929–30. London, 1976.
Pipping-Van Hulten, I. An episode of colonial history: the German press in Tanzania 1901–1914. Uppsala, 1974.
Powesland, P. G. Economic policy and labour: a study in Uganda's economic history, ed. Elkan, W.. Kampala, 1957.
Priisse, A. Zwanzig Jahre Ansiedler in Deutsch-Ostafrika. Stuttgart, 1929.
Rai, K. Indians and British colonialism in East Africa, 1883–1939. Patna, 1979.
Ranger, T. O.African attempts to control education in East and Central Africa, 1900–1939’, Past and Present, 1965, 32.Google Scholar
Ranger, T. O. Dance and society in Eastern Africa, 1890–1970. The beni ngoma. London, 1975.
Ranger, T. O.Godly medicine: the ambiguities of medical mission in south-east Tanzania, 1900–1945’, Social Science and Medicine, 1981, 15B.Google Scholar
Richards, A. I. ed. Economic development and tribal change: a study of immigrant labour in Buganda. Cambridge, 1954. 2nd ed. Nairobi, 1973.
Roberts, A. D.The sub-imperialism of the Baganda’, Journal of African History, 1962, 3, 3.Google Scholar
Rogers, S. G.The Kilimanjaro Native Planters Association: administrative responses to Chagga initiatives in the 1920s’, Transafrican journal of History, 1974, 4.Google Scholar
Rosberg, C. G. and Nottingham, J. The myth of ‘Mau Mau’: nationalism in Kenya. New York, 1966.
Ross, W. McGregor. Kenya from within. London, 1927.
Ryckmans, P. Une page d'histoire coloniale. L'occupation allemande dans l'Urundi. Brussels, 1953.
Salim, A.I. The Swahili-speaking peoples of Kenya's coast 1895–1965. Nairobi, 1973.
Savage, D. C. and Munro, J. F.Carrier corps recruitment in the British East Africa Protectorate, 1914–1918’, Journal of African History, 1966, 7, 2.Google Scholar
Schilling, D. G.Local native councils and the politics of education in Kenya 1925–39’, International Journal of African Historical Studies, 1976, 9, 2.Google Scholar
Schnee, H. Deutsch-Ostafrika im Weltkrieg: wie wir lebten und kämpften. Leipzig, 1919.
Schnee, H. Als letzter Gouverneur in Deutsch-Ostafrika. Erinnerungen. Heidelberg, 1964.
Scotton, J. F.The first African press in East Africa: protest and nationalism in Uganda in the 1920s’, International Journal of African Historical Studies, 1973, 6, 2.Google Scholar
Shivji, I. G.Semi-proletarian labour and the use of penal sanctions in the labour law of colonial Tanganyika (1920–1938)’, in Sumner, C. ed. Crime, justice and underdevelopment. London, 1982.Google Scholar
Shorter, A. E. M. Chief ship in western Tanzania: a political history of the Kimhu. Oxford, 1972.
Simpson, Alyse. The land that never was. London, 1937.
Soff, H. G.Indian influence on Kenya's Nyanza Province, 1900–1925’, Journal of Indian History, 1968, 46, 3.Google Scholar
Soff, H. G.Sleeping sickness in the Lake Victoria region of British East Africa, 1900–1915’, African Historical Studies, 1969, 2, 2.Google Scholar
Sorrenson, M. P. K. Origins of European settlement in Kenya. Nairobi, 1968.
Spencer, I. R. G.The first assault on Indian ascendancy: Indian traders in the Kenya reserves, 1895–1929’, African Affairs, 1981, 80, no. 320.Google Scholar
Stahl, K. The metropolitan organisation of British colonial trade. London, 1951.
Stichter, Sharon. Migrant labour in Kenya: capitalism and African response, 1895–1975. London, 1981.
Strobel, Margaret. Muslim women in Mombasa, 1890–1975. New Haven, 1979.
Swainson, Nicola. The development of corporate capitalism in Kenya, 1918–1977. London, 1980.
Sweet, C. Louise. ‘Inventing crime: British colonial land policy in Tanganyika’, in Sumner, C. ed. Crime, justice and underdevelopment. London, 1982.Google Scholar
,Tanzania National Archives. Guide to the German records. 2 vols. Dar es Salaam and Marburg, 1973.
Taylor, T. F.The struggle for economic control of Uganda, 1919–1922: formulation of an economic policy’, International Journal of African Historical Studies, 1978, 11, 1.Google Scholar
Tetzlaff, R. Koloniale Entwicklung und Ausbeutung: Wirtschafts- und Sozialgeschichte Deutsch-Ostafrikas 1885–1914. Berlin, 1970.
Thomas, H. B. and Scott, R. Uganda. London, 1935.
Thomas, H. B. and Spencer, A. E. A History of Uganda land and surveys. Entebbe, 1938.
Thuku, H. Harry Thuku. An autobiography. Nairobi, 1970.
Tignor, R. L. The colonial transformation of Kenya. The Kamba, Kikuyu and Maasai from 1900 to 1939. Princeton, 1976.
Tosh, J.Small-scale resistance in Uganda: the Lango “Rising” at Adwari in 1919’, Azania, 1974.Google Scholar
Tosh, J. Clan leaders and colonial chiefs in Lango. Oxford, 1978.
Tosh, J.Lango agriculture during the early colonial period: land and labour in a cash-crop economy’, Journal of African History, 1978, 19, 3.Google Scholar
Tothill, J. D. ed. Agriculture in Uganda. Oxford, 1940.
Turton, E. R.The impact of Mohammad Abdille Hassan in the East African Protectorate’, Journal of African History, 1969, 10, 4.Google Scholar
Turton, E. R.The Isaq Somali diaspora and poll-tax agitation in Kenya, 1936–41’, African Affairs, 1974, 73, no. 292.Google Scholar
Turyahikayo-Rugema, B.The British imposition of colonial rule on Uganda: the Baganda agents in Kigezi (1908–1930)’, Transafrican Journal of History, 1976, 5, 1.Google Scholar
Twaddle, M. J.The Bakungu chiefs of Buganda under British colonial rule, 1900–1930’, Journal of African History, 1969, 10, 2.Google Scholar
Vail, D. J. A history of agricultural innovation and development in Teso District, Uganda. Syracuse, NY, 1972.
van Zwanenberg, R. M. A.History and theory of urban poverty in Nairobi: the problem of slum development’, Journal of Eastern African Research and Development, 1972, 2, 2.Google Scholar
van Zwanenberg, R. M. A. Colonial capitalism and labour in Kenya 1919–1939. Nairobi, 1975.
van Zwanenberg, R. M. A. with King, A. An economic history of Kenya and Uganda, 1800–1970. London, 1975.
Vincent, Joan. Teso in transformation. The political economy ojpeasant and class in eastern Africa. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London, 1982.
Webster, J. B. et al. A bibliography on Kenya. Syracuse, 1967.
Weigt, E.Die {Colonisation Kenias’, Mitteilungen der Gesellschaft fur Erdkunde zu Leipzig, 1930–1.Google Scholar
West, H. W. Land policy in Buganda. Cambridge, 1972.
Westcott, N. J.An East African radical: the life of Erica Fiah’, journal of African History, 1981, 22, 1.Google Scholar
Weule, K. Native life in East Africa, tr. Werner, A.. London, 1909.
White, Luise. ‘A colonial state and an African petty bourgeoisie: prostitution, property and class struggle in Nairobi, 1936–1940’, in Cooper, F. ed. Struggle for the city: migrant labor, capital and the state in urban Africa. Beverly Hills, 1983.Google Scholar
Whiteley, W. H. Swahili: the rise of a national language. London, 1969.
Wilson, Monica. For men and elders. Change in the relations of generations and of men and women among the Nyakyusa-Ngonde people 1875–1971. London, 1978.
Wolf, J. B.Asian and African recruitment in the Kenya police, 1920–1950’, International Journal of African Historical Studies, 1973, 6, 3.Google Scholar
Wrigley, C. C.Kenya: the patterns of economic life, 1902–1945’, in Harlow, and Chilver, , History of East Africa.
Wrigley, C. C. Crops and wealth in Uganda. Kampala, 1959.
Wylie, D.Confrontation over Kenya: the Colonial Office and its critics 1918–1940’, Journal of African History, 1977, 18, 3.Google Scholar
Yoshida, M.The protected development of European agriculture in Kenya before the Second World War’, East African Journal of Rural Development, 1969, 2, 2.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×