
Skull of Chief Mkwawa on display at the Mkwawa Memorial Museum, Kalenga, near Iringa.
Paramount Chief 'Mkwavinyika Munyigumba Mwamuyinga' (
1855 –
19 July 18981), more commonly known as 'Chief Mkwawa', was a
Hehe tribal leader in
German East Africa (now
Tanzania) who opposed the German
colonisation. The name "Mkwawa" is derived from ''Mukwava'', itself a shortened form of ''Mukwavinyika'', meaning "conqueror of many lands". Mkwawa was born in
Luhota and was the son of Chief Munyigumba, who died in
1879.
In July
1891, the German commissioner,
Emil von Zelewski, led a battalion of soldiers (320
askaris with officers and porters) to suppress the Hehe. On
17 August, they were attacked by Mkwawa's 3,000-strong army at
Lugalo, who, despite being equipped with only
spears and a few guns, quickly overpowered the German force and killed Zelewski.
On
28 October 1894, the Germans, under new commissioner Colonel Freiherr
Friedrich von Schele, attacked Mkwawa's
fortress at
Kalenga. Although they took the fort, Mkwawa managed to escape. Subsequently, Mkwawa conducted a campaign of
guerrilla warfare, harassing the Germans until
1898 when, on
19 July, he was surrounded and committed
suicide rather than be captured.
After his death, German soldiers removed Mkwawa's head. The skull was sent to Berlin and probably ended up in a
Bremen museum. In 1918 the then British Administrator of German East Africa H.A. Byatt proposed to his government to demand a return of the skull to Tanganyika in order to reward the Wahehe for their cooperation with the British during the war and in order to have a symbol assuring the locals of the definitive end of German power. The skull's return was stipulated in the
1919 Treaty of Versailles:
:"''ARTICLE 246. Within six months from the coming into force of the present Treaty, ... Germany will hand over to His Britannic Majesty's Government the skull of the Sultan Mkwawa which was removed from the Protectorate of German East Africa and taken to Germany.''"
The Germans disputed the removal of the said skull from East Africa and the British government took the position that the whereabouts could not be traced.
After World War II, however, the Governor of Tanganyika Sir Edward Twining took up the issue again. After enquiries he was directed to the Bremen Museum which he visited himself in 1953. The Museum had a collection of 2000 skulls, 84 of which originated from former German East Africa. He had the ones chosen which showed measurements similar to surviving relatives of Chief Mkwawa. From this selection he picked the only skull with a bullet-hole as the skull of chief Mkwawa.
The skull was finally returned on
9 July,
1954, and now resides at the Mkwawa Memorial Museum in Kalenga, near the town of
Iringa.
Notes
1. According to the Report of the German soldier, who found the corpse of Mkwawa, the date of Mkwawa's death was definitely on 19th of July 1898 (Bericht des Feldwebels Merkl, BArch R1001, 289))
[1],
[2].
See also
★
Maji Maji Rebellion
References
★ Martin Baer, Olaf Schröter: ''Eine Kopfjagd. Deutsche in Ostafrika.'' Berlin 2001.
★ Doebold, Holger: ''Schutztruppe Deutsch-Ostafrika''.
★ Iliffe, John: ''A modern history of Tanganyika''. Cambridge 1979.
★ Nigmann, Ernst: ''Die Wahehe: Ihre Geschichte, Kult-, Rechts-, Kriegs- u. Jagd-Gebräuche''. Berlin: Mittler 1908.
★ Nigmann, Ernst: ''Geschichte der Kaiserlichen Schutztruppe für Deutsch-Ostafrika''. Berlin: Mittler 1911.
★ Patera, Herbert: ''Der weiße Herr Ohnefurcht: das Leben des Schutztruppenhaupmanns Tom von Prince''. Berlin 1939.
★ Prince, Tom von: ''Gegen Araber und Wahehe: Erinnerungen aus meiner ostafrikanischen Leutnantszeit 1890-1895''. Berlin 1914.
★ Redmayne, Alison Hope: ''The Wahehe people of Tanganyika.'' Oxford 1965.
★ Redmayne, Alison: ''The Hehe. Tanzania Before 1900''.
★ ''Small wars & insurgencies''. London: Taylor & Francis, ISSN 1743-9558, Online-Resource.
External links
★
A site by Mkwawa's great-grandson
★
"The colonial wars of imperial Germany"