Information about East African Campaign (world War I)
| East African Campaign (World War I) | |
| East African Campaign |
|---|
| Tanga - Jassin - Bukoba - Salaita - Latema Nek - Kahe - Kilimanjaro - Kondoa Irangi - Dodoma - Mkalamo - Lukigura - Matamondo - Wami - Kilosa - Mlali - Morogoro - Kidodi - Dutumi - Kisaki - Njinjo - Kimbaramba - Kibata (1916) - Behobeho - Kibata (1917) - Mpotona - Utete - Nambanje - Kiawe Bridge - Rumbo - Narungombe - Mahiwa - Nyangao |
Introduction
German East Africa comprising Tanganyika (the mainland part of modern-day Tanzania), Burundi, and Rwanda, was a large territory with complex geography (including parts of the massive Great Rift Valley, Lake Tanganyika and Lake Victoria). It varied from the mountainous, well-watered and fertile north-west, to the drier and sandy or rocky centre, with wildlife-rich grasslands in the north-east and vast areas of uninhabited forest in the south-east. Its coast, inhabited by the Swahili people and Arab traders, dominated trade with Central Africa in conjunction with British-controlled Zanzibar and the coasts of modern-day Kenya and Mozambique.At the start of the war, the German colony chief administrator, Governor Heinrich Schnee, ordered that no hostile action was to be taken. To the north, the British Governor of Kenya stated that Kenya "had no interest in the present war" (Keegan, "World War I", pg. 210). The reason for this was, in part, neither colony had many troops. But the commander of the tiny German army in East Africa, Colonel von Lettow-Vorbeck, ignored Schnee and assembled his army for battle. At the start of the war, the German forces were about 200 officers, and 2,500 askari.
The war begins, 1914-1915
The fighting in German East Africa began in August, 1914. On August 15, German troops stationed in Rwanda-Burundi shelled some villages in the Belgian Congo. On August 22, a German naval vessel on Lake Tanganyika opened fire on the harbour of Albertville (now Kalemie).
In September, the Germans staged raids into neighbouring Kenya and Uganda. Lettow-Vorbek also created a tiny navy on Lake Victoria, causing minor damage but a great deal of news. The British sent out some gun-boats in pieces over the railway to Lake Victoria to take control over the lake. They also sent two brigades of the British Indian Army which they tried to land at Tanga on November 2 1914 but the Germans completely disrupted the landing (see Battle of Tanga). Heavy and accurate fire prevented the British from moving off the beaches and finally forced them to re-embark three days later. The supplies left behind on the beaches kept Lettow-Vorbeck's tiny army equipped for the next year (Keegan, "World War I", pg 211).
British-Belgian expedition on Lake Tanganyika
In 1915, two British motorboats, HMS Mimi and HMS Toutou, the Fifi and two Belgian ships, under the command of Commander Geoffrey Spicer-Simson, managed to sink Hedwig von Wissman in a bid to secure control of Lake Tanganyika, strategic key to controlling the eastern part of German territory. The success of this expedition was compromised by the fact that a larger vessel remained, the formidable Graf von Götzen, which retained naval supremacy over the lake until it was scuttled later in the year in the face of a land assault on Ujiji. (After the war the ship was raised by the British and restored as a passenger ferry under the name MV Liemba, and still operates along the eastern shore of the lake to this day).Meanwhile, Belgian colonial forces used flying boats to bombard the German ships and the harbour installations.
The arrival of General Smuts, 1916
Horace Smith-Dorrien was assigned the command to fight the Germans, but pneumonia contracted during the voyage to South Africa prevented him from taking command. In 1916, General Jan Smuts was given the task of defeating Lettow-Vorbeck. Smuts had a large army (for the area), some 13,000 South Africans including Boers, British, and Rhodesians as well as 7,000 Indian and African soldiers. Also, not under his direct command but fighting on his side, was a Belgian force and a larger but totally ineffective group of Portuguese military units based in Mozambique. Despite all these troops from different countries, this was essentially a South African operation of the British Empire under Smuts' control. During the previous year, Lettow-Vorbeck had also gained troops and his army was now 3,500 Germans and some 12,000 Askaris.Smuts army attacked from several directions, the main attack was from the north out of Kenya, while substantial forces from the Belgian Congo advanced from the west in two columns, over Lake Victoria and into the Rift Valley. Another force advanced over Lake Nyasa (Lake Malawi) from the south-east. All these forces failed to catch Lettow-Vorbeck and they all suffered terribly from disease along the march. One unit (9th South African Infantry) started at a strength of 1,135 in February and by October was down to 116 men, without doing much fighting at all (Cyril Falls, The Great War, pg. 253). However, the Germans nearly always retreated from the larger British forces, and by September of 1916, the German railway from the coast at Dar-es-Salaam to Ujiji was fully under British control. Belgian forces under General Tombeur captured Tabora, an administrative center of central German East Africa.
With Lettow-Vorbeck's forces now confined to the southern part of German East Africa, Smuts began to withdraw his South-African, Rhodesian, and Indian troops and replace them with African soldiers. By the start of 1917 more than half the British army was composed of African soldiers, and by the end of the war, it was nearly all African troops. Smuts himself left the area in January of 1917 to go to London to join the Imperial War Cabinet.
Belgian-Congolese participation on land
As noted above, the first action in the war in East Africa consisted of attacks by German forces on the Belgian Congo. Belgian-Congolese participation in the campaign was sizeable — for the logistics alone some 260,000 carriers were mobilized, not counting troops.The colonial armed forces of the Belgian Congo ('Force Publique') started a campaign on April 18, 1916 under the command of General Tombeur, Colonel Molitor and Colonel Olsen. They captured Kigali on May 6. The German forces in Burundi fought well, but had to give in to the numerical superiority of the Force Publique. On June 6, they took Usumbura, and by that time had completely occupied Rwanda and Burundi.
The Force Publique then started the campaign to capture Tabora. They marched into Tanganyika in three columns and took Biharamuro, Mwanza, Karema, Kigoma and Ujiji. After several days of heavy fighting they took Tabora. Fearing Belgian claims on the German colony, Smuts quickly sent Belgian forces back to Congo, leaving them as occupying forces in Rwanda and Burundi. But the British were forced to call Belgian-Congolese troops to help for a second time in 1917, and after this they worked together.
Last years, 1917-1918
Despite continued efforts to capture or destroy Lettow-Vorbeck's army, the British failed to end the German resistance. First General Hoskins (of the King's African Rifles) took over, then another South African, General van Deventer, was given the command. Deventer launched an offensive in July 1917. Lettow-Voorbeck's forces were divided into three groups and two of them managed to escape the offensive but the third, some 5,000 men under Tafel, was forced to surrender.The German army was able to tie down large British forces and even defeat them upon occasion. For example, the Germans beat the British at a battle near Mahiwa in October 1917. They lost 100 men and the British lost 1600.
Nevertheless, the British troops were closing in on the Germans and so on November 23 1917, Lettow-Vorbeck crossed south into Portuguese Mozambique. He hoped by so doing to gain recruits and supplies by capturing small Portuguese garrisons. He marched through Mozambique for the next nine months, avoiding capture but unable to gain much strength. Then the German army crossed into Northern Rhodesia in August 1918. On November 13, two days after the Armistice was signed in Europe, the German army took and burnt its last town, Kasama which had been evacuated by the British. The next day at the Chambezi River, Lettow-Vorbeck was given a telegram announcing the signing of the armistice, and agreed to a cease-fire: the 'Von Lettow-Vorbeck Memorial' marks the spot in present-day Zambia. As requested, he marched his undefeated army to Abercorn and formally surrendered there on November 23.[1]
Assessment
In this campaign, disease killed or incapacitated 30 men for every man killed in battle (on the British side) (John Keegan, World War I, pg. 300).As Cyril Falls writes
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The achievement of Lettow-Vorbek deserves undying fame. He was cut off from home. He could entertain no hope of a decisive victory. His aim was purely to keep the British on the stretch as much as possible for as long as possible and to make them expend the largest possible resources in men, in shipping, and in supplies. By this yardstick he was successful (Cyril Falls, The Great War pg. 254).
References
1. ^ The Northern Rhodesia Journal online, Vol IV No 5 (1961) pp440-442. “The Evacuation of Kasama in 1918”. Accessed 7 March 2007.
Further reading
- Abbott, Peter, Armies in East Africa 1914-1918 Osprey, 2002, ISBN 1-841-76489-2.
- Anderson, Ross, The Forgotten Front: The East African Campaign: 1914-1918, Tempus Publishing, Limited, 2004, ISBN 0-752-42344-4.
- Farwell, Byron, The Great War in Africa, 1914-1918, W. W. Norton & Company, 1989, ISBN 0-393-30564.
- Gardner, Brian, On to Kilimanjaro, Macrae Smith Company, 1963, ISBN 1-111-04620-4.
- Hoyt, Edwin, Guerilla: Colonel von Lettow-Vorbeck and Germany's East African Empire, Scribner, 1981, ISBN 0-025-55210-4.
- Hoyt, Edwin, The Germans who never lost, Frewin, 1969, ISBN 0-090-96400-4.
- Miller, Charles, Battle for the Bundu: The First World War in East Africa, Macmillan Publishing Co., 1974, ISBN 0-025-84930-1.
- Mosley, Leonard, Duel for Kilimanjaro, Ballantine Books, 1963.
- Paice, Edward, Tip and Run: The Untold Tragedy of the Great War in Africa, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2007, ISBN 0-297-84709-0.
- Sibley, J.R., Tanganyikan Guerrilla, Ballantine Books, 1973, ISBN 0345098013.
- Strachan, Hew, The First World War in Africa, Oxford University Press, 2004, ISBN 0-199-25728-0.
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Battle of Tanga (sometimes nicknamed the "Battle of the Bees") was the blundered attempt by the British Indian Army to capture German East Africa (present-day Tanzania) during World War I. It was the first major event in the war in Africa.
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Battle of Jassin was a World War I battle that took place on 18–January 19 1915 at Jassin on the German East African side of the border with British East Africa between a German Schutztruppe force and British and Indian troops.
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Battle of Bukoba was the first victory for Entente forces in German East Africa, coming after the disastrous battles of Tanga and Jassin. The British objective was the destruction of the Bukoba wireless station.
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Battle of Salaita, sometimes known as the Battle of Salaita Hill, was the first large-scale engagement of the East African Campaign to feature South African troops. The battle took place on February 12 1916, as part of the three pronged offensive into German East Africa launched by
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Battle of Latema Nek
Part of the East African Campaign (World War I)
Date March 11 - March 12 1916
Location Latema-Reata Hills, British East Africa
Result Entente victory
Combatants
South Africa British Empire German Empire
Commanders
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Part of the East African Campaign (World War I)
Date March 11 - March 12 1916
Location Latema-Reata Hills, British East Africa
Result Entente victory
Combatants
South Africa British Empire German Empire
Commanders
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The Battle of Kilimanjaro took place in Tanganyika in 1914 and was a battle of First World War. It commenced with a two-pronged British invasion of German East Africa. The first prong attacked Tanga and the second prong attack the German defences around Kilimanjaro.
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Battle of Kondoa Irangi
Part of the East African Campaign (World War I)
Date May 7 - May 10 1916
Location Kondoa Irangi, German East Africa
Result Entente victory
Combatants
South Africa German Empire
Commanders
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Part of the East African Campaign (World War I)
Date May 7 - May 10 1916
Location Kondoa Irangi, German East Africa
Result Entente victory
Combatants
South Africa German Empire
Commanders
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German East Africa (German: Deutsch-Ostafrika) was a German colony in East Africa, including what is now Burundi, Rwanda and Tanganyika (the mainland part of present Tanzania).
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Tanganyika is the name of an East African territory lying between the largest of the African great lakes: Lake Victoria, Lake Malawi and Lake Tanganyika, after which it was named.
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Motto
"Uhuru na Umoja" (Swahili)
"Freedom and Unity"
Anthem
Mungu ibariki Afrika
"God Bless Africa"
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"Uhuru na Umoja" (Swahili)
"Freedom and Unity"
Anthem
Mungu ibariki Afrika
"God Bless Africa"
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Republika y'u Burundi
République du Burundi
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Motto
Ubumwe, Umurimo, Gukunda Igihugu
"Unity, Work, Patriotism"
Anthem
Rwanda nziza
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Ubumwe, Umurimo, Gukunda Igihugu
"Unity, Work, Patriotism"
Anthem
Rwanda nziza
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Great Rift Valley is a vast geographical and geological feature, approximately 6,000 kilometres (0 mi) in length, which runs from northern Syria in Southwest Asia to central Mozambique in East Africa.
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Coordinates
Lake type Rift Valley Lake
Primary sources Ruzizi River
Malagarasi River
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Lake type Rift Valley Lake
Primary sources Ruzizi River
Malagarasi River
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Primary outflows White Nile River
Catchment area 184,000 km²
238,900 km² basin
Basin countries Tanzania
Uganda
Kenya
Max length 337 km
Max width 240 km
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Catchment area 184,000 km²
238,900 km² basin
Basin countries Tanzania
Uganda
Kenya
Max length 337 km
Max width 240 km
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Swahili
Waswahili
Total population 1,328,000
Regions with significant populations Dar-Es-Salaam (Tanzania), Kenya, Mozambique, Somalia, Comoros
Languages Swahili, Portuguese, English, French, Somali Religions Islam Related ethnic groups Kikuyu, Makonde, Shirazi
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Waswahili
Total population 1,328,000
Regions with significant populations Dar-Es-Salaam (Tanzania), Kenya, Mozambique, Somalia, Comoros
Languages Swahili, Portuguese, English, French, Somali Religions Islam Related ethnic groups Kikuyu, Makonde, Shirazi
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Central Africa is a core region of the African continent often considered to include:
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Flag
Map of Zanzibar's main island
Zanzibar is part of Tanzania
Coordinates:
Country Tanzania
Islands Unguja and Pemba
Capital Zanzibar City
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Flag
Map of Zanzibar's main island
Zanzibar is part of Tanzania
Coordinates:
Country Tanzania
Islands Unguja and Pemba
Capital Zanzibar City
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Motto
"Harambee" (Swahili)
"Let us all pull together"
Anthem
Ee Mungu Nguvu Yetu
"Oh God of All Creation"
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"Harambee" (Swahili)
"Let us all pull together"
Anthem
Ee Mungu Nguvu Yetu
"Oh God of All Creation"
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Motto
none
Anthem
Pátria Amada
(formerly Viva, Viva a FRELIMO)
Capital
(and largest city) Maputo
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Anthem
Pátria Amada
(formerly Viva, Viva a FRELIMO)
Capital
(and largest city) Maputo
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Paul Emil von Lettow-Vorbeck (March 20, 1870 - March 9, 1964) was a German general, the commander of the German East Africa campaign in World War I, the only colonial campaign of that war where Germany remained undefeated.
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Askari is an Arabic, Turkish, Somali, Persian and Swahili word meaning "soldier" (Arabic: عسكري ‘askarī).
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Paul Emil von Lettow-Vorbeck (March 20, 1870 - March 9, 1964) was a German general, the commander of the German East Africa campaign in World War I, the only colonial campaign of that war where Germany remained undefeated.
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Kalemie, formerly Albertville/Albertstad, is a town on the western shore of Lake Tanganyika in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The town is next to the exit of the Lukuga River flowing out from Lake Tanganyika to the Lualaba River.
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