buganda - meaning and definition. What is buganda
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What (who) is buganda - definition

Buganda

buganda      
s.2g.
-etnol
1 indivíduo dos bugandas v s.m.
-ling
2 língua banta falada pelos bugandas n adj.2g.
3 relativo ao indivíduo, povo, costumes ou à língua dos bugandas ª bugandas s.2g.pl.
-etnol
4 povo banto que habita o Norte e o Oeste do lago Vitória (África oriental), e que constitui a principal parcela da população da Uganda
-etim afr.

Wikipedia

Reino de Buganda

Buganda é um dos reinos tradicionais da atual Uganda, fundado no século XIV por Quintu[carece de fontes?] e abolido em 1967 no tempo de Mutesa II (r. 1939–1966) por ocasião da proclamação da república. Desde 1993, com a restauração destes reinos, Muenda Mutebi II, filho de Mutesa, assumiu o trono como cabaca.[carece de fontes?] Desde sua fundação tem Mengo como capital. De acordo com o censo de 2019, consta que havia 11 184 500 habitantes em Buganda (chamada administrativamente como Central) e engloba uma área de 61 403 quilômetros quadrados, subdividida em Oriental, Ocidental e Setentrional. Sua população é sobretudo ganda.

O Acordo de Buganda de 1900 concedeu ao reino alguma autonomia dentro do Protetorado de Uganda do Império Britânico. A 18 de outubro de 1955 foi assinado um novo acordo que reiterava a cooperação entre o cabaca e o Reino Unido na governação do território. Os cabacas foram sepultados nos túmulos em Cassubi, uma colina em Campala, capital de Uganda.

Examples of use of buganda
1. KAMPALA Uganda‘s capital is spread over a series of hills 18'0: HQ of British colonial administration 1'62: Capital of independent Uganda Population: 1.2m 2003: Drawing inspiration from Kampala‘s colour 1700 – Buganda begins to expand at the expense of Bunyoro. 1800 – Buganda controls territory bordering Lake Victoria from the Victoria Nile to the Kagera river. 1840s – Muslim traders from the Indian Ocean coast exchange firearms, cloth and beads for the ivory and slaves of Buganda.
2. A chronology of key events: 1500 – Bito dynasties of Buganda, Bunyoro and Ankole founded by Nilotic–speaking immigrants from present–day southeastern Sudan.
3. MILTON OBOTE Obote went into exile in Zambia after the 1'85 coup Prime minister 1'62–70 President 1'66–71, 1'80–85 2005: Obote ‘not planning return soon‘ On This Day 1'71: Idi Amin ousts Obote 1'58 – Uganda given internal self–government. 1'62 – Uganda becomes independent with Milton Obote as prime minister and with Buganda enjoying considerable autonomy. 1'63 – Uganda becomes a republic with Mutesa as president. 1'66 – Milton Obote ends Buganda‘s autonomy. 1'67 – New constitution vests considerable power in the president and divides Buganda into four districts.
4. The key lay in his relations with the Baganda, the people of the kingdom of Buganda, whose numbers, wealth, intelligence and past pre–eminence made them wary of being absorbed into a state which might be dominated by their traditional enemies in the north and west of Uganda.
5. That Obote was able to engineer an alliance between his own radical and mainly northern–based Uganda Peoples Congress (UPC, founded in 1'60) and the conservative, Kabaka of Buganda, Sir Edward Mutesa, was a considerable achievement, and one that ensured that together they won the crucial pre–independence elections in 1'62.