history of eastern Africa
Learn about this topic in these articles:
British decolonization
- In 20th-century international relations: Great Britain and decolonization
>East Africa between 1961 and 1963, and Malaŵi and Northern Rhodesia (Zambia) in the south in 1964. White residents of Southern Rhodesia, however, declared their own independence in defiance of London and the UN. The Republic of South Africa and the surviving
Read More
British-German sphere of influence
- In sphere of influence
…of July 1, 1890, concerning East Africa, may be regarded as typical. Its text is as follows:
Read More
colonial powers partition
- In Western colonialism: The race for colonies in sub-Saharan Africa
The boundary lines in East Africa were arrived at largely in settlements between Britain and Germany, the two chief rivals in that region. Zanzibar and the future Tanganyika were divided in the Anglo-German treaty of 1890: Britain obtained the future Uganda and recognition of its paramount interest in Zanzibar…
Read More
World War I
- In World War I: The loss of the German colonies
The story of German East Africa (comprising present-day Rwanda, Burundi, and continental Tanzania) was very different, thanks to the quality of the local askaris (European-trained African troops) and to the military genius of the German commander Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck. A landing of troops from India was repelled with
Read More
World War II
- In World War II: East Africa
Wavell, the success of whose North African strategy had been sacrificed to Churchill’s recurrent fantasy of creating a Balkan front against Germany (Greece in 1941 was scarcely less disastrous for the British than the Dardanelles in 1915), nevertheless enjoyed one definitive triumph before…
Read More