Historically the Usambara Mountains have been inhabited by the
Bantu,
Shambaa, and
Maasai people who were a mix of agriculturalists and pastoralists. A Shambaa kingdom based at
Vugha was founded by
Mbegha in the first half of the 18th century. His grandson Kinyashi Muanga Ike gave the kingdom a stronger political and military structure. Under Kinyashi's son
Kimweri ye Nyumbai the kingdom grew to cover both the west and east Usambaras, extending down to the coast and into the
Pangani River valley to the south. After Kimweri died in 1862 the kingdom fell apart in a succession struggle. In the late 19th century when within the Usambara District of
German East Africa, German colonialists came into the area bringing with them a mix of cash crops like lumber trees, coffee, tea, and
quinine, and also designated forests as reserves for either water conservation or timber use. They also brought many new Western concepts, which often were diametrically opposed to traditional beliefs, such as coexistence with the forest versus forest as a "separate wilderness". The result of colonialism was a massive change in the way forests were perceived in the community, and conversion of traditional agriculture to cultivating cash crops such as quinine, pine trees, bananas, maize, tea, and coffee. In 1882
Walter von Saint Paul-Illaire, the governor of the Usambara District of German East Africa, collected seeds of a small herb which he sent to his father, who cultivated them into plants.
Hermann Wendland, the director of the
Herrenhausen Gardens,
formally described the plants and recognized them as representing a new species in a new genus,
Saintpaulia ionantha, with the English common name
African violet. Wendland's
scientific name for the plant based the generic name
Saintpaulia on von Saint Paul-Ilaire; the specific name he assigned means violet () flower (). In their native Usambara Mountains
cloudforests, the plants are threatened with extinction. Following World War I, it became part of the British mandate territory of
Tanganyika. The British administration continued to reserve and exploit forests. ==Development and tourism==