The colonial army (
Schutztruppe) of the
German Empire employed native troops with European officers and
NCOs in its colonies. The main concentration of such locally recruited troops was in
German East Africa (now
Tanzania), formed in 1891 after the transfer of the
Wissmanntruppe (raised in 1889 to suppress the
Abushiri Revolt) to German imperial control. The first askaris formed in German East Africa were raised by DOAG (
Deutsche Ost-Afrika Gesellschaft—the
German East Africa Company) in about 1888. Originally drawn from Sudanese mercenaries, the German askaris were subsequently recruited from the
Wahehe and
Angoni tribal groups. They were harshly disciplined but well paid and highly trained by German cadres who were themselves subject to a rigorous selection process. Prior to 1914 the basic
Schutztruppe unit in Southeast Africa was the
Feldkompanie comprising seven or eight German officers and NCOs with between 150 and 200 askaris (usually 160)—including two machine gun teams. Such small independent commands were often supplemented by tribal irregulars or
Ruga-Ruga. They were successfully used in German East Africa where 11,000 askaris, porters and their European officers, commanded by
Paul Emil von Lettow-Vorbeck,
managed to fight a successful guerilla campaign against numerically superior British, Portuguese and Belgian colonial forces until the end of
World War I in 1918. The
Weimar Republic and pre-war
Nazi Germany provided pension payments to the German askaris. Due to interruptions during the worldwide depression and World War II, the parliament of the
Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) voted in 1964 to fund the back pay of the askaris still alive. The West German embassy at
Dar es Salaam identified approximately 350 ex-askaris and set up a temporary cashiers office at Mwanza on Lake Victoria. Only a few claimants could produce the certificates given to them in 1918; others provided pieces of their old uniforms as proof of service. The banker who had brought the money came up with an idea: each claimant was handed a broom and ordered in German to perform the
manual of arms. Not one of them failed the test. File:Askari-Ostafrika.jpg|Askari bugler
German East Africa File:Askari aus Deutsch-Ostafrika (Askari from German East Africa).jpg|Askari in German army uniform, 1915 File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-R19361, Deutsch-Ostafrika, Deutsches Feldgeschütz.jpg|Germans and Askaris during the
East African Campaign File:Bundesarchiv Bild 105-DOA3049, Deutsch-Ostafrika, Askari beim Übungsschießen.jpg|Askaris in training File:Bundesarchiv Bild 105-DOA7225, Deutsch-Ostafrika, Askari im Kampf.jpg|Askari in action (
Tanga) File:Bundesarchiv Bild 105-DOA7209, Deutsch-Ostafrika, Askari auf dem Marsch.jpg|Askaris on the march (
WWI) File:Bundesarchiv Bild 105-DOA6369, Deutsch-Ostafrika, Askari.jpg|Askari standard bearer, German East Africa File:Eckenbrecher Tropische Landschaft in Deutsch-Ostafrika.jpg|A depiction of a battle between local tribesmen and German askaris by
Themistokles von Eckenbrecher, 1896. File:Deutsch-Ostafrikaner-Ehrenmal in Aumühle.JPG|German-Ostafrika Memorial in
Aumühle ==Italian colonies==