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UNYORO , called by its See also: people Bunyoro, a country of See also: east central See also: Africa lying N.W. of the See also: kingdom of Buganda (See also: Uganda) and bounded E. and N. by the See also: Victoria See also: Nile
.
On the west, Unyoro includes nearly all the eastern shores of See also: Albert Nyanza and a See also: strip of territory—incorporated in Belgian See also: Congo in 1910—west of that lake
.
In 1896 a See also: British See also: protectorate was established over Unyoro, which now forms the S.W. See also: part of the See also: northern province of the Uganda Protectorate
.
The limits of Unyoro have varied according to the strength of its rulers; during the 19th century the states of Bunyoro and Buganda appear to have been rivals for the overlordship of the region between the See also: Bahr-el-See also: Jebel and the See also: great lakes
.
The Banyoro (as its people See also: call themselves) had a certain degree of See also: civilization and were skilled in iron-See also: work, pottery and See also: wood-work
.
The ruling class is of Hima stock, the Bahima possessing large herds of cattle
.
The first Europeans to enter the country were J
.
H
.
Speke and J
.
A
.
See also: Grant, who spent part of 1862 there, the
See also: king, Kamurasi, putting many obstacles in the way of the travellers continuing their journey down the Nile
.
Its next
See also: white visitors were
See also: Sir See also: Samuel and Lady See also: Baker, who in 1864 discovered the Albert Nyanza
.
At this See also: time ivory and slave traders, nominally See also: Egyptian subjects, penetrated as far See also: south as Unyoro, and a few years later (1870-74) Baker, as governor-general of the See also: Equatorial Provinces, extended Egyptian influence over the country and placed a garrison at Foweira on the Victoria Nile
.
He formally annexed Unyoro to the Egyptian dominions at Masindi on the 14th of May 1872
.
General See also: Gordon, who succeeded Baker, established posts at Masindi and Mruli
.
With King Kabarega, a son of Kamurasi, the Egyptians had many encounters
.
Egyptian authority ceased altogether with the withdrawal of Emin See also: Pasha in 1888, but not long after-wards British influence began to be felt in the country
.
Kabarega in 1891 found himself in conflict with Captain F
.
D
.
Lugard, who entered Unyoro froth the south
.
From this point the See also: history of Unyoro is traced in the article UGANDA
.
It need only be stated here that in 1899 Kabarega was captured by the British and deported to the See also: Seychelles, and that one of his sons (Yosia, a minor) was subsequently recognized as chief in his place, though with very restricted See also: powers, the province being virtually ad-ministered directly by the British See also: government
.
Unyoro has played rather an important role in the past (unwritten history of Equatorial Africa as being the region from which the See also: ancient Gala (Hamitic) aristocracy, coming from Nileland, penetrated the forests of See also: Bantu Africa, bringing with them the Neolithic civilization, the use of metals, and the keeping of cattle
.
Unyoro, though not a large country, is in many ways remarkable
.
It is thought to contain gold in theSee also: north and north-east
.
In the west and south-west are the vast primeval forests of Budonga and Bugoma, containing large chimpanzees and a See also: peculiar sub-See also: species of straight-tusked elephants (only found in Unyoro)
.
See the See also: works of Speke, Grant and Baker; also Colonel Gordon in Central Africa (4th ed., 1885) ; J
.
F
.
See also: Cunningham's Uganda and its Peoples (1905) ; and Winston See also: Churchill's My See also: African Journey (1908)
.
(H
.
H
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