East Africa timeline
Ras Tafari, a member of the Ethiopian imperial family, deposes his distant relation the emperor and puts on the throne his aunt, Zauditu
Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck, commander of the German army in East Africa, surrenders after four stubborn years of resistance
German East Africa is to be governed by Britain as Tanganyika, under a League of Nations mandate
The Young Kikuyu Association is formed in Kenya, to fight for African rights and the restoration of Kikuyu land
The League of Nations grants Belgium a mandate to administer the former Germany colony of Ruanda-Urundi
Jomo Kenyatta becomes the editor of Muigwithania, the newspaper of the Kikuyu Central Association
The regent Ras Tafari becomes emperor of Ethiopia and takes the name Haile Selassie
Mussolini uses a disagreement over grazing rights as a pretext for an empire-building invasion of Ethiopia
The Italian forces invading Ethiopia reach Addis Ababa, and Haile Selassie flees into exile
Danish author Karen Blixen publishes her autobiographical novel Out of Africa
The Allies recover Ethiopia from the Italians and Haile Selassie returns to his throne in Addis Ababa
A decision by the United Nations makes Eritrea an autonomous federal province within Ethiopia
An outbreak of terrorism in Kenya is orchestrated by a secret Kikuyu organization, the Mau Mau
Jomo Kenyatta, charged with having organized the Mau Mau uprising in Kenya, is sentenced to seven years in prison
Civil war breaks out in Sudan between the Muslim north and the Christian south
Rwanda suffers the first nationwide outbreak of Hutu violence against Tutsis
British and Italian colonies merge as the independent Somali republic, also known as Somalia, with Aden Abdullah Osman as president
Kenyatta, still in prison, is elected leader of KANU, a new political party in Kenya
Tanganyika becomes an independent nation with Julius Nyerere as prime minister
The Eritrean parliament votes to merge fully with Ethiopia, ending Eritrean autonomy
The former British colony of Uganda becomes an independent republic, with Milton Obote as prime minister
The OAU (Organization of African Unity) is founded in Addis Ababa to give Africa a united voice in world affairs
An invasion of Rwanda by Tutsi guerrillas prompts the first major Hutu massacre of Tutsis
Zanzibar becomes an independent nation and a member of the Commonwealth
Kenya becomes independent, with Jomo Kenyatta as prime minister