Wadelai was a boma at a narrow point on the Albert Nile in what is now northern Uganda. There were several shortlived colonial stations there, the first being the final chief station of Emin Pasha when Governor of Equatoria. Wadelai gives its name to a current Ugandan sub-county. [1]
Wadelai lay about 200 miles (320 km) in a straight line north-northwest of Entebbe, and 72 miles (116 km) by river downstream from Butiaba (on Lake Albert), [2] just north of Lake Rubi, a swampy broad of papyrus and ambatch. [3] The local Ragem were a Jonam branch of the Alur people, who migrated northwest under pressure from the Lango. [4] The Ragem were first visited by a European, Lieutenant H. Chippendall, in 1875. [2] In 1876 Romolo Gessi, exploring Lake Albert in the service of General Gordon, named the Ragem area "Wadelai" after its chieftain, a vassal of Kabarega, king of Bunyoro. [2] The chieftain's personal name was Fishwa [4] or Pico; [5] "Wadelai" ("Wat-el-Lai", [4] Wo' Lei, [6] or Walad Lāy [7] ) was a patronymic ("son of Lai") bestowed by the Sudanese. [4] The region was annexed to the Egyptian Sudan and a site near Wadelai's village chosen as a government post. This post was on the western bank of the Nile, downstream (north) of the later British station. [2] [8]
Here for some time Emin Pasha had his headquarters, evacuating the place in December 1888. Thereafter, for some years, the district was held by the Mahdists. In 1894 the British established the Protectorate of Uganda after making treaties with regional chiefs, including the "sheikh of Wadelai". [9] The British flag was hoisted at Wadelai, on both banks of the Nile, by Major E. R. Owen. The British built a government station at 2°47′N31°30′E / 2.783°N 31.500°E [10] on the east bank on a hill 160 to 200 feet (50 to 60 m) above the Nile at a spot where the river narrows to 482 feet (147 m) and attains a depth of 30 feet (9 m). [2] Alur chief Uŋwec called this site "East Wadelai". [5] At this place was a gauge for measuring the discharge of the river. [2] The Lado Enclave of the Congo Free State controlled the west bank from 1894 and the Belgians occupied Emin's old fort. Ewart Grogan passed through in 1899, and wrote, "A tiny lake, scarce five miles wide, smothered with weed, two insignificant hills, over one of which the Union Jack flutters on a crooked pole, some gravitation-defying huts, a sad-eyed Englishman, such is Wadelai". [11] Grogan lamented that the Royal Artillery officer manning the station had to spend his time "sorting mails and retailing beads and yards of cloth", keeping him from "the really important work of inspecting the country and winning the confidence of the natives". [12] The British government post was moved from Wadelai to Fatiko in 1906 and then Koba in 1907. [2] [13] At the same time the Belgian post closed as part of a general withdrawal from Lado. [14] From then until the outbreak of the First World War, Wadelai was a base for poaching of elephants for the ivory trade. [15] In 1910 the Smithsonian–Roosevelt African Expedition was allowed to hunt white rhinoceros. [16] [17]
Winston Churchill passing through in 1907 and described Wadelai as "newly abandoned to ruin". [14] Theodore Roosevelt described the native settlement in 1910: "thatched huts surrounded by a fence .. small fields of mealies and beans, cultivated by the women, and a few cattle and goats; ... big wicker-work fish-traps". [18] Sleeping sickness was endemic. [19] There remained a weather station at Wadelai; [10] the telegraph office was closed in May 1918. [20] According to the 1929 Encyclopaedia Britannica , steamboats between Butiaba and Nimule were still calling at the Wadelai "native village". [21]
Archaeological surveys were made of the remains of "Fort Emin Pasha" in 1935 by A. J. Rusk and in 1963 by Merrick Posnansky and the Brathay Exploration Group. [22] In 1972 it was scheduled as a historical cultural site. [17] A small hotel opened there in 2013, funded by the German government in memory of Emin's German origins. [17]
A journalist visiting the British fort site in 2008 found it deserted and overgrown. [23]
Wadelai is a sub-county of Jonam County (formerly in Nebbi District but now in Pakwach District). There is a Magistrate Grade II Court in Wadelai. [24] The sub-county has a total area of 248.6 square kilometres (96.0 sq mi). [25] It is divided into the parishes of Mutir, Pakwinyo, Pumit, Ongwelle, and Ojigo, [26] each in turn divided into villages. The parishes of Ragem Upper and Lower were in Wadelai sub-county at the time of the 2014 census but subsequently erected into a new sub-county named Ragem. The modern settlement of Wadelai is several kilometres from the west bank of the Nile at 2°43′27″N31°23′33″E / 2.72417°N 31.39250°E [27] , where the road from Ajai Wildlife Reserve to Pakwach crosses the Ora River.
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
NRM | Leonard Opio Anywar | 1,378 | 32 | |
Independent | Pokech K. Francis Ayella | 1,057 | 25 | |
FDC | Lawrence Kertho | 925 | 21 | |
UPC | Ovuru Onenarach Aliga | 500 | 12 | |
Independent | John Olama | 452 | 10 | |
The 2016 chairperson election was won by independent Richard Okan with 1,799 votes. [29]
In the 2021 Ugandan Presidential election, the Electoral Commission of Uganda recorded that 4,670 (62%) of 7,488 of voters registered in the sub-county cast ballots, 3,424 (73%) of them for incumbent and winner Yoweri Museveni. [26]
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)Lake Albert, originally known as Lake Mwitanzige by the Banyoro, Nam Ovoyo Bonyo by the Alur, and temporarily as Lake Mobutu Sese Seko, is a lake located in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It is Africa's seventh-largest lake, as well as the second biggest of Uganda's Great Lakes.
Mehmed Emin Pasha was an Ottoman physician of German Jewish origin, naturalist, and governor of the Egyptian province of Equatoria on the upper Nile. The Ottoman Empire conferred the title "Pasha" on him in 1886, and thereafter he was referred to as "Emin Pasha".
Equatoria is the southernmost region of South Sudan, along the upper reaches of the White Nile and the border between South Sudan and Uganda. Juba, the national capital and the largest city in South Sudan, is located in Equatoria. Originally a province of Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, it also contained most of northern parts of present-day Uganda, including Lake Albert and West Nile. It was an idealistic effort to create a model state in the interior of Africa that never consisted of more than a handful of adventurers and soldiers in isolated outposts.
The Lado Enclave was a leased territory administered by the Congo Free State and later by the Belgian Congo that existed from 1894 until 1910, situated on the west bank of the Upper Nile in what is now South Sudan and northwest Uganda. Its capital was the town of Lado.
Arua District is a district in the Northern Region of Uganda. Like many Ugandan districts, it too shares its name with its administrative center of Arua. The name Arua is said to be derived from the Lugbara name for prison (Arujo) and prisoner (Aru), since the white settlers had a detention center at Arua Hill.
Nebbi District is a district in Northern Uganda. It is named after its main municipal, commercial and administrative centre, Nebbi, the location of the district headquarters.
Arua is a city and commercial centre within the Arua District in the Northern Region of Uganda.
Henry Luke Orombi in Pakwach, North Western Uganda, is a Ugandan Anglican bishop. He served as Archbishop of Uganda and Bishop of Kampala from 2004 until his retirement in December 2012, two years earlier than expected. He was succeeded as Archbishop by Stanley Ntagali, who was consecrated in December 2012. Orombi served as Bishop of the Diocese of Kampala, which is the fixed episcopal see of the Archbishop, but unlike many other fixed metropolitical sees, the incumbent is not officially known as "Archbishop of Kampala", but bears the longer compound title "Archbishop of Uganda and Bishop of Kampala".
Richard Buchta(Austrian German pronunciation: [ˈrɪçart ˈbuxtɐ], 19 January 1845 – 29 July 1894) was an Austrian explorer in East Africa, travel writer, painter and photographer. Born in Radlow, Galicia, Austrian Empire, he traveled widely, first to Germany, France, the Balkans, and Turkey, Egypt and the Sudan. Upon his return to Germany and later to Austria, he published several books on the geography, ethnic groups and political conditions of the historic Sudan in the 1870s and 1880s. His historical photographs, taken mainly in southern Sudan, are regarded as the earliest photographs of ethnic people living along the White Nile and beyond.
Pakwach is a town in the Northern Region of Uganda. It is the main commercial, political and administrative center of Pakwach District. In the 19th century the town came under brief occupation by the Ottoman branch of the Khedivate of Egypt, as part of Hatt-ı Üstuva (Equatoria) Vilayet.
Nebbi is a town in the Nebbi District of the Northern Region of Uganda. It is the site of the district headquarters.
Paraa is a location in Northern Uganda.
Southern Sudan was an autonomous region consisting of the ten southern states of Sudan between its formation in July 2005 and independence as the Republic of South Sudan in July 2011. The autonomous government was initially established in Rumbek and later moved to Juba. It was bordered by Ethiopia to the east; Kenya, Uganda, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo to the south; and the Central African Republic to the west. To the north lies the predominantly Arab and Muslim region directly under the control of the central government. The region's autonomous status was a condition of a peace agreement between the Sudan People's Liberation Army/Movement (SPLA/M) and the Government of Sudan represented by the National Congress Party ending the Second Sudanese Civil War. The conflict was Africa's longest running civil war.
Major General Sir James Ronald Leslie Macdonald was a British engineer, explorer, military officer and cartographer. Born in the Madras Presidency, he was a balloon observer as a young man, surveyed for railways in British India and East Africa, explored the upper Nile region, commanded balloon sections during the Second Boer War and Boxer Rebellion and led the British expedition to Tibet in 1903–1904.
Muni University (MU) is a public multi-campus university in Uganda. It is one of the public universities and degree-awarding institutions in the country, licensed and supervised by the Uganda National Council for Higher Education (UNCHE).
Parombo is a town in the West Nile sub-region of the Northern Region of Uganda.
Peter C. "Pete" Pearson was an Australian-born game ranger, poacher, and professional hunter in East Africa.
The Uganda Army, also known as Uganda Armed Forces, served as the national armed forces of Uganda during the dictatorship of Idi Amin (1971–1979). It mostly collapsed during the Uganda–Tanzania War, but remnants continued to operate in exile from 1979. These pro-Amin rebel forces continued to be called the "Uganda Army" and maintained a semblance of cohesion until 1980, when they fully fractured into rival factions.
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Equatoria was a Mudiriyah of the Khedivate of Egypt in the late 19th century. It was located in modern-day South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Uganda. Equatoria, as an Egyptian province, was created on the 26th of May, 1871, following the formal annexation of Gondokoro by Egypt, which was organized by Samuel Baker. Throughout its early existence, the provincial administration in Gondokoro was plagued by instability, as conflict with slave traders and the native Bari tribes meant that the governor only controlled the areas around the capital and the forts. However, during its later existence, Equatoria experienced a “golden period”, where the province was self-sufficient, prosperous, and the Egyptians under Emin Pasha maintained positive relations with both the interlacustrine kingdoms, and the surrounding tribes. Ultimately however, the outbreak of the Mahdist War in the Sudan which severed communications with Khartoum and Cairo, led to the fall of Equatoria, as Mahdist offensives led by Karam Allāh Muḥammad Kurkusāwī surrounded the Egyptian forts, which forced Emin to withdraw south to Wadelai, until he finally abandoned the province in early 1889, following an expedition sent to relieve his forces.