British East
Africa
British
East Africa, territories that were formerly
under British control in eastern
Africa—namely Kenya, Uganda,
and Zanzibar and Tanganyika (now Tanzania).
British
penetration of the area began at Zanzibar in the last quarter of the 19th
century. In 1888 the Imperial British East Africa Company established
claims to territory in what is now Kenya. In 1890 and 1894 British
protectorates were established over the sultanate of Zanzibar and the kingdom
of Buganda (Uganda), respectively, and in 1895 the company’s territory in Kenya
was transferred to the crown as the East Africa Protectorate (after 1920, the
Kenya Colony and the Kenya Protectorate). Under the Treaty of
Versailles (signed June 1919; enacted January 1920), Britain was
awarded the former German territory of Tanganyika as a League of
Nations mandate.
All of these territories achieved political
independence in the 1960s, and Zanzibar united with Tanganyika to form Tanzania
in 1964.