"A History of Tanzania" references that the Germans established a direct rule where German administrators controlled all aspects of the colony’s government. At the top of the administration was a governor who enforced laws, created local decrees, and controlled the military. The governor appointed district officers who were in charge of everything in their districts. Their responsibilities included collecting taxes, awarding punishment, and commanding the local police force. Lands with high populations often had economic potential. In these areas, the Germans forced out the occupants so they could develop these fertile lands for themselves. All resistance to the
Germans in the interior ceased and they could now set out to organize German East Africa. They continued brutally to exercise their authority with disregard and contempt for existing local structures and traditions. While the German colonial administration brought cash crops, railroads, and roads to
Tanganyika, European rule provoked African resistance. Between 1891 and 1894, the
Hehe—led by
Chief Mkwawa—resisted German expansion, but were eventually defeated. After a period of
guerrilla warfare, Mkwawa was cornered and committed suicide in 1898.
Maji Maji resistance Widespread discontent re-emerged, and in 1902 a movement against forced labour for a cotton scheme rejected by the local population started along the
Rufiji River. The tension reached a breaking point in July 1905 when the
Matumbi of
Nandete led by Kinjikitile Ngwale revolted against the local administrators (
akida) and suddenly the revolt grew wider from
Dar Es Salaam to the
Uluguru Mountains, the
Kilombero Valley, the
Mahenge and
Makonde plateaux, the
Ruvuma in the southernmost part and Kilwa,
Songea,
Masasi, and from
Kilosa to
Iringa down to the eastern shores of
Lake Nyasa. The resistance culminated in the
Maji Maji Resistance of 1905–1907. The resistance, which temporarily united a number of southern tribes ended only after an estimated 300,000 Africans had died from fighting or starvation. Research has shown that traditional hostilities played a large part in the resistance. Germans had occupied the area since 1897 and totally altered many aspects of everyday life. They were actively supported by the
missionaries who tried to destroy all signs of
indigenous beliefs, notably by razing the 'mahoka' huts where the local population worshiped their ancestors' spirits and by ridiculing their rites, dances and other ceremonies. This would not be forgotten or forgiven; the first battle which broke out at
Uwereka in September 1905 under the Governorship of Count
Gustav Adolf von Götzen turned instantly into an all-out war with indiscriminate murders and massacres perpetrated by all sides against farmers, settlers, missionaries, planters, villages, indigenous people and peasants. Known as the
Maji-Maji war with the main brunt borne by the
Ngoni people, this was a merciless rebellion and by far the bloodiest in
Tanganyika.
World War I , fought between the British and Germans during
World War I Before the outbreak of the war, German East Africa had been prepared to resist any attack that could be made without extensive preparation. For the first year of hostilities, the Germans were strong enough to conduct offensive operations in their neighbours' territories by, for example, repeatedly attacking railways in
British East Africa. The strength of German forces at the beginning of the war is uncertain. Lieutenant-General
Jan Smuts, the commander of British forces in east Africa beginning in 1916, estimated them at 2,000 Germans and 16,000
Askaris. The white adult male population in 1913 numbered over 3,500 (exclusive of the German garrison). In addition, the indigenous population of over 7,000,000 formed a reservoir of manpower from which a force might be drawn, limited only by the supply of German officers and equipment. "There is no reason to doubt that the Germans made the best of this material during the ... nearly eighteen months which separated the outbreak of war from the invasion in force of their territory." The geography of German East Africa also was a severe impediment to British and allied forces. The coastline offered few suitable points for landing and was backed by unhealthy swamps. The line of lakes and mountains to the west proved to be impenetrable. Belgian forces from the
Belgian Congo had to be moved through Uganda. On the south, the
Ruvuma River was fordable only its upper reaches. In the north, only one practicable pass about five miles wide existed between the
Pare Mountains and
Mount Kilimanjaro, and here the German forces had been digging in for eighteen months. Britain lost 3,443 men in battle plus 6,558 men to disease. In 1924, ten years after the beginning of the First World War and six years into British rule, the visiting American Phelps-Stokes Commission reported: In regards to schools, the Germans have accomplished marvels. Some time must elapse before education attains the standard it had reached under the Germans. But by 1920, the Education Department consisted of 1 officer and 2 clerks with a budget equal to 1% of the country's revenue—less than the amount appropriated for the maintenance of Government House. == British administration after World War I ==