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Tanganyika Territory

Tanganyika was a colonial territory in East Africa which was administered by the United Kingdom in various guises from 1916 to 1961. It was initially administered under a military occupation regime. From 20 July 1922, it was formalised into a League of Nations mandate under British rule. From 1946, it was administered by the UK as a United Nations trust territory.

Tanganyika Territory
1916–1961
Coat of arms
League of Nations mandates in the Middle East and Africa, with no. 11 representing Tanganyika
StatusMandate of the United Kingdom
CapitalDar es Salaam
Common languagesEnglish (official)
Religion
Protestantism, Catholicism, Islam and others.
Monarch 
• 1916–1936
George V
• 1952–1961
Elizabeth II
Governor 
• 1916–1925
Horace Archer Byatt
• 1958–1961
Richard Turnbull
History 
• Anglo-Belgian invasion
1916
• Mandate created
20 July 1922
• Independence
9 December 1961
CurrencyEast African shilling
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part ofTanzania
Tanganyika stamp, 1925, with giraffe

Before World War I, Tanganyika formed part of the German colony of German East Africa. It was gradually occupied by forces from the British Empire and Belgian Congo during the East Africa Campaign, although German resistance continued until 1918. After this, the League of Nations formalised the UK's control of the area, who renamed it "Tanganyika". The UK held Tanganyika as a League of Nations mandate until the end of World War II after which it was held as a United Nations trust territory. In 1961, Tanganyika gained its independence from the UK as Tanganyika. It became a republic a year later. Tanganyika now forms part of the modern-day sovereign state of Tanzania.

Etymology

The name of the territory was taken from the large lake in its west. Henry Morton Stanley had found the name of "Tanganika", when he travelled to Ujiji in 1876. He wrote that the locals were not sure about its meaning and conjectured that it meant something like "the great lake spreading out like a plain", or "plain-like lake".[1]

The name was chosen by the British with the Treaty of Versailles, and as such the name took effect when Britain was given control of Tanganyika in 1920. Britain needed a new name to replace "Deutsch Ostafrika" or "German East Africa". Various names were considered, including "Smutsland" in honour of General Jan Smuts (denied for being "inelegant"), "Eburnea," "New Maryland," "Windsorland" after the British Royal Family's new family name, and "Victoria" after both the Lake and the Queen. The Colonial Secretary insisted that "a native name prominently associated with the territory" be selected. "Kilimanjaro", analogous to "Kenya," named after the country's highest mountain, and "Tabora", after the town and trading centre near the geographical centre of the country, were proposed and rejected. Then, the deputy undersecretary to the Colonial Secretary proposed "Tanganyika Protectorate" after Lake Tanganyika; the name was modified after a "junior official suggested that 'Territory' was more in accordance with the [League of Nations mandate]" and that was adopted.[2]

History

 
Map of Tanganyika Territory

The area that made up Tanganyika was commonly visited by Arabic traders who would come to the area to buy slaves and ivory. The island of Zanzibar was even taken as a part of the Sultanate of Oman, when Seyyid Said came to power in 1806, Omani interests in Tanzania began to increase. During the early 19th century, with British support, Oman began developing in the region more closely to prevent French growth in the Indian ocean and grow Oman’s wealth and influence.[3] Trade caravans began venturing further into the continent, connecting the coast and the interior together. In some areas, Islam became adopted by the native peoples such as the Yao in the south of the country. Islam has continued to be a major religion within the area, with 36% of Tanzanian population adhering to Islam.[4]

In the second half of the 19th century, European explorers and colonialists travelled through the African interior from Zanzibar. In 1885, the German Empire declared its intent to establish a protectorate in the area, named German East Africa (GEA), under the leadership of Carl Peters. When the Sultan of Zanzibar objected, German warships threatened to bombard his palace. Britain and Germany then agreed to divide the mainland into spheres of influence, and the Sultan was forced to acquiesce. The Germans brutally repressed the Maji Maji Rebellion of 1905. The German colonial administration instituted an educational programme for native Africans, including elementary, secondary, and vocational schools.[5][6][page needed]

The German colonial administrations developed the colony through several means. Cultivation of several profitable cash crops such as cotton, sisal, coco and coffee were important to developing the colony as these resources were used for German consumers and industry. Sisal, was especially valuable to rope production, and was one of German East Africa’s largest exports. In 1893 there was only one Sisal plantation in the country, by 1913 there were 54. At the end of 1913, the country exported over 20,000 tons of sisal, making up 30% of their total exports.[7] To ensure that these resources could be moved easily, several railways were built. The most important of which was the Central Line or Mittellandbahn, which connected much of the country towards the port city of Dar es Salam. This railroad is still in use today and has since been connected to other railways across the country.

After the defeat of Germany during World War I, GEA was divided among the victorious powers under the Treaty of Versailles. Apart from Ruanda-Urundi (assigned to Belgium) and the small Kionga Triangle (assigned to Portuguese Mozambique), the territory was transferred to British control. "Tanganyika" was adopted by the British as the name for its part of the former German East Africa.

In 1927, Tanganyika entered the Customs Union of the East Africa Protectorate and the Uganda Protectorate, which eventually became the independent countries of Kenya and Uganda, and the East African Postal Union, later the East African Posts and Telecommunications Administration. Cooperation expanded with those protectorates and, later, countries in a number of ways, leading to the establishment of the East African High Commission (1948–1961) and the East African Common Services Organisation (1961–1967), forerunners of the East African Community. The country held its first elections in 1958 and 1959. The following year it was granted internal self-government and fresh elections were held. Both elections were won by the Tanganyika African National Union (TANU), which led the country to independence in December 1961. The following year a presidential election was held, with TANU leader Julius Nyerere emerging victorious. In the mid-20th century, Tanganyika was the largest producer of beeswax in the world.[8]

The British state took control of the colony of Tanganyika as a result of the Treaty of Versailles. Once Britain took control of the colony, they wished it to be a "Black man's country". The British state wished for this colony to be similar to the Nigeria in terms of its state structure. And as the policy of colonial rule in Nigeria changed to indirect rule so too did the governance of Tanganyika. The British also pursued an anti-German policy which was led by the head official in Tanganyika, Sir Horace Bryatt. Bryatt was an unpopular politician, and his policies of expelling Germans halved Tanganyika's population. Many of the ex-German plantations were sold to European companies and mixed farms were given to new British owners. Much of Tanganyika's economy was based around cash crops, in particular Coffee.[9]

British rule did have positives for the Asian community living in Tanganyika, as they were protected by the Britain as they were no longer attacked as they were during the war. Many of them were employed from the Indian administration to work for the Tanganyikan administration. This led to the Asian population in Tanganyika increasing from 8,698 in 1912 to 25,144 in 1931.[9]

One of the major drivers for decolonisation in Tanganyika was TANU which was founded in 1954, led by Julius Nyerere.[10] In 1963, TANU opened its doors to all members of society within Tanganyika, whereas it had previously only been open to Africans.[11]

The success of TANU can be seen in the 1958 election under colonial rule where TANU candidates or TANU-supported candidates won every seat. The majority of the voters in Tanganyika were African, approximately two-thirds of the 28,500 registered voters,[11] with them coming from across the country.

There was some resistance, though, from the British settlers who established the United Tanganyikan Party (UTP) by Brian Willis in 1956. However, the party became redundant as it was clear that Nyerere and TANU were going to win the battle over Tanganyikan independence. UTP was less effective due to the £4,000 annual salary for Willis which limited the party’s effectiveness, as they lacked funds to campaign effectively.[12]

Tanganyika eventually gained its independence on 9 December 1961,[13] after Nyerere had met a British government representative to arrange the steps to be taken on the road to independence.[9]

Notable people

Tanganyikan independence

The British colony of Tanganyika gained independence on 9 December 1961, with Julius Nyerere becoming first, its prime minister in 1960 under British rule, and then president when Tanganyika was declared a republic in 1962. The main leader of the independence movement was undoubtedly Nyerere, who led the party TANU, which was a socially diverse group which had shared demands for independence from Britain.[14] TANU gained most of its political support through national issues. For example, TANU, discussed and promoted fears that the colonial state had attempted to give a disproportionate amount of power to the European and Asian minority groups living within Tanganyika. This would have undermined the entire basis of Tanganyika independence. TANU installed a deep-rooted fear within the African population that the colonialists might still rule or have influence, even after independence.[15]

Challenges after independence

Although independence came peacefully for Tanganyika, the country suffered from similar problems with many other post-colonial African countries such as poor financial resources and inadequate levels of infrastructure. However, two of the main factors that burdened Tanganyika’s independence was its geography and its surrounding neighbours. The destabilizing conflicts that bordered Tanganyika meant that refugees from the Congo, Burundi, and Rwanda often flooded into Tanganyika.[16] The influx of refugees was a huge issue for Tanganyika so soon after independence. These challenges only emphasized the insecurities of Tanganyika and its people. In addition, Nyerere's growing emphasis on modernisation and his African socialist ideology known as Ujamaa saw many rural farmers' livelihoods destroyed by encroaching agriculturalists. In 1964, after the Zanzibar Revolution which saw the Arab rule of Zanzibar overthrown, Tanganyika merged with Zanzibar to become the United Republic of Tanganyika and Zanzibar, which later became known as the United Republic of Tanzania on 26 April 1964.[17]

See also

References

  1. ^ Stanley, Henry M. (1878). Through the Dark continent, or, The sources of the Nile : around the great lakes of equatorial Africa and down the Livingstone River to the Atlantic Ocean, Volume II. Harold B. Lee Library. London : Sampson Low, Marston, Searle, Rivington. p. 16.
  2. ^ Iliffe, John (1979). A Modern History of Tanganyika. Cambridge University Press. p. 247. ISBN 9780521296113.
  3. ^ Kimambo, N. and Maddox, H. (2017) A New History of Tanzania. Oxford: Mkuki Na Nyota Publishers
  4. ^ (PDF). World Faiths Development Dialogue. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 April 2022. Retrieved 7 August 2022.
  5. ^ East, John William. "The German Administration in East Africa: A Select Annotated Bibliography of the German Colonial Administration in Tanganyika, Rwanda and Burundi from 1884 to 1918." [London? 1989] 294 leaves. 1 reel of microfilm (negative.) Thesis submitted for the fellowship of the Library Association, London, November 1987.
  6. ^ Farwell, Byron. The Great War in Africa, 1914–1918. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. 1989. ISBN 0-393-30564-3
  7. ^ Nganang, Alain Patrice., Klaus. Mühlhahn, and Nina. Berman, German Colonialism Revisited : African, Asian, and Oceanic Experiences (Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 2014) page 114
  8. ^ Gunther, J. (1955). Inside Africa. Harper. p. 409. ISBN 0836981979. Retrieved 7 August 2022.
  9. ^ a b c Iliffe, John (1979). A Modern History of Tanganyika. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 262–566. ISBN 9780521296113.[page range too broad]
  10. ^ Shivji, Issa (2015). Pan-Africanism or Pragmatism?: lessons of the Tanganyika-Zanzibar Union. Addis Ababa: Dar es Salaam. pp. 70–71. ISBN 9789987449996.
  11. ^ a b Bienen, Henry (2015). Tanzania: Party Transformation and Economic Development. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 51. ISBN 9780691000121.
  12. ^ Murphy, Phillip (1995). Party Politics ad Decolonization: The Conservative Party and British Colonial Policy in Tropical Africa 1951–1964. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 138–139. ISBN 9780198205050.
  13. ^ Institut Francais de recherche en Afrique (2015). Remembering Julius Nyerere in Tanzania: history, memory, legacy. Dar es Salaam: Mkuki Na Nyota. p. 35. ISBN 978-9987-753-47-5.
  14. ^ Leys, Colin (1962). "Tanganyika: The Realities of Independence". International Journal. 17 (3): 251–68. doi:10.2307/40198635. JSTOR 40198635. Retrieved 23 November 2021.
  15. ^ Bjerk, Paul (2015). Building a Peaceful Nation (1st ed.). Boydell & Brewer. p. Chapter 3, Paragraph 1.
  16. ^ Bjerk, Paul (2015). Building a Peaceful Nation. Boydell & Brewer. p. Chapter 3, Paragraph 6.
  17. ^ Ewald, Jonas (2013). Challenges for the Democratisation Process in Tanzania (1st ed.). Mkuki na Nyota Publishers. p. Chapter 4.3, Paragraph 15.

Further reading

  • Cana, Frank Richardson (1922). "Tanganyika Territory" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 32 (12th ed.). pp. 676–677.
  • Gordon-Brown, A. (editor), The East Africa Year Book and Guide, London, 1954, 87pps, with maps.
  • Hill, J.F.R., and Moffett, J.P., Tanganyika – a Review of its Resources and their Development, published by the Government of Tanganyika, 1955, 924pps, with many maps.
  • Iliffe, John (10 May 1979). A modern history of Tanganyika. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521296113.
  • Moffett, J.P., Handbook of Tanganyika, published by the Government of Tanganyika, 1958, 703pps, with maps.
  • Mwakikagile, Godfrey, Life in Tanganyika in The Fifties, New Africa Press, 2008, 428pps, with maps and photos.

External links

  • The British Empire – Tanganyika

Coordinates: 6°S 35°E / 6°S 35°E / -6; 35

tanganyika, territory, former, sovereign, state, tanganyika, 1961, 1964, tanganyika, colonial, territory, east, africa, which, administered, united, kingdom, various, guises, from, 1916, 1961, initially, administered, under, military, occupation, regime, from,. For the former sovereign state see Tanganyika 1961 1964 Tanganyika was a colonial territory in East Africa which was administered by the United Kingdom in various guises from 1916 to 1961 It was initially administered under a military occupation regime From 20 July 1922 it was formalised into a League of Nations mandate under British rule From 1946 it was administered by the UK as a United Nations trust territory Tanganyika Territory1916 1961Flag Coat of armsLeague of Nations mandates in the Middle East and Africa with no 11 representing TanganyikaStatusMandate of the United KingdomCapitalDar es SalaamCommon languagesEnglish official ReligionProtestantism Catholicism Islam and others Monarch 1916 1936George V 1952 1961Elizabeth IIGovernor 1916 1925Horace Archer Byatt 1958 1961Richard TurnbullHistory Anglo Belgian invasion1916 Mandate created20 July 1922 Independence9 December 1961CurrencyEast African shillingPreceded by Succeeded byGerman East Africa TanganyikaToday part ofTanzania Tanganyika stamp 1925 with giraffe Before World War I Tanganyika formed part of the German colony of German East Africa It was gradually occupied by forces from the British Empire and Belgian Congo during the East Africa Campaign although German resistance continued until 1918 After this the League of Nations formalised the UK s control of the area who renamed it Tanganyika The UK held Tanganyika as a League of Nations mandate until the end of World War II after which it was held as a United Nations trust territory In 1961 Tanganyika gained its independence from the UK as Tanganyika It became a republic a year later Tanganyika now forms part of the modern day sovereign state of Tanzania Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Notable people 2 2 Tanganyikan independence 2 3 Challenges after independence 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksEtymology EditThe name of the territory was taken from the large lake in its west Henry Morton Stanley had found the name of Tanganika when he travelled to Ujiji in 1876 He wrote that the locals were not sure about its meaning and conjectured that it meant something like the great lake spreading out like a plain or plain like lake 1 The name was chosen by the British with the Treaty of Versailles and as such the name took effect when Britain was given control of Tanganyika in 1920 Britain needed a new name to replace Deutsch Ostafrika or German East Africa Various names were considered including Smutsland in honour of General Jan Smuts denied for being inelegant Eburnea New Maryland Windsorland after the British Royal Family s new family name and Victoria after both the Lake and the Queen The Colonial Secretary insisted that a native name prominently associated with the territory be selected Kilimanjaro analogous to Kenya named after the country s highest mountain and Tabora after the town and trading centre near the geographical centre of the country were proposed and rejected Then the deputy undersecretary to the Colonial Secretary proposed Tanganyika Protectorate after Lake Tanganyika the name was modified after a junior official suggested that Territory was more in accordance with the League of Nations mandate and that was adopted 2 History EditMain article History of Tanzania Map of Tanganyika Territory The area that made up Tanganyika was commonly visited by Arabic traders who would come to the area to buy slaves and ivory The island of Zanzibar was even taken as a part of the Sultanate of Oman when Seyyid Said came to power in 1806 Omani interests in Tanzania began to increase During the early 19th century with British support Oman began developing in the region more closely to prevent French growth in the Indian ocean and grow Oman s wealth and influence 3 Trade caravans began venturing further into the continent connecting the coast and the interior together In some areas Islam became adopted by the native peoples such as the Yao in the south of the country Islam has continued to be a major religion within the area with 36 of Tanzanian population adhering to Islam 4 In the second half of the 19th century European explorers and colonialists travelled through the African interior from Zanzibar In 1885 the German Empire declared its intent to establish a protectorate in the area named German East Africa GEA under the leadership of Carl Peters When the Sultan of Zanzibar objected German warships threatened to bombard his palace Britain and Germany then agreed to divide the mainland into spheres of influence and the Sultan was forced to acquiesce The Germans brutally repressed the Maji Maji Rebellion of 1905 The German colonial administration instituted an educational programme for native Africans including elementary secondary and vocational schools 5 6 page needed The German colonial administrations developed the colony through several means Cultivation of several profitable cash crops such as cotton sisal coco and coffee were important to developing the colony as these resources were used for German consumers and industry Sisal was especially valuable to rope production and was one of German East Africa s largest exports In 1893 there was only one Sisal plantation in the country by 1913 there were 54 At the end of 1913 the country exported over 20 000 tons of sisal making up 30 of their total exports 7 To ensure that these resources could be moved easily several railways were built The most important of which was the Central Line or Mittellandbahn which connected much of the country towards the port city of Dar es Salam This railroad is still in use today and has since been connected to other railways across the country After the defeat of Germany during World War I GEA was divided among the victorious powers under the Treaty of Versailles Apart from Ruanda Urundi assigned to Belgium and the small Kionga Triangle assigned to Portuguese Mozambique the territory was transferred to British control Tanganyika was adopted by the British as the name for its part of the former German East Africa In 1927 Tanganyika entered the Customs Union of the East Africa Protectorate and the Uganda Protectorate which eventually became the independent countries of Kenya and Uganda and the East African Postal Union later the East African Posts and Telecommunications Administration Cooperation expanded with those protectorates and later countries in a number of ways leading to the establishment of the East African High Commission 1948 1961 and the East African Common Services Organisation 1961 1967 forerunners of the East African Community The country held its first elections in 1958 and 1959 The following year it was granted internal self government and fresh elections were held Both elections were won by the Tanganyika African National Union TANU which led the country to independence in December 1961 The following year a presidential election was held with TANU leader Julius Nyerere emerging victorious In the mid 20th century Tanganyika was the largest producer of beeswax in the world 8 The British state took control of the colony of Tanganyika as a result of the Treaty of Versailles Once Britain took control of the colony they wished it to be a Black man s country The British state wished for this colony to be similar to the Nigeria in terms of its state structure And as the policy of colonial rule in Nigeria changed to indirect rule so too did the governance of Tanganyika The British also pursued an anti German policy which was led by the head official in Tanganyika Sir Horace Bryatt Bryatt was an unpopular politician and his policies of expelling Germans halved Tanganyika s population Many of the ex German plantations were sold to European companies and mixed farms were given to new British owners Much of Tanganyika s economy was based around cash crops in particular Coffee 9 British rule did have positives for the Asian community living in Tanganyika as they were protected by the Britain as they were no longer attacked as they were during the war Many of them were employed from the Indian administration to work for the Tanganyikan administration This led to the Asian population in Tanganyika increasing from 8 698 in 1912 to 25 144 in 1931 9 One of the major drivers for decolonisation in Tanganyika was TANU which was founded in 1954 led by Julius Nyerere 10 In 1963 TANU opened its doors to all members of society within Tanganyika whereas it had previously only been open to Africans 11 The success of TANU can be seen in the 1958 election under colonial rule where TANU candidates or TANU supported candidates won every seat The majority of the voters in Tanganyika were African approximately two thirds of the 28 500 registered voters 11 with them coming from across the country There was some resistance though from the British settlers who established the United Tanganyikan Party UTP by Brian Willis in 1956 However the party became redundant as it was clear that Nyerere and TANU were going to win the battle over Tanganyikan independence UTP was less effective due to the 4 000 annual salary for Willis which limited the party s effectiveness as they lacked funds to campaign effectively 12 Tanganyika eventually gained its independence on 9 December 1961 13 after Nyerere had met a British government representative to arrange the steps to be taken on the road to independence 9 Notable people Edit Julius Nyerere 1922 1999 an anti colonial activist politician and political theorist Vasant Tapu 1936 1988 a Tanzanian cricketer Ebrahim Hussein born 1943 a Tanzanian playwright and poet Sir Clive Christopher Hugh Elliott 4th Baronet of Limpsfield 1945 2018 an ornithologist and international civil servant Usha Sunak a pharmacist and mother of Rishi Sunak was born in Tanganyika Dudley Seaton 1953 1978 son of Alberta Jones Seaton a zoologist involved in African independence movements Juma Mkambi 1955 2010 a Tanzanian footballer Tim Macartney Snape born 1956 a mountaineer and author Kipruto Rono Arap Kirwa born 1957 a Kenyan politician Tanganyikan independence Edit The British colony of Tanganyika gained independence on 9 December 1961 with Julius Nyerere becoming first its prime minister in 1960 under British rule and then president when Tanganyika was declared a republic in 1962 The main leader of the independence movement was undoubtedly Nyerere who led the party TANU which was a socially diverse group which had shared demands for independence from Britain 14 TANU gained most of its political support through national issues For example TANU discussed and promoted fears that the colonial state had attempted to give a disproportionate amount of power to the European and Asian minority groups living within Tanganyika This would have undermined the entire basis of Tanganyika independence TANU installed a deep rooted fear within the African population that the colonialists might still rule or have influence even after independence 15 Challenges after independence Edit Although independence came peacefully for Tanganyika the country suffered from similar problems with many other post colonial African countries such as poor financial resources and inadequate levels of infrastructure However two of the main factors that burdened Tanganyika s independence was its geography and its surrounding neighbours The destabilizing conflicts that bordered Tanganyika meant that refugees from the Congo Burundi and Rwanda often flooded into Tanganyika 16 The influx of refugees was a huge issue for Tanganyika so soon after independence These challenges only emphasized the insecurities of Tanganyika and its people In addition Nyerere s growing emphasis on modernisation and his African socialist ideology known as Ujamaa saw many rural farmers livelihoods destroyed by encroaching agriculturalists In 1964 after the Zanzibar Revolution which saw the Arab rule of Zanzibar overthrown Tanganyika merged with Zanzibar to become the United Republic of Tanganyika and Zanzibar which later became known as the United Republic of Tanzania on 26 April 1964 17 See also Edit Tanzania portalList of colonial heads of Tanganyika Tanganyika groundnut schemeReferences Edit Stanley Henry M 1878 Through the Dark continent or The sources of the Nile around the great lakes of equatorial Africa and down the Livingstone River to the Atlantic Ocean Volume II Harold B Lee Library London Sampson Low Marston Searle Rivington p 16 Iliffe John 1979 A Modern History of Tanganyika Cambridge University Press p 247 ISBN 9780521296113 Kimambo N and Maddox H 2017 A New History of Tanzania Oxford Mkuki Na Nyota Publishers Faith and Development in Focus Tanzania PDF World Faiths Development Dialogue Archived from the original PDF on 7 April 2022 Retrieved 7 August 2022 East John William The German Administration in East Africa A Select Annotated Bibliography of the German Colonial Administration in Tanganyika Rwanda and Burundi from 1884 to 1918 London 1989 294 leaves 1 reel of microfilm negative Thesis submitted for the fellowship of the Library Association London November 1987 Farwell Byron The Great War in Africa 1914 1918 New York W W Norton amp Company 1989 ISBN 0 393 30564 3 Nganang Alain Patrice Klaus Muhlhahn and Nina Berman German Colonialism Revisited African Asian and Oceanic Experiences Ann Arbor The University of Michigan Press 2014 page 114 Gunther J 1955 Inside Africa Harper p 409 ISBN 0836981979 Retrieved 7 August 2022 a b c Iliffe John 1979 A Modern History of Tanganyika Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 262 566 ISBN 9780521296113 page range too broad Shivji Issa 2015 Pan Africanism or Pragmatism lessons of the Tanganyika Zanzibar Union Addis Ababa Dar es Salaam pp 70 71 ISBN 9789987449996 a b Bienen Henry 2015 Tanzania Party Transformation and Economic Development Princeton Princeton University Press p 51 ISBN 9780691000121 Murphy Phillip 1995 Party Politics ad Decolonization The Conservative Party and British Colonial Policy in Tropical Africa 1951 1964 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 138 139 ISBN 9780198205050 Institut Francais de recherche en Afrique 2015 Remembering Julius Nyerere in Tanzania history memory legacy Dar es Salaam Mkuki Na Nyota p 35 ISBN 978 9987 753 47 5 Leys Colin 1962 Tanganyika The Realities of Independence International Journal 17 3 251 68 doi 10 2307 40198635 JSTOR 40198635 Retrieved 23 November 2021 Bjerk Paul 2015 Building a Peaceful Nation 1st ed Boydell amp Brewer p Chapter 3 Paragraph 1 Bjerk Paul 2015 Building a Peaceful Nation Boydell amp Brewer p Chapter 3 Paragraph 6 Ewald Jonas 2013 Challenges for the Democratisation Process in Tanzania 1st ed Mkuki na Nyota Publishers p Chapter 4 3 Paragraph 15 Further reading EditCana Frank Richardson 1922 Tanganyika Territory Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 32 12th ed pp 676 677 Gordon Brown A editor The East Africa Year Book and Guide London 1954 87pps with maps Hill J F R and Moffett J P Tanganyika a Review of its Resources and their Development published by the Government of Tanganyika 1955 924pps with many maps Iliffe John 10 May 1979 A modern history of Tanganyika Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521296113 Moffett J P Handbook of Tanganyika published by the Government of Tanganyika 1958 703pps with maps Mwakikagile Godfrey Life in Tanganyika in The Fifties New Africa Press 2008 428pps with maps and photos External links EditThe British Empire Tanganyika Coordinates 6 S 35 E 6 S 35 E 6 35 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tanganyika Territory amp oldid 1127447559, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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