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  • 1902 Harry H. Johnston Map of the Uganda Protectorate

    Erscheinungsdatum: 1902

    Anbieter: Geographicus Rare Antique Maps, Brooklyn, NY, USA

    Verbandsmitglied: ABAA ESA ILAB

    Verkäuferbewertung 4 von 5 Sternen 4 Sterne, Erfahren Sie mehr über Verkäufer-Bewertungen

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    Karte

    EUR 497,10

    EUR 14,65 Versand
    Versand innerhalb von USA

    Anzahl: 1 verfügbar

    In den Warenkorb

    Soft cover. Very good. Light wear along original fold lines. Small area of reinforcement on verso. Accompanied by Johnston's article. Size 17.5 x 18.5 Inches. This is a 1902 Royal Geographical Society and Harry Hamilton Johnston 'Scramble for Africa' map of the Uganda Protectorate - including modern-day Uganda and western Kenya. The map was issued to accompany a descriptive article by Johnston, which emerged as the British were working to assert administrative and economic control over the region through the building of the Mombasa-Victoria Railway, the establishment of new administrative zones, and the construction of colonial trade towns. A Closer Look The map highlights the British colonial Uganda Protectorate - encompassing a massive territory ranging from the Congo border east as far as Nairobi, Kenya. Lake Victoria (Victoria Nyanza) dominates the bottom border. The region's impressive topography is illustrated, with individual mountain peaks identified - including an impressive Mount Kenya (Elgon). Lake Albert, Lake Kyoga, and Lake Rudolf (Lake Turkana) appear as well. The Nile River runs north from Lake Albert, creating part of the border of the Uganda Protectorate. The Mombasa-Victoria Railway, opened one year earlier in 1901, extends form Nairobi in the lower right to Lake Victoria. Although most of the line was complete when this map was issued, the dashed section here emphasizes that it had not yet reached its terminus at Kisumu. A notation along the route states 'site of projected new capital', which never emerged. Uganda Protectorate The Uganda Protectorate, established by the British in 1894, marked the beginning of formal colonial rule over the kingdom of Buganda and its neighbors. The era was characterized by administrative, economic, and social changes, as the British sought to consolidate their control through indirect rule, leveraging the existing traditional kingdoms. The introduction of cotton and coffee transformed the local economy, integrating the region into the global markets and altering traditional agricultural practices. The period also saw the establishment of Christian missions, which played a crucial role in education and the spread of Christianity, alongside the introduction of Western legal and administrative systems. Despite these changes, the protectorate era was marked by resistance and negotiation between the British and the local rulers, leading to a complex legacy of colonial rule that shaped Uganda's path to independence in 1962. The Mombasa-Victoria (Uganda) Railway An ancient Kikuyu prophecy predicted 'an iron snake will cross from the lake of salt to the lands of the Great Lake.' Prophecy became reality in 1896, when the British began construction of an ambitious meter-gauge railway from the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa to the Ugandan city of Kisumu, on Lake Victoria. The construction was plagued by difficult terrain, infectious disease, and the man-eating lions of Tsavo. It also ran excessively over budget, so much so that political critics in London dubbed it the 'Lunatic Express'. Nonetheless, by 1901, the line was complete and proved a strategic coup. The British used railroads as a logistical and tactical tool to assert 'Effective Occupation' during the Scramble for Africa. In this case, the Uganda Railway, as it came to be known despite running almost entirely in Kenya, opened the African Great Lakes region to economic and military development and proved to be the binding linchpin of British East African hegemony. From 1929, the line began running under the management of Kenya Railways as one of the world's great heritage railroads. Passing through some of Africa's most beautiful terrain, travel on the train became a luxury staple for the safari-set, carrying Theodore Roosevelt, among others. Today, although much faded from its colonial glory, the railroad remains little changed, using original tracks, moderately-well maintained original cars, old-world table services, and more. Scramble f.