Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-9q27g Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-18T10:22:50.115Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Erieza Kintu's Sulutani Anatoloka: A Nineteenth-Century Historical Memoir From Buganda1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 May 2014

John A. Rowe*
Affiliation:
Northwestern University

Extract

An 85-year-old villager named Erieza Kintu died at Kabubu in the county of Bulemezi, kingdom of Buganda, sometime in 1965. His passing was virtually unnoticed, except by relatives and a few neighbors. Through my research trips between 1962 and 1964 had on several occasions brought me to within a few miles of his house, I never met Kintu. Yet he is one of my best sources for the history of Buganda in the 1890s. Indeed, his memory of the so called “rebellion” by Kabaka Mwanga against the British in 1897 is the single best source I know, particularly valuable as an “insider” eyewitness participant. Even more importantly, unlike the earlier “official” histories of Mwanga's uprising, Kintu's view is from the point of the losers in the conflict—those who had resisted the new order of Christianity, private land tenure, and protectorate status within the British empire.

As so often happens with the vanquished, their history was suppressed by the victors, who—through the control of schooling and the printing press— ensured that only their own version of the conflict would become history. Yet somehow, at the age of almost seventy years the non-literate Erieza Kintu managed to dictate his oral memoirs to the manager of the Baganda Cooperative Society Press, and the result was Sulutani Anatoloka, a printed pamphlet that went on sale in Kampala priced one shilling a copy. After a few days no doubt the small edition was sold out and disappeared from view. Fortunately, one copy wound up in the hands of a prominent anthropologist from the University of Chicago, Lloyd Fallers, who was director of the East African Institute of Social Research at Makerere University in the early 1950s. Years later, when Fallers returned to Chicago, he brought back the pamphlet and offered me a photocopy, which I translated from Luganda into English in 1964. At that time I knew nothing about the author, except what was printed in his memoir covering the years from 1892 to 1899, nor did I know the circumstances surrounding the publication, or even the date when it had been printed. So here was a mysterious, unique, and potentially invaluable historical source—if only one could investigate its provenance.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1993

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

1.

A revised version of this paper will appear in War, Religion, and Revolution in Uganda: Six Dissident Discourses, ed. Michael Twaddle and John Rowe, to be published by Michigan State University Press under the auspices of the Association for the Publication of African Historical Sources. The work is a collection of six translated documents from the point of view of the vanquished, and Sulutani Anatoloka will be translated in its entirety, with introduction and annotation.

References

Notes

2. See Twaddle, M., “Z. K. Sentongo and the Indian Question in East Africa,” Institute of Commonwealth Studies seminar paper, 20 November 1986Google Scholar; Scotton, J. F., “The First African Press in East Africa: Protest and Nationalism in Uganda in the 1920s,” IJAHS 6(1973)Google Scholar; Rowe, J. A., “The Anti-Establishment Voice in 20th Century Buganda: or the Power of the Printing Press and How the Ruling Elite Lost Their Monopoly over it,” Makerere University History Department seminar paper, 21 August 1991.Google Scholar

3. Lukiko, Buganda, Abami Abomu Buganda (Entebbe, 1907), 44.Google Scholar

4. See Wilson to Ternan, Kampala, 6 July 1987, Entebbe Secretariat Archives A4/8 inward; Kagwa, Apolo, Basekabaka be Buganda (London, 1927), 203–08.Google Scholar

5. Kintu, Erieza, Sulutani Anatoloka (Wandegeya, n.d. [1949]), 8.Google Scholar

6. For Kagwa's version of these events see Basekabaka be Buganda,. 203-07.

7. Ternan Diary for 9 July 1897 (Rhodes House, Oxford Mss. Aft. r 128-131; also Ternan, , Some Experiences of an Old Bromsgrovian (Birmingham, 1930), 301–02.Google Scholar

8. Kintu, , Sulutani Anatoloka, 14.Google Scholar

9. Ibid., 23.

10. See Rowe, J. A., “Myth, Memoir, and Moral Admonition: Luganda Historical Writing, 1893-1969,” Uganda Journal 23 (1969), 1740Google Scholar; 23 (1969), 217-19.

11. M. Twaddle and J. Rowe, “The Ganda Civil Wars of the Late 19th Century: Testimonies From the ‘Losers’ Within Buganda,” paper presented at the African Studies Association of the United Kingdom, University of Birmingham, 11-13 September 1990.

12. Apter, David, The Political Kingdom in Uganda (Princeton, 1961)Google Scholar; and Low, D. A., The Mind of Buganda (London, 1971Google Scholar).

13. See Apter, , Political Kingdom, 227–28.Google Scholar

14. Interview with Daudi Musoke Mukubira, Makerere Hill, 14 August 1991.