|
|
| A
Brief History of Kenya |
About
2.5 million years ago Homo habilis lived in the rich fertile rift valley.
By 50,000 BC Homo erectus had emerged and Stone age cultures spread over
this area. The forefathers of Homo sapiens became hunter gatherers. Cushitic-
speaking agro-pastoral people from the north, Ethiopia, and pastoral Nolites
followed from the Nile valley moved across during 3000 to 1500 BC.
Bantu speaking cattle herders and cultivators came from Sudan and West
Africa between 500 BC and 500 AD. By about 800 AD Omani-Arab traders operated
down the east African coast, under the Sultan of Zanzibar, and intermarried
with the Bantu creating the Swahili culture.
In the 16th and 17th Centuries the Portuguese gained control of coastal
trade, but Arab resistance saw their power restored
|
During
1780 and 1850 Britain, France Germany and America established trading
concessions with Zanzibar, but by 1895 Kenya had become a British protectorate.
During the late 1890s and early 1900s the Kenya- Uganda railway was built
and a white settler community was established.
When Kenya became a British colony in 1919, organized African political
activity developed. By 1944 KANU (Kenya African National Union) had formed,
and Jomo Kenyatta became KANU's President
in 1947. The Mau Mau uprising (1952-56) which resulted in over 10,00 deaths
led to Kenyatta becoming Prime Minister of an independent Kenya in 1963.
Jomo Kenyatta died in 1978 and was succeeded
by Daniel Arap Moi. Although other political parties were by now permitted,
Moi and Kanu were returned to power in 1992 and again in 1997, though
with substantial opposition. |
|
Kenya
Historical Timeline Courtesy
of National Museums of Kenya
|
|
4.1
million years before the present
|
Austrolopithicus
anamensis, considered one of the first upright walking humans,
inhabited the west of what is now called Lake Turkana.
|
|
3.5
million years before the present
|
Kenyanthropus
platyops lived in the area West of Lake Turkana; skeleton remains
found between 1998-1999 and stored at the National Museums of
Kenya.
|
|
200
A.D.
|
Bantu
migrants bring technology to the Coast of Kenya.
|
|
+700
A.D.
|
Arabs
who traded with the local people introduce Islam on the Coast
of East Africa.
|
|
+750
A.D.
|
Swahili
urban settlements spring up along the Kenyan Coast.
|
|
10-14th
Century
|
The
Nilotes, consisting of the Kalenjin, Maasai, Turkana, Iteso, and
Luo, moved from the West of Lake Turkana into Kenya.
|
|
13th
Century
|
Some
Bantu speakers split into two groups when moving into Central
Tanzania settling in between Mt. Kilimanjaro and the Indian Ocean.
The first group migrated north forming the Taveta, Dawida and
Akamba peoples. The second group moved along the coast into the
hilltops behind the coastline north becoming the Mijikenda. And
a third group moving westwards settled in the Kenya Highlands,
which became the Agikuyu, Aembu, Chuka, Tharaka, and the Ameru.
|
|
15th
Century
|
"Golden
Age" of Swahili Civilization
|
|
15th-17th
Century
|
The
Luos migrated from southern Sudan to Uganda and settled on the
shores of Lake Victoria. From there they began spreading along
the shores to Kisumu and Kano Plains.
|
|
1528
|
The
first Portuguese attack on Mombasa
|
|
1593
|
Fort
Jesus is built by the Portuguese in Mombasa
|
|
18th
Century
|
The
Maasai moved through the plains before settling in the Rift Valley
area.
|
|
1846
August 25th
|
Dr.
Ludwig Krapf, a German and missionary of the Church Missionary
Society of England, establishes the first Christian Mission of
Kenya among the Mijikenda on the coast.
|
|
1883
|
Joseph
Thomson is the first European explorer to pass through Maasai
country.
|
|
1887
|
Sir
William Mackinnon and the British East Africa Association accept
a concession of the Zanzibar sultan's territory for a 50-year
period.
|
|
1890
|
Waiyaki
Wa Hinga, a Kikuyu chief who ruled Dagoretti, signed a treaty
with Fredrick Lugard of the Imperial British East Africa Company.
Lugard settled in Dagoretti and began harassing the Kikuyu for
their women and food. In defiance to his demands they burnt down
Lugard's fortress. In 1892, the British administration kidnapped
Hinga and buried him alive along the coast of Kenya.
|
|
1894
|
British
government declares a protectorate over Kenya and Uganda, calling
it the The East Africa Protectorate and Sir Arthur Hardinge becomes
the first Commissioner.
|
|
1896-1897
|
The
British sends military expeditions against the Kikuyu and the
Kamba to assert authority.
|
|
Late
19th Century
|
Koitalel
Arap Samoei, a diviner and Nandi leader prophesied that a black
snake would tear through Nandi land spitting fire, which was seen
later as the railway line. For ten years he fought against the
builders of the railway line and train. Later, determined to continue
the railway line, the British created a trap and killed Samoei.
|
|
Early
20th Century
|
Mekatilili
Wa Menza resisted British attempts to eradicate Giriama traditional
culture through the destruction of kaya, sacred forest shrines
and places of worship. She led the Giriama people into a rebellion
against the British. Mekatilili was later captured and exiled
to Western Kenya.
|
|
1901
|
First
railway line completed from Mombasa to Kisumu on Lake Victoria.
|
|
1909
|
National
Museums of Kenya founded
|
|
1920
|
The
status of the East Africa Protectorate is changed to the Kenya
Colony and the coastal strip is named the Kenya Protectorate.
|
|
1921
|
The
first African political protest movement in Kenya against the
government began by the Young Kikuyu Association, led by Harry
Thuku.
|
|
1944
|
The
first African is included in legislative council of an East African
territory.
|
|
1947
|
In
preparation for efforts to gain freedom from the British rule,
members of the Kikuyu, Embu, Meru and Kamba took oaths of unity
and secrecy, thus the Mau Mau movement began.
|
|
1953
April 8th
|
Jomo
Kenyatta, born Kamau wa Ngengi, is charged with directing
the Mau Mau movement and sentenced to 7 years imprisonment.
|
|
1956
|
Dedan
Kimathi was arrested on February 18th for his role in the Mau
Mau uprising as a Field Marshall leading thousands of fighters
for the struggle of independence.
|
|
1959
|
Jomo
Kenyatta is released from prison.
|
|
1960
|
Africans
allowed to form their own nationwide political parties. African
leaders met in Kambu and created The Kenya African National Union
(KANU), led by J.S. Gichuru, Oginga Odinga, Tom Mboya and later
joined by Jomo Kenyatta.
|
|
1963
June 1st
|
Kenya
achieved internal self-government, known as Madaraka (Freedom).
June 1st is Madaraka Day, now celebrated as Self Rule Day.
|
|
1963
December 12th
|
Kenya
becomes fully independent
|
|
1964
|
Kenya
becomes a Republic with Jomo Kenyatta as its first President and
Jaramogi Oginga Odinga as Vice President
|
|
1966
|
Vice
President Oginga Odinga forms a new opposition party, Kenya People's
Union (KPU) 1969 July
|
|
1969
July
|
Tom
Mboya, Minister of Economic Planning, and Development is assassinated.
|
|
1978
|
Jomo
Kenyatta dies.
|
|
1978
October
|
Daniel
arap Moi succeeds Kenyatta as Kenya's second President.
|
|
1992
|
Section
14 of the Constitution is repealed and Kenya holds its first multi-party
elections.
|
|
1994
|
Oginga
Odinga dies.
|
|
1997
|
Second
multi-party elections
|
|
| Historic
Highlights |
Bantu
and Masai Migrations
The Zenj States and the Portuguese
The Omani Dynasty
British Rule
The Kikuyu Revolt
IndependenceKenya is an ethnic and cultural melting pot. Its present population
is the result of incursions of differing groups over the past 1500 years.
Before ad 1000 East Africa was invaded by Nilotic clans from the north.
The invaders, called Hima, were aristocratic pastoralists who introduced
cattle herding and developed powerful kingdoms.
Bantu and Masai Migrations
Bantu invasions after the 14th century forced most of the Nilotes into
Uganda, where they established new kingdoms, or into Tanzania, where,
mixing with the Bantu, they became the Sukuma and Nyamwezi. In Kenya a
similar process absorbed the Nilotic Luo into basic Bantu culture. The
Bantu invaded Kenya by two routes. The Kamba and Kikuyu took the northerly
way from west of the great lakes area and settled in the highlands. A
more southerly route was followed by the Taita and other coastal Bantu.
Both of these groups were organized into clans, with no centralized social
or political institutions. No large, powerful Bantu kingdoms ever emerged
in Kenya. Even the Kikuyu, the most numerous of the Bantu groups, were
satisfied with the clan system. The soil in the uplands was fertile, and
agriculture flourished there. The Bantu, using the terrain of the Rift
Valley, particularly the valleys and hills of the highlands and the Aberdare
Mountains, defended themselves from later invaders without being forced
to alter fundamentally their political systems.
Still another group of invaders came to Kenya in the 17th century from
the region north of Lake Turkana (Lake Rudolf). These were the Nilo-Hamitic
Masai clans with their cattle herds. Scorning the uplands for the plains
of central and southern Kenya, they clashed with the Bantu only on the
frontiers. Their societies were also based on clans, and although the
warrior, or muran, was a dominant figure, the Masai never had large armies.
Like the Bantu, they presented few military problems to the Europeans
who divided up East Africa in the 19th century.
The Zenj States and the Portuguese
After the 11th century, the coastal areas were dominated by traders and
settlers from southern Arabia. They established the various Zenj city-states,
so called because in Arabic the country was known as the land of the Zenj,
or black people. The most important of these settlements in Kenya were
Malindi and Mombasa. The Muslim entrepreneurs were content to control
the interior trade, and their cities became important ports in the Indian
Ocean trade system. In time a composite Arabic-Bantu culture developed
along the coast, exemplified by the hybrid Swahili language, which became
the trading language of East Africa. Generally independent from one another,
the Zenj states were from time to time dominated by powerful non-African
maritime empires. One of these was the sultanate of Oman and Muscat, which
for centuries vied with the Europeans for supremacy along the coast. The
Portuguese, following Vasco da Gama's discovery of the sea route to India
in 1498, attempted to monopolize all Indian Ocean trade, and for more
than a century, despite native resistance, they dominated the Zenj states.
Fort Jesus, a massive 16th-century fortress in Mombasa, stands as a memorial
to their former power on the Kenya coast. After the Dutch and the English
wrested the trade from the Portuguese early in the 17th century, however,
the Zenj states regained their independence.
The Omani Dynasty
In the early 19th century Sultan Sayyid Said of Oman (reigned 1806-56)
conquered all the city-states north of Cape Delgado. Ruling over a commercial
empire, he did not try to dominate the interior Bantu clans, and he eventually
moved his capital to the island of Zanzibar in present-day Tanzania. The
clove plantations on Zanzibar and oil-palm groves at Mombasa, developed
by Said, needed a large labor force, and this need was met by the slave
trade. Controlled from Mombasa and Zanzibar, this trade extended into
Africa's interior as far as Zaire. Swahili slavers sometimes raided weak
Bantu clans, but they generally traded for slaves with the stronger African
states. The cruelty of the trade brought revived European interest in
Kenya. The British consul on Zanzibar took the lead in the anti-slave-trade
movement. In return for guarantees of continued protection, the sultan
by the 1850s had signed treaties limiting the scope of the trade. Finally,
in 1873, fearing that the British would support a European takeover of
his empire, Said's son, Barghash (reigned 1870-88), agreed to abolition.
|
British
Rule
The British consul from 1873 to 1886 was John Kirk (1832-1922), who advised
Sultan Barghash to raise an army and annex most of eastern Kenya and Tanzania.
Refusing this advice, the sultan was helpless in the face of European
territorial imperialism. German imperialists led the way, and their claims
were upheld at the Congress of Berlin. In 1886 the British recognized
the German sphere of influence over coastal Tanganyika (part of present-day
Tanzania), retaining the Kenya area for themselves. A further territorial
division took place in 1890. For a time British interests in Kenya were
maintained by the Imperial British East Africa Company, but in 1896 the
British Foreign Office assumed direct control primarily because of the
decision to build a railway from Mombasa to Lake Victoria. British annexation
was not seriously contested by any of the Bantu or Masai. In 1902 all
Kenya became a dependency under the Colonial Office. It became the British
base of operations in the protracted East African campaign against the
Germans during World War I. The type of government established in Kenya
was the crown colony system. The governor and the secretariat were appointed
from London. Most Africans, however, continued to be ruled in some fashion
by their own leaders under the general guidance of a British district
officer. Tribal lands were guaranteed, but all unoccupied territory became
crown land. Even before 1900 some white colonists had recognized the economic
value of the highlands and had begun to settle the fertile lands adjacent
to Nairobi. By the close of World War I more than 9000 Europeans were
in Kenya, and much of the highlands had been reserved for continual white
settlement. The government, claiming to be concerned with "native
paramountcy," actually favored the productive white minority. African
economics and politics were closely monitored at a time when the depression
of the 1930s and an expanding population showed the inadequacy of the
land reserved for the natives.
The Kikuyu Revolt
The Kikuyu, denied any major additions to their reserve and never reconciled
to the loss of their original lands, began an agitation after World War
II, which culminated in the Mau Mau uprising of the early 1950s. Although
the rebellion did not spread to the other native peoples, it cost the
lives of a few Europeans and thousands of Kikuyu, and the expenditure
of millions of dollars. By the end of the emergency, in 1956, the prosettler
policy was abandoned in favor of one similar to that being followed in
West Africa, leading to majority rule and independence. The only difficulty
in this period concerned Jomo Kenyatta, the Kikuyu leader, who had been
imprisoned for complicity in the Mau Mau uprising. The major Kenya political
party, the Kenya African National Union (KANU), refused to cooperate fully
until their leader was released. Once this was done (1961), full cooperation
ensured Kenya's independence, which was proclaimed on December 12, 1963.
Independence
Despite the fears of white settlers, African rule proved moderate, pro-Western,
and progressive. Although Kenya by 1965 was a functioning one-party state,
considerable freedom was permitted within the party, and the government
seldom misused its powers. Internal peace among the different tribes and
nations was maintained, and land redistribution calmed much of the clamor
of Kenya's traditional leaders. Kenya became a republic in 1964, and Kenyatta
was chosen its first president. He sought to maintain good relations with
Kenya's neighbors but did have some difficulties with Tanzania and with
the Ugandan regime of Idi Amin. The East African Community, an economic
union of the three countries established in 1967 and once considered a
promising start for political unification, was gradually phased out (although
in the early 1980s the community's former members considered reviving
it). Kenyatta's moderate, stable government attracted large foreign investments.
A new industrial area was established near Thika, and central Nairobi
was modernized. The tourist industry, based on Kenya's great national
wildlife reserves, continued to thrive. Kenyatta was recognized at the
time of his death in mid-1978 as Mzee, "the wise old one," not
only by his own people but by a wide array of world leaders.
Fears of possible civil war between Luo and Kikuyu groups when Kenyatta
died proved unfounded, and his successor, Daniel arap Moi, followed the
same moderate political and economic policies. However, in June 1982 he
made Kenya officially a one-party state. Two months later an attempt by
air force units to oust him was crushed by loyal troops. As the 1990s
began, Moi reacted to rising domestic opposition by jailing his leading
critics; in late 1991, however, he bowed to pressure from international
aid donors by legalizing opposition parties. Kenya's first multiparty
election in 26 years was held in December 1992. Moi won the election and
was sworn for his fourth term as president in January 1993. |
|