Lake Albert is still known as
Mwitanzige by the
Banyoro and
Batooro, and
Nam Ovoyo Bonyo by the
Alur as well as other peoples who have inhabited the region for centuries before the
colonial age. This name means ‘locust killer’, from
omwita ‘killer’ and
enzige ‘locusts’ in the
Runyoro language, and 'The Lake that has defeated the locusts' in the
Alur language, from
Nam, 'Lake',
Ovoyo, 'has defeated',
Bonyo, 'Locusts'. This is due to a local legend that tells how a plague of locusts had destroyed the crops of the people who were living on the eastern shore of the lake, but when they tried to cross to the other side they never got there. In 1864, the explorers
Samuel Baker and
Flóra von Sass found the lake and renamed it after the recently deceased
Prince Albert, consort of
Queen Victoria. In the 20th century,
Zairian President Mobutu Sese Seko temporarily named the lake after himself. European colonialists operated shipping on the lake. The British planned shipping on Lake Albert as part of a network of railway, river steamer and lake steamer services linking British interests in Egypt, east Africa and southern Africa. The
John I. Thornycroft & Company shipyard at
Woolston, Hampshire built the cargo and passenger ship for this purpose in 1930. She was named after the
British Army officer Robert Thorne Coryndon, who was governor of Uganda 1918–22.
Winston Churchill described the ship as
"the best library afloat" and
Ernest Hemingway called her
"magnificence on water". or sank in 1964. In March 2014, a boat carrying Congolese refugees
capsized in Lake Albert, killing more than 250 people. On 26 December 2016, a boat carrying 45 members and fans of a local village football team capsized in Lake Albert killing at least 30 people. On 24 December 2020, thirty people died when a boat capsized en route from Uganda to Congo. The passengers were concerned about travel restrictions related to the
COVID-19 pandemic in Africa. The
Kibiro settlement on Lake Albert has cultural and archeological significance. ==See also==