Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T15:43:03.588Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Anglo-German Relations in Uganda, 1890–1892

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Extract

After recovery from his alarming accident at Bagamoyo at the end of 1889, Emin Pasha decided to enter the German service in East Africa. At the beginning of 1890 he was appointed the leader of an expedition into the interior of the continent. Part of Emin's instructions read as follows:

In accordance with instructions received by me from the Imperial Chancellor, and the arrangement made with Your Excellency, I have the honour to give you the following directions with regard to the mission undertaken by you:

(I) Your Excellency is to secure on behalf of Germany the territories situated south of and along the Victoria Nyanza Lake, from Kavirondo and the countries between Victoria Nyanza and Tanganyika up to the Muta Nzige and Albert Nyanza, so as to frustrate England's attempts at gaining an influence. I consider that the extension of the line from Kilimanjaro and the Kavirondo Bay to the north west, up to the frontier of the Congo State, constitutes the Anglo-German frontier. Any extension warranted by the circumstances of the sphere of influence just described would be regarded by me as redounding to Your Excellency's special merit.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1960

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

1 Schweitzer, George, Emin' Pasha—His Life and Work (Westminster, 1898), II, 41.Google Scholar

2 Schweitzer, , op. cit. 11, 48.Google Scholar

3 Schweitzer, , op. cit. 11, 57.Google Scholar

4 Peters, Carl, New Light on Dark Africa (London, 1891), 536–43.Google Scholar

5 Stuhlmann, Franz, Mit Emin Paseha ins Herz von Afrika (Berlin, 1894), 44, 45.Google Scholar

6 Schweitzer, , op. cit. 11, 61–63.Google Scholar

7 Schweitzer, , op. cit. 11, 97, 98.Google Scholar

8 Schweitzer, , op. cit. II, 138.Google Scholar

9 Stuhlmann, , op. cit. 107.Google Scholar

10 Schweitzer, , op. cit. 11, 145.Google Scholar

11 Stuhlmann, , op. cit. 136.Google Scholar

12 Stuhlmann, , op. cit. 142, 143 footnote.Google Scholar

13 Stuhlmann, , op. cit. 144.Google Scholar

14 Schweitzer, , op. cit. II, 134, 135; Stuhlmann, op. cit. 146, 147.Google Scholar

15 Stuhlmann, , op. cit. 147.Google Scholar

16 Stuhlmann, , op. cit. 147.Google Scholar

17 Tucker, A. R., Eighteen Years in Uganda and East Africa (London, 1911), 40.Google Scholar

18 Schweitzer, , op. cit. 11, 138.Google Scholar

19 Stuhlmann, , op. cit. 147.Google Scholar

20 Stuhlmann, , op. cit. 147, 148.Google Scholar

21 Stuhlmann, , op. cit. 149.Google Scholar

22 Margery Perham, Lugard; The Years of Adventure, 1858–1898 (London, 1956), 210.Google Scholar

23 Stuhlmann, , op. cit. 151, 152.Google Scholar

24 Lugard, F. D., The Rise of our East African Empire (London, 1893), 11, 31.Google Scholar

25 Stuhlmann, , op. cit. 151, 152.Google Scholar

26 Perham, , op. cit. 230, 231;Google ScholarPerham, Margery and Bull, Mary, The Diaries of Lord Lugard (London, 1959), 11, 39.Google Scholar

27 Perham, , op. cit. 231, 232; Perham and Bull, op. cit. 11, 39–46; Stuhlmann, op. cit. 157.Google Scholar

28 Stuhlmann, , op. cit. 161–3.Google Scholar

29 Stuhlmann, , op. cit. 163, 164.Google Scholar

30 Stuhlmann, , op. cit. 166.Google Scholar

31 Lugard, , op. cit. 11, 48, 49.Google Scholar

32 Lugard, , op. cit. 11, 122.Google Scholar A facsimile of the letter is reproduced in Lugard, The Rise of Our East African Empire, 11, 122. Emin was extremely short sighted and as in the case of other persons suffering from that defect of vision, his handwriting was extremely microscopic. The gaps in the reproduction of this letter are in the circumstances very difficult to decipher. From their context it is apparent that they do not materially affect the main purport of Emin's letter.

33 Schweitzer, , op. cit. 11, 155–7.Google Scholar

34 Schweitzer, , op. cit. 11, 130.Google Scholar

35 Schweitzer, , op. cit. 11, 153.Google Scholar

36 SirJackson, Frederick, Early Days in East Africa (London, 1930), 142, 143.Google Scholar

37 Schweitzer, , op. cit. 11, 106, 144.Google Scholar

38 Schweitzer, , op. cit. 11, ch. xxxiii.Google Scholar

39 Schweitzer, , op. cit. 11, 174.Google Scholar

40 Schweitzer, , op. cit. 11, 176.Google Scholar

41 Schweitzer, , op. cit. 11, chs. xxxiv, xxxv.Google Scholar

42 Stanley, H. M., In Darkest Africa (London, 1890), II, 456;Google ScholarSir Hertslet, E.The Map of Afrua by Treaty (3rd edn., London, 1909), II, 592.Google Scholar

43 Schweitzer, , op. cit. 11, 129.Google Scholar

44 Schweitzer, , op. cit. 11, 215.Google Scholar

45 Lugard, , op. cit. 11, 174, 175; Perham and Bull, op. cit. II, 260.Google Scholar

46 Schweitzer, , op. cit. 11, chs. XXXVI–XLI.Google Scholar

47 Lugard, , op. cit. 11, 412, 413.Google Scholar