Introduction
In 1885 Germany annexed German East Africa. During the First World War this was occupied by allied forces. It was renamed Tanganyika Territory in 1920 and placed under British Mandate; in 1946 it became a United Nations mandate. Tanganyika became independent on 09 December 1961 (from UK-administered UN trusteeship). Zanzibar became independent 19 December 1963 (from UK); and Tanganyika united with Zanzibar on 26 April 1964 to form the United Republic of Tanganyika and Zanzibar; renamed United Republic of Tanzania on 29 October 1964. Martin Grieve, 06 Jun 2004Tanganyika Red Ensign (1919 - 1961)
After World War I Tanganyika became a Mandated Territory under the League of Nations, with the British as the mandated power. The flag that was used was the red or blue ensign, with a giraffe’s head in the fly. In the blue ensign the head is not situated in a white disk. Stuart Notholt, 29 Jun 1996Red Ensign - white disc with Giraffe's neck and head. The white disk's diameter = 4/9 of flag height. Badge from Flaggenbuch (1939) by Ottfried Nubecker.
Martin Grieve, 06 Jun 2004Tanganyika Red and Blue Ensign: 1919 - 1961, (not 1964). Both went out of use at the end of 1961 when Tanganyika became independent, not 1964 when Tanganyika and Zanzibar joined to become Tanzania.
My 12 year old daughter told me the other day that the old colonial flag for Tanganyika used by the British between 1920ish and 1960ish had a giraffe on it, can anyone confirm this and give me any insight as to why this was so. I think a giraffe is quite a strange thing to put on flag but I dare not argue with my daughter who knows a thing or two about giraffes. Was it a case of some colonial governor having a gin & tonic too many or does the giraffe hold a special place in the cultural life of Tanzania, a bit like the sheep does here in Mid-Wales.
Nicholas Randall-Smith, 08 May 2004It was probably a case of 'what else is there?'. By the end of the 19th century the Colonial Office had realised that the pictorial element of the Public Seal did not make a good flag badge. A local animal was usually used when there was no other obvious emblem associated with an area. In Africa they had already used the elephant, lion, leopard, and two sorts of antelope. Perhaps it was a toss-up between the giraffe and the zebra ?
David Prothero, 08 May 2004Many of you are aware of the story I have told about finding an old piece of 4x8 foot ply board on Lake Malawi with 4 old British red ensigns crudely painted onto it. The ensigns were Nyasaland, Northern Rhodesia, Southern Rhodesia, and Tanganyika. The story goes that yachtsmen from all of those colonies used to meet and race yachts on the lake. Yachts from respective colonies evidently flew their particular red ensigns on their boats, and the ply board served spectators on the shore as an ensign identifier.
Tanganyika Blue Ensign (1919 - 1961)
Tanganyika Governor's flag (1919 - 1953)
Governor's flag - I have borrowed António Martins' template for our purposes here. Badge from Flaggenbuch (1939) by Ottfried Nubecker.
Tanganyika Colonial Badge (1919 - 1961)
Badge detail on transparent background. Badge from Flaggenbuch (1939) by Ottfried Nubecker.
The badge was approved 1919 and added to the Admiralty Flag Book as an amendment in 1920.
Also Tanganyika was technically not a British colony. It was a League of Nations Mandated Territory 1919-1946, and a United Nations Trust Territory 1946-1961
No comments:
Post a Comment