Colony and Protectorate of Kenya | ||||
British colony | ||||
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Flag of Colony of Kenya |
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Anthem God Save the Queen |
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Capital | Nairobi | |||
Language(s) | English | |||
Government | Colonial administration | |||
Monarch | ||||
- 1920-1936 | George V | |||
- 1936 | Edward VIII | |||
- 1936-1952 | George VI | |||
- 1952-1963 | Elizabeth II | |||
Commissioner, Governor | ||||
- 1920-1922 | Sir Edward Northey | |||
- 1937-1939 | Sir Robert Brooke-Popham | |||
- 1963 | Malcolm John MacDonald | |||
Historical era | 20th century | |||
- Established | 23 July 1920 | |||
- Independent as Kenya | 12 December 1963 | |||
Currency | East African Shilling |
The Colony and Protectorate of Kenya was part of the British Empire in the territory of present-day Kenya. It was established when the former East Africa Protectorate was transformed into a British crown colony in 1920. Technically, the Colony of Kenya referred to the interior lands, while a ten-mile coastal strip (ostensibly on lease from the Sultan of Zanzibar) was the Protectorate of Kenya but the two were controlled as a single administrative unit. Mombasa, the largest city in 1921, had a population of 32,000 at that time.
Indians in the Kenya Colony[1] objected to the reservation of the Highlands for Europeans, and bitterness grew between the Indians and the Europeans. The population in 1921 was estimated at 2,376,000, of whom 9651 were Europeans, 22,822 Indians, and 10,102 Arabs.
The colony came to an end in 1963 when independence was agreed with the British. After independence, the former colony became known as Kenya.
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