Tanganyika

For the British colony, see Tanganyika (territory). For the Lake, see Lake Tanganyika. For other uses, see Tanganyika (disambiguation).
Tanganyika (1961–62)
Republic of Tanganyika (1962–64)
1961–1964
Flag Coat of arms
Anthem
Mungu ibariki Afrika
Capital Dar es Salaam
Languages
Government Parliamentary monarchy (1961–62)
Presidential republic (1962–64)
Head of state
   1961–62 Elizabeth II
  1962–64 Julius Nyerere
Governor-General
  1961–62 Richard Turnbull
History
   Independence from British Empire 9 December 1961
  Republic 9 December 1962
   Union with Zanzibar 26 April 1964
Currency East African shilling
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Tanganyika (territory)
Tanzania

Tanganyika /ˌtæŋɡənˈjkə/ was a sovereign state that existed from 9 December 1961 until 22 April 1964, first gaining independence from the United Kingdom as a Commonwealth realm, then becoming a republic within the Commonwealth of Nations exactly a year later. After signing the Articles of Union on April 22,[1] on 26 April 1964, Tanganyika officially joined with the People's Republic of Zanzibar and Pemba to form the United Republic of Tanganyika and Zanzibar, a new state that changed its name to the United Republic of Tanzania within a year.[2] It was situated between the Indian Ocean and the African Great Lakes of Lake Victoria, Lake Nyasa and Lake Tanganyika.

History

Main article: History of Tanzania

Tanganyika originally consisted of the Tanganyika Territory, the British share of German East Africa, which the British took under a League of Nations Mandate in 1922, and which was later transformed into a United Nations Trust Territory after World War II. The other parts of German East Africa were taken into Belgian trusteeship, eventually becoming present-day Rwanda and Burundi.

The Tanganyika Independence Act 1961 transformed the United Nations trust territory into the independent sovereign Commonwealth realm of Tanganyika. The British monarch Elizabeth II remained head of state and Tanganyika shared the Sovereign with the other Commonwealth realms. The monarch's constitutional roles were mostly delegated to the Governor-General of Tanganyika. The royal succession was governed by the English Act of Settlement of 1701.

Tanganyika adopted a new constitution in 1962 that abolished the monarchy, with the Tanzanian Parliament (the majority of whom were members of the Tanganyika African National Union Party) drastically revising the new Constitution to favor a strong executive branch of government, namely a president.[2] Tanganyika then became a republic within the Commonwealth. After the Union of Zanzibar and Tanganyika, an interim Constitution amended from the 1962 Constitution became the governing document. Although meant to be temporary, the Constitutions remained effective until 1977.[2]

Julius Nyerere served as the first President of Tanganyika, which in turn led to the unification of Tanganyika and Zanzibar in 1964, following Nyerere's principle of Ujamaa which entailed a strong "territorial nationalism."[3]

See also

References

  1. "Background history of the The Union between Tanganyika and Zanzibar" (PDF).
  2. 1 2 3 Katundu, Mangasini (August 2015). "Tanzania's Constitutional Reform Predicament and the Survival of the Tanganyika and Zanzibar Union". The Journal of Pan African Studies. 8 (3).
  3. Gunderson, Frank (4 May 2013). "Expressive Bodies / Controlling Impulses: The Dance Between Official Culture and Musical Resistance in Colonial Western Tanganyika". Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal. 96 (2): 145–169. ISSN 2161-6302.
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