a concession of the 10-miles strip of coast from the Umba river
in the south to Kipini in the north. The British association
further sought to extend its rights in the sphere reserved to
British influence by making treaties with the native chiefs behind
the coast strip, and for this purpose various expeditions
were sent into the interior. When they had obtained concessions
over the country for some 200 m. inland the associated
Formation
of British
East Africa.
capitalists applied to the British government for a
charter,
which
was granted on the 3rd of September
1888, and the association became the Imperial British
East Africa Company (see British East Africa).
The example set by the British company in obtaining a lease
of the coast strip between the British sphere of influence and the
sea was quickly followed by the German association, which, on
the 28th of April 1888, concluded an agreement with the sultan
Khalifa, who had succeeded his brother Bargash, by which the
association leased the strip of Zanzibar territory between the
German sphere and the sea. It was not, however, until August
that the German officials took over the administration, and their
want of tact and ignorance of native administration almost
immediately provoked a rebellion of so serious a character that
it was not suppressed until the imperial authorities had taken
the matter in hand. Shortly after its suppression the administration
was entrusted to an imperial officer, and the sultan’s rights
on the mainland strip were bought outright by Germany for
four millions of marks (£200,000).
Events of great importance had been happening, meanwhile,
in the country to the west and north of the British sphere of
influence. The British company had sent caravans into the
interior to survey the country, to make treaties with the native
chiefs and to report on the commercial and agricultural possibilities.
One of these had gone up the Tana river. But another
and a rival expedition was proceeding along the northern bank
of this same river. Karl Peters, whose energy cannot be denied,
whatever may be thought of his methods, set out with an armed
caravan up the Tana on the pretext of leading an expedition to
the relief of Emin Pasha, the governor of the equatorial province
of the Egyptian Sudan, then reported to be hemmed in by the
dervishes at Wadelai. His expedition was not sanctioned by the German
government, and the British naval commander had orders to
prevent his landing. But Peters succeeded in evading the
British vessels and proceeded up the river, planting German
flags and fighting the natives who opposed his progress.
Early in 1890 he reached Kavirondo, and there found letters
from Mwanga, king of Uganda, addressed to F. J. Jackson, the
leader of an expedition sent out by the British East AfricaUganda
secured by
Great
Britain.
Company, imploring the company’s representative to come
to his assistance and offering to accept the British
flag. To previous letters, less plainly couched. from the
king, Jackson had returned the answer that his instructions
were not to enter Uganda, but that he would do so in case of
need. The letters that fell into Peters’s hands were in
reply to those from Jackson. Peters did not hesitate to
open the letters, and on reading them he at once proceeded
to Uganda, where, with the assistance of the French Roman
Catholic priests, he succeeded in inducing Mwanga to sign
a loosely worded treaty intended to place him under German
protection. On hearing of this Jackson at once set out for
Uganda, but Peters did not wait for his arrival, leaving for the
south of Victoria Nyanza some days before Jackson arrived
at Mengo, Mwanga’s capital. As Mwanga would not agree to
Jackson’s proposals, Jackson returned to the coast, leaving a
representative at Mengo to protect the company’s interests.
Captain (afterwards Sir) F. D. Lugard, who had recently entered
the company’s employment, was at once ordered to proceed to
Uganda. But in the meantime an event of great importance
had taken place, the conclusion of the agreement between Great
Britain and Germany with reference to their different spheres of
influence in various parts of Africa.
The Anglo-German agreement of the 1st of July 1890 has
already been referred to and its importance insisted upon.
Here we have to deal with the provisions in reference to East
Africa. In return for the cession of Heligoland, Lord Salisbury
obtained from Germany the recognition of a British protectorate
over the dominions of the sultan of Zanzibar, including the
islands of Zanzibar and Pemba, but excluding the strip leased to
Germany, which was subsequently ceded absolutely to Germany.
Germany further agreed to withdraw the protectorate declared
over Witu and the adjoining coast up to Kismayu in favour of
Great Britain, and to recognize as within the British sphere of
influence the vast area bounded, on the south by the frontier
line laid down in the agreement of 1886, which was to be extended
along the first parallel of south latitude across Victoria Nyanza
to the frontiers of the Congo Free State, on the west by the
Congo Free State and the western watershed of the Nile, and on
the north by a line commencing on the coast at the north bank of
the mouth of the river Juba, then ascending that bank of the
river until it reached the territory at that time regarded as
reserved to the influence of Italy[1] in Gallaland and Abyssinia,
when it followed the frontier of the Italian sphere to the confines
of Egypt. To the south-west of the German sphere in East
Africa the boundary was formed by the eastern and northern
shore of Lake Nyasa, and round the western shore to the mouth
of the Songwe river, from which point it crossed the Nyasa-
Tanganyika plateau to the southern end of the last-named lake,Limits of
German
East
Africa
defined.
leaving the Stevenson Road on the British side
of
the
boundary. The effect of this treaty was to remove
all serious causes of dispute about territory between
Germany and Great Britain in East Africa. It rendered
quite valueless Peters’s treaty with Mwanga
and his promenade along the Tana; it freed Great Britain from
any fear of German competition to the northwards, and recognized
that her influence extended to the western limits of the
Nile valley. But, on the other hand, Great Britain had to relinquish
the ambition of connecting her sphere of influence in the
Nile valley with her possessions in Central and South Africa. On
this point Germany was quite obdurate; and, as already stated,
an attempt subsequently made (May 1894) to secure this object
by the lease of a strip of territory from the Congo Free State was
frustrated by German opposition.
Uganda having thus been assigned to the British sphere of influence by the only European power in a position to contest its possession with her, the subsequent history of that region, and of the country between the Victoria Nyanza and the coast, must be traced in the articles on British East Africa and Uganda, but it may be well briefly to record here the following facts:—The Imperial British East Africa Company, finding the burden of administration too heavy for its financial resources, and not receiving the assistance it felt itself entitled to receive from the imperial authorities, intimated that it would be compelled to withdraw at the end of the year 1892. Funds were raised to enable the company to continue its administration until the end of March 1893, and a strong public protest against evacuation compelled the government to determine in favour of the retention of the country. In January 1893 Sir Gerald Portal left the coast as a special commissioner to inquire into the “best means of dealing with the country, whether through Zanzibar or otherwise.” On the 31st of March the union jack was raised, and on the 29th of May a fresh treaty was concluded with King Mwanga placing his country under British protection. A formal protectorate was declared over Uganda proper on the 19th of June 1894, which was subsequently extended so as to include the countries westwards towards the Congo Free State, eastwards to the British East Africa protectorate and Abyssinia, and northwards to the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. The British East Africa protectorate was constituted in June 1895, when the Imperial British East Africa Company relinquished all its rights in exchange for a money payment, and the administration was assumed by the imperial authorities. On the 1st of April 1902 the eastern province of the Uganda protectorate was transferred to the British East Africa protectorate, which thus secured control of the whole length of the so-called Uganda
- ↑ At this period negotiations between Great Britain and Italy had begun but were not concluded.