Africans, East, their character and religion, ii. 324.
Albinos, frequency of, amongst the Wazaramo tribes, [i. 109].
Description of them, [109].
Amayr bin Said el Shaksi, calls on Capt. Burton, ii. 228.
His adventures, 228.
Ammunition, danger of, in African travelling, [i. 264].
Androgyne, the, ii. 159.
Animals, wild, of Uzaramo, [i. 63].
Of Dut’humi, [87].
Of Zungomero, [95].
Of the Mrima, [103], [104].
Of K’hutu, [160].
Of the Usagara mountains, [162].
Of the plains beyond the Rufuta, [181], [183].
Of Ugogi, [242].
Of the road to Ugogo, [247].
In Ugogo, [300].
Of Unyamwezi, ii. 15.
Of Ujiji, 60.
Antelopes in the Doab of the Mgeta river, [i. 81].
In the Rufuta plains, [183].
Of East Africa, [268], [269].
On the Mgunda Mk’hali, [289].
Of Ugogo, [i. 300].
Ant-hills of East Africa, [i. 202], [203].
In Unyamwezi, ii. 19.
Clay of, chewed in Unyamwezi, 28.
Anthropophagi of Murivumba, ii. 114.
Ants in the Doab of the Mgeta river, [i. 82].
Red, of the banks of rivers in East Africa, [186].
Maji m’oto, or “hot water” ants, [187].
Near the Marenga Mk’hali river, [201].
Account of them, [202].
Annoyance of, at K’hok’ho, [276].
Of Rubuga, [317].
Of East Africa, [371].
Of Unyamwezi, ii. 19.
Of Ujiji, 64.
Arabs of the East coast of Africa, [i. 30].
The half-castes described, [32].
Those settled in Unyanyembe, [323].
History and description of their settlements, [327].
Tents of, on their march, [353].
Armanika, Sultan of Karagwah, account of, ii. 183.
His government, 183, 184.
Besieged by his brother, ii. 224.
Arms of the Wazaramo, [i. 110].
Of the Wadoe, [124].
Of the Baloch mercenaries, [133].
Of the “Sons of Ramji,” [140].
Required for the expedition, [152].
Of the Wasagara tribe, [199], [237].
Of the Wahehe, [240].
Of the Wagogo, [304].
Of the Wahamba, [312].
Of the porters of caravans, [350].
Of the Wakimbu, ii. 20.
Of the Wanzamwezi, 30.
Of the Wajiji, 66.
Of the Wavinza, 75.
Of the Watuta, 77.
Of the people of Karagwah, 182.
Bakshshish, in the East, ii. 84, 85.
The propriety of rewarding bad conduct, 85.
Influence of, ii. 172.
Balochs, the, of Zanzibar, described, [i. 14].
Their knavery, [85].
Their behaviour on the march, [127].
Sketch of their character, [132].
Their quarrels with the “Sons of Ramji,” [163].
Their desertion and return, [173].
Their penitence, [177].
Their character, [177], [178].
Their discontent and complaints about food, [212], [221].
And proposed desertion, [273], [278].
Their bile cooled, [274].
Their injury to the expedition, [319].
Their breakfast on the march, [345].
Their manœuvres at Kazeh, [376].
Their desertion, ii. 111.
Influenced by bakhshish, 217.
Their quarrel with the porters, 253.
Doing “Zam,” ii. 276.
Sent home, 277.
Bdellium Tree, or Mukl, of Ugogo, [i. 299].
Uses of, among the Wagogo, [300].
Beads, mode of carrying, in the expedition, [i. 145].
Account of African beads of commerce, [146].
Currency at Msene, [398].
Those most highly valued in Ujiji, ii. 72.
Bead trade of Zanzibar, 390.
Bee-hives, seen for the first time at Marenga Mk’hali, [i. 200].
Their shape, [200].
Of Rubuga, [317].
Beer in East Africa, ii. 285.
Mode of making it, 286.
Bees in K’hutu, [i. 120].
But no bee-hives, [120].
Wild, attack the caravan, [i. 176], [248], [249].
Annoyance of, at K’hok’ho, [276].
Of East Africa, ii. 287.
Beetles in houses at Ujiji, ii. 91, note.
One in the ear of Captain Speke, 91, note.
Bhang plant, the, in Zungomero, [i. 95].
Smoked throughout East Africa, [96].
Effects produced by, [96].
Used in Ujiji, ii. 70.
Billhooks carried by the Wasagara tribe, [i. 238].
Birds, mode of catching them, [i. 160].
Scarcity of, in East Africa, [270].
Of Ugogo, [300].
Period of nidification and incubation of, ii. 13.
Of Unyamwezi, 16.
Of Ujiji, 60.
Blackmail of the Wazaramo, [i. 70], [113].
Of the Wak’hutu, [121].
Of the Wazegura, [125].
At Ugogo, [252].
Account of the blackmail of East Africa, [253].
At Kirufuru, [264].
At Kanyenye, [265].
In K’hok’ho, [274].
At Mdaburu, [279].
At Wanyika, [407].
At Ubwari island, ii. 114.
Blood of cattle, drunk in East Africa, ii. 282.
Boats of the Tanganyika Lake, described, ii. 94.
Boatmen of the Tanganyika Lake, ii. 101.
Bomani, “the stockade,” village of, [i. 47].
Halt at, [47].
Vegetation of, [47], [48].
Departure from, [51].
Ill effects of the climate and food of Ujiji, ii. 85.
Captain Speke sent up the Lake, ii. 87.
Mode of spending the day at Ujiji, ii. 87.
Failure of Capt. Speke’s expedition, ii. 90.
The author prepares for a cruise, ii. 93.
The voyage, ii. 99.
Halts and encamps at Kigari, ii. 101.
Enters the region of Urundi, ii. 101.
Reaches and halts at Wafanya, ii. 106.
Sails for the island of Ubwari, ii. 112.
Anchors there, ii. 113.
Leaves there and arrives at Murivumba, ii. 114.
Reaches the southern frontier of Uvira, ii. 115.
Further progress stopped, ii. 117, 119.
Returns, ii. 121.
Storm on the Lake, ii. 123.
Passes the night at Wafanya, ii. 123.
A slave accidentally shot there,
ii. 124.
Returns to Kawele, ii. 124.
Improvement in health, ii. 129.
The outfit reduced to a minimum, ii. 130.
Arrival of supplies, but inadequate, ii. 132.
Preparations for the return to Unyanyembe, ii. 155.
The departure, ii. 157.
The return-march, ii. 160.
Pitches tents at Uyonwa, ii. 161.
Desertions, ii. 161.
Returns to the ferry of the Malagarazi, ii. 164.
Marches back to Unyanyembe, ii. 165.
Halts at Yombo, ii. 166.
Re-enters Kazeh, ii. 167.
Sends his companion on an expedition to the north, ii. 173.
His mode of passing time at Kazeh, ii. 173, 198.
Preparations for journeying, ii. 200.
Shortness of funds, ii. 221.
Outfit for the return, ii. 229.
Departs from Kazeh, ii. 231.
Halts at Hanga, ii. 232.
Leaves Hanga, ii. 240.
Returns through Ugogo, ii. 244.
The letters with the official “wigging,” ii. 247.
Takes the Kiringawana route, ii. 249.
Halts at a den of thieves, ii. 252.
And at Maroro, ii. 255.
Marches to Kiperepeta, ii. 256.
Fords the Yovu, ii. 258.
Halts at Ruhembe rivulet, ii. 261.
And on the Makata plain, ii. 262.
Halts at Uziraha, ii. 263.
Returns to Zungomero, ii. 264.
Proposes a march to Kilwa, ii. 265.
Desertion of the porters, ii. 266.
Engages fresh ones, ii. 267.
Leaves Zungomero, and resumes the march, ii. 276.
Re-enters Uzaramo, ii. 277.
And Konduchi, ii. 278.
Sights the sea, ii. 278.
Sets out for Kilwa, ii. 372.
Returns to Zanzibar, ii. 379.
Leaves Zanzibar for Aden, ii. 384.
Returns to Europe, ii. 384.
Butter in East Africa, ii. 284.
Cacti in the Usagara Mountains, [i. 165].
Of Mgunda M’Khali, [286].
Calabash-tree of East Africa, described, [i. 147].
In the Usagara mountains, [i. 164],
[229].
Magnificence of, at Ugogo, [260].
The only large tree in Ugogo, [299].
Camp furniture required for the expedition, [i. 152].
Cannibalism of the Wadoe tribe, [i. 123].
Of the people of Murivumba, ii. 114.
Canoes built of mvule trees, ii. 147.
Mode of making them, 147.
Canoes on the Malagarazi river, [i. 409].
On the “Ghaut,” [411].
Capparis sodata, verdure of the, in Ugogo, [i. 300].
Carriage, cost of, in East Africa, ii. 414.
Caravans of ivory, [i. 17].
Slave caravans, [17], [62].
Mode of collecting a caravan in East Africa, [143].
Attacked by wild bees, [4], [176].
And by small-pox, [179].
In East Africa, description of, [337].
Porters, [337-339].
Seasons for travelling, [339].
The three kinds of caravan, [341].
That of the Wanyamwezi, [341].
Those made up by the Arab merchants, [342].
Those of the Wasawahili, &c., [344].
Sketch of a day’s march of an East African caravan, [344].
Mode of forming a caravan, [348].
Dress of the caravan, [349].
Ornaments and arms worn by the porters, [349].
Recreations of the march, [350].
Meeting of two caravans, [351].
Halt of a caravan, [351].
Lodgings on the march, [353].
Cooking, [355], [356].
Greediness of the porters, [356], [357].
Water, [359].
Night, [359].
Dances of the porters, [360].
Their caravan, [361], [362].
Rate of caravan travelling, [362].
Custom respecting caravans in Central Africa, ii. 54.
Those on the Uruwwa route, 148.
Accident to a, 270.
Carissa Carandas, the Corinda bush in Uzaramo, [i. 60].
Carpentering in East Africa, ii. 309.
Carvings, rude, of the Wanyamwezi, ii. 26.
Castor plants of East Africa, [i. 48].
Mode of extracting the oil, [48].
Cats, wild, in Unyamwezi, ii. 15.
Cattle, horned, of Ujiji, ii. 59.
Of Karagwah, 181.
Cattle trade of East Africa, ii. 413.
Cereals of East Africa, ii. 414.
Ceremoniousness of the Wajiji, ii. 69.
Ceremony and politeness, miseries of, in the East, [i. 392].
Coffee, wild, or mwami, of Karagwah, ii. 180, 181,
187.
Commando, pitiable scene presented after one, [i. 185].
Commerce of the Mrima, [i. 39].
Of Zungomero, [95].
Of Uzaramo, [119].
Of Ugogo, [308].
Of the Wanyamwezi, ii. 29.
Of the Nyanza Lake, 215.
African, 224.
Of Ubena, 270.
Of Uvira, ii. 120.
Of East Africa, 387.
Conversation, specimen of, in East Africa, ii. 243, 244.
Cucumbers at Marenga Mk’hali, [i. 201].
Wild, of Unyanyembe, ii. 285.
Cultivation in the Mukondokwa hills, [i. 196], [197].
In the Usagara mountains, [229].
Currency of East Africa, stock may be recruited at Kazeh, [i. 334].
Of Msene, [i. 398].
Of Ujiji, ii. 73.
Of Karagwah, 185.
Of Ubena, 270.
Cynhyænas of Ugogo, [i. 302].
In Unyamwezi, ii. 15.
Cynocephalus, the, in Unyamwezi, ii. 15.
The terror of the country, 15.
Dancing of the Wazaramo women, [i. 55].
African, described, [360]; ii. 291, 298.
Dege la Mhora, “the large jungle bird,” village of, [i. 72].
Fate of M. Maizan at, [73].
Det’he, or Kidete of East Africa, ii. 293.
Devil’s trees of East Africa, ii. 353.
Dialects of the Wazaramo, [i. 107].
The Wagogo, [306].
The Wahumba, [311].
The Wanyamwezi, ii. 5.
The Wakimbu, 20.
The Wanyamwezi, 30.
Diseases of the maritime region of East Africa, [i. 105].
Of the people of Usagara, [233].
Of Ugogo, [299].
Of caravans in East Africa, [342].
Of Unyamwezi, ii. 11, 13, 14.
Of East Africa, 318.
Remedies, 321.
Mystical remedies, 352, 353.
Dishdasheh, El, or turban of the coast Arabs, [i. 32].
Divorce amongst the Wazaramo, [i. 118].
Amongst the East Africans generally, ii. 333.
Drawing materials required for the expedition, [i. 155].
Dress, articles of, of the East Africans, [i. 148].
Of the Wamrima, [33], [34].
Of the Wazaramo, [109].
Of the Wak’hutu, [120].
Of the Wasagara, [253].
Of the Wahete, [239].
Of the Wagogo, [305].
Of the Wahumba, [312].
Of the Wakalaganza, [406].
Of the Wakimbu, ii. 20.
Of the Wanyamwezi, 21.
Of the Wajiji, 64.
Of the Warundi, 146.
Of the Wavinza, 75.
Of the Watuta, 77.
Of the Wabuta, 78.
Of the people of Karagwah, 182.
Of the Wahinda, 220.
Of the Warori, 271.
Dodges of the ferrymen, ii. 164, 165.
Dragon-flies in Unyamwezi, ii. 18.
Drinking-bouts in East Africa, ii. 295, 335.
Drinking-cups in East Africa, ii. 295.
Drums and drumming of East Africa, ii. 295.
Drunkenness of the Wazaramo, [i. 118].
Of the Wak’hutu, [120].
And debauchery of the people of Msene, [398].
Prevalence of, near the Lake Tanganyika, ii. 59.
Of the Wajiji, 69.
Dogs, wild, in Unyamwezi, ii. 16.
Pariah, in the villages of Ujiji, 60.
Rarely heard to bark, 60.
Dolicos pruriens on the banks of the Mgeta river, [i. 166].
Dungomaro, or Mandama, river, arrival of the caravan at the, [i. 222].
Description of the bed of the, [223].
Dut’humi, mountain crags of, [i. 65], [83], [86].
Illness of the chiefs of the expedition at, [84].
Description of the plains of, [86].
Eagles, fish, of Ujiji, ii. 60.
Ear-lobes distended by the Wasagara, [i. 235].
And by the Wahehe, [239].
By the Wagogo, [304].
And by the Wahumba, [312].
Enlarged by the Wanyamwezi, ii. 21.
Ebb and flow of the Tanganyika Lake, ii. 143.
Causes of, 143, 144.
Education of children in Unyamwezi, ii. 23, 24.
Eels of the Tanganyika Lake, ii. 68.
Eggs not eaten by the Wanyamwezi, ii. 29.
Nor by the people of Ujiji, 59.
Elæis Guiniensis, or Mehikichi tree, in Ujiji, ii. 58.
Elephants at Dut’humi, [i. 87].
In Ugogi, [242].
At Ziwa, or the Pond, [251].
On the road to Ugogo, [247].
On the Mgunda Mk’hali, [287], [289].
In Ugogo, [300].
On the banks of the Malagarazi river, [408].
In Unyamwezi, ii. 15.
Near the sea of Ujiji, 60.
In East Africa, 297.
Falsehood of the coast clans of East Africa, [i. 37].
General in East Africa, ii. 328.
Faraj, sketch of him and his wife, the lady Halimah, [i. 129].
Fauna of Ujiji, ii. 60.
Fetiss-huts of the Wazaramo described, [i. 57].
Of East Africa, [369]; ii. 346.
Fetissism of East Africa, ii. 341, et seq.
Fever, marsh, cure in Central Asia for, [i. 82].
The author prostrated by, [84].
Delirium of, [84].
Of East Africa generally described, [105].
The author and his companion again attacked by, at Muhama, [179].
Common in the Usagara mountains, [233].
Seasoning fever of East Africa, generally, [379].
Miasmatic, described, [403].
Low type, [406].
Seasoning fever at Unyamwezi described, ii. 14.
Fire-arms and Gunpowder in East Africa, ii. 308.
Fires in Africa, ii. 259.
Fish of the Kingani river, [i. 56].
Of the Tanganyika Lake, ii. 59.
Varieties of, 67.
Narcotised in Uzaramo, 67.
At Wafanya, 108.
Considered as an article of diet in East Africa, 280.
Fishing in the Tanganyika Lake, ii. 66.
Fisi, or cynhyæna, of Uzaramo, [i. 63].
The scavenger of the country, [i. 64].
Flies in Unyamwezi, ii. 18.
Fatal bite of one in, 19.
Food of the Wamrima, [i. 35].
Of the Wazaramo, [56].
Of the people of Zungomero, [95], [96], [97].
Of the Wak’hutu, [120].
Of the expedition, [151], [198].
Of the people of Marenga Mk’hali, [201].
Of the Wagogo, [310], [311].
Of Rubuga, [317].
Of Kazeh, [329].
Of Arabs of, [331-334].
Of Wilyanhuru, [392-394].
Of Unyamwezi, ii. 28, 29.
Of Ujiji, 70, [88].
Of Karagwah, 180, [181].
Of Uganda, 196, [197].
Of the Warori tribe, 273.
East Africa generally, 280.
Game in Uzaramo, [i. 59], [71].
In the Doab of the Mgeta river, [81].
In K’huta, [120].
In the plains between the Rufuta and the Mukondokwa mountains, [181].
In Ugogi, [242].
At Ziwa, or the Pond, [251].
At Kanyenye, [268].
Scarcity of, in East Africa generally, [268].
Geography of the second region, [i. 225], et seq.
Of Ugogo, [295].
Arab oral, ii. 144-154.
Geology of the maritime region of East Africa, [i. 102].
Of the Usagara mountains, [227].
Of the road to Ugogo, [247].
Of Mgunda Mk’hali, [i. 282-284].
Of Ugogo, [i. 295].
Of Unyamwezi, ii. 6.
Ginyindo, march to, ii. 253.
Quarrel of the Baloch and porters at, 253.
Giraffes in Ugogi, [i. 242].
Native names of the, [242], [243].
Use made of them, [243].
At Ziwa, or the Pond, [251].
On the Mgunda Mk’hali, [289].
In Unyamwezi, ii. 15.
Girls of the Wanyamwezi, strange custom of the, ii. 24.
Gnus in the Doab of the Mgeta river, [i. 81].
At Dut’humi, [87].
Government of the Wazaramo, [i. 113].
Of the Wak’hutu, [120], [121].
Of the Wanyamwezi, ii. 31.
Of the Wajiji, 71.
Of the northern kingdoms of Africa, 174.
Mode of, in Uganda, 192.
Forms of, in East Africa, 360.
Grain, mode of grinding, in East Africa, [i. 111], [372].
That of Msene, [397], [398].
Of Ujiji, ii. 57.
Grapes, wild, seen for the first time, ii. 41.
Grasses of the swamps and marshes of the Mrima, [i. 103], [104].
The dub of the Usagara mountains, [171].
Guinea-fowls in the Doab of the Mgeta river, [i. 81].
Of the Rufuta plains, [183].
Of Ugogi, [242].
Guinea-palm of Ujiji, ii. 58.
Gul Mohammed, a Baloch of the party, sketch of him, [i. 139].
His conversation with Muzungu Mbaya, ii. 244.
Gulls, sea, of the sea of Ujiji, ii. 60.
Gungu, district of, in Ujiji, ii. 53.
Its former and present chiefs, 53.
Plundered by the Watuta tribe, 76.
Hail-storms in Unyamwezi, ii. 10.
Hair, mode of dressing the, amongst the
Wazaramo, [i. 108].
And the Wak’hutu, [120].
Wasagara fashions of dressing the, [234].
Wagogo mode, [304].
Amongst the Wanyamwezi, ii. 26.
Wabuha mode of dressing the, 78.
And in Uganda, 189.
Halimah, the lady, sketch of, [i. 129].
Taken ill, [200].
Returns home, ii. 277.
Hamerton, Lieut.-Col., his friendship with the late Sultan of Zanzibar, [i. 2].
Interest taken by him in the expedition, [3].
His objections to an expedition into the interior viâ Kilwa, [5].
His death, [66].
His character, [69].
Hamid bin Salim, his journey to the Wahumba tribe, [i. 311].
Hammals of the Wanyamwezi, character of the, ii. 162.
Hammam, or primitive form of the lamp-bath, [i. 82].
Hanga, journey to, ii. 232.
Difficulties with the porters there, 232.
Hartebeest in the Doab of the Mgeta river, [i. 81].
Honey in Ujiji, ii. 59.
Abundance of, in East Africa, 287.
Two kinds of, 288.
Houses of Kuingani, [i. 43].
The wayside, or kraals, [53], [181], [230].
Of the Wak’hutu, [97], [121].
Of the Wazaramo, [110].
Of the Wagogo, [306].
Of the Arabs in Unyanyembe, [328], [329].
Of stone, ignored by Inner Africa, [93].
Of the country beyond Marenga Mk’hali, called “Tembe,” [207].
The Tembe of the Wahete, [240].
The Khambi or, Kraal, [354].
The Tembe of the Usagara, [366].
Houses of East Africa generally described, [364], ii. 334.
Pests of the houses, [i. 370].
Furniture, [371].
Of the Wanyamwezi, ii. 26.
Of Karagwah, 182, 183.
Instruments required for the expedition, [i. 153].
Breakage of, on the road, [169].
Accidents to which they are liable in East African travels, [189], [191].
Intellect of the East African, ii. 337.
Iron in Karagwah, ii. 185.
In Urori, 27.
And in Ubena, 27.
Of East Africa generally, 311.
Ironga, sultan of U’ungu, defeats the Warori, ii. 75.
Ironware of Uvira, ii. 121.
Irora, village of, [i. 389].
Halt at, [389].
Sultan of, [389].
Return to, ii. 166.
Ivory, caravan of, [i. 17].
Frauds perpetrated on the owners of tusks, [17].
Mode of buying and selling in East Africa, [39].
Touters of Zungomero, [97].
Mode of carrying large tusks of, [341], [348].
Price of, at Uvira, ii. 120, 121.
Ivory of Ubena, 270.
Trade in Ivory, 408.
Iwanza, or public-houses, in Unyamwezi, ii. 1, 27.
Described, 27, 279, 285.
Juma Mfumbi, Diwan of Saadani, his exaction of tribute from the Wadoe, [i. 123].
Jungle, insect pests of the, [i. 186].
Fire in the jungle in summer, ii. 163.
Jungle-thorn, on the road to Ugogo, [i. 246].
Near Kanyenye, [271].
Kadetamare, arrival of the party at, [i. 189].
Loss of instruments at, [189], [190].
Kaffirs of the Cape, date of their migration to the banks of the Kei, ii. 5.
Kafuro, district of, in Karagwah, ii. 177.
Kajjanjeri, village of, arrival of the party at, [i. 403].
Deadly climate of, [403].
Kannena, headman of Kawele, visit to, ii. 81.
Description of him, 81.
His mode of opening trade, 82.
His ill-will, 83, 84.
Agrees to take the party to the northern extremity of the lake, 93.
His surly and drunken conduct, 97.
Starts on the voyage, 98.
His covetousness, 109.
His extravagance, 120.
His drunkenness and fate, 156.
Kanoni, sultan of the Wahha tribe, ii. 79.
Kanoni, minor chief of Wafanya, visit from, ii. 107.
His blackmail, 107.
Outrage committed by his people, 124.
Kanyenye, country of, described, [i. 265].
Blackmail at, [265].
Sultan Magomba of, [265].
Kaole, settlement of, described, [i. 12], [13].
The landing place of the expedition, [22].
Karagwah, kingdom of, ii. 177.
Extent of, 177.
Boundaries of, 178.
Climate of, 180.
People of, 181.
Dress of, 182.
Weapons of, 182.
Houses of, 182.
Sultan of, 183.
Government of, 183.
Karagwah, mountains of, ii. 48, 144, 177.
Kariba, river, ii. 146.
Karindira, river, ii. 146.
Karungu, province of, ii. 149.
Kasangare, a Mvinza sultan, his subjects, [i. 328].
Kazeh, arrival at, [i. 321], [322].
Abdullah bin Salih’s caravan plundered at, [321].
Hospitality of the Arabs there, [323].
Revisited, ii. 167.
Kazembe, sultan of Usenda, ii. 148.
Account of him, 148.
Khalfan bin Muallim Salim, commands an up caravan, [i. 179].
His caravan attacked by small-pox, [179], [201].
His falsehoods, [179].
Spreads malevolent reports at Ugogo, [262].
Khalfan bin Khamis, his penny wise economy, [i. 288].
Bids adieu to the caravan, [291].
Overtaken half-way to Unyanyembe, [221].
His civility at Msene, [399].
Khambi, or substantial kraals, of the wayside described, [i. 53], [134].
Khamisi, Muinyi, and the lost furniture, ii. 168.
K’hok’ho, in Ugogo, dangers of, [i. 272], [274].
Its tyrant sultan, [274].
Insect annoyances at, [276].
Khudabakhsh, the Baloch, sketch of him, [i. 138].
His threats to murder the author, [174].
His illness in the Windy Pass, [214].
His conduct at Wafanya, ii. 110.
Reaches Kawele by land, 111.
K’hutu, expedition enters the country of, [i. 86].
Irrigation in, [86].
Hideous and grotesque vegetation of, [91].
Climate of, [92].
Salt-pits of, [92].
Country of, described, [119].
Roads in, [335].
Return to, ii. 264.
Desolation of, 264.
Kibuga, in Uganda, distance from the Kitangure river to, ii. 186.
Road to, 186, 187.
Described, 188.
Kibuya, sultan of Mdabura, blackmail of, [i. 279].
Description of him, [279].
Kichyoma-chyoma, “the little irons,” Captain Speke afflicted with, ii. 234.
The disease described, 320.
Kidogo, Muinyi, sketch of him, [i. 140].
His hatred of Said bin Salim, [164].
His advice to the party at Marenga Mk’hali, [203].
His words of wisdom on the road to Ugogo, [250].
His management, [254].
His quarrel with Said bin Salim, [255].
Makes oath at Kanyenye, that the white man would not smite the land, [267].
Loses his heart to a slave girl, [314].
His demands at Kazeh, [377].
Dismissed at Sorora, [402].
Flogs Sangora, [403].
Sent home, ii. 277.
Kidunda, or the “little hill,” camping ground of,
[i. 79].
Scenery of, [79].
Kifukuru, delay of the caravan at, [i. 264].
Question of blackmail at, [264].
Sultan of, [264].
Kigari, on the Tanganyika Lake, halt of the party at, ii. 101.
Kigwa, or Mkigwa, halt of the caravan at, [i. 319].
The ill-omened forest of, [319].
Sultan Manwa, [319].
Kikoboga, basin of, traversed, ii. 262.
Kikoboga river, ii. 263.
Kilwa, dangers of, as an ingress point, [i. 4], [5].
Kimanu, the sultan of Ubena, ii. 270.
Kinanda, or harp, of East Africa, ii. 298.
Kinawani, village of, arrival of the caravan at, ii. 35.
Kingani river described, [i. 56].
Valley of the, [56].
Hippopotami and crocodiles of the, [56].
Fish of the, [56].
Its malarious plain, [69].
Rise of the, [87].
Kiranga-Ranga, the first dangerous station in Uzaramo, [i. 59].
Kirangozi, guide or guardian, carried by mothers in Uzaramo, [i. 116].
Kirangozi, or guide of the caravan, his wrath, [i. 221].
Description of one, [346].
Meeting of two, [351].
His treatment of his slave girl, ii. 161.
His fear of travelling northward, 172.
Land-crabs in the Doab of the Mgeta river, [i. 81].
Language of the Wagogo, [i. 306].
Of the Wahumba, [311].
Of the Wanyamwezi, ii. 5.
Of the Wakimbu, 20.
Of the Wanyamwezi, 30.
Specimens of the various dialects collected, 198.
Of the East Africans, 336.
Leeches in Unyamwezi, ii. 18.
Leopards in Ugogo, [i. 302].
In Unyamwezi, ii. 15.
Malagarazi river, [i. 334], [337]. ii. 36,
39, 47, 49.
First sighted by the party, 407.
Described, 408, 409.
Courses of the, 409.
Crossed, 410.
Return of the party to the, 164.
Mallok, the Jemadar, sketch of his character and personal appearance, [i. 133].
His desertion, and return, [173].
Becomes troublesome, [381], [382].
His refusal to
go northwards, ii. 172.
Influence of bakhshish, 172.
Sent home, ii. 277.
Mamaletua, on the Tanganyika lake, halt of the party at, ii. 115.
Civility of the people of, 115.
M’ana Miaha, sultan of K’hok’ho, [i. 272].
Description of him, [274].
His extortionate blackmail, [274].
Manda, the petty chief at Dut’humi, [i. 89].
Expedition sent against him, [89].
Mandama, or Dungomaro, river, arrival of the caravan at the, [i. 222].
Description of the bed of the, [223].
Mangrove forest on the east coast of Africa, [i. 9].
Of the Uzaramo, [62].
Manners and customs of the Wamrima, [i. 35], [37].
Of the Wasawahili, [37].
Of the Wazaramo, [108]et seq.
Of the Wak’hutu, [120].
Of the Wadoe, [124].
Of the Wasagara, [235].
Of the Wagogo, [309], [310].
Of the Wahumba, [312].
Of the Wanyamwesi, ii. 23.
Of the Wambozwa, 152.
Mansanza, sultan of Msene, [i. 396].
His hospital, [396].
His firm rule, [396].
His wives, [396], [399].
His visits to the author, [399].
Mganga, or medicine-man of East Africa, described, [i. 38].
His modus operandi, [44]; ii. 358.
His office as a priest, 350.
As a physician, 352.
As a detector of sorcery, 356.
As a rain-maker, 357.
As a prophet, 358.
His minor duties, 359.
Mgeta river, the, [i. 80], [159], [160],
[166]; ii. 268.
Head of the, [80].
Mode of crossing the swollen river, [80].
Pestilence of the banks of the, [i. 127].
Fords of the, [i. 336]; ii. 268.
Mgongo T’hembo, the Elephant’s Back, arrival of the caravan at, [i. 290].
Description of, [290].
Inhabitants of, [290].
Mgunda Mk’hali, or “the Fiery Field,” [i. 281].
Description of, [281], [282].
Stunted vegetation of, [282].
Geology of, [282].
Scarcity of water in, [283].
Traversed by the caravan, [283].
Features of the, [283], [292].
Monkeys of Muhinyera, [i. 64].
Of Usagara mountains, [162].
In Unyamwezi, ii. 15.
Monkey-bread, ii. 221.
Monsoon, the N. E., or Kaskazi, of East Africa, [i. 83], [102].
In Unyamwezi, ii. 9.
Origin of the S. W. monsoon, 50.
Failure of the opportunity for comparing the hygrometry of the African and Indian monsoons, 93.
Mpingu tree, [i. 373].
Uses of the wood of the, [373].
Mporota, a den of thieves, halt at, ii. 252.
Mrima, or “hill-land,” of the East African
coast, described, [i. 8], [30].
Inhabitants of, [30].
Their mode of life, [35].
Mode of doing business in, [39].
Vegetation of the, [47].
Geography of the, [100].
Climate of the, [102], [104].
Diseases of the, [105].
Roads of the, [105], [106].
Ethnology of the, [106].
Msene, settlement of, arrival of the party at, [i. 395].
Description of, [395], [396].
Sultan Masawza of, [396].
Prices at, [397].
Productions of, [397], [398].
Currency of, [398].
Industry of, [398].
Habits of the people of, [398].
Climate of, [399].
Msimbira, sultan of the Wasukuma, [i. 319].
Papers of the party stolen and carried to him, [320].
Refuses to restore them, [320].
Send a party to cut off the road, [321].
Defeats Sultan Mpagamo, [327].
Msopora, Sultan, restores the stolen goods, ii. 166.
Muhonyera, district of, described, [i. 63].
Wild animals, [63].
Mui’ Gumbi, Sultan of the Warori, ii. 271.
Defeated by Sultan Ironga, 75.
Description of him, 271.
Muikamba, on the Tanganyika Lake, night spent at, ii. 115.
Muingwira river, ii. 211.
Muinyi Wazira, engaged to travel with the
expedition, [i. 52].
Sketch of his character, 129.
Requests to be allowed to depart, 314.
His debauch and dismissal, 399.
Reappears at Kazeh, ii. 168.
Ejected, 168.
Muinyi, halt of the party at, [i. 193].
Determined attitude of the people of, [194].
Murchison, Sir R., his triumphant geological hypothesis, [i. 409].
His notice respecting the interior of Africa, [409], note.
Murunguru river, ii. 154.
Murivumba, tents of the party pitched at, ii. 114.
Cannibal inhabitants of, 114.
Murundusi, march to, ii. 250.
Musa, the assistant Rish Safid of the party, sketch of him, [i. 138].
Musa Mzuri, handsome Moses, of Kazeh, [i. 323].
His return to Kazeh, ii. 223.
His history, 223.
His hospitality, 226.
Visits the expedition at Masui, 231.
His kindness, 231.
Music and musical instruments in East Africa, described, ii. 291, 338.
Of the Wajiji, 98.
Mutware, or Mutwale, the Lord of the Ferry of the Malagarazi river, [i. 409].
Muzungu, or white man, dangers of accompanying a, in Africa, [i. 10], [11].
Muzunga Mbaya, the wicked white man, the plague of the party, ii. 239.
His civility near home, 240.
Sketch of his personal appearance, and specimen of his conversation, 244.
Night in the Usagara mountains, [i. 162].
In the caravan, described, [359].
Nile, White, Ptolemy’s notion of the origin of the, ii. 178.
Captain Speke’s supposed discovery of the sources of the, 204.
Njasa, Sultan of the Wasagara, his visit to the expedition, [i. 199].
Description of him, [199].
Makes “sare” or brotherhood with Said bin Salim, [199].
Nullahs, or watercourses of East Africa, [i. 102].
Nutmeg, wild, of Usui, ii. 176.
Nyakahanga, in Karagwah, ii. 177.
Nyanza, or Ukerewe, Lake, [i. 311], 439;
ii. 175, 176, 179.
Chances of exploration of the, 195.
Geography of the, 206, 210, et seq.
Size of the, 212.
Position of the, 211.
Commerce of the, 215.
Savage races of the, 215.
Reasons why it is not the head stream of the White Nile, 218.
Tribes dwelling near the, 219.
Nyara, or Chamærops humilis, of the Mrima, [i. 48].
Nyasanga, fishing village on the Tanganyika lake, ii. 101.
Ophthalmia, several of the party suffer from, in Unyamwezi, [i. 406].
Ophidia in Unyamwezi, ii. 17.
Ordeal for witchcraft, ii. 357.
Amongst the Wazaramo, [i. 114].
Ornaments worn by the Wazaramo, [i. 110].
By the Wak’hutu, [120].
Fondness of the Africans for, [147], [148], [150].
Of the Wasagara tribe, [199], [237].
Of the Wagogo, [305].
Of the Wahumba, [312].
Of the porters of caravans, [349].
Of sultans in East Africa, [396].
Of the Wakimba, ii. 20.
Of the Wanyamwezi, 22.
Of the Wabuha, 78.
Of the Wabwari islanders, 113.
Of the people of Karagwah, 181.
Ostriches in Ugogo, [i. 301].
Value of feathers in East Africa, [i. 301].
Outfit of the expedition, articles required for the, [i. 151].
Oxen of Ujiji, ii. 59.
Paddles used on the Tanganyika lake, ii. 96.
Described, 96.
Palma Christi, or Mbarika, of East Africa, [i. 48].
Palm-oil, or mawezi, of the shores of the Lake Tanganyika, ii. 58.
Mode of extracting it, 58, 59.
Price at the lake, 59.
Uses to which it is applied, 59.
Trade in, at Wafanya, 107.
Palmyra tree (Borassus flabelliformis), in the plains, [i. 180].
Toddy drawn from, [181].
At Yambo, [387].
And at Mb’hali, [401].
Tapped for toddy at Msene, [398].
Porters, or Pagazi, the Wanyamwezi, of the expedition, [i. 143].
Character of East African, [144].
In East Africa, [337].
Variations of porterage, [339].
Great weight carried sometimes by, [341].
Their discontent, [343].
Desertion of in Wilyankuru, [391].
Description of those hired in Ujiji, ii. 157.
Of the Warori, 271.
Pottery, art of, in East Africa, ii. 313.
Prices at Msene, [i. 397].
In the market at Unyanyembe, [333].
In Ujiji, ii. 72.
At Wafanya, 107.
At Uvira, 120, 121.
Rain at Zungomero, [i. 156].
Autumnal, at Muhama, [179].
In the Usagara mountains, [218], [231], [232].
In Ugogo, [298].
The Masika or wet season, [378].
In Unyamwezi, ii. 8-10.
In the valley of the Malagarazi river, 49.
In Karagwah, 180.
Ramji, the Banyan of Cutch, engaged to accompany the expedition, [i. 10].
His commercial speculation, [20].
His conversation with Ladha Damha, [23].
Visits the author at Kuingani, [43].
Account of him, [43], [44].
His advice, [45].
Ramji, “sons” of, sketch of them, [i. 140].
Their ever-increasing baggage, [182].
Their quarrels with the Baloch soldiers, [163].
Their insolence, [164].
Reappear at Kazeh, ii. 168.
Allowed to take the places of porters, 227.
Return home, ii. 277.
Ranæ of Unyamwezi, ii. 17.
Of the Tanganyika Lake, ii. 61.
Rats, field, [i. 160].
On the banks of the Mukondokwa river, [193].
House rats of Ujiji, ii. 60.
Religion of the Wazaramo, [i. 115].
Of the East Africans, ib.; ii. 341.
An African’s notion of God, 348 note.
Reptiles in Unyamwezi, ii. 17.
Respect, tokens of, amongst the Wajiji, ii. 69.
Revenge of the African, ii. 329.
Revenue, sources of, in East Africa, ii. 365.
Rhinoceroses at Dut’humi, [i. 87].
On the road to Ugogo, [247].
On the Mgunda Mk’hali, [289].
In Ugogo, [300].
In Unyamwezi, ii. 15.
The Rhinoceros horn trade of East Africa, 413.
Rice, how to cook, [i. 393].
Red, density and rapidity of growth of, at Msene, [397].
Luxuriance of, in Ujiji, ii. 57.
Allowed to degenerate, 57.
Unknown in Karagwah, 180.
Roads in the maritime region of East Africa described, [i. 105], [106].
In the Usagara Mountains, [230].
From Ugogo to Unyamwezi, [281].
In Ugogo, [302].
In Unyanyembe, [325].
Description of the roads in East Africa, [335].
In Unyamwezi, ii. 19.
From the Malagarazi Ferry, 51.
Said, Sayyid, Sultan of Zanzibar, the “Imaum of Muscat,” [i. 2].
His sons, [2].
Salim bin Rashid, the Arab merchant, calls on Captain Burton, ii. 228.
Said bin Salim, appointed Ras Kafilah, or caravan guide, to the expedition, [i. 9],
[10].
Attacked by fever, [71].
His terror of the Wazaramo, [73].
His generosity through fear, [90].
His character, [129].
His hatred of the Baloch, [163].
His covetousness, [163], [164].
Insolence of his slaves, [164].
His dispute with Kidogo, [255].
His fears, and neglect at Ugogo, [280].
His inhospitality, [287].
His change of behaviour, [382].
His punishment, [384].
His selfishness, [391].
His fears, ii. 125.
Enters into brotherhood with Lurinda, 125.
And afterwards with Kannena, 126.
His carelessness of the supplies, 127.
His impertinence, 159, 160.
His attempts to thwart the expedition, 172.
Pitches tents outside Kazeh, 227.
Moves to the village of Masui, 229.
Dismissed from his stewardship, 237.
His news from Zanzibar, 261.
His terror in Uzaramo, 275.
Leaves for
home, 277.
Visits the author at Zanzibar, 382.
Said bin Ali el Hinawi, the Arab merchant of Kazeh, [i. 323].
Said bin Majid, the Arab merchant of Kazeh, [i. 323].
Return of the expedition with his caravan, ii. 157.
Separation from him, 165.
Treatment of his people at Ujiji, 84.
Said bin Mohammed of Mbuamaji, and his caravan [i. 257].
Account of him and his family, [258].
Said bin Mohammed, Sultan of Irora, [i. 389].
His surliness, [389].
Brought to his senses, [389], [390].
Salim bin Said, the Arab merchant in Wilyankuru, [i. 391].
His hospitality, [391].
Salim bin Masud, the Arab merchant, murdered, [i. 328], [391].
Sare, or brother oath, of the Wazaramo, [i. 114].
Mode of performing the ceremony, [114].
Ceremony of, performed between Sultan Njasa and Said bin Salim, [i. 199].
Sawahil, or “the shores,” geographical position of the, [i. 29], [30].
People of, described, [30].
Sayf bin Salim, the Arab merchant, account of, [i. 83].
Returns to Dut’humi, [128].
His covetousness, [128].
Crushes a servile rebellion, [125].
Scorpions of East Africa, [i. 370].
In the houses in Ujiji, ii. 61.
Seasons, aspect of the, in Ugogo, [i. 298].
Eight in Zanzibar, ii. 8.
Two in Unyamwezi, 8.
Seedy Mubarak Bombay, gun-carrier in the expedition, character of, [i. 130], [279].
His demand of bakhshish, ii. 173.
His peculiarities, 236.
Appointed steward, 237.
Σεληνης ορος of the Greeks, locality of the, ii. 4.
Skin, colour of the, of the Wazaramo, [i. 108].
Of the Wak’hutu, [120].
Of the Wadoe, [124].
Of the Wagogo, [304].
Sebaceous odour of the, of the Wazaramo, [309].
Of the Wanyamwezi, ii. 20.
Warundi, 145.
Karagwah people, 181.
Skin diseases of East Africa, 320.
Slave caravans of East Africa, [i. 17].
At Tumba Ihere, [62].
At Zanzibar, [50].
Slaves and slavery: kidnapping in Inland Magogoni, [i. 88].
In Dat’humi, [89].
Slavery in K’hutu, [97], [98], [121].
Kidnappings of the Wazegura, [125].
Pitiable scene presented by a village after a commando, [185].
In Ugogo, [309].
In Unyamwezi, ii. 23.
Of Ujiji, 61, 71.
Prices of slaves in, 62, 71.
Prices of Wahha slaves at Msene, 79.
Not trustworthy in Africa, 111.
Their modes of murdering their patrons, 111.
Prices of, in Uvira, 121.
In Karagwah, 184.
In Ubena, 270.
Degrading effects of the slave trade, 340, 366.
Origin of the slave trade of East Africa, 366.
Treatment of slaves, 367, 369.
Two kinds of slave trade, 368.
Kidnapping, 369.
Character of slaves, 371.
Revenge of slaves, 374, 375.
Female slaves, 375.
Prices of slaves, 375.
Number of slaves imported yearly into Zanzibar, 377.
Ease with which the slave-trade at Zanzibar could be abolished, 377.
Small-pox in the Usagara mountains, [i. 166].
And in the up caravans, [179].
The porters of the party attacked by, [180], [184], [190].
In Khalfan’s caravan, [201].
In the caravans in East Africa, [342].
In East Africa generally, ii. 318.
Snay bin Amir, the Arab merchant of Kazeh, [i. 323].
Performs the guest rites there, [323], [324].
Sketch of his career, [324].
His visit to the Sultan of Ugunda, ii. 193.
His kindness, [i. 384]; ii. 231.
Snakes at Unyamwezi, ii. 17.
In the houses in Ujiji, 61.
Snuff, Wajiji mode of taking, ii. 65.
Soil, fertility of the, at Msene, [i. 397].
Character of the, in Unyamwezi, ii. 6.
Wondrous fertility of the, in the valley of the Malagarazi river, 49.
And of that of Ujiji, 57.
Soma Giri, of the Hindus, locality of the, ii. 4.
Songs of the porters of the caravan, ii. 361, 362.
Of East Africa, ii. 291.
Sorghum cultivated in Ujiji, ii. 57.
Sorora, or Solola, in Unyamwezi, arrival of the party at, [i. 401].
Its deadly climate, [401].
Speke, Capt., his illness in Uzaramo, [i. 62], [65], [69].
Shakes off his preliminary symptoms, [71].
Lays the foundation of a fever, [82].
Thoroughly prostrated, [84].
Recovers his health at Mzizi Mdogo, [161].
Again attacked at Muhama, [179].
And by “liver” at Rumuma, [200].
Dangerous illness at the Windy Pass, [214].
Restored, [215].
Unable to walk, [286].
Awaits reserve supplies at Kazeh, [386].
Rejoins the caravan, [390].
Tormented by ophthalmia, [406]; ii. 86.
Starts on an expedition to explore the northern extremity of the Tanganyika Lake, 87.
Returns moist and mildewed, and nothing done, 90.
His “Journal” in “Blackwood” referred to, 90.
Quoted, 91 note.
A beetle in his ear, 91 note.
Joins the second expedition, 99.
Improvement in his health, 129.
Return journey, 157.
His deafness and dimness of vision, 169.
Leaves Kazeh for the north, 173.
Returns, 204.
His supposed discovery of the sources of the White Nile, 204.
Taken ill at Hanga, 233.
Convalescent, 240.
Sights the sea at Konduchi, 279.
Returns home, 384.
Spears and assegais of the Wasagara tribe, [i. 237].
Of the Wagogo, [306].
Of the Wahumba, [311].
Of the Wanyamwezi, ii. 22.
Of East Africa generally, 301.
Spiders of East Africa, [i. 371].
In the houses of Ujiji, ii. 61.
Sultans, burial-places of, in Unyamwezi, ii. 26.
Power of the Sultan in this country, 31.
And in East Africa generally, ii. 362.
Sun, his splendour at the equator, [i. 162].
Ring-cloud tempering the rays of the, in Unyamwezi, ii. 11, 12.
Suna, Sultan of Uganda, ii. 188.
The Arabs’ description of him, 189.
His hundred sons, 192.
His chief officers, and mode of government, 192.
Account of a visit to him, 193.
Sunset-hour on the Indian Ocean, [i. 1].
In the Land of the Moon, [387].
In Unyamwezi, ii. 7.
In Ujiji, 89.
In East Africa generally, 289.
Sunrise on the Tanganyika Lake, ii. 156.
Superstitions of the Wamrima, [i. 38].
Of the Wagogoni, inland, [88].
Of the Wazaramo, [112], [114], [115].
Supplies, shortness of, ii. 130.
Arrival of some, but inadequate for the purpose, 130.
Surgery in East Africa, ii. 322.
Suwarora, Sultan, his exorbitant black-mail, ii. 176.
Swallows in Unyamwezi, ii. 17.
Swords in East Africa, ii. 308.
Sycomore tree of East Africa, the Mkuyu, its magnificence, [i. 195].
Its two varieties, [195], [196].
Its magnificence in Usagara, [229].
Tailoring in Africa, ii. 201.
Tamarind trees of the Usagara Mountains, [i. 165], [229].
Modes of preparing the fruit, [165].
At Mfuto, [389].
Tanganyika Lake, first view of the, described, ii. 42, 43.
A boat engaged on the, 45.
Seen from Ujiji, 47.
Hippopotami and crocodiles in, 60.
People of the shores of, 62, et seq.
Fishing in, 66.
Varieties of fish in, 67.
Failure of Captain Speke’s expedition for exploring the northern shores of, 90.
Preparations for another cruise, 93.
Description of the boats of the lake, 94.
Navigation of the, 94.
Voyage up the, 99.
Eastern shores of the, described, 100.
Fishing villages, 100.
Remarks on boating and voyaging
on the lake, 101.
Account of the island of Ubwari, 108.
Visit to the island, 113.
Further progress stopped, 117, 119.
Storm on the lake, 122.
History of the lake, ii. 134 et seq.
Meaning of the name, 137.
Extent and general direction of, 137.
Altitude of, 139.
Sweetness of its water, 139.
Its colour, 140.
Its depth, 140.
Its affluents, 140.
Its coasts, 141.
No effluents, 141.
Its temperature, 142.
Its ebb and flow, 143.
Physical and ethnological features of its periplus, 144.
Sunrise scenery on the lake, 156.
Targes of the East Africans described, ii. 307.
Tattoo, not general amongst the Wazaramo, [i. 108].
Nor amongst the Wak’hutu, [120].
Practised by the Wadoe, [124].
Of the Wanyamwezi, ii. 21.
Amongst the Wajiji, 63.
Of the Warundi, 145.
Teeth, chipped to points by the Wasagara tribe, [i. 235].
Tembe, the houses beyond Marenga Mk’hali so called, [i. 207].
Description of the Tembe of East Africa, [366].
Tembo, or palm-toddy, a favourite inebrient in Ujiji, ii. 70.
Tenga, in Karagwah, ii. 177.
Tent-making in Africa, ii. 201.
Termites of East Africa, [i. 201], [202].
In the houses of Ujiji, ii. 61.
Tobacco, use of, in East Africa, [i. 36].
Smoked by women in Unyamwezi, [388].
Chewed by Unyamwezi, ii. 28.
Tobacco of Uganda, 196.
Tobacco trade of East Africa, ii. 418.
Tobacco-pipes of Eastern Africa, [i. 388]; ii. 315.
Toddy obtained from the palmyra of Msene only, [i. 398].
Extracted from
the Guinea-palm in Ujiji, ii. 59.
Prevalence of the use of, in Ujiji, 59, 70.
Of Zanzibar, 287.
Togwa, a drink in Unyamwezi, [i. 333].
And in East Africa generally, ii. 286.
Tumba Ihere, the P’hazi, [i. 54].
His station, [62].
Slave caravans at, [62].
Accompanies the expedition, [62], [65].
Tumbiri river of Dr. Krapf, ii. 217.
Tunda, “the fruit,” malaria of the place, [i. 71].
Tura, arrival of the caravan at the nullah of, [i. 291].
And at the village of, [292].
Astonishment of the inhabitants, [292].
Description of, [313].
Return to, ii. 241.
Twanigana, elected Kirangozi, ii. 239.
His conversation, 243.
Twins amongst the Wazaramo, [i. 116].
Treatment of, in Unyamwezi, ii. 23.
Tzetze, a stinging jungle fly, [i. 187].
At K’hok’ho, [276].
On the Mgunda Mk’hali, [289].
Ubena, land of, described, ii. 269.
People of, 270.
Commerce and currency of, 270.
Ubeyya, province of, ii. 153.
Ubwari, island of, ii. 108.
De Barros’ account of, quoted, 108.
Size and position of, 108.
The expedition sails for, 112.
Inhabitants of, 113.
Halt at, 114.
Portuguese accounts of, 135.
Uchawi, or black magic, how punished by the Wazaramo, [i. 113].
Described, [265].
Not generally believed in Ugogo, [307].
Mode of proceeding in cases of, ii. 32.
Belief of the East Africans generally in, 347.
Office of the mganga, 356.
Ufipa, district of, on the Tanganyika Lake, [i. 153].
Its fertility, [135].
People of, [153].
Ugogi, halt of the party at, [i. 241].
Abundance of provisions at, [241].
Geography of, [242].
People of, [242].
Animals of, [242].
Pleasant position of, [243].
Its healthiness, [243].
Ugogo, first view of, from the Usagara mountains, [i. 220].
The plains of, reached by the caravan, [223].
Scenery on the road near, [245].
Blackmail at, [252].
Entrance into, [259].
Description of the surrounding country, [259].
The calabash tree at, [260].
Siroccos at, [260].
Reception of the caravan at, [261].
Incidents of the march through, [261-280].
Roads from Ugogo to Unyamwezi, [281].
Geography of Ugogo, [294].
Boundaries of, [294].
No rivers in, [295].
Igneous formation of, [295].
Houses of, [296].
Subsoil of, [296].
Climate of, [297].
Diseases of, [299].
Vegetation of, [299], [300].
Animals of, [300].
Roads of, [302].
Description of the tribes of, [303].
Lodging for caravans in, [354].
Return through, ii. 246.
Ugoyye, district of, in Ujiji, ii. 53.
Uhha, land of, now a desert, ii. 53.
Laid waste by the Watuta tribe, 76, 78.
Ujiji, town of, lodgings for caravans in, [i. 354].
Arrival of the party at the, ii. 46.
Scene there, 47.
Climate of, 50, 51.
Boundaries of, 53.
Villages and districts of, 53.
Camping ground of caravans near, 54.
Distance of Ujiji from the coast, and number of stages, 55.
History of the country, 56.
Trade of, 57.
Fertility of the soil of, 57.
Bazar of, 59.
Fauna of, 60.
Slave trade of, 61.
Principal tribes in, 62.
Inconveniences of a halt at, and of a return journey from, 74.
Mode of spending the day at, 87.
Ukaranga, or “land of ground-nuts,” on the Tanganyika Lake, arrival at, ii. 44.
Boundaries of, 52.
Wretched villages of, 52.
Apathy of the people, 52.
Etymology of the name, 52.
Ukerewe, ii. 212.
Account of, 212, 213.
People of, 212.
Commerce of, 213.
Unyanyembe district, rice lands of the, [i. 321].
Aspect of the land, [321].
Description of it, [325]; ii. 5.
Roads in, [i. 325].
Its physical features, [326].
Its villages, [326].
History of the Arab settlements in, [327].
Food in, [329], [331-334].
Prices in, [333].
Unyamwezi, or the Land of the Moon, [i. 313].
Arrival of the caravan in the, [314].
Lodgings for caravans in, [354].
Geography of, ii. 1.
Boundaries and extent of, 2.
Altitude of, 2.
The country as known to the Portuguese, 2.
Corruptions of the name, 2, 3.
Etymology of the word, 3, 4.
Barbarous traditions of its having been a great empire, 4.
Portuguese accounts of its former greatness, 5.
Its present political condition, 5.
Its dialects, 5.
Provinces into which it is divided, 5.
General appearance of the country, 6.
Its geology, 6.
Peaceful rural beauty of the country, 7.
Water and rice fields, 7.
Versant of Unyamwezi, 8.
Its two seasons, 8.
Its rainy monsoon, 8-10.
The hot season, 11.
Diseases of the country, 11, 13, 14.
Whirlwinds and earthquakes, 11, 13.
Curious effects of the climate, 14.
Fauna of Unyamwezi, 15.
Roads in, 19.
Notice of the races of, 19.
Unyoro, dependent, ii. 187.
Unyoro, independent, land of, ii. 197.
People of, 197.
Urundi, mountains of, [i. 409]; ii. 48.
Arrival of the expedition in the region of, 101.
People of, 107, 117.
Description of the kingdom of, 144.
Governments of, 145.
People of, 145.
Route to, 169.
Uruwwa, the present terminus of trade, ii. 147.
People of, 147.
Prices at, 147.
Usagara mountains, [i. 87], [159], [215],
[297], [335].
Ascent of the, [160].
Halt in the, [161].
Healthiness of the, [161].
Vegetation of the, [162], [165].
Water in the, [218].
Descent of the counterslope of the, [219].
View from the, [220].
Geography of the, [225], et seq.
Geology of the, [227].
Fruits and flowers of the, [228].
Magnificent trees of the, [129].
Water-channels and cultivation of the ground in the, [229].
Village of the, [229].
Supplies of food in the, [229].
Roads of the, [230].
Water
for drinking in the, [230].
Climate of the, [231].
Diseases of the, [233].
The tribes inhabiting the, [233].
Usagozi, a province of Unyamwezi, ii. 6.
March to, [i. 405].
Insolence of the men of, [405].
Description of the town of, and country around, [405].
Sultan and people of, [406].
Uzaramo, the first district of, [i. 54].
Fertility of, [60].
Wild animals of, [63].
Storm in, [60].
Boundaries of the territory of, [107].
Roads in, [335].
Art of narcotising fish in, ii. 67.
Re-entered, 275.
Uzige, land of, described, ii. 146.
People of, 146.
Rivers of, 146.
Uziraha, plain of, ii. 263.
Uzungu, or White Land, African curiosity respecting, [i. 261].
Valentine, the Goanese servant, sketch of his character, [i. 131].
Taken ill, [i. 200], [379]; ii. 169.
Cured by the tinctura Warburgii, 169.
His reception by the Wagogo, 263.
Sent to learn cooking, 384.
Suffers from ophthalmia, 406.
Mortally wounds a Wayfanya, ii. 124.
Villages of the Mrima, [i. 102].
Of the Wak’hutu, [121].
A deserted village described, [185].
Villages of the Usagara mountains, [229].
Of the Wahehe, [240].
Of East Africa generally, [364], et seq.
In Unyamwezi, ii. 7.
Of Ukaranga, [52].
Vinegar of East Africa, ii. 288.
Voandzeia subterranea, a kind of vetch, [i. 196], [198].
Wabembe tribe, their cannibal practices, ii. 114,
146.
Wabena tribes, [i. 304].
Described by the Arab merchants, ii. 270.
Wabha tribe, their habitat, ii. 78.
Their chief village, 78.
Their personal appearance and dress, 78.
Their arms, 78.
Their women, 78.
Wabisa tribe, habitat of the, ii. 150.
Their dress, 150.
Their manners and customs, 150.
Wabwari, or people of Ubwari island, described, ii. 113.
Women of the, 113.
Wadoe tribe, their habitat, [i. 123].
Their history, [123].
Their cannibalism, [123].
Their distinctive marks, [124].
Their
arms, [124].
Their customs, [124].
Subdivisions of the tribe, [124].
Wafanya, halt at the village of, ii. 106.
Visit from the chief of, 107.
Blackmail at, 107.
Climate of, 107.
Prices at, 107.
Wafipa tribe, habitat of the, ii. 153.
Their personal appearance, 153.
Wafyoma race, described, ii. 176.
Waganda races, described, ii. 196.
Their language, 196.
Their dress, 196.
Waganga, or priests, of Urundi, their savage appearance, ii. 145.
See[Mganga].
Wagogo, their astonishment at the white man, [i. 263].
Habitat of the, [303], [304].
Extent of the country of the, [304].
Complexion of the, [304].
The ear-ornaments of the, [304].
Distinctive mark of the, [304].
Modes of wearing the hair, [304].
Women of the, [305].
Dress of the, [305].
Ornaments of the, [305].
Arms of the, [306].
Villages of the, [306].
Language of the, [306].
Their dislike of the Wanyamwezi, [307].
Their strength of numbers, [307].
Not much addicted to black magic, [307].
Their commerce, [308].
Their greediness, [308].
Their thievish propensities, [309].
Their idleness and debauchery, [309].
Their ill manners, [309].
Their rude hospitality, [310].
Authority of the Sultan of Ugogo, [310].
Food in, [310], [311].
Wagoma tribe, their habitat, ii. 147.
Waguhha tribe, habitat of the, ii. 147.
Lake in their country, 147.
Roads, 147.
Wahayya tribe, the, ii. 187.
Wahehe tribe, their habitat, [i. 239].
Their thievish propensities, [239].
Their distension of their ear-lobes, [239].
Distinctive marks of the tribe, [239].
Their dress, [239].
Their arms, [240].
Their villages, flocks, and herds, [240].
Wahha tribe, their country laid waste, ii. 76, 78.
Their present habitat, 79.
Wahha slaves, 79.
Wahinda tribe, account of the, ii. 219.
Their habitat, 219.
Their dress, 220.
Their manners and customs, 220.
Wahuma class of Karagwah, described, ii. 181, 182.
Wahumba tribe, the bandit, [i. 203].
Haunts of the, seen in the distance, [205].
Wahumba, or Wamasai, tribe, ii. 215.
Attack the villages of Inenge, [i. 213].
Haunts of, [259].
Slavery among the, [309].
Dialect of the, [311].
Habitat of the, [311].
Seldom visited by travellers, [311].
Complexion of the, [311].
Dress, manners, and customs of the, [312].
Dwellings of the, [312].
Arms of the, [312].
Wajiji tribe, the, described, ii. 62.
Rudeness and violence of, 62, 68.
Diseases of, 63.
Practice of tattooing amongst, 63.
Ornaments and dress of, 63, 64.
Cosmetics of, 63.
Mode of taking snuff of, 65.
Fishermen of the lake of Tanganyika, 66.
Ceremoniousness of the Wajiji, 69.
Absence of family affection amongst them, 69.
Their habits of intoxication, 69.
Power and rights of their sultan, 70.
Their government, 71.
Their commerce, 71.
Prices in Ujiji, 72.
Currency in, 73.
Musical instruments of the Wajiji, 98.
Inquisitive wonder of the people, 128.
Category of stares, 128.
Wakalaganza tribe, the, [i. 406].
Dress of the, [406].
Wakamba, the, a sub-tribe of the Wazaramo, [i. 108].
Wakarenga tribe, wretched villages of the, ii. 52.
Their want of energy and civilisation, 52, 74, 75.
Wakatete tribe, habitat of the, ii. 149.
Wakimbu race, account of the, ii. 19.
Villages of the, 19.
Dress and characteristic marks of the, 20.
Arms of the, 20.
Ornaments of the, 20.
Language of the, 20.
Wak’hutu race, the, described, [i. 97].
The ivory touters of, [97].
Their territory, [119].
Their physical and mental qualities, [120].
Their dress, [120].
Their drunkenness, [120].
Their food, [120].
Their government, [121].
Their dwellings, [121].
Wakwafi tribe, slavery among the, [i. 309].
Their untameable character, [309].
Wambele, Chomwi la Mtu Mku, or Headman Great Man of Precedence, [i. 156].
Wambozwa tribe, habitat of the, ii. 149.
Their government, 152.
Their personal appearance, 152.
Their manners and customs, 152.
Wamrima, or “people of the Mrima,” described, [i. 16], [30],
[32].
Their chomwi, or headmen, [16].
Their dress, [33].
Their women, [34].
Their mode of life, [35].
Their national characteristics, [36].
Their habits and customs, [37].
Their tombs, [57].
Wamrima caravans, description of, [344].
Hospitality of the people, [353].
Wanyambo, the poor class of Karagwah, described, ii. 182.
Wanyamwezi porters of the expedition, [i. 143].
Account of the Wanyamwezi tribe,
ii. 20.
Colour of the skin of the, 20.
Effluvium from their skins, 20.
Mode of dressing the hair, 20.
Elongation of the mammæ of the women, 21.
Mark of the tribe, 21.
Dress of the, 21.
Ornaments of the, 22.
Arms of the, 22.
Manners and customs of the, 23.
Ceremonies of childbirth, 23.
Of marriage, 24.
Funerals, 25.
Houses of the Wanyamwezi, 24.
Iwanza, or public-house of the, 27.
Food of the people, 28.
Their commercial industry, 29.
Their language, 30.
Cultivation of the ground, 30, 31.
Slavery amongst them, 31, 33.
Government of the people, 31.
Notice of Sultan Fundikira, 31, 32.
Desertion of the porters, in Ugogo, 277.
Their fear of the Wagogo, 307.
Greeting of porters of the, on the road, 291.
Wanyika, halt of the party at the settlement of, [i. 407].
Blackmail at, [407].
Wanyora race described, ii. 197.
Wap’hangara, the, a subtribe of the Wazaramo, [i. 108].
Wapoka, country of the, ii. 153.
Warburg’s tincture, an invaluable medicine, ii. 169.
Warori, their meeting with the caravan, ii. 251.
The tribe described, 272.
Their raids, 272, 273.
Their personal appearance, 273.
Dress and weapons, 273.
Their food and habitations, 273.
Warugaru tribe, country of the, [i. 88].
Their language, [89].
Warundi tribe, noise and insolence of the, ii. 107.
Their inhospitality, 108, 117.
Their habitat, 144.
Their mode of government, 145.
Their complexion, 145.
Their personal appearance, 145.
Their dress, arms, and ornaments, 145.
Their women, 146.
Wasagara tribe, thievish propensities of the, [i. 229].
Villages of the, [168].
Those of Rumuma described, [198].
Their ornaments and arms, [199].
Village of, on the summit of Rubeho, [218].
Villages of, on the slopes, [221].
Their habitat, [234].
Colour of their skins, [234].
Modes of wearing the hair, [234].
Distension of the ear-lobe, [235].
Distinctive marks of the tribe, [235].
Dress of the, [235].
Arms of the, [237].
Government of the, [238].
Houses of the, [366].
Wasawahili, or people of the Sawahil, described, [i. 30].
National characteristics of the, [36].
Their habits and customs, [37].
Caravans of, [344].
Wasenze tribe, their habitat, ii. 147.
Washaki tribe, the, ii. 215,
219.
Washenzi, or barbarians from the interior, [i. 18].
Curiosity of, [394].
Washenzi, “the conquered,” or Ahl Maraim, the, [i. 30].
Wasps, mason, of the houses in East Africa, [i. 370].
Wasui tribe, described, ii. 176.
Wasukuma tribe, their thievery, [i. 319].
Punishment of some of them, [320], [321].
Their sultan, Msimbira, [319-321].
Watatura tribes, [i. 304]; ii. 215, 220.
Their habitat, 220.
Recent history of them, 220, 221.
Watches, a few second-hand, the best things for keeping time in East African travel, [i. 190].
Water-courses, or nullahs, of East Africa, [i. 102].
In the Usagara mountains, [229], [230].
Water, in the Mrima, [i. 102].
In the Usagara mountains, [218].
Scarcity of, near Marenga Mk’hali, [203].
Impatience and selfishness of thirst of the Baloch guard, [205].
In the Usagara mountains, [230].
On the road to Ugogo, [247].
Permission required for drawing, [252].
Scarcity of, at Kanyenye, [265].
Inhospitality of the people there, respecting, [267].
Scarcity of, in Mgunda Mk’hali, [282].
At the Jiwe la Mkoa, [287].
At Kirurumo, [289].
At Jiweni, [289].
On the march of the caravan, [359].
In Unyamwezi, ii. 7.
Of the Tanganyika Lake, its sweetness, 139.
Want of, on the return journey, 239.
Water-melons at Marenga Mk’hali, [i. 201].
Cultivation of, [201].
Wat’hembe tribe, the, ii. 154.
Wat’hembwe tribe, habitat of the, ii. 149.
Wat’hongwe tribe, country of the, ii. 154.
Wat’hongwe Kapana, Sultan, ii. 154.
Watosi tribe in Msene, [i. 396].
Their present habitat, ii. 185.
Account of them and their manners and customs, 185.
Watuta tribe, hills of the, [i. 408].
History of, ii. 75.
Their present habitat, 76.
Their wanderings and forays, 76, 77.
Their women, 77.
Their arms, 77.
Their tactics, 77.
Their fear of fire-arms, 77.
Their hospitality and strange traits, 77.
Their attack on the territory of Kannena, ii. 156.
Wavinza tribe, [i. 407].
Personal appearance and character of the, ii. 75.
Arms of the, 75.
Inhospitality of the, 75.
Drunkenness of the, 75.
Wavira tribe, civility of the, ii. 115.
Wayfanya, return to, ii. 123.
A slave mortally wounded at, 124.
Wazaramo, or Wazalamo, territory of the, [i. 54].
Visit from the P’hazi, or headmen, [i. 54].
Women’s dance of ceremony, [55].
Tombs of the tribe, [57].
Stoppage of the guard of the expedition by the Wazaramo, [70].
Ethnology of the race, [107].
Their dialect, [107].
Subtribes of, [108].
Distinctive marks of the tribe, [108].
Albinos of the, [109].
Dress of the, [109].
Ornaments and arms of the, [110].
Houses of the, [110].
Character of the, [112].
Their government, [113].
The Sare, or brother oath, of the, [114].
Births and deaths, [118].
Funeral ceremonies, [118], [119].
“Industry” of the tribe, [119].
Wazegura tribe, [i. 124].
Their habitat, [125].
Their arms, [125].
Their kidnapping practices, [125].
Their government, [125].
Their character, [126].
Wazige tribe described, ii. 146.
Waziraha, a subtribe of the Wak’hutu, [i. 122].
Described, [123].
Weights and measures in Zanzibar, ii. 389, 391.
Weapons in East Africa, ii. 300.
Weaving in East Africa, ii. 309.
White land, African curiosity respecting, [i. 261].
Zanzibar, view of, from the sea, [i. 1].
What the island is not, [2].
Family, [2], [3].
History
of the word “Zanzibar,” [28].
Its geographical position, [29].
Weakness of the government of, in the interior of the continent, [98].
The eight seasons of, ii. 8.
Slave-trade of, 377.
Troubles in, 380.
General trade of, Appendix to vol. ii.
Zawada, the lady, added to the caravan, [i. 210].
Her services to Capt. Speke, ii. 277.
Zebras, in the Rufuta plains, [i. 183].
At Ziwa, [251].
In Unyamwezi, ii. 15.
Zemzemiyah of East Africa, ii. 239.
Zeze, or guitar, of East Africa, ii. 291.
Zik el nafas, or asthma, remedy in East Africa for, [i. 96].
Zimbili, halt of the caravan at, [i. 386].
Description of, [386].
Ziwa, or the Pond, [i. 244].
Water obtained from the, [250].
Description of the, [251].
Troubles of the expedition at, [254].
Zohnwe settlement, [i. 173].
Adventures of the expedition at, [173].
Zungomero, district of, described, [i. 93].
Commerce of, [95].
Attractions of, [95].
Food of, [95-97].
Cause of the ivory touters of, [97].
Halt of the expedition at, [i. 127].
Pestilence of, [127], [163].
Fresh porters engaged at, [128].
Life at, [156].
Return to, ii. 264.
Departure from, 276.