Online Encyclopedia

KILWA (Quiloa)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 798 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

KILWA (Quiloa)  , a seaport of German East Africa, about 200 m . S. of
See also:
Zanzibar . There are two Kilwas, one on the mainland—Kilwa Kivinje; the other, the ancient city, on an island—Kilwa Kisiwani . Kilwa Kivinje, on the
See also:
northern side of Kilwa
See also:
Bay, is regularly laid out, the houses in the
See also:
European quarter being large and substantial . The government house and barracks are fortified and are surrounded by
See also:
fine public gardens . The adjacent country is fertile and thickly populated, and the trade of the
See also:
port is considerable . Much of it is in the hands of Banyans . Kilwa is a starting-point for caravans to Lake
See also:
Nyasa . Pop. about 5000 . Most of the inhabitants are Swahili . Kilwa Kisiwani, 18 in. to the south of the
See also:
modern
See also:
town, possesses a deep harbour sheltered from all winds by projecting
See also:
coral reefs . The island on which it is built is separated from the mainland by a shallow and narrow channel, .

The ruins of the city include massive walls and bastions, remains of a

palace and of two large mosques, of which the domed
See also:
roofs are in
See also:
fair preservation, besides several Arab forts . The new quarter contains a customs house and a few Arab buildings . Pop. about 600 . On the island of Songa Manara, at the
See also:
southern end of Kilwa Bay, hidden in dense vegetation, are the ruins of another city, unknown to
See also:
history . Fragments of palaces and mosques in carved
See also:
limestone exist, and on the
See also:
beach are the remains of a lighthouse . Chinese coins and pieces of
See also:
porcelain have been found on the sea-
See also:
shore, washed up from the reefs . The sultanate of Kilwa is reputed to have been founded about A.D . 975 by
See also:
Ali
See also:
ibn
See also:
Hasan, a Persian prince from
See also:
Shiraz, upon the site of the ancient Greek colony of Rhapta . The new state, at first confined to the town of Kilwa, extended its influence along the coastfrom Zanzibar to
See also:
Sofala, and the city came to be regarded as the capital of the Zenj "
See also:
empire " (see ZANZIBAR: " Sultanate "` . An Arab chronicle gives a list of over
See also:
forty sovereigns who reigned at Kilwa in a period of five
See also:
hundred years (cf . A . M .

H . J . Stokvis,

Manuel d'histoire,
See also:
Leiden, 1888, i . 558) . Pedro Alvares Cabral, the Portuguese navigator, was the first European to visit it . His
See also:
fleet, on its way to India, anchored in Kilwa Bay in 15oo . Kilwa was then a large and wealthy city, possessing, it is stated, three hundred mosques . In 1502 Kilwa submitted to Vasco da Gama, but the sultan neglecting to pay the tribute imposed upon him, the city in 1505 was occupied by the Portuguese . They built a fort there; the first erected by them on the east coast of Africa . Fighting ensued between the
See also:
Arabs and the Portuguese, the city was destroyed ; and in 1512 the Portuguese, whose ranks had been decimated by fever, temporarily abandoned the place . Subsequently Kilwa became one of the chief centres of the slave trade . Towards the end of the 17th century it fell under the dominion of the imams of Muscat, and on the separation in 1856 of their Arabian and
See also:
African possessions became subject to the sultan of Zanzibar .

With the

rest of the southern
See also:
part of the sultan's
See also:
continental dominions Kilwa was acquired by Germany in 1890 (see AFRICA, § 5; and GERMAN EAST AFRICA) .

End of Article: KILWA (Quiloa)
[back]
KILT
[next]
ROBERT KILWARDBY (d. 1279)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.