In the year 1875, explorer Henry Morton Stanley surveyed the
geographical area of the village of Kageye and wrote that this village
is located 25 miles (39 kilometers) from the shores of Nyanza or Lake
Victoria, east of the city of Mwanza, near the small town of Kayenze, 16
miles (24 kilometers) from the Sukuma museum in Bujora. Kageye is a
village under the Sukuma Kingdom. This area is said to have been
established about 400 years ago by a notable person named Nkanda, who
was known for appointing his nephews, the Babinza, as chiefs. When
Kageye began to be known and famous, the Sukuma Kingdom was under Chief
Nkingwa Machimu, who lived in the village of Ng’wakipili, now called
Kibambi, near Nyanguge. The chief's assistant in the Kageye area at that
time was called Kaduma Nguku.
**The Slave Trade**
In East
Africa, the slave trade was carried out by Arabs. This trade continued
worldwide despite the outcry from figures like Dr. Livingstone. By 1830,
the slave trade had been abolished in the British Empire. In 1845, the
Sultan of Zanzibar also announced a ban on the transportation of slaves,
although slavery remained legal within his rule. Kageye was very famous
for the slave trade involving slaves from Buganda and Ukerewe.
According to records from many missionaries baptized during that time,
they were slaves purchased by the missionaries themselves, often young,
because the missionaries did not have enough money to buy adult slaves.
In
1890, a German named Stuhlmann banned the slave trade at the Arab
stations of Masanza, Magu, and Kayenze by directly prohibiting human
trafficking. Following this action, Stuhlmann found hundreds of freed
slaves, many of whom were not Sukuma. There were also those from Kilwa,
as well as Wabemba and Wagogo.
**Explorers**
The first
geographer to enter the African continent and provide some limited and
insufficient information about the journey of a Greek named Diogenes was
Marinus of Tyre from Syria. This Greek traveled within Africa for 25
days and saw the great lakes. It is said that at that time there were no
Sukuma living in these areas. Africa was a continent unknown to Europe,
and what intrigued many was the desire to discover the source of the
Nile River. Many prominent scholars, including Dr. Livingstone, died
without providing any information about the source of the Nile. The
first to glimpse Lake Victoria was Speke, who was informed by an Arab
that there was a very large lake north of Tabora called Kazeh at that
time. After receiving information about this large lake, Speke traveled
north and succeeded in seeing Lake Victoria on August 3, 1858, while
standing on the hill of Isamilo in Mwanza. After spending a few days
with an Arab named Mansur of Ngombe, he then visited King Kingo of
Ng’wanza, and upon returning to Tabora to meet his friend Burton, he
exclaimed “Eureka!” meaning “I have discovered; I have found the source
of the Nile!” Burton dismissed him because he had not seen the Nile
River itself.
When they returned to England, the geographical
society sent Speke and Grant again to trace the actual source of the
Nile. They left England in November 1860, passed west of Lake Victoria,
crossed the Kagera River in Karagwe, and on July 28, 1862, they reached
the Ripon Falls where the Nile River begins. There, they agreed that
Speke was correct that the source of the Nile is Lake Victoria.
However,
another question arose: was the lake they saw at the Nile Falls the
same one that Speke had seen at Isamilo in Mwanza? At that time, there
was no one to confirm this. After Stanley returned from rescuing Dr.
Livingstone, he arrived in England and was sent back to Africa to
circumnavigate the lake to verify if it was indeed Lake Victoria.
Henry
Morton Stanley left Zanzibar on November 17, 1874, with 356 people,
including 3 Europeans. He traveled 720 miles from the coast to Kageye,
taking 103 days. In his caravan, he had taken parts of a boat called
'Mama Alice,' which he assembled upon reaching the crossing at Kageye on
February 27, 1875. On March 8, 1875, Stanley left Kageye with 11
porters, leaving his entire caravan in Kageye under Ng’wanangwa Kaduma.
He arrived at the Ripon Falls and found the lake pouring its waters into
the White Nile on April 12, 1875. He then began to return to Kageye via
the western route taken by Speke and Grant in order to circumnavigate
the lake.
When he started his journey around the lake, he
received news that the people he had left in Kageye were critically ill
with dysentery, and the European Fredrick Barker died on April 23, 1875,
followed by five African porters, including Mabruki, who had also
served Dr. Livingstone, Speke, and Burton and was a favorite of Stanley,
along with Akida and Jabir. After receiving this sad news, Stanley
decided to retrace the same route he had taken from Kageye. Upon
arriving in Kageye on May 2, 1875, Stanley marked graves for his fallen
companions.
Other notable explorers who passed through Kageye
include Dr. Fisher, a German who crossed Kageye in December 1885 coming
from Buganda. Dr. Junker, a Russian of Jewish descent from St.
Petersburg who was working in exploration in Sudan and Egypt, visited
Kageye and went to Bukumbi, Busambilo, and Kipalapala where he met
Tipu-tip who helped him find porters to accompany him to the coast.
**Christian Missionaries and Research Expeditions**
Dr.
Livingstone's journey and the report he gave upon returning to England
in 1856 led to the arrival of various missionaries in East Africa. Dr.
Livingstone's report was followed by Stanley's emphasis on the urgent
need to spread Christianity in the land of Buganda. The Church Mission
Society (C.M.S.) was sent based on the views of the English to establish
a true religion, reform existing customs, abolish the slave trade, and
promote legitimate trade. Initially, 8 men were sent led by Lt. Shergold
Smith. Others included Thomas 'O' Neili, Mr. James Robertson, Pastor
Wilson, Alex Mackay, Dr. John Smith, and two artists. These individuals
left Zanzibar on July 1, 1876, with supplies to build a boat to take
them to Buganda.
On their journey, they faced many challenges and
delays, including delays from porters, fevers, bribes, or taxes paid to
chiefs every time they arrived in a certain Kingdom, and eventually
reached Kageye at the home of Ng’wanangwa Kaduma on January 29, 1877. On
May 11, 1877, Dr. John Smith died of fever and was buried near Barker's
grave in Kageye.
**Conflict with Chief Lukonge**
Ng’wanangwa
Kaduma and an Arab trader named Songolo were building a boat on Ukerewe
Island, which took them three months. The missionaries purchased this
boat for 150 U.S. dollars and also paid 14 U.S. dollars for the
operators. When missionaries Shergold Smith and O’Neill boarded the boat
heading to Buganda, they were stopped by Chief Lukonge’s people
claiming that the boat still belonged to Chief Lukonge since Songolo had
not compensated him for the timber used to build it. The missionaries
explained that they had paid Songolo everything related to the boat, and
they were allowed to leave. As they approached the Kageye crossing, a
strong wind arose, damaging the boat and breaking it into pieces.
Fortunately, the missionaries managed to reach dry land at Kageye. The
next day, they gathered the pieces of the boat and piled them beside
Ng’wanangwa Kaduma’s house.
These missionaries left Kageye again
on December 4, 1877, heading to Buganda. Due to bad weather, they
decided to land at Ukerewe. Unfortunately, upon landing, they found a
severe conflict between Songolo and Chief Lukonge. To save his life,
Songolo, upon seeing the missionaries' vessel, ran to them so they could
leave with him. Chief Lukonge asked them to lower Songolo so he could
kill him, but Smith humbly refused to comply, leading Chief Lukonge to
order that everyone be killed except for two people who fled back to
Kageye using a small boat they had, and those two provided information
about Kageye. The heads of two missionaries were severed and taken to be
preserved at the residence of Chief Bukindo.
After several
years, trader Charles Stokes visited Chief Lukonge and asked for the
heads of those missionaries; he was given them and buried them at Dr.
Smith's grave.
In 1878, missionaries from Africa, established in
1868 by Cardinal Charles Levegrie, entered the country. Five
missionaries from the Society of Missionaries of Africa arrived in the
village of Mallya on December 24, 1878, and celebrated the first
Christmas Eve in this region of the lake. The next day they continued
their journey and reached Kageye on December 31, 1878, where they were
warmly received by Ng’wanangwa Kaduma. Ng’wanangwa Kaduma welcomed the
missionaries in the same house that the C.M.S. missionaries had used.
Without wasting time, Father Simeon Lourdel and Brother Amans Delmas, who had already purchased a small
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