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Encyclopedia > King of Buganda

Buganda is the kingdom of the Baganda people, the largest of the four traditional kingdoms in present-day Uganda.


Organised and ruled by a king called the Kabaka, the Baganda formed the political kernel of the future country, Uganda. It is now a constitutional monarchy, with a parliament.

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Buganda covers the land immediately to the north of Lake Victoria, extending slightly to the south west. It was formerly the name of a province in Uganda. The Luganda language is widely spoken there (also by others than the Baganda), for example in Kampala.


Originally a vassal state of Bunyoro it grew rapidly in power in the eighteenth and nineteenth century becoming the dominant state in the region. It became the closest ally of Great Britain in the region and rose as British power increased in the region. Buganda was given a great deal of control over the other kingdoms in the protectorate: Toro, Nkore, and Bunyoro. When the colony became an independent state, it was named Uganda, the Swahili name of Buganda. However, the monarchy and much of Buganda's autonomy was revoked, along with that of the other Ugandan kingdoms, in 1967. The monarchy was restored in 1993.


Kings of Buganda

  • Kintu, late fourteenth century
  • Chwa I, early fifteenth century
  • Kimera, c.1420-c.1447
  • Tembo, c.1447-c.1474
  • Kiggala, c.1474-c.1501
  • Kiyimba, c.1501-c.1501
  • Kiyima, c.1528-c.1528
  • Nakibinge, c.1555-c.1582
  • Mulondo, c.1582-late 16th century with...
  • Jemba, late 16th century and...
  • Suna I, late sixteenth century-c.1609
  • Sekamanya, c.1609-early seventeenth century
  • Kimbugwe, early seventeenth century
  • Katerga, c.1636-c.1663
  • Mutebi I, Juuko, and Kayemba c.1663-c.1690
  • Tebandeke and Ndawula, c.1690-c.1717
  • Kagulu, Kikulwe and Mawanda. c.1717-c.1744
  • Mwanga, Namugala, and Kyabagu, c.1744-c.1771
  • Junju and Semakokiro, c.1771-1797
  • Semakokiro (alone), c.1797-1814
  • Kamaya, 1814-1836
  • Suna II, 1836-1856
  • Mutesa I, 1856-1884
  • Mwanga II, 1884-1888
  • Kiwewa Mutebi II, 1888
  • Kelema. 1888-1889
  • Mwanga II (2nd time) 1889-1897
  • Daudi Chwa, 1897-1939
  • Mutesa II, 1939-1966
  • Interregnum 1966-1993
  • Muwenda Mutebi, 1993-present

External links

  • Brief description of Buganda at www.myuganda.co.ug (http://www.myuganda.co.ug/categories/about/people_culture/mornachies/buganda/index.htm)
  • Buganda.com (http://www.buganda.com/)

  Results from FactBites:
 
UGANDA BEFORE 1900 (1403 words)
The third type of state to emerge in Uganda was that of Buganda, on the northern shores of Lake Victoria.
Each new king was identified with the clan of his mother, rather than that of his father.
Buganda's armies and the royal tax collectors traveled swiftly to all parts of the kingdom along specially constructed roads which crossed streams and swamps by bridges and viaducts.
Buganda at AllExperts (3545 words)
Buganda is the kingdom of the 52 clans of the Baganda people, the largest of the traditional kingdoms in present-day Uganda.
Buganda's boundaries are marked by Lake Victoria on the south, the Victoria Nile River on the east, and Lake Kyoga on the north.
Buganda is bounded by Lake Victoria to the south, the Victoria Nile to the east, and Lake Kyoga to the north.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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