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From Chalo Chatu, Zambia online encyclopedia
  • {{Infobox Bilateral relations|South African - Zambian |South Africa| Zambia}} ...o the [[bilateralism|current and historical relationship]] between [[South Africa]] and [[Zambia]]. Both countries are members of the [[Southern African Deve
    2 KB (313 words) - 23:25, 12 July 2016
  • ...he treaty did not confer protectorate status on the territory, as only the British government could confer that status. Nonetheless, the charter gave the terr ...[Barotseland]] to form [[Barotziland-North-Western Rhodesia]], an official British protectorate.<ref>Barotziland-North-Western Rhodesia Order in Council, 1899
    2 KB (271 words) - 13:14, 11 August 2016
  • ...the Company, and has been Zambia since 1964; that to the south, which the Company dubbed Southern Rhodesia, became Zimbabwe in 1980. Northern and Southern Rh ...director. It was used in newspapers from 1891 and was made official by the Company in 1895.
    5 KB (701 words) - 13:24, 13 October 2016
  • |continent = Africa |region = Central Africa
    10 KB (1,389 words) - 13:15, 11 August 2016
  • |continent = Africa |region = Central Africa
    11 KB (1,477 words) - 17:14, 17 July 2016
  • ...878-1879 travel narrative ''Como eu atravessei a África'' (''How I Crossed Africa'', in English translation). ...t the white men. Arnot may have helped Lewanika to see the advantages of a British protectorate in terms of the greater wealth and security it would provide.<
    5 KB (850 words) - 15:00, 2 August 2016
  • ..., an army that originated in the Sotho-speaking Bafokeng region of [[South Africa]], known as the [[Makololo]], led by a warrior called [[Sebetwane]], invade ...developments in infrastructure and education were made.<ref>Reader, John. Africa: A Biography of the Continent</ref>
    6 KB (832 words) - 04:15, 29 June 2016
  • ...farmers, and pressed for its creation; however, the [[British South Africa Company]] (BSAC) insisted that there were too few Europeans in the territory (1,184 ...seats) and [[North-Eastern Rhodesia]] (one seat). Voting was restricted to British subjects over the age of 21 who had lived in the territory for at least six
    3 KB (438 words) - 01:47, 29 June 2016
  • |related= [[White people in Botswana]], [[White people in Zimbabwe]], [[White South African]]s ...ambia.<ref name="zastudy">{{cite book|last=Kaplan|first=Irving|title=South Africa: A Country Study|pages=1–846}}</ref>
    6 KB (751 words) - 03:44, 4 September 2016
  • {{Use British English|date=December 2014}} ...adopted upon independence on October 24, 1964. Before that, Zambia was the British protectorate of [[Northern Rhodesia]] and used a defaced [[Blue Ensign]] as
    8 KB (1,129 words) - 18:01, 17 July 2016
  • ...olonial]] [[Boma (enclosure)|boma]] of the [[British Empire]] in [[central Africa]] and today is a settlement in the [[Luapula Province]] of [[Zambia]], and ...lan, 2013-2017, Lusaka. pp8</ref> [[Bwile people]], five kilometres to the south, was amenable to a treaty, Sharpe decided to set up a boma there to secure
    6 KB (941 words) - 21:15, 15 July 2016
  • {{Infobox company |type = [[Public company|Public]]
    7 KB (905 words) - 13:14, 6 July 2016
  • ...Central Africa. The railway started as part of [[Rhodesian Railways]], the company which ran the railways of Northern Rhodesia and Southern Rhodesia as an int ...ed in Zambia. It is a subsidiary of NLPI Ltd (NLPI), an investment holding company. The NLPI Consortium participated in a tender in respect of the Zambia Rail
    7 KB (1,086 words) - 09:32, 1 March 2018
  • ...risoners of the Past: A Note on the History of Railway Politics in Central Africa, pp. 63-4.</ref> ...s. The railway could not meet the costs of the construction loans, and the company faced major financial problems. The only area likely to generate sufficient
    12 KB (1,827 words) - 13:24, 1 December 2016
  • ...ard to Africa, let alone Africans."<ref>Ieuan Griffiths: "The Scramble for Africa: Inherited Political Boundaries", ''The Geographical Journal'', Vol 152 No ==British and Belgian territorial claims==
    9 KB (1,504 words) - 13:37, 26 July 2017
  • In 1913, The British South Africa Company gazetted Lusaka as a local authority under a Village Management Board. The ...ntal activities in key economic sectors: Lusaka's first hospital was built south of [[Villa Elizabetha]] in 1918. In the same year, the financial sector saw
    4 KB (589 words) - 11:29, 14 March 2018
  • ...[[British Empire|British colonial]] control of this part of south-central Africa.<ref name="NRJ">[http://www.nrzam.org.uk ‘’The Northern Rhodesia Journa ...[Nyasaland]], and decisions were taken to strengthen the imperial presence south of the lake and prevent other colonial powers establishing a foothold there
    13 KB (1,975 words) - 21:01, 15 July 2016
  • ...from the early 1890s to 1902. Alone and unassisted, he arrived from South Africa in about 1887, reputedly as an outlaw, and assembled and trained a private ...een collecting [[hut tax]] for at least two years under this pretence, the Company resolved to remove him from power, and did so in 1902. Clark then farmed fo
    23 KB (3,561 words) - 15:56, 11 November 2016
  • ...rica.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1874&Itemid=35 Railways Africa - EXTENDING BEYOND CHIPATA<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> This link plu J.H. Venning, the [[British South Africa Company]] Provincial Commissioner in [[Abercorn (Northern Rhodesia)|Abercorn]] –
    4 KB (684 words) - 06:47, 30 August 2016
  • ...y around [[Kasama, Zambia|Kasama]]. At the time the [[British South Africa Company]] (BSAC) chartered by Britain to administer [[North-Eastern Rhodesia]] was ...athers]] missionary society, now called the Society of the Missionaries of Africa. He was [[Holy Orders|ordained]] a priest on 21 December 1878, and took his
    10 KB (1,452 words) - 15:22, 10 January 2017
  • | death_place = Muizenberg, Cape Colony<br />(now South Africa) | nationality = British
    26 KB (3,835 words) - 14:00, 12 October 2016
  • ...Inonge Mbikusita-Lewanika]] - diplomat, former UNICEF Regional Adviser for Africa, Presidential Candidate (2001) * [[Corné Krige]] - Zambian-born South African Springboks Rugby Union team player
    12 KB (1,538 words) - 11:09, 15 November 2016
  • ...in Lusaka was donated by Alfred Beit director in the British South Africa Company. In his will he set up the Beit Trust through which he bequeathed large sum
    4 KB (591 words) - 14:18, 10 February 2022
  • ...of [[Northern Rhodesia]] separate from [[British South Africa Company]] [[Company rule in Rhodesia|rule in the Rhodesias]], the elected Legislative Council w ...ame=as>{{cite book |page=1143 |first=Katherine |last=Murison |title=Africa South of the Sahara 2003 |publisher=Psychology Press |year=2002 |isbn=97818574313
    13 KB (1,682 words) - 08:10, 26 September 2023
  • ...op:''' Proposed flag and arms.<br/>'''Bottom:''' Map of Barotseland within Africa; orthographic projection ...branch are the Luyi (Maluyi), and also assimilated northern Sotho of South Africa who they called [[Sotho people#Zulu expansionism and White migration|Kololo
    24 KB (3,397 words) - 11:44, 14 March 2018
  • ...h 2007</ref> It is named after [[David Livingstone]], the [[United Kingdom|British]] explorer who was the first European to explore the area. Mukuni, {{convert|9.6|km|mi|abbr=on}} to the south-east of present-day Livingstone, was the largest village in the area before
    21 KB (2,814 words) - 15:35, 14 November 2016
  • ...portion of the basin of the Kafue River on the central plateau of southern Africa, and is about 900 to 1,500 m (about 3,000 to 5,000 ft) above sea level. The ...British colonial rule began in the mid-1890s when the British South Africa Company signed treaties with local chiefs. The province became part of the colony o
    8 KB (1,075 words) - 16:14, 14 July 2016
  • |continent = Africa |region = Southern Africa
    38 KB (5,403 words) - 16:33, 10 October 2016
  • ...er was Francis Gore Browne,{{sfn|Rotberg|1977|p=6}} a lawyer and writer on company law,<ref name="Gore-BrowneBoyle2004">{{cite book|last1=Gore-Browne|first1=S When he heard in 1914 that the [[British South Africa Company]] which administered Northern Rhodesia was selling land very cheaply to whi
    12 KB (1,761 words) - 12:55, 16 November 2016
  • {{Infobox company '''ZCCM Investments Holdings''' is a successor company to Zambia Consolidated Copper Mines Limited (ZCCM Ltd), of [[Zambia]].
    13 KB (1,902 words) - 19:42, 26 June 2016
  • ...]]). Later, the Belgians wanted to claim this land. Over the years, during British colonial rule, District Commissioners and [[Provincial Commissioner]]s were ...t Belgian maps of 1955 show the meeting point at Cape Kipimbi which is far south of Cape Pungu, thereby cutting deep into assumed [[Northern Rhodesia]]n ter
    31 KB (4,916 words) - 15:05, 2 July 2016
  • ...ature of the Bangweulu system is a series of parallel sandy ridges running south-west to north-east. These are particularly striking in satellite photograph ...r swamps. The largest is Lake Kampolombo ''(9)'', 30&nbsp;km by 5&nbsp;km, south of Lake Walilupe and connected to it by a 7&nbsp;km channel. The 32&nbsp;km
    16 KB (2,486 words) - 13:57, 7 March 2018
  • ...l barriers and opened a new era in Rhodesian sport when he beat the famous British four minute miler, Gordon Pirie, by 100 yards in a three-mile race at Salis ...cember 1958. However, his skin colour almost saw him being barred by South Africa-born William DuBois, a dedicated white supremacist who served as chairman o
    8 KB (1,126 words) - 11:10, 24 November 2019
  • ...o spelled ''Mwelu'', ''Mwero'') is a freshwater lake on the longest arm of Africa's second-longest river, the Congo. Located on the border between [[Zambia]] ...ainly fed by the [[Luapula River]], which comes in through swamps from the south, and the [[Kalungwishi River]] from the east. At its north end the lake is
    18 KB (2,831 words) - 04:24, 29 June 2016
  • ...r 1961 and 2 November 1961<ref name="un_sec_report"/> under the command of British Lt. Colonel [[Maurice C. H. Barber|M.C.B. Barber]]. The Rhodesian Commissio ...terious Death of Dag Hammarskjold|year=1962|publisher=New York: Walker and Company|page=58}}</ref>
    19 KB (2,898 words) - 12:29, 9 July 2016
  • The '''Northern Rhodesia Police''' was the police force of the British ruled protectorate of [[Northern Rhodesia]] (now [[Zambia]]). ...babwe), Bechuanaland (Botswana) and the Caprivi strip of German South West Africa (Namibia), was not a political unit and had no name at all. Customary law w
    33 KB (5,133 words) - 07:09, 30 August 2016
  • ...in [[Kabwe]] in 1921 - this was the first human fossil ever discovered in Africa.<ref>http://www.nhm.ac.uk/nature-online/collections-at-the-museum/museum-tr ...ctised [[slash and burn]] agriculture, they had to constantly move further south when the [[soil]] was exhausted. The [[indigenous peoples|indigenous]] khoi
    28 KB (4,154 words) - 15:07, 15 May 2017
  • ...Waller]] (ed.) (1874) ''The Last Journals of David Livingstone in Central Africa from 1865 to his Death''. Two volumes, John Murray.</ref>) who called it va ...slave trade, he reached the northeastern shore of Lake Mweru. He continued south down the eastern shore. Mwata Kazembe VII had been alerted to his arrival a
    26 KB (3,930 words) - 14:46, 22 September 2016
  • ...Waller]] (ed.) (1874) ''The Last Journals of David Livingstone in Central Africa from 1865 to his Death''. Two volumes, John Murray.</ref>) who called it va ...slave trade, he reached the northeastern shore of Lake Mweru. He continued south down the eastern shore. Mwata Kazembe VII had been alerted to his arrival a
    26 KB (3,936 words) - 13:20, 2 September 2016
  • ...'new world'. He left Kapela village on foot with two companions and headed South eventually ending up in a mine town called [[Kwekwe]], where he found work ...and Steel Company (RISco), subsequently known as [[Zimbabwe Iron and Steel Company]] (ZISCO), where Phiri's father Abel was now Head Clerk. Mr. Green took per
    12 KB (1,864 words) - 16:51, 8 July 2016
  • ...% <br> {{flag|China}} 14.1% <br> {{flag|DR Congo}} 13.4% <br> {{flag|South Africa}} 6.1% <br> {{flag|United Arab Emirates}} 4.9% (2014 est.)<ref>{{cite web|u |import-partners = {{flag|South Africa}} 31.3% <br> {{flag|DR Congo}} 18.7% <br> {{flag|China}} 9.3% <br> {{flag|K
    19 KB (2,721 words) - 11:33, 17 July 2016
  • ...ting in the 18th century, Zambia was gradually claimed and occupied by the British as protectorate of Northern Rhodesia towards the end of the nineteenth cent **Africa
    25 KB (2,990 words) - 23:03, 2 July 2016
  • ...ting in the 18th century, Zambia was gradually claimed and occupied by the British as protectorate of [[Northern Rhodesia]] towards the end of the nineteenth **[[Africa]]
    25 KB (3,035 words) - 04:34, 17 July 2016
  • |continent = Africa |region = Southern Africa
    79 KB (11,521 words) - 04:37, 31 August 2022
  • Ruwe returned to Zambia in 1982. In the same year, he was sponsored by [[The British Council]] to study television production at the BBC [[Open University]] in ...Roads Board and the [[World Bank]], "Zamseed Radio Program" by Zambia Seed Company, "DBZ of the Air" by the Development Bank of Zambia, and more than twenty c
    14 KB (1,974 words) - 14:11, 23 September 2016
  • | designation1_free2value = [[List of World Heritage Sites in Africa|Africa]] ...oa-Tunya'''Tonga: ''the Smoke that Thunders''), is a waterfall in southern Africa on the [[Zambezi River]] at the border of Zambia and Zimbabwe.
    27 KB (4,183 words) - 15:24, 12 September 2016
  • ...[DB Studios]] in Lusaka, and records pressed in Ndola by the [[Teal Record Company]]. ...[[Ngoma Awards]]. The Ngoma Awards amount to a Zambian version of the all-Africa [[Kora Awards]]. At the moment [[K'Millian]], [[Marky 2]], Slap dee, is a
    15 KB (2,218 words) - 06:10, 27 March 2020
  • |Ship operator = [[Marine Services Company Limited]] ...|title=MV. Liemba |author= |date= |work=Vessels |publisher=Marine Services Company Limited |accessdate=26 June 2011 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archi
    24 KB (3,661 words) - 09:05, 13 January 2023
  • ...d, were allowed to circulate in parallel until December 15, 1965, when the South Rhodesian pound bills and coins were withdrawn from circulation, except for ...duction of the kwacha's [[gold standard]] by 7.8%. A few months later, the British [[Chancellor of the Exchequer]] [[Anthony Barber]], announced the demise of
    32 KB (4,753 words) - 10:48, 12 January 2018
  • ...'Uhuru Railway''' or the '''Tanzam Railway''', is a [[railroad]] in [[East Africa]] linking the [[Port of Dar es Salaam|port]] of [[Dar es Salaam]] in [[Tanz ...ambia's economic dependence on [[Rhodesia]] (now [[Zimbabwe]]) and [[South Africa]], both of which were ruled by white-minority governments.<ref name="depend
    45 KB (6,585 words) - 14:40, 30 November 2016
  • ...tudent there, he frequented Scrivener Stadium and trained regularly in the company of Edward Kalale, Lazarus Musumali, Eric Chekoloko, Isaac Musakanya and Sim ...amuel Ndhlovu|Samuel "Zoom" Ndhlovu]] and Mwila himself had been picked by British coach Phil Woosnam to go and play in the professional league in America, wi
    27 KB (4,282 words) - 18:26, 26 April 2017
  • |time_zone = [[Central Africa Time|CAT]] ...part of Zambia. The population is concentrated mainly around Lusaka in the south and the [[Copperbelt Province]] to the northwest, the core economic hubs of
    73 KB (10,138 words) - 23:44, 3 August 2017
  • ...ambia's economy flourishes. The mineral rights of the British South Africa Company now accrue to the state. And copper prices rise dramatically, largely becau ...ration of UDI by Ian Smith, in 1965, Zambia becomes the frontline state in Africa's struggle against this act of white supremacy. Kaunda takes a lead in oppo
    28 KB (4,075 words) - 14:18, 21 November 2016
  • ...RQwsE-PmYC&q=Kenneth+Kaunda+28+april&pg=PA13|title=Independence Leaders of Africa|first=Bridgette|last=Kasuka|date=7 February 2012|publisher=Bankole Kamara T ...as at the forefront of the struggle for independence from [[British Empire|British rule]]. Dissatisfied with [[Harry Nkumbula]]'s leadership of the [[Zambian
    50 KB (7,197 words) - 20:24, 18 June 2021
  • |birth_place = Blantyre, South Lanarkshire, Scotland, United Kingdom |nationality = British
    59 KB (8,831 words) - 13:33, 17 November 2016
  • ...football team|Zambia U20]] win the [[2017 Africa U-20 Cup of Nations |U20 Africa Cup]] for the first time in history. *'''2015 Mar''' - President [[Edgar Lungu|Lungu]] has surgery in South Africa. He collapsed at an event the month before.
    40 KB (6,116 words) - 05:56, 22 July 2023
  • ...s heavily in the accounts of [[David Livingstone]]'s journeys in [[Central Africa]]. ...any of the Indians serving in the British Indian Army convinced, "that the British did indeed have plans to Christianize India",<ref>Ferguson 2004: 145</ref>
    58 KB (8,890 words) - 15:36, 5 August 2016