Africa timeline
Italian troops occupy Eritrea, a province of Ethiopia
German warships arrive in Zanzibar harbour to persuade the sultan to cede territory to the Kaiser, William I
Addis Ababa is founded, to become subsequently the capital of Ethiopia
Germany and Britain define neighbouring spheres of interest in east Africa
The German and British agreement in east Africa creates the present-day boundary between Tanzania and Kenya
The Ndebele chieftain, Lobengula, grants Rhodes mining rights in what is now Zimbabwe
The Imperial British East Africa Company is given a charter to adminster Kenya and Uganda
Cecil Rhodes forms the British South Africa Company to push British commerce and imperial control further north
Menelik II is crowned emperor in Ethiopia, bringing the crown back to the Solomon dynasty
France and Britain agree colonial boundaries for Senegal and Gambia in west Africa
In the treaty of Uccialli, Menelik II cedes the Ethiopian province of Eritrea to Italy
Cecil Rhodes sends colonists to settle the newly won colony of Rhodesia
Zanzibar, under its Arab sultan, is declared a British protectorate
Germany takes direct control of German East Africa as a protectorate
Rhodes wins the right to adminster the region from the Zambezi up to Lake Tanganyika, forming present-day Zambia
Frederick Lugard's Maxim machine gun settles a Protestant-Catholic clash in Kampala, the capital of Buganda
The French establish a protectorate in part of the ancient kingdom of Dahomey in west Africa
Constantine Cavafy begins a 30-year career as a civil servant in Alexandria's Irrigation Service
France claims the Ivory Coast (or Côte d'Ivoire) in west Africa as a French colony
Leander Jameson, finding a pretext for war, drives Lobengula out of his kingdom in Rhodesia
Mahatma Gandhi, travelling with a first-class ticket, is forcibly ejected from the carriage at Pietermaritzburg because of his colour
The British Central African Protectorate is set up in the region of present-day Malawi
The territory south of the Zambezi is given the name Rhodesia, in honour of the man who has colonized it
Khama III, the king of Bechuanaland, travels to London to demand the continuing protection of the British crown
The British government takes responsibility for Kenya, as the East Africa Protectorate