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African History 2: Bunyoro and Buganda 6 Views
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Description:
Today we're going to learn about how salt can build a city, and bananas can build an army. Seriously. Take a look.
Transcript
- 00:04
OK, get ready for a tale of two kingdoms: Bunyoro and Buganda.
- 00:08
Yes, those are actual places, not Caribbean dance moves. [Caribbean men dancing]
- 00:12
They were both societies that emerged in the central African jungle in what is present
- 00:17
day Uganda.
- 00:19
Bunyoro and Buganda aren't as old as some of the other civilizations we've been talking [Bunyoro and Uganda bump into each other]
Full Transcript
- 00:23
about.
- 00:24
They mostly came to power in the middle ages.
- 00:26
But…that’s still pretty old, right?
- 00:28
And the thing that makes these societies the most interesting is that they’re examples
- 00:32
of isolated and… peculiarly African… development.
- 00:36
These dudes weren't influenced by the Egyptians or the Middle East. [Tiger in a field and a city appears from under the ground]
- 00:39
They rose up out of the jungle all by their lonesome.
- 00:42
Bunyoro actually came to power first.
- 00:45
What was the secret to its success?
- 00:47
Salt.
- 00:48
Yup…salt. [Person shakes a salt shaker]
- 00:49
It’s a mineral that’s essential for all human and animal life, making it, uh… pretty
- 00:54
darn valuable.
- 00:55
So when Bunyoro figured out the process of culling salt from the soil around its lakes, [Man culling salt from a lake]
- 01:00
it eventually figured out it was sitting on a gold mine.
- 01:03
Well, a salt mine.
- 01:05
Well, really a lot of salty dirt.
- 01:07
Whatever…it was valuable.
- 01:09
And trading it gave Bunyoro the kind of thriving economy needed to build a kingdom. [Bunyoro people working]
- 01:13
Meanwhile, a rival was steadily growing in power on the shores of Lake Victoria.
- 01:18
Buganda.
- 01:19
It didn’t have salt, but it did have a knack for growing bananas, which provided the base
- 01:23
for its growing economy.
- 01:24
A country run on banana power. [Country overview with a banana attached to a generator]
- 01:27
Now that idea has some a-peel.
- 01:29
Buganda also had a ton of ambition.
- 01:31
So it put a lot of that banana money toward maintaining a standing army and building a
- 01:35
fleet of jumbo canoes.
- 01:37
It used that army to take over new land and to dominate trade on Lake Victoria. [Buganda army firing bananas at army]
- 01:41
By this point, it was getting pretty lucrative, since Arabic and Swahili traders had arrived [Arabic and Swahili traders fighting with bananas]
- 01:46
looking for slaves and ivory.
- 01:48
Oh, and they also brought a new invention called… the gun.
- 01:53
So that was a biggie. [Buganda fires a gun]
- 01:55
With its newfound wealth and firepower, Buganda started to totally dominate its salty rival
- 02:00
Bunyoro, though the old school kingdom still managed to put up some resistance.
- 02:04
However, Bunyoro’s downfall was sealed when Buganda made a deal with the British, who’d [Buganda negotiating with British soldiers]
- 02:09
arrived first in the form of explorers and missionaries.
- 02:12
Now in the form of soldiers, the British offered to back Buganda, as long as Buganda became
- 02:17
a British Protectorate.
- 02:19
Buganda signed up to be a part of the British empire in 1894, and it wasn’t until the
- 02:23
1960’s that it regained its independence. [Timeline of Buganda]
- 02:26
Back in the day, it seemed like a great opportunity, though.
- 02:28
Together, the British and Bugandans attacked Bunyoro and killed three quarters of its population,
- 02:34
basically annihilating the ancient kingdom. [Bunyoro appears and looks at the rubble]
- 02:35
Talk about overkill.
- 02:38
And that’s why the modern-day country is called Uganda instead of Unyoro or… something
- 02:43
like that.
- 02:44
Though today both Bunyoro and Buganda are recognized provinces within Uganda.
- 02:49
So…would you call that a happy ending? [Ugandan crying]
- 02:54
Tough call.
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