In Darkest Africa, Vol. 2; or, The Quest, Rescue, and Retreat of Emin, Governor of Equatoria
ii. 15, 34;
tribe, 84, 91, 97.
Bantu, the term, ii. 384-5.
Banyoro, ii. 430.
Banza Manteka, i. 85.
Banzanza tribe, i. 289.
Banzombé village, ii. 275.
Bapai (or Bavaiya), i. 206; fishermen, 482.
Baptist Mission, i. 86.
Barghash, Sultan of Zanzibar, _see_ “Seyyid Barghash.”
Bari tribe, ii. 133.
Baring, Sir Evelyn, ii. 128; and Hicks Pasha, i. 16; and General Gordon, 20-1, 22, 46; conversation regarding route at Cairo, 49-51, 56, 58.
Barttelot, Major, ii. 2; Preface, i. 5-7; and Tippu-Tib, ii. 17-20; engaged for the relief staff, i. 42; at Aden, 59; sketch of, 73; and Soudanese, 88; and s.s. _Peace_, 92-4; and s.s. _Stanley_, 95; orders to and duties of, 97-8, 103, 105; selected for command of the rear column, 105-6; to proceed to Stanley Falls, 108, 115-16; letter of instructions to, 117-19; conversation with--referring to Tippu-Tib, 119-28; at Yambuya, 128; blood-brother with a Yambuya chief, 132; farewell to, 136, 209; weight of, ii. 190, 470-1; return to assistance of, i. 344, 351; couriers sent to, 364, 366, 370, 372, 380, 422; Lieut. Stairs and, 463-5; descriptive letter to, from Surgeon Parke, 490, 494; and sad story of the rear column, 498-526; report of, 527-8; log of rear column, 533-47.
Barua tribe, ii. 386.
Baruti (black boy), i. 48; at Suez, 58; and brother, 108-10.
Barzah House, the, ii. 148-156; and Mpigwa at, 395-6.
Basoga tribe, ii. 399.
Basoko tribe, ii. 97; villages, i. 108-10.
Basongora tribe, i. 204, 207, 238, 510.
Basopo Cataract, i. 235, 269, 478; rapids, ii. 30.
Batomba tribe, ii. 97.
Bats, army of, i. 481.
Batundu natives, i. 491; settlement, ii. 20, 34.
Batwa dwarfs, ii. 42, 100-9.
Baundwé, forest aborigines, ii. 263.
Bavabya, ii. 1-2.
Bavikai rapids, i. 479; village, ii. 31-3.
Bavira, villages and chief, i. 320-1, 324, 346, 380, 384-5; and Wahuma, 385; huts of, 389; tribe, ii. 129; women, 130, 208, 391; language, 490.
Bazungu tribe, ii. 100-109.
Beatrice Gulf, ii. 347, 349.
Becker, Lieutenant, ii. 474.
Bedden Station, ii. 122, 133, 243.
Bees, i. 143-4.
Bemberri, i. 386.
Bembezi Ford, i. 84.
Bentley, Rev. Mr., and s.s. _Peace_, i. 86, 90-1, 92-4.
Berber, i. 412, 415.
Bessé, ii. 118; village, i. 377, 378; skirmish of, 424, 453.
Bevwa, Chief of Wakonju, ii. 344-5, 351, 366.
Beyts, Captain (agent B.I.S.N. Co.), i. 58.
Bible, reading the, i. 311-2.
Big Cataract, ii. 40.
Bilal, ii. 197.
Billington, Mr., and s.s. _Henry Reed_, i. 86, 90, 92-4.
Binnie, Mr., and Stanley Falls Station, i. 65.
Binza (Dr. Junker’s boy), i. 90, 194, 427; ii. 126, 127, 137.
Birds, _see_ “Ornithology.”
Blood-brotherhood, with a Yambuya chief, i. 132; with Ismaili, 253-4; with Mazamboni, 382-3; with Uchunku, ii. 378-9.
Bolobo, i. 103, 105, 111; ii. 6, 9, 10; contingent at, i. 133.
Boma, i. 76; ii. 32.
Bonny, Wm., Preface, i. 4, 5-7; engaged for the relief staff, 41; and Baruti, 48; at Suez, 58; Soudanese and Zanzibaris, 73; sketch of, 74; orders to, and duties of, 97-8; and rear column, 106, 372, 380; meeting with, at Banalya, 493-497; and sad story of the rear column, 501, 526; official written narrative, 512-19; report and log of rear column, 527-47; action of, ii. 1-2, 12, 13, 16, 17, 30; and dwarfs, 40, 54, 59-60, 63, 66, 155-6; note from, 157, 161-2, 259-60, 275, 276, 376, 479.
Bora Station, ii. 133.
Borchgrave, Comte de, i. 44, 45.
Boryo (chief of Balessé), i. 267-8, 271, 274, 276-7, 282, 349, 351.
Botany, i, 229-31; raphia palms, 453; of the forest, ii. 44-5; Emin and, 238; musa plants, &c., 46; flora on Ruwenzori, 277-80; manioc, 5-11; phrynia, 22, 45, 63, 77, 83-5, 109; tobacco leaves, 24, 269; palms, 34, 79, 87, 264, 281, 341-2, 351; wood beans, &c., 50, 61, 109; ferns, 54, 175, 281; flora, &c., of African forest, 75-7; of the clearings, 83-4; epiphytes, 76-7; flora of Balegga Hills, 175; Awamba Forest and Semliki Valley, 318-23, 335-7; spear grasses, 265; of the plain, 338-9, 351; acacia, 274, 336, 351, 421; beans, &c., 39, 78, 250, 269, 289; mushrooms, 64; makwemé, 109; Indian corn, &c., 354; euphorbia, 337-9, 351, 421; papyrus, 372; thistles, 377; baobab, 444.
Brackenbury, Captain of H.M.S. _Turquoise_, ii. 457, 462.
Brackenbury, General, i. 48.
British Congo Company’s Steamers, i. 75-6.
British East African Company, ii. 430, 453; and Emin, 467, 472.
British Government, and Emin’s Province, i. 417.
Bruce, Alex. L., i. 35.
Buganda, ii. 430.
Bugombi natives, ii. 174, 395.
Bukanda, village, i. 146-149.
Bukiri (or Myyulu’s), i. 258.
Bukoko, ii. 270, 272, 274, 328.
Bukumbi, French missionaries at, ii. 368-9, 371, 428.
Bumbiré, i. 223.
Bunda, ii. 37.
Bundegunda village, ii. 223, 250; crops at, 252.
Bundi, i. 206, 393, 433.
Bungangeta, villages, i. 155.
Bungangeta, island, i. 492; ii. 12, 15-16, 34.
Bunyambiri village, ii. 223.
Burdett Coutts, Baroness and W., i. 35, 46.
Burroughs and Welcome, i. 38.
Buruli, ii. 347, 349-50.
Bushiri, ii. 449.
Busindi, i. 255.
Butahu River, ii. 284, 318.
Butama, ii. 270.
Butterflies at Katwé, ii. 343.
Buxton, Sir Thomas F., i. 35.
Bwamburi, villages of, i. 165; ii. 22.
Bwanga village, ii. 422.
Bwessa, chief of, i. 384, 441.
CABOT’S (SEBASTIAN) map of Africa, ii. 298-9.
Camps, _see_ “Itinerary” in Appendix, ii. 496-512.
Canoe accidents, ii. 16, 24, 28, 30.
Cape Town, i. 74.
Casati, Captain, i. 118, 334, 396; ii. 125-6, 128, 138, 144, 147, 155-7, 160, 162; and Monbuttu, i. 400, 419; and return to the Coast, 406; experiences in Unyoro, 407-9; and Emin, 419; ii. 186-9, 191, 200, 207-8, 244-5; servant, 255, 276; and cattle raids, 338; illness of, 371, 376; Emin and, 409-10, 479.
Castor Oil Plant, i. 291.
Casualties and desertions, ii. 20, 22, 26-8, 33, 35, 47-9, 50, 53, 57, 61, 65, 116, 259, 281.
Cataracts, rapids, falls, &c., _see_ Amiri, Bafaido, Basopo, Mabengu, Mariri, Panga, Nejambi, Wasps, &c.
Cattle, of the Dinka tribe, i. 450; raids, 423-4; ii. 246; Rukara’s, 289-90, 350; raids of Wasongora, 338, 347, 372.
Chai river, ii. 252, 257.
Chama Issa, ii. 57-8.
Chamlirikwa, ii. 353.
Charters, Mr. David, and s.s. _Peace_, i. 102; and repair of s.s. _Stanley_, 103-4, 115.
Cherif Pasha, i. 16.
Chimpanzees, or “soko,” i. 262; in forest of Msongwa, 449. _See_ “Zoölogy.”
Chongo, camp at, i. 441.
Chowambi, ii. 392.
Christian Mission Society, ii. 380.
Chumbiri, and s.s. _Stanley_, i. 103.
Clarke, Mr., of the L. I. Mission, i. 83.
Clearings, ii. 46, 80-4; of dwarfs, 101. _See_ “Andaki.”
Congo-la-Lemba, i. 84-5.
Congo Railway, ii. 110-11.
Congo River, work on the, i. 19-20; the Congo route for Emin’s relief, 33, 34, 43-5, 75, 77, 78; Upper, scenery, 99-101; miniature Congo cañon, 219; raiders in Upper Basin, 238; ague and, ii. 32, 75; banks of, 82-3.
Congo Free State, and Tippu-Tib, i. 121; and Emin, 411; compared to Soudan, 414-15.
Congo Mission Stations, ii. 433, 449; State, 247; Emin and, 468.
Congratulations by cable received at Zanzibar, ii. 481-8.
Constable’s map of Africa, ii. 300-1.
Consul of Zanzibar, ii. 18, 474, 477.
Cross roads camp, ii. 115-16.
D’Abren, Señor J. F., i. 79.
Daly, Judge, work on Africa, ii. 294.
Dawnay, Hon. Guy, i. 46, 50.
Deakes, Mr., ii. 429.
Deane, Captain, and Stanley Falls Station, i. 65, 70, 72, 107, 120, 520.
Denny, Peter, i. 35.
Denny range, ii. 362, 365, 367, 371-2.
Dessauer, Monsieur, i. 87.
Dinka tribe, and their cattle, i. 450; and snakes, 450.
Diseases, ii. 6, 29, 34, 53, 61, 114, 158, 268, 376, 412; ulcers through poisoned skewer, i. 151; of the Madi carriers, 479; small-pox, ii. 20, 24, 28, 29, 31, 34-5; wounds from poisoned arrows, 27-8; pustules, 30; guinea worms, 110; malaria, 31-3; variola, 110.
Domestic animals of the Dwarfs, ii. 110.
Donagla. _See_ “Mahdi.”
Drummond, Professor, on Africa, ii. 73-4.
Dualla, Somali, i. 455, 456.
Dufflé Station, ii. 132-7; troops at, i. 405.
Dui River, ii. 58-60.
Duki Mountain, ii. 390-1.
Dwarfs, first specimen of the tribe of, i. 207-8; first village of, 261; camp, 265; ii. 79, 263; dwellings of, 103-4; village of, i. 278, 374; camp of, near Fort Bodo, 356; a Queen of, 367-8; colour of, 374; features of, 375; measurement and colour of, ii. 40-2, 164, 167; conversation by gesture, 42-4; woman, 44; woodcraft of, 44, 49-50; and ammunition, 53-4, 61-2; tribe of, 100-9; at Fort Bodo, 113; the opposite of the Wahuma, 384-5; damsel and boy, 410.
East African Association’s offer to Emin Pasha, i. 411-12.
Eastern Telegraph Company, i. 66.
Edgington, J. and Company, i. 38.
Edrisi and Central Africa, ii. 295-6, 305-6.
Edwin Arnold Mountain, ii. 353, 367.
Egypt, and England, i. 11, 12, 15; and the Soudan, 12; Ministry and Gordon, 21; Egyptian Government, Relief Fund, 35; Government and Emin’s ivory, 52; and Equatorial Provinces, 401, 410-17; and Emin Pasha, ii. 232; Egyptian Government in the Soudan, 247.
Egyptians, ii. 141; officers, 170, 173; muster of, and Soudanese, 198-206, 208, 214-16, 231; Emperor Hadrian and, 240, 252, 255, 265-6, 352, 371, 376, 377.
El-del Station, ii. 241.
Elephant Playground Camp, i. 491; ii. 22.
Elephants at Memberri, i. 204; at Ituri, 213; bones of, at Lake Albert, 339; troops of, 359; spear, 376.
Elliot, Captain Grant, i. 39-40.
Emin Pasha, Preface, i. 7-9; and General Gordon, 19; birth and early days, 18-19, 442-3; letters to Mr. Mackay, 25-6; letter to Mr. C. H. Allen, 26; letter to Dr. Felkin, 26-7; his views, 28; letters relating to Emin from Messrs. Mackay, Holmwood, &c., 29-31; ----’s troops, 31, 54-6; estimated and actual time occupied for relief of, 36; and store of ivory, 52, 64; High Order from the Khedive to, 56-8; Stanley’s letter to, 62-3; ivory and Tippu-Tib, 71; false report of Emin Pasha’s arrival, 196, 199; and Dr. Junker _re_ Lake Albert, 333; no news of, 362-3; second attempt to find, 373; first news of “Malleju” or the “Bearded One,” 379, 381, 386; “Malleju’s” letter, 389-90; at Kavalli camp, 396; description of, 396; Drs. Felkin and Junker’s description of, 400; and Monbuttu, 400; and Kabba Rega, 401; conversation about leaving the province, 401-6; brings provisions, 408; and Captain Casati, 408; conversation between Stanley and, relating to Equatorial Province, 410-17; and Casati, 419; and Lake Ibrahim, 419; presents of clothing by, 422; Emin Pasha’s officers, 423; and cattle-raids, 423-4; and use of the sextant, 425, 426; good-bye to, 428-9; and Ruwenzori, 430, 432; two letters from, 431-2; and Unyoro, 432-3; and General Gordon, 443-4; and Mackay’s library, 445; Emin Pasha’s abilities, capacity, and industry, 445-7; some of Emin Pasha’s troubles, 447-9; and natural history, 449-51; and malaria, ii. 33, 59; and insects, 91; news of, 118-19; three letters from, 120-1; Jephson and, 121-4, 124-7; Stanley’s letter to, 128-9; Jephson and, 131-8, 140-4; letter from, 144-5, 147-8; officers, 151, 155; baggage, 158; daughter, 160; as naturalist, 160-7, 174-5; and Shukri Agha, 174, 176; and Selim Bey, 176-81; Osman Latif Effendi and, 183-4; and Captain Casati, 186-9, 191, 207-8, 213, 409-10; weight of, 190; illness of, 352, 371, 376; and Mohammed Effendi’s wife, 192-7; and Stanley, 198-206; followers, 204-5; and Wadelai mails, 216, 226; a study of his province, 228-49; and troops, 267-8; and Ruwenzori, 276, 314; muster-roll, 353; Père Schintze and, 445; and Pères of French Mission, 448-9; at Bagamoyo, 454, 457; the dinner and accident to, 458-62; Stanley and, 465-6, 468-73; and German Government, 466-8, 479-80.
Emin Pasha Relief Committee, telegram from, i. 507, 514-15; report to, 527-34; ii. 13, 128, 177, 471; and Jaffar Tarya, 477.
Emin Pasha Relief Expedition, ii. muster of, 14, 115, 155; at Kavalli, 210.
Emin Pasha Relief Fund, ii. 474; statement of receipts and expenses, 513-14.
_En Avant_, s.s., i. 77, 85, 90, 525.
England’s work in Africa, i. 69.
Engweddé tribe, i. 170, 173, 174, 482; ii. 24; rapids, 28; rain at, 94; captives of, 100.
Entomology: Insects and flies, i. 152, 359; of the great African forest, 479-80; ii. 90-3; fleas of Ibwiri, i. 270; mosquitoes, gnats, &c., of Upper Congo, 101; at Fort Bodo, 356-7; Emin and, ii. 267-8; jiggers, 3, 92; ants, i. 150, 357-8, 469, 479-80; ii. 39, 75-6, 78, 84, 91, 92; dried ants for poison, 108; white ants, 110; black mosquitoes, 415; moths, cloud of, 33; wasps, 35; and bees, 39, 76, 84, 90-2; beetles, 91, 92, 393; gnats, pest of, 261; butterflies at Katwé, 343.
Epeni brook, ii. 44.
Equatorial Province, i. 410-17; stations in, 418; rebellion in, ii. 121-4; Jephson’s report of, 131-7, 143-4; officers of, 151-6, 160, 176-7, 179-81, 188, 213, 223-6; history of, 231-49, 261.
Equator Station, i. 85, 107, 115.
Ethnology, i. 385; forest tribes, ii. 88-9, 97-104; of Central and South Africa, 384-9.
Etienne, Père, ii. 457, 459.
Express rifles, i. 213.
FABBO Station, ii. 133-4.
Fadl el Mulla Aga, ii. 132, 134, 160, 178, 183, 188, 224-6, 246.
Fane, Mr., i. 52.
Farag Pasha, i. 24.
Farishi Station, i. 455, 456.
Farjalla, the slave of, i. 212-13.
Fathel Mullah, ii. 416-17.
Felkin, Dr. R. W., missionary, ii. 268, 380, 470; letter from Emin Bey, i. 26-7; route for Emin’s relief, 31; description of Emin, 400.
Ferahani, ii. 447-8.
Ferajji, headman, ii. 4-7, 27.
Ferida, Emin’s daughter, ii. 160; the nurse of, 192, 194-5.
Ferney, Mr. Lafontaine, i. 75.
Feruzi, i. 228; and the bush antelope, ii. 25-6.
Fetteh (of Unyoro), i. 312-14, 377.
Fights of Expedition, _see_ Avisibba, Mazamboni, &c.; with the Balegga, ii. 129; with Wara Sura, 255, 260, 349-50, 352; with Wasakuma, 436-8.
Fischer, Dr., and relief of Junker, i. 29, 30; and Emin, 30, 35.
Fish in Lake Urigi, ii. 415.
_Florida_, s.s., shaft, i. 84; launching of, 95-6; departure for Yambuya, 101-7, 462-3.
Foreign Office, despatches, i. 417; and Emin, ii. 466-7.
Forests: of the Upper Congo river, i. 99-101; our mode of marching through, 135-8; 160 days in the, 138; slow progress through the, 144, 229-30; a forest tempest, 144-5, 233; abandoned clearings, 222; our food in the, 222-3; beans, 225; pears, 226; limit of the great, 281; woods, 284, 357; forest-craft, 374; of Msongwa, 449; clearings, 474-5; evils of forest marching, 479-80; Forest, Great Central African, description of, ii. 74-111; Awamba, 262, 269-70. Table of--and Grass-land languages. _See_ Appendix.
Forrest & Son, and steel boat, i. 38, 77.
Fort Bodo, i. 349; ii. 15, 57, 59, 72, 104-7, 112-15, 124-5, 232, 470; construction of, i. 351-2; stockade of, 352-3; officers’ house at, 354-5; garrison of, 354; road construction at, 349; distance from Ipoto, 363; cornfields at, 369-70, 456-7; labour about, 370-1; roads from, 371; life at, 371-2; arrival at, 453; condition of garrison at, 456-7; state of, 459-60; improvements to be made in, 466; departure from, 468; progress from, 491.
Fort Island, near Panga Falls, i. 171; ii. 26.
Fortnum & Mason, i. 39.
Foss, Captain, ii. 462, 473.
France, territory in West Africa, i. 69, and East Africa, 77.
Francqui, Mons., i. 87.
Fraser, Commander T. M., ii. 457.
French missionaries at Usambiro, ii. 422, 428; at Bukumbi, 433-4, 444; tributes of, 443, 445, 447; Emin and, 448-9.
Fruit: fenessi, i. 225, 229; ii. 109; plantains and bananas, i. 266, 299, 476; ii. 10, 20, 28, 31, 36, 39, 43, 45, 53, 59, 61, 62, 78-9, 97, 261-2, 275-6, 417; wild oranges and mango-trees, 29; figs, 29, 110; fig-tree, 34, 83; wild fruit of the forest, 88, 109-10; melons, &c., 328; blackberries, 371, 377.
Fundi, ii. 69.
Gaddo (the lake pilot), ii. 402.
Game in the forest, ii. 88-9.
Gavira, chief of Bavira (_see_ “Mpigwa”), i. 320, 384, 386, 388, 390, 434-5; ii. 119, 391-2.
Gengé, ii. 434.
Geology: Forest at Andari, ii. 50; at Andikumu, 57; of river beds, 274; bed of Semliki River, 286; bed of Albert Edward Nyanza, 335-6.
German Government and Emin, ii. 438-42, 472-3.
Germans at Mpwapwa, ii. 430-1, 446; and coast Arabs, 446; and Ugogo, 446; at Bagamoyo, 457-61.
Germany and territory east of Zanzibar, i. 68-9, 77.
Gessi Pasha, i. 14, 430, 444; ii. 141; and Ruwenzori, 314.
Giegler Pasha, i. 58.
Girault, Père, ii. 445.
Gladstone, Mr., i. 16, 23, 240.
Glave, at Equator Station, i. 85, 107.
Gleerup, Mr., and Stanley Falls Station, i. 70.
Goats, ii. 15, 24, 28, 39, 58, 61, 97; of Wara Sura, 350; and fowls of Nepanga, i. 169.
Goods of the Expedition, i. 37-9, 547; ii. 155.
Gondokoro, i. 412.
Gordon, General, and the slave trade, i. 14, 17; and the Upper Soudan, 17-19; and the Congo River, 20; and Khartoum, 20-25, 404, 427; at Khartoum, ii. 141; death, i. 24; Nubar Pasha and, 52, 240, 412; and Lake Ibrahim, 419; and Emin Pasha, 27, 443-4.
Gordon, Rev. Cyril, ii. 380, 424, 429.
Gordon-Bennett, Mr. J., ii. 450.
Gordon-Bennett Mountain, ii. 315, 317; cove, 367.
Grant, Capt., i. 12.
Grant, Col. J. A., i. 45-7; and Baruti, 48, 50; and Mtesa, ii. 411, 412.
Granville, Lord, and the Soudan, i. 16; and General Gordon, 20-2.
Grass-land and Forest languages, comparative table of. _See_ Appendix.
Gravenreuth, Baron von, ii. 450.
Gray, Dawes & Co., i. 35, 46, 48.
Grenfell, General, i. 56, 58.
Grenfell, Mr., and Mobangi River, i. 107.
Grenfell, Sir Francis, ii. 248-9.
Greshoff, Mr. A., i. 96, 399, 462-3.
Gunda village, i. 441.
Gwengweré, rapids and villages, i. 151, 152.
Hailallah, ii. 118.
Hajji, Zanzibari, ii. 209.
Hall, Jas., i. 35.
Hamdan, Egyptian soldier, ii. 263, 265.
Hamed bin Ibrahim, ii. 411.
Hamid Aga, ii. 131.
Hannington, Bishop, i. 53; murder of, ii. 359, 370, 380-1.
Hassan, our cook, i. 474.
Hassan, Bakari, ii. 169.
Hassan, Vita, apothecary, i. 399, 424.
Hassan, Dr., ii. 473.
Hekatæus, ii. 41, and Africa, 294.
_Henry Reed_, mission steamer, i. 76-7, 85, 86, 90; Jephson and, 93, 95; departure for Yambuya, 101-7, 115-16.
_Heron_, steamer, i. 76, 79.
Hicks Pasha, i. 14-17; Army, ii. 241.
Hilallah, boy, i. 261.
Hipparchus’ map of Africa, ii. 294-5, 300.
Hippo Broads, ii. 33; camp, i. 201, 478.
Hippopotami, i. 101, 104, 201; bones of, 339.
Hirschberg, Capt., ii. 462, 473.
Holmwood, Consul-General F., and Emin, i. 28-9; despatch to Foreign Office, Sept., 1886, 29-30; 60, 71, 531-2.
Homer’s time, Africa in, ii. 291-4, 300, and Nile, 302.
Hot springs, ii. 282; near Iwanda, 350; Mtagata, 406, 410.
Houssas, i. 91, 107.
Hutton, Mr. James F., i. 31, 35.
Ibina River, i. 207, 246.
Ibrahim Effendi Elham, ii. 217.
Ibrahim, Lake (or Gita Nzige), i. 419.
Ibwiri, village of, i. 265-70; ii. 30, 48; clearing of, 53, 103; fleas of, i. 270, 274-5, 303, 337-8, 350-1.
Iddesleigh, Lord, and Uganda route, i. 45; death of, 46; despatches furnished by, 417.
Ihangiro, ii. 387-8, 414, 418.
Ihuru River, i. 207, 219, 263; ii. 43, 47, 49, 54, 58, 61, 63, 69, 72.
Ikoma, ii. 434-5.
Ikungu, ii. 445-6.
Ikuta Island, ii. 418.
Indekaru, villages of East and West, i. 263, 265, 367-8, 375, 468.
Indemau, ii. 58-60.
Indemwani village, i. 277, 349, 374.
Indenduru, villages of East and West, i. 277-9, 453; West and Central, ii. 116.
Indeperri, ii. 59.
Indepessu, i. 280, 375.
Indepuya, natives of, i. 374.
Indesura, i. 286, 290-2, 349.
Indetonga camp, i. 349.
Ingham and Congo carriers, i. 47, 80.
Inkissi River, i. 89.
Ipoto, settlement of, i. 219, 234-5; ii. 103, 273; ivory hunters at, i. 236-41, 364, 469-70.
Irangara Island, ii. 347.
Islands, _see_ Bungangeta, Fort, Ikuta, Kakuri, Kasenya, Mysomé, Nepanga, Rumondo, &c.
Ismail, the Khedive of Egypt, i. 12-14; and Gordon, 19.
Ismail Hakki Pasha and E. Schnitzler, i. 18, 442.
Ismaili, chief, i. 238, 249-54, 261, 361.
Itari, ii. 418-21.
Itinerary of Journeys made in 1887, 1888, 1889; ii. 496-512.
Itiri settlement, i. 184-7; ii. 28.
Ituri River, i. 53, 207, 213, 216-17, 219-21, 223, 282, 289, 291-2, 301-2, 304, 306, 319, 320, 347-8, 376, 393, 453, 466, 470-1, 476; twin peak near, 431; ii. 26, 30, 38, 39-40; source of, 94-7; 115, 125, 145; Emin and, 240; valley, 281; tributaries of, 252, 273, 393; _see_ also Aruwimi River.
Ivory, ii. 107, 146; Emin’s, 183, 240; gift to Mazamboni, 223; at Katwé, 342; _see_ Emin Pasha, Ipoto, &c., i.
Iwanda, ii. 350, 366, 371-2.
Iyugu village, i. 283, 349.
Jabu (our cook), ii. 26.
Jaffar, son of Tarya Topan, i. 60; ii. 474-7.
Jameson, James S., Preface, i. 5-7, 36; engaged for the relief staff, 43, 58; sketch of, 74; and hippopotami, 93; orders to, and duties of, 97-8; selected for second in command of rear column, 106; letter of instructions to, 117-19, 128; farewell to, 136; and butterflies, 150, 372, 380, 494; and sad story of the rear column, 500-26; report and log of rear column, 527-47; mention of, ii. 12, 13, 15-66; box, 30, 182-3.
Jephson, A. J. Mounteney (_Buburika_), Preface, i. 7-9; engaged for the relief staff, 43; departure of, 48; Soudanese and Zanzibaris, 73; sketch of, 73; and steel boat, 85; and Congo, 89; and Salim, 89-90; and steamer _Peace_, 92-4; orders to, and duties of, 97-8; at Yambuya, 128; memorandum for advance column officers, 129-31, 146, 149, 161-2, 180, 182-4, 192, 224-5; fanciful menus, 226-28, 232; report of Nelson’s relief, 248-9, 272, 471; and Mazamboni’s people, 315-17; and Katonza’s, 224-5, 347; at Fort Bodo, 354, 367; and blood-brotherhood with Mazamboni, 382-3; and steel boat, 390; conveys letter to Emin Pasha, 391-2; note from, 395; at Kavalli, 396, 410, 422, 427; Message for Emin’s troops, 427-8, 430-1; and Fort Bodo, 466; ii. 28, 31-2, 113-15, 117-19; and Emin, 120-1, 138; letters from, 121-4; Stanley’s letter to, 124-8; return of, 130-1; report of the revolt in the Equatorial Province, 131-7, 141, 145; letter from, 146-7, 162, 167; and Balegga Hills, 175, 176, 178, 179-83; weight of, 190, 201-18; illness of, 216, 257, 260, 275, 352, 371; and Emin, 233, 237, 248, 276; and Gaddo, 402, 479.
Jordan’s Nullah, ii. 438.
Juma, i. 243-4, 249, 454, 478-9; son of Nassib, 487-8.
Juma, Hussein bin, ii. 27-8.
Juma, Ali, ii. 114.
Juma Waziri, i. 291.
Junker, Dr., ii. 151, 183, 229, 232; and Emin, i. 29-31, 54, 58, 77, 400, 402; ii. 244-5, 268, 470; and Congo route, i. 50, 52-4; and Emin’s troops, 55; and Emin’s ivory, 64, 71; and Nepoko River, 193; and Monbuttu, 400; letter from, 447.
Kabba Rega, i. 332; ii. 129, 147, 157, 159, 191, 239, 244-5, 255, 270-1, 338; and Katwé, 344-5, 352, 382; father of, 392, 430; and Komubi, i. 393-4; and Emin, 401, 431; and Capt. Casati, 507-8; and Katonza, 425; and Musiri, 435-6.
Kabindas, party of, i. 84, 91.
_Kacongo_ gunboat, i. 79.
Kadongo’s village, i. 433-4; ii. 391.
Kafur River, ii. 432.
Kafurro settlement, ii. 373, 411-13.
Kaibuga, chief, ii. 255, 258, 268.
Kaiyura’s settlement, ii. 346-7.
Kajumba, chief, ii. 417-18.
Kakoko, ii. 411, 429.
Kakonya, ii. 351-2.
Kakuri, chief, ii. 284, 344-6.
Kakuri Island, ii. 346, 353, 354, 366.
Kakwa Hill, ii. 54.
Kalema, ii. 430.
Kalengé, Katto’s cousin, i. 437; ii. 118, 391.
Kametté, chief of, i. 452.
Kamrasi, ii. 392.
Kamwaga, ii. 422.
Kamwaiya, i. 367.
Kandekoré clearings, i, 376; ii. 115-16, 118.
Kanji, the Vakeel of Tarya, i. 60.
Kapera, ii. 444.
Karagwé, route through, i. 32-3, 53; armlets, &c., of, 258; spears of, 318; mention of, ii. 360, 382, 387, 404-5, 411-14.
Karamulli settlement, ii. 352.
Karema, King of Uganda, ii. 369, 382, 411.
Karéma and Baruti, i. 108.
Karimi camp, ii. 289; Ruwenzori from, 327, 335, 339.
Karramalla, ii. 242, 244, 247.
Kasai River, ii. 453.
Kasari settlement, ii. 372.
Kasenya Island, i. 334-8.
Kassasura, ii. 418.
Kassessé, chief, ii. 347.
Kassololo Hill, i. 206.
Kasunga Nyanza, ii. 353.
Katara, ii. 371.
Katari settlement, ii. 353-4, 366.
Katekiro’s raid, ii. 338.
Katera lagoon, ii. 392.
Kateribba Island, ii. 347.
Katero Island, ii. 347.
Katonga River, ii. 318, 358.
Katonza, chief, i. 331-7, 379, 394, 338, 425, 431-2; ii. 119, 157, 391; and Kava lli, 395.
Katto, Mazamboni’s brother, i. 434-5; phalanx dance, 436-8; ii. 118, 391.
Katwé town, ii. 284, 337, 339-40; salt lake of, 340-4; colour of, 343; bay, 346-7.
Kavalli, i. 63, 118, 129; and Kasenya Island, 337, 386, 393 (_see_ “Mbiassi”), 389-90, 392, 395, 409-10; and Kabba Rega, 431-2; plateau of, ii. 31; camp, 118-19, 122, 126, 128-9, 140, 162, 201, 210; Egyptians at, 240, 315; and Katwé salt, 343, 359; chief, 389-92; and cattle, 393-4; and Katonza, 395; and Gaddo, 402; and Emin, 470-1.
Kavari, ii. 414.
Kavirondo, ii. 359-60.
Kawandaré, ii. 351, 352.
Keltie, J. S., i. 47.
Khalfan, i. 173, 187, 189-90.
Khalif of Khartoum, ii. 143-4; letter to, 249.
Khambi Mbya, ii. 443.
Khamis bin Athman, i. 86; headman, 238, 261; and “Three O’clock,” 264-5; and Zanzibaris, 266-7; and Boryo, 268, 271-2, 361.
Khartoum, and General Gordon, i. 20-5, 404, 427; Emin at, ii. 238; fall of, 121, 239, 241, 244.
Khedive of Egypt, ii. 151, 152; letter from the, 121, 125, 128, 131-2, 180; and Emin, 189, 232-4, 243, 249, 467, 471-2.
_Khedive_, s.s., on Lake Albert, i. 399, 407, 409, 422, 424, 426, 431; ii. 126, 144, 146, 160.
Kibbo-bora, headman, ii. 69, 410-11.
Kibiro, ii. 244.
Kibwiga, ii. 362.
Kiengo (guide), ii. 412.
Kigeri, King, ii. 373.
Kikuyu, ii. 359.
Kilimani Hill, i. 455.
Kilolo, village of, i. 85.
Kilonga-Longa’s (Uledi) settlement, i. 208, 218-19, 234-6, 247; charges against, 273, 360, 469-70; ferry of, ii. 49, 59, 107; followers of, 273.
Kimberri cones, ii. 390-1.
Kimpoko, i. 102.
Kimwani, or Kizinga, ii. 417-18.
Kingani River, ii. 453.
Kinnena on the Lindi, i. 236.
Kinshassa, i. 91, 95-6; and s.s. _Peace_, 102.
Kinya-magara Range, ii. 362-5.
Kirk, Sir John, Mr. Mackay’s letter to, i. 30-1, 50, 67; Emin’s letter to, 417; ii. 466-7.
Kirri, i. 447; ii. 122, 131, 243.
Kiruromo, ii. 409-10.
Kiryama village, ii. 257; natives, 258.
Kisaho village, ii. 418.
Kitagwenda, ii. 347, 351, 353-4.
Kitchener, Major, and Khartoum, i. 25.
Kites, i. 358; at Badzwa, 394.
Kiteté heights of, ii. 354, 360-1.
Kiwewa, ii. 369, 411.
Knorr, Admiral, i. 60.
Komubi, chief, i. 393-4; ii. 391.
Kru-boys, i. 91.
Kuka Peak, ii. 390-1.
Kungu, ii. 434-5.
Kwamouth, i. 103, 105.
Kwara-Kwanzi, ii. 344.
Kwilu River, i. 85.
Kyensi, ii. 411.
Kynock & Co.'s cartridges, i. 38, 472.
Kyya Nkondo’s, ii. 128-9.
Laboratoire Khedivial and Katwé salt, ii. 340-1.
Laboré Station, ii. 122, 131-3.
Lado, i. 412-13, 415; ii. 133, 244.
Lake Shore Camp, ii. 160-1, 220, 224-5.
Lakki (or a “Hundred Thousand”), ii. 24.
Lakkin (Zanzibari), i. 487.
Lamu, i. 59; Dr. Lenz at, 127.
Landburg, Count de, ii. 310-12.
Lando villages, i. 424.
Langa Langa, i. 107.
Lavigerie, crusade preached by Cardinal, i. 240.
Lemur, i. 357.
Lenda River, i. 206-7, 213, 216, 236-7, 472-3; ii. 38.
Lenz, Dr., the Austrian traveller, i. 59, 127, 428.
Leopold, King, and the Congo River, i. 20; and the Congo route, 33-4, 43-5; visit to, 47-8; and Stanley Falls, 64-65; and Free State, 69; and Tippu-Tib, 70, 121; proposition to Emin, 411-17; and Emin, ii. 467-8.
Leopold II. Lake, ii. 300.
Leopoldville, i. 91-2, 111.
Liebig Company’s Extract, i. 39, 89; ii. 58.
Liebricht, Lieut., of Stanley Pool, i. 90, 92-4, 115, 462, 531.
Linant Bey, i. 448.
Lindi River, i. 206.
Lions, i. 450-1.
Little Rapids, ii. 30.
Livingstone Inland Mission, i. 83, 85, 93.
Livingstone, relief of David, ii. 228-9, 431.
Lobo, Père Jerome, and the Nile, ii. 291, 302-3.
Lohugati stream, ii. 418.
Luajimba, ii. 350, 411.
Luba, of Usoga, ii. 370.
Lufu River, i. 84.
Luila River, i. 91.
Lukolela Mission Station, i. 91, 107.
Lukungu Station, i. 80, 86, 87-8, 105, 120.
Lulu River, i. 206.
Lumami, the, i. 513, 520.
Lunionzo River, i. 85.
Lupton Bey, i. 19, 26; ii. 241.
Luteté, i. 89.
Mabengu Rapids, i. 192; ii. 28, 94; villages, i. 184, 187, 481.
Mabisé tribe, ii. 161.
Mabodé tribe, i. 165; ii. 97.
Mabruki, the hunter, i. 395, 409, 424-5, 481; ii. 137.
Mackay, Mr. A. M., the Uganda missionary, letters from Emin Bey, i. 25-30; letter to Sir John Kirk, 30-1; and spare books from Emin Pasha, 407; Emin and Mackay’s library, 445; success of, ii. 380-2; and the Relief Expedition, 423-9; last letter of, 429-31, 433, 444.
Mackenzie, G. S., i. 37, 48, 59-60, 63, 65.
Mackinnon, John, i. 35.
Mackinnon, Peter, i. 35.
Mackinnon, Sir Wm., Prefatory to, i. 1-10; and relief to Emin, 31-5; and Congo route, 44-5; farewell banquet, 48; letter to the Sultan of Zanzibar, 61-2, 67, 118-19; Barttelot’s report to, 527-33; Mackay and, ii. 431.
Mackinnon Mountain, ii. 317-18; cove, 367.
McMichael, N., i. 35.
MacNeil, D., i. 35.
Madi tribe, i. 426; carriers, 428-29, 433, 472-4, 476-92; ii. 20, 24, 27, 35, 47, 58, 110; chief, 281.
_Madura_, B.I.S.N. Co.'s s.s., i. 60, 63, 66, 75, 79-80.
Magungo, on Albert Nyanza, i. 444.
Mahdi (Mohamet Achmet), i. 14; at Khartoum, 25; at Rimo, 27, 413-14, 427; forces defeated by Shukri Agha, 448; forces, ii. 120, 122-4, 133, 135, 233, 241-4.
Majato, Manyuema headman, i. 513.
Majinga Island, ii. 418.
Makara Plain, ii. 335-6, 343-5.
Makata Plain, ii. 447.
Makkaraka, ii. 224, 245.
Makoko’s village, i. 91.
Makolo, ii. 369, 434, 444.
Makraka cattle raids, i. 423.
Makrisi and the Nile, ii. 308-9.
Makubana, i. 492.
Makukuru village, i. 386.
Malai tribe, ii. 161, 174, 210.
Malaria, remarks about, ii. 31-32.
Malissa, chief, ii. 435-8.
“Malwa,” or beer, ii. 403, 411, 416.
Mamara, ii. 441.
Mambanga, camp opposite, i. 167, 484; ii. 24.
Manbungu, i. 167, 261-3, 455-6, 469.
Mandé, i. 268, 375; woman of, 453.
Mangola River, i. 84.
Manioc Zanzibaris and, ii. 5-11.
Manginni, ii. 24.
Manyanga, i. 85.
Manyuema, i. 141, 199; followers of Kilonga Longa, 218-19, 231-5; headmen at Ipoto, 238; morals of, 241-2; and our rifles, 244-5, 469-71; and relief of Nelson, 247, 261, 264-73, 350; and Fort Bodo, 352; ii. 12, 16, 22, 24, 27, 28, 35, 37-8, 47; girl, 34; headmen, 13, 19; insane women, 20; the wife of ---- drummer, 29, 49, 64, 110, 119, 148; raiders, 273, 352, 378.
Map-makers, ii. 292-3, 299-300; in books of travel, 334-35.
Marco, Greek trader, ii. 147, 156, 157, 176.
Margarita Philosophica, map of, ii. 296.
Mariri, Lower and Upper, i. 157-8; rapids, 491; rapids and villages, ii. 16.
“Marwa” wine, i. 299.
Masai, a horde of, ii. 445.
Masai Land route, i. 32-4, 53.
Masakuma, ii. 361, 365-7.
Mason Bey, i. 51-2; and Albert Nyanza, 328, 444, 332, 334, 336; and Ruwenzori, 430; ii. 314.
Mataddi, i. 76, 79, 80, 90; ii. 31.
Mathews, General, i. 29, 60-1; mimicking, 371; ii. 474.
Matyera, interpreter, ii. 282.
Mavona Valley, ii. 382.
Maxim automatic gun, i. 38, 116; compared to Tippu-Tib, 127; ii. 306, 379, 437.
Maza Mankengi, i. 83.
Mazamba wood, i. 84.
Mazamboni’s Peak, i. 303; range, 304-9; Chief, 313; ii. 118, 206, 208, 210-11; 223, 391; arms of, i. 318, 346-7, 378, 380-4; his guides, 386, 425, 452; and Musiri, 434-5; Phalanx dance by his warriors, 436-41.
Mbiassi, chief of Kavalli district, i. 386, 390, 392-4, 425.
Mbiri, millet fields of, i. 298; cataract near, 314.
Mboga, ii. 256; natives of, 258; height of, 262.
Mbutti village, i. 375.
Mbwenni, i. 60.
Medze tribe, ii. 34.
Melindwa, ii. 129, 140, 174, 176, 391.
Memberri, i. 205.
Meteorology: rain, i. 100-1, 156-7, 188-9, 338, 418-19; wind, 100-1, 144-5, 153, 262, 388-9, 409, 421-2; temperature, 149-50, 423, 425-6, 430-1; rain, ii. 34, 38-9; in the forest, 82, 86, 93-4, 255-6, 262, 271, 355; wind, 30, 39, 81-2; in the forest, 93-4, 318-21, 365, 376, 392, 413; temperature, 34.
Mhuma warrior, i. 384-5, 389.
Mikonju chief, ii. 285.
Missionary Station Usambiro, ii. 422-31, 433.
Mississi River, ii. 318.
Mittinginya, ii. 444-5.
Miwale River, i. 453.
Mkiyo village, ii. 342; lake of, 343.
Mobangi River, i. 107.
Mogo, Chief, ii. 121, 124, 129, 140.
Mohammed Arabi, ii. 429.
Mohammed Biri, ii. 245.
Mohammed, Corporal Dayn, ii. 53.
Mohammed Emin, ii. 167, 178, 186.
Mohammed Effendi, the engineer and wife, ii. 191-7; and Emin, 469.
Mohammedans, ii. 368, 381.
Mombasa, i. 59.
Momvu tribes, i. 194; ii. 97, 100.
Monangwa, capture of a, ii. 436, 441.
Monbuttu, visited by Emin, i. 400, 403; route, 419; tribe, arms of, ii. 22, 97; Emin and -- land, 240.
Monkeys, i. 262.
Mongoose, i. 449.
Morogoro, ii. 448.
Mosquito curtain, ii. 33.
Mountains of the Moon. _See_ “Ruwenzori.”
Mpanga River, ii. 354, 367.
Mpigwa, chief of Nyamsassi, i. 386, 425, 431; ii. 126, 158, 161-2; and Emin, 176, 395-6.
Mpinga (_see_ “Gavira”), chief of Bavira, ii. 210.
Mpororo, ii. 354, 369, 373, 387, 405.
Mpozo River, i. 80.
Mpwapwa Station, ii. 446-7.
Mrima, Zanzibari, ii. 158.
Msalala, i. 73, 404, 408; ii. 449.
Msharasha (Zanzibari), i. 349.
Msongwa, forest of, i. 449.
Msua, ii. 450-3.
Mswa Station, i. 390, 395, 418, 424; ii. 140, 179, 199, 224-6, 233, 245; chimpanzees and fruit of, i. 449.
Mswata, i. 95, 103.
Mtagata hot springs, ii. 406, 410.
Mtarega, ii. 275, 281, 322-3.
Mtesa, King, ii. 381, 411.
Mtsora, ii. 283, 285-6, 323.
Muanza, ii. 438.
Muggi Station, ii. 122, 133.
Mugwyé, chief of My-yui, i. 166; ii. 24.
Muhalala, ii. 446.
Muhamba, ii. 286, 323.
Muhokya Village, ii. 349.
Muini Somai, Sheik, i. 527-47; ii. 477.
Muini Usagara, ii. 447.
Mukangi, i. 452; ii. 118.
Mukondokwa Valley, ii. 447.
Mukungu, ii. 347; huts of, 347-8.
Mukupi camp, i. 165.
Mupé, North and South, villages, i. 158-9, 491; South, ii. 16.
Murabo, i. 266; our “medicine man,” 382-3, 481.
Murchison Bay, island near, ii. 370.
Murray, Hugh, and the River Nile, ii. 300.
Musiri, Chief, i. 433-5, 441; ii. 391-2.
Muta Nzigé, lakes so named by different tribes, ii. 421.
Mutara, ii. 415.
Mutundu, ii. 391-2.
Mwanga, King of Uganda, ii. 359, 367-71 (_see_ “Uganda”); 380-2, 411-13, 417, 421, 424-31.
Mwani, Chief, i. 258.
Mwembi, i. 86.
Mwengi, Chief, ii. 417.
Mwité, Chief, ii. 159.
Mysomé Island, ii. 418.
My-yui (or Mugwé’s) camp, i. 165-6, 484.
Namianja, River and Valley, ii. 376-8, 405.
Nassib (Zanzibari), i. 478-9.
Natural History, _see_ “Ornithology,” “Zoölogy,” “Botany,” &c.
Navabi, i. 202-4; falls, 477.
_Navarino_, s.s., i. 46, 48, 58, 59.
Ndagara or Unyagumbwa, ii. 411-12, 414.
Nderi, dwarfs of, i. 367.
Ndugubisha, i. 263, 468.
Ndumba Village, i. 153.
Nebassé, i. 261.
Nejambi Rapids, i. 171-2, 482; ii. 27.
Nelson, Captain, i. 5, 7; ii. 112, 115, 158, 168-9, 179-81, 183; weight of, 190; and Emin, 237, 255, 257, 260-1, 265, 275, 276, 350; illness of, 353; Kiengo and, 412, 413, 479; engaged for the relief staff, i. 42; departure, 48; Soudanese and Zanzibaris, 73; sketch of, 74, 95; orders to and duties of, 96-8; at Yambuya, 128; memorandum for advance-column officers, 129-31; farewell to Barttelot, 136-7, 154, 161, 178, 182, 213; illness of, and other followers, 220-1; anxiety regarding, 241; relief of, arranged, 247-9; report, 249-53; at Ipoto, 272-3, 359, 362-3, 367; at Fort Bodo, 454, 458-9, 466; Starvation camp, 249, 253, 471.
Nepanga Island and Falls (_see_ Panga), i. 168-9.
Nepoko River, i. 165, 193, 209, 370; ii. 29.
Nera, ii. 441-2.
Nestor, i. 381-3.
Neuville, the Prior of, and the River Nile, ii. 302-3.
Ngaiyu River, i. 208; ii. 30, 33, 34, 100.
Ngalyema, i. 93-119.
Ngoki River, ii. 44.
Ngoti, ii. 417.
Ngula River, i. 167, 483; camp, ii. 26.
Ngwetza, ii. 61-71.
_Nieman_, s.s., i. 75-6.
Nile, sources of the river, ii. 291-312, 314-15, 325; White Nile, 336; Albertine Nile, 357; Alexandra, 359, 376, 405, 412; valley, 382.
Nindo people, ii. 430.
Njalis, i. 262.
Nkalama River, i. 90.
Noailles, Countess de, i. 35, 43.
Nsabé camp, i. 399, 418-27; ii. 122-4, 128, 135-7.
Nselo, i. 89.
Nsinda Mountain, ii. 362.
Nsona Mamba, of Lower Congo, i. 219.
Nsongi River, ii. 318, 351, 354.
Nubar Pasha, i. 17; and Congo route, 49, 51-2; letter to Emin, 58, 401-3; and Emin’s pay, 406, 428; letter from, ii. 121, 131-2, 180, 467.
Nubians and rhinoceros, ii. 406-9.
Nyamatoso settlement, ii. 373.
Nyamagazani River, ii. 318, 337, 339.
Nyamagoju camp, ii. 418.
Nyam-Nyam tribe, arms of, ii. 22, 97; language of, 490.
Nyamsassi, i. 337, 386., 391-2, 395; island, 291; Baker and, 400, 423, 424; ii. 118, 124-7, 135, 137.
Nyangwé, i. 127, 527.
_Nyanza_, s.s., i. 426; ii. 126, 144, 146, 160, 176.
Nyanzas, the different, ii. 283-4.
Nyika, King of Usongora, ii. 345; son of, 372.
Nzalli’s camp, i. 468.
Nzera Kum Hill, i. 309-10, 382, 441.
Okili, Captain Casati’s servant, ii. 255.
Omar, Sergeant, of the Soudanese, ii. 208-10.
Omar Saleh, ii. 122, 133, 248-9.
Omar al Khattab, ii. 135.
_Oriental_, s.s., i. 59.
Ornithology: aquatic birds, i. 152; guinea fowl, 223; eagles, 358; black ibis, 358; herons, 358; kites at Badzwa, 394; wagtails and weaver birds, 359; Emin’s bird studies, 451; fowls, ii. 15, 28, 62; ibises, 45; eagles, 45, 90; parrots and other birds, 45, 90; birds in the forest, 88, 90; bats, 88; Emin and birds, 163-4, 175, 267; cranes, herons, &c., 343, 348, 414-5.
Osman Digna, letter from, ii. 248-9.
Osman Latif Effendi, ii. 170, 178, 183-4, 202; and the Koran, 206-7, 220.
Oyster-shells, heaps of, i. 154.
Palaballa camp, i. 83.
Panga Falls, i. 154, 165, 168-9, 194, 483; ii. 26.
Parke, Surgeon T. H., i. 5-7; ii. 31-2, 72, 112, 114; Surgeon to Expedition, i. 49, 58; vaccinating the men, 73; and s.s. _Stanley_, 95; orders to, and duties of, 96-8, 103, 105, 128; memorandum for advance-column officers, 129-31; stung by bees, 143-4; and weaver birds, 151-2, 161; the good surgeon, 195, 218; fanciful menus, 226-7, 233; report, 250, 253, 272, 359; report of, 360-2; and Stanley’s illness, 367, 371; first view of the grass-land, 376, 390, 420, 422, 430-1; at Fort Bodo, 458-9, 466, 468-70; letter to Major Barttelot, 490; address to, 116-18, 155, 162-3, 167-8, 179-81, 189; weight of, 190, 208-9, 211-12; illness of, 216, 352, 466; and Emin, 237, 260-1, 276; pigmy damsel and, 410, 460; and Emin’s accident, 461, 465, 479.
Parrots, i. 262, 449.
Pauncefote, Sir J., i. 46.
_Peace_, Mission Steamer, letter from donor, i. 47, 85-6, 90-1, 92; Yambuya, 101-7, 112-16.
Pelly, Colonel Sir Lewis, i. 46, 50.
Pender, Sir John, i. 66.
Pfeil, Count, i. 59.
Phalanx Dance, a, i. 436-38.
Physical Geography, _see_” Rivers,” “Cataracts,” “Falls,” “Islands,” &c.
Piaggia, traveller, and Monbuttu, i. 400.
Pigmies, _see_ “Dwarfs.”
Pisgah, Mount, i. 281-3, 375, 376; ii. 94, 116, 124, 175, 315, 333, 390.
Poisoned arrows, _see_ “Arms.”
Poison used for arrows, ii. 107-8.
Poli-Poli, guide, ii. 438.
Ponta da Lenha, i. 76.
Portal, Mr., i. 29.
Portugal and Africa, i. 69.
Power, Mr., Consul of Khartoum, i. 21, 23.
Price, Rev. Mr., ii. 447.
Prout, Expedition under Colonel, i. 443-4.
Ptolemy’s map of Africa, ii. 294, 300, and Nile, 301.
Purdy, Expedition under Colonel, i. 443-4.
Rajab, Emin’s clerk, ii. 163, 268.
Raki, a kind of Russian Vodka, i. 426.
Rami River, ii. 274, 318.
Rami Lulu River gorge, ii. 275, 281, 318, 328.
“Randy,” fox terrier and guinea fowl, i. 223; Randy’s food, 232; and the rats, 355; the last of, 459; ii. 93.
Raouf Pasha and cattle raids, i. 423.
Rashid, Tippu-Tib’s nephew, i. 70.
Rashid bin Omar, Head Chief, i. 213-5, 228, 247, 291, 347, 472-3, 484-5, 491.
Rashid, Chief, ii. 59-60, 139, 145.
Rats, at Fort Bodo, i. 355.
Ravidongo, a general of Kabba Rega’s, i. 432; ii. 258.
Rear column, instructions to officers commanding, i. 117-9; garrison of, 133; start for relief of, 457-9; anxiety about, 460-1; Lieut. Stairs and, 464-5; no news of, 489-90; the sad story of the, 498-526; Barttelot’s report of, 527-33; log of, 533-47.
Red Sea, and Stanley’s servant, i. 58-9.
Refuse heaps of villages, ii. 348.
Rehan, ii. 213-16; Major--Agha Ibrahim, 243.
“Reilly” rifle, i. 213.
Rejaf Station, i. 447-8; ii. 120, 121, 123-4, 131-5, 243.
Rendi Creek, i. 162.
Rendi River, ii. 16.
Reptiles; snakes and, i. 357-8, 426; ii. 90; Emin and, 267-8; and pythons, i. 450.
Richards, Mr. and Mrs., of the L. I. Mission, i. 85.
Rivers, _see_ Aruwimi, Chai, Congo, Dui, Ihuru, Katonga, Lenda, Mpanga, Namianja, Nepoko, Ngaiyu, Ngula, Rami Lulu, Rwizi, Semliki, &c.
Rothkirch, Baron von, i. 84, 95.
Royal Geographical Society, London, i. 35; ii. 13, 16.
Royal Scottish Geographical Society, ii. 13, 16.
_Royal_, steamer, i. 77.
Royle, Mr., and Baker’s defeat at Tokar, i. 17.
Rozaka, ii. 413.
Ruampara Range, ii. 373, 376.
Ruanda, i. 53, 63; ii. 343, 345, 354, 359-60, 373, 387, 405.
Rubutu River, ii. 274, 318.
Rudimi, Chief of Usiri, ii. 176.
Ruguji tribe, ii. 160, 176, 392.
Ruhandika, King, ii. 270.
Ruigi, King, ii. 347, 353, 366.
Rukara, ii. 284; cattle of, 289-90, 339; and Katwé, 344, 347-50.
Rukoki River, ii. 318, 349.
Ruku Creek, i. 173.
Rumanika, ii. 411-2.
Rumondo Island, ii. 418.
Rusango River, ii. 318, 367, 405.
Rusessé zeriba, ii. 289-90, 337.
Rusirubi River, ii. 318.
Rusussu Valley, ii. 376.
Ruverahi River, ii. 290, 318.
Ruwenzori, first view of, i. 429-30; the “Cloud King,” ii. 175, 190, 208; “Ukonju,” 251, 256, 257, 262-3; “Bugombowa,” 263, 268-72, 274-6; Stair’s ascent of, 276-80; names for, 284; view of, 286; from Karimi, 289; from Mtsora, 323; Mountains of the Moon in old maps (Mount Gumr), 291-313, 313-33, 336-9, 349, 357, 479.
Ruysch, John, map of Africa, ii. 297.
Rwimi River, ii. 286, 318.
Rwizi River, ii. 371-2, 376, 377, 405.
Saat Tato (or “Three O’clock,” the hunter), i. 184, 200, 205, 213, 264-5, 302, 341, 345, 374, 395, 409; ii. 146, 170, 254.
Saadi, i. 187, 189-90, 204.
Sabadu, ii. 369.
Saburi (boy), ii. 64-5, 69, 71.
Sadi, Chief, ii. 49, 69.
Said bin Saif, _alias_ Kipanda, ii. 368.
Sali, the tent-boy, i. 273-4, 480-1; ii. 185-6, 197-8, 460, 466, 471.
Salim, son of Massoud, i. 89-90, 120, 301; Tippu-Tib’s nephew, 513-14, 524.
Salim, the son of Rashid, ii. 7-11.
Salim bin Mohammed, ii. 16-20, 182.
Salt lakes of Katwé, ii. 340-4.
Salt, packet of native, i. 376.
Samuel, Waganda Christian, ii. 367-71, 380-2.
“Sanford” Exploring Company, i. 95, 107.
Sanga (Barttelot’s assassin), i. 499, 518, 520, 545-6.
Sangarameni, headman, i. 238, 246, 361.
Sangwé-Mirembé Promontory, ii. 323.
Sarmini, i. 367.
Scheabeddin’s description of the River Nile, ii. 310.
Schmidt, Lieutenant R., ii. 446-8, 453, 461.
Schintze, Père, ii. 445.
Schnitzer, Edward, _see_ “Emin Pasha.”
Schweinfurth, Professor, and Congo route, i. 49, 52-4, 58; and Monbuttu, 400; “Artes Africanæ,” ii. 22, 164, 268.
Seké, ii. 441-2.
Selim Bey, i. 423; ii. 134, 148, 152, 156, 160, 176-81, 183-4, 199-203, 214, 217-20; letters from, 223-7.
Semliki Valley, ii. 256, 268-9, 275, 280, 283; description of, 317-25, 328-32, 337, 479.
Semliki River, ii. 226, 258; ferrying, 260, 263, 269, 284-6, 317, 392.
Serour, a Monbuttu boy, ii. 197, 203, 209.
_Serpa Pinto_, paddle-boat, i. 76-7.
Seyyid Barghash, Sultan of Zanzibar, i. 37, 60, 61-3, 67, 69, 264; ii. 18; and the Germans, 381.
Shukri Agha, Commandant of Mswa Station, i. 395, 431, 447-9; ii. 121-3, 135, 147, 173-4, 177-8; notice to, 181, 210, 217; arrival, 220, 233, 246-7, 473.
Sibaliki, Chief, ii. 270.
Simba, i. 273-4; ii. 444.
Simbamwenni, ii. 448.
Sims, Dr., and s.s. _Peace_, i. 92-4.
Singiri River, ii. 274-318.
Sinyanga, ii. 442.
Smith, Dr., ii. 380.
Smith, Mr. Harrison, i. 31.
Smith, Colonel Euan, ii. 445, 472-3.
Smith, Mackenzie, and Company, i. 37, 48.
Somalis, i. 83, 126, 157, 164.
Somalis, the, ii. 4-11; last of, 57-8.
Soswa Island, ii. 418.
Soudan, the, i. 12, 15-17, 414.
Soudanese soldiers, i. 67-8, 72-3, 80, 85, 87-8, 120, 129, 194, 529; Emin’s, 399, 450; the Soudanese, ii. 1-11, 22, 116, 126, 127, 141, 146, 159, 198-206, 208, 214-16, 378, 415-16, 434.
Soudi, Barttelot’s boy, i. 518; ii. 29, 34.
Speke, Captain, i. 12, 50; and Mtsea, ii. 411-12.
Stairs, Lieutenant W. G., i. 5, 7, 42-3, 48, 74, 80; orders to, 97-8, 116, 128, 129-31, 132-3, 151, 161; wounded by a poisoned arrow, 174-9, 189, 217-18, 226-7, 232, 274, 313-14, 315-17, 336, 341, 347, 352-54, 363, 364, 365, 366, 453, 485; at Fort Bodo, 454, 458-9; report of, 454-6, 461-5, 465-7; ii. 112, 113-14, 115-18, 139-40; letter from, 145-6, 155, 159-60, 170-3, 176, 179-81; weight of, 190, 203, 211; and capture of Rehan, 213-16; and ammunition, 220; and Emin, 237, 255; illness of, 260, 265, 275, 371; report of ascent of Ruwenzori, 276-78, 352; and Semliki River, 297, 453, 473-4, 479.
Stanley, H. M., work on the Congo River, i. 19-20, 78; the Congo route, 33, 34; purchases, 37-9, 46-7; Sandringham, 48, 49, 58, 59; orders to officers, 97-8; the command of rear column, 106; Baruti, 110; instructions to Major Barttelot, 117-19; conversation with Major Barttelot referring to Tippu-Tib, 119-28; memorandum for advance column officers, 129-31, 136; officers, 161; Avisibba bow and arrows, 180, 192, 204, 209, 213-15, 223, 229, 230-1; and Bible, 311-12; prostrated by ague, 348, 366; and inflammation of the stomach, 367, 369; and Chief Mazamboni, 380-3; first letter from Emin, 389-90; and answer, 391-2; meeting with Emin, 396; conversation with Emin about leaving the Province, 401-6, 410-17, 420-3; Emin’s officers, 423; cattle raids, 423-4; Emin and sextant, 425, 426; message to Emin’s troops, 427-8; two letters from Emin, 431-2; Kadongo and, 434; visit from Shukri Agha, 447-9; natural history facts by Emin related to, 449-51; at Fort Bodo, 457-8; anxiety about rear column, 460-1, 492; conversation and instructions to Lieut. Stairs, 461-7; and forest marching, 479-80; rumors about, 502-3; and the story of the rear column, 526-50; Barttelot’s report, 527-33; log of rear column, 533-47; (Bula Matari) and Zanzibaris, ii. 1-11; letter to Jameson, 15-16; and breaches of promise, 21; and fever, 31-2; clothes, 47; Starvation Camp, 48, 63-71; and Chimpanzee skulls, 93; address by, 116-18; letters from Emin and Jephson, 120-4; replies to the same, 124-9; Emin’s letters to, 137-8, 144-5; letter to revolted officers, 156; Emin and the dwarfs, 164-7; and Egyptian baggage, 170-3; and Balegga Hills, 175; and Selim Bey, 177-8; address to officers re Selim Bey, 179-81; and Osman Latif Effendi, 183-4; and boy Sali, 185-6; and Captain Casati, 186-9; weight of, 190; and Emin Pasha and men, 198-206, 217-20; illness, 211-13, 216, 220, 260, 353, 376; and Rehan, 214-16; study of Emin Pasha, 228, 249; and Egyptians, 252-5; and Emin Pasha, 267-8; and maps, 292-3, 334-5; routes to the coast, 358-60; meeting with Mr. Mackay, 423-7; Mackay’s last letter to, 429-31; letters and news clippings, 449-50; Gordon Bennett and, 450-3; at Bagamayo, 454-61; visit to Emin, 465-6; and Emin, 468-73; at Zanzibar, 473-7; at Cairo, 477-80.
_Stanley_, s.s., i. 75, 76, 85, 90, 92, 95, 101-10, 120-4, 128, 132, 461-3, 505, 512-16, 528, 532.
Stanley Falls, i. 63-5, 69-72, 120-4, 415, 511-26; ii. 15; Pool, 31.
Stanley Pool, i. 86, 103.
Starvation Camp, i. 3-4; _see_ “Nelson;” ii. 48, 63-71.
Stephenson, General, i. 56, 58.
Stevens, Mr. Thomas, ii. 450.
Stewart, Colonel, i. 20, 23.
Stewart, Sir Herbert, i. 23-5.
Stokes, Mr., ii. 370-1, 381-2, 427, 435, 444.
Stone Pasha and Gordon, i. 444.
Strauch, General, and Stanley Pool, i. 86.
Suez, i. 58.
Sulimani, ii. 48.
Sullivan, Admiral, i. 45.
Sultan of Zanzibar, _see_ “Seyyid Barghash.”
Surur Aga, ii. 132.
Swinburne at Kinshassa, i. 85, 95-6, 462.
Sylvannus’ Map of Africa, ii. 297.
Tam, native of Johanna, ii. 28, 29.
Tanganika Lake, i. 63, 65; ii. 300, 359; and party of 100 Swedes, i. 240.
Tempest, a forest, ii. 81-2.
Tewfik, Khedive, and Congo route, i. 49, 56; High Order handed me for Emin Pasha, 56-7, 401-3, 405; propositions to Emin from, 410-11, 427.
Thermometer readings, Ruwenzori, ii. 277.
Thomson, Mr. J., and Masai Land route, i. 31, 32, 35, 47.
“Three O’clock,” the hunter, _see_ “Saat Tato.”
Tigrane Pasha, i. 52, 58.
_Times_, letter to the, re Tippu-Tib, i. 127.
Tippu-Tib, i. 53, 63-5; and Emin’s ivory, 64, 71; negotiations with, 65, 67-9; the Belgians and Stanley Falls, 69-71; and Cape Town, 74-5; proposed visit to England, 75; and Salim, 90; and Major Barttelot proceed to Stanley Falls, 108, 115-16; Major Barttelot and, 119-28, 239, 370, 463-5; and rear column, 498-526; Barttelot’s report of, 527-33; log of rear column, 533-47; ii. 12-14, 16, 107; caravan of, 446; Jaffar Tarya and carriers, 474-7.
Tobacco, i. 290.
Toro, ii. 279, 284, 343, 345; hills of, 349, 351, 362, 403.
Trees, fallen, in the forest, ii. 92-3.
Tribes, _see_ “Ethnology.”
Troup, John Rose, i. 6, 42, 80, 85; orders to, 97-8, 106, 372, 380, 462-3, 494; and story of the rear column, 500-26, 528.
Tukabi, boy, ii. 257.
Tunguru Station, ii. 123, 127, 134, 135, 140, 147, 179, 233, 245.
Turkan Land, ii. 240.
Twin Cones of Ruwenzori, ii. 315.
Uchu natives, ii. 61.
Uchunku, Prince Royal of Ankori, ii. 378-80.
Uddu, ii. 314, 369, 381-2.
Uganda, king of, i. 29, 30, 32, 53, 63, 64; shields, 318, 323; Kabba Rega and, 407, 417; ii. 314, 345; routes to coast, 358-60; events in, 368-71, 380-2, 411-13; _see_ also Mwanga, King of Uganda.
Ugarama village, ii. 264; spur of, 269-70, 328.
Ugarrowwa (called Uledi Balyuz), i. 199, 203-10, 211, 238, 363; ii. 12, 15, 16, 26; ----’s old stations, 37, 107; invalids in care of, i. 454-6, 475-82, 484, 485-90.
Ugogo, ii. 446.
Uhaiya, ii. 387-8.
Uhaiyana, ii. 343, 345, 347, 351, 387.
Uhha, armlets, &c., of, i. 258; spears of, 318; ii. 386, 405.
Uhobo, ii. 255; natives of, 258.
Ujangwa clearing, i. 444-5.
Ujiji, ii. 359.
Ujungwa, ii. 252.
Ukerewé, ii. 300, 434.
Ukonju, ii. 270, 282-5, 343-4.
Ukuba, i. 453.
Ulaiya, ii. 209.
Uledi, i. 164, 227-8, 229, 245, 249, 263, 274, 292, 315-17, 349; and queen of Pigmies, 367-8; ii. 48, 167, 254, 273.
Ulegga, ii. 282, 284, 322-3.
Umari (headman), i. 230, 240, 250, 275, 361.
Umeni, i. 216; camp, ii. 39.
Umpeté, ii. 422.
Undussuma, i. 2, 313, 319, 321, 346, 378, 380, 383, 390, 401, 452; ii. 31, 183; hills, 220.
Ungerengeri, ii. 449.
Unyabongo, i. 452.
Unyakatera camp, ii. 405.
Unya-Kavalli range, i. 430-1.
Unya-Matundu plateau, ii. 421.
Unya-Matundu Ruwamba, ii. 421.
Unyampaka, ii. 337, 343, 347, 353.
Unyamwambi River, ii. 318, 349.
Unyamwezi, i. 53; ii. 434, 446.
Unyoro, dome hut of, i. 258; table-land of, 324, 329, 400; ii. 317, 387-9; language of, i. 332; Casati in, 407-8, 417, 432; ii. 159, 175, 191; cattle of, 393, 403.
Urigi, Lake, ii. 300, 413-15, 417.
Urima, ii. 438, 442.
Urindi, ii. 386, 405.
Uringa, ii. 284.
Urumangwa, i. 384, 441, 452.
Usambiro mission house, ii. 422-31.
Useni, ii. 414.
Usiri, i. 435, 543.
Usoga, ii. 381.
Usongo district, ii. 444.
Usongora, Casati and, i. 419; ii. 242, 284, 286, 289, 343, 345, 354; cattle of, 393; pit-water, 376-7, 479.
Usui, ii. 443; king of, 418-21.
Usukuma, ii. 434, 442-3.
Usumbwa herdsmen, ii. 387-8.
Uthenga, ii. 413.
Utinda, ii. 252-5.
Utiri villages, i. 172, 192.
Utuku, ii. 263, 270, 285.
Uyogu, people of, ii. 444.
Uyombi, ii. 422.
Uzanza plain, ii. 391.
Uzanzi, i. 105, 386, 388.
Uzinja, ii. 421.
Vaccination of Zanzibaris, ii. 34-5.
Valentine Baker Pasha, i. 16-17, 22; Nubar Pasha and, 52, 58.
Vandyck, Mr., of Cairo, i. 304.
Van Gele, Capt., i. 107, 532.
Van Kirkhoven of Bangala Station, i. 107, 503, 527-32.
Verrazano, H. de, map of Africa, ii. 298.
Vianzi, ii. 448.
Viaruha village, ii. 377-8.
Victoria Nile, i. 419.
Victoria Nyanza, and Emin, i. 416-18; march to, 423, 432; bay at N. E. end, ii. 292, 299-300, 304, 418-22, 432-6.
Villages, refuse heaps of the, i. 150; decaying, 469.
Vita Hassan, ii. 147, 155, 161, 186, 194.
Vombo, i. 86.
Vivi, ii. 32.
Vizetelly, Mr. E., ii. 450.
Wabiassi tribe, i. 324; ii. 160, 210.
Waburu, i. 280, 453.
Wachunga tribe, ii. 386.
Wachwezi or Wanyankori tribe, ii. 284, 345, 362-6, 388-9.
Wadelai, i. 64, 333, 424; ii. 123, 133-7, 143, 145, 155, 179, 199, 224, 233, 245.
Wadi Asmani, headman, ii. 409.
Wadi Halfa, i. 56, 415, 427.
Wadi Khamis, ii. 158, 160, 376.
Wafipa tribe, ii. 386.
Waganda, i. 33; ii. 338, 353, 359-60; and Kabba Rega, 401; Christians, 367, 371, 378, 380-2, 388, 392, 417, 421.
Wahha, the, i. 53.
Wahuma, i. 380, 385, 392; or Waiyana tribe, ii. 129, 176, 255, 284, 378; description of, 384-403, 422, 489.
Waiau tribe, ii. 386.
Waima or Wanyavingi tribe, ii. 284.
Waiyana or Wahuma tribe, ii. 284.
Wakanongo tribe, ii. 386.
Wakawendi tribe, ii. 386.
Wakonju people, ii. 283-6; and Ruwenzori, 332, 344-7, 349-51.
Wakovi tribe, ii. 284.
Wakungu, ii. 369.
Wakuri tribe, ii. 304, 312, 388.
Wales, T. R. H. Prince and Princess of, i. 48.
Walker, Mr., i. 79, 85, 95; ii. 429, 444; and s.s. _Stanley_, i. 103-4, 115.
Waller, Rev. H., i. 50.
Wamaganga, ii. 372.
Wambutti dwarfs, i. 375, 385, 457; ii. 42, 100-9; measurements of, 164-7; language of, 489.
Wampoko, i. 95.
Wandui, ii. 445.
Wanguido tribe, ii. 386.
Wanyamavezi, music of, i. 436; tribe, ii. 386, 423.
Wanyankori or Wachwezi tribe, ii. 284, 359, 362-6, 372; milk of, 372; one of our officers and, 373-6; 378.
Wanyaturu tribe, ii. 445-6.
Wanyavingi or Waima tribe, ii. 269, 284, 344-5.
Wanyoro, ii. 157, 314, 338; tribe and Capt. Casati, i. 408.
Wara Sura, tribe of, i. 286, 332, 379, 381; ii. 159, 255, 260-1; raid of, 262, 264, 270-1, 273, 284, 290, 313, 338, 339, 344-6, 349, 351-2, 362-5, 391-2.
Ward, Herbert, i. 6, 83, 104, 106, 372, 380, 494; and story of the rear column, 500-26; report, 524-26; log of rear column, 527-47.
Wasiri tribe, ii. 176.
Wasoki tribe, ii. 284.
Wasongora or Wawitu tribe, ii. 284, 337-8, 344, 345, 347, 349-51, 386, 388.
Wasp Rapids, i. 163, 210, 485; ii. 22.
Wasps, i. 163-4, 233.
Wasps and their nests, ii. 84.
Wasukuma tribe, ii. 386; fight with, 436-8.
Watson & Co., i. 38.
Watusi tribe, ii. 372, 387-8, 396, 399.
Watuta or Wangoni, ii. 444-5.
Watwa tribe of pigmies, ii. 42, 263, 264, 270, 272, 284.
Wavira tribe, ii. 176.
Wawitu or Wasongora tribe, ii. 284.
Wazinja, ii. 421.
Wazongora, ii. 269.
Wellcome, Henry S., and Katwé Salt, ii. 341-2.
Weré Camp, ii. 146.
Wester, Lieut., and Stanley Falls Station, i. 65.
Whitley, Capt., and s.s. _Peace_, i. 92, 102.
Wilkinson’s “Ancient Egyptians,” ii. 396-9.
Wills, Mr. J. T., i. 31.
Wilson, Sir Chas., i. 24.
Winton, Col. Sir F. de, i. 39-40, 46-9, 108.
Wissman, Major, ii. 447-8, 453, 458, 485.
Wolseley, Lord, and Arabi Pasha, i. 14; and General Gordon, 20; and the relief of Khartoum, 23-5; and Lieut. Stairs, 41.
Wombola, chief of, i. 452.
Wood, Sir Evelyn, i. 14.
Woods, in the forest, ii. 84; secrets of, 87-8.
Woods, trees, &c., _see_ “Forests.”
Wyyanzi natives, i. 159.
Wyyanzi tribe, ii. 97.
Yambuya, i. 110-14, 131-8; rapids of, 138, 158, 200-1; s.s. _Stanley_ at, 461-5; story of the rear column at, 502-6; log of rear column, 527-47.
Yankondé natives, i. 138-9.
Younger, Henry J., i. 35.
Yumbu, i. 255.
Yusuf Effendi, ii. 352.
Zachariah, Waganda Christian, ii. 367-71, 380-2.
Zanzibar, i. 60; ii. 473-7.
Zanzibar, Sultan of, _see_ “Seyyid Barghash.”
Zanzibaris, i. 53, 72-3, 79, 84, 86, 88, 91, 94, 96, 123, 129, 169, 172, 182-3, 194-5, 210-15, 227, 364, 387, 399, 420, 426, 428, 460, 475; and Sali, 480-1, 482, 483, 484, 486-9, 497, 529.
Zanzibaris, the, ii. 1-11, 16, 20, 22, 27, 29, 34-5, 38, 47, 58, 60-1, 110, 119, 130-1, 146, 148, 158, 164, 168-9, 173, 197-202; and Omar, 208-10; and Rehan, 216, 220, 266-7, 276-80, 352, 378, 413, 428, 453, 458, 474.
Zoölogy: antelope, i. 218; buffalo, 358, 409, 425; ii. 89; crocodiles of Upper Congo, i. 101; ii. 88; claws of a, i. 419; chimpanzees, 262, 449; ii. 88, 90, 93, 101, 163, 279; lions, i. 450-1; ii. 367, 415, 421; monkeys, i. 262; ii. 45, 88, 90; mongoose, i. 449; lemur, i. 357; ii. 93; goats, i. 169; bush antelope, ii. 24-6, 88; elephants, 47, 78, 88, 89, 93, 113; squirrels, 90; hippopotami, 88, 415; rhinoceros, 406-9; donkeys, 91; cattle, 160, 275, 393; of Ikoma, 435; leopard, at Katwé, 346-7, 367; hyæna, 367, 415.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] The Sketch Maps on pages 293 to 308 inclusive are from tracings from ancient books in the Khedive’s library at Cairo.
[2] This proves that the Pasha endorses what Mr. Jephson writes.
[3] The Pasha appears to admit that he has read Mr. Jephson’s letters.
[4] I have read this letter scores of times, yet I fail to see how this officially worded letter, which, as suggested by Mr. Jephson, might have fallen into the rebel officers’ hands, could have wounded the most delicate susceptibilities, yet I was informed that the Pasha was very much offended at it. Nothing was further from my mind than to affront a friend, my sole object being to obtain a definite answer to the question “Will you stay here, or accompany me?”
[5] Omar al Khattab, the second Caliph from Mohammed, said, “Four things come not back; the spoken word; the sped arrow; the past life; and the neglected opportunity.” I accept Mr. Jephson’s explanations, but I nevertheless adhere to the belief that much suffering and anxiety would have been avoided, and the imprisonment and danger would have been impossible, had the promises been kept. July was the date they should have started for Fort Bodo. The arrest took place August 18th.
[6] I do not know what induced the Pasha to write in this melancholy strain, for as plain as tongue could speak, and pen could write, I had been endeavouring to explain to him that we considered ourselves as his servants, and bound to render any service in our power to him, provided he but distinctly and definitely stated his wishes.
[7] This kindly letter was after the Chesterfield style so commended by Mr. Jephson, whose sharp wits had perceived the Pasha’s extremely delicate susceptibilities. Oh dear! oh dear!
[8] The Pasha has, however, severely refrained from communicating anything.
[9]
LIST OF MEASUREMENTS TAKEN ON WAMBUTTI PIGMIES BELONGING TO MR. STANLEY’S EXPEDITION.
Name of the Individuum ... .. {| Tokbali. | A girl. | A woman. | A boy. {| P. 20 |I.H.P. 15 | P. 35 | P. 15 Height from vortex to the | | | | earth ... ... ... ... ... .... | 1·360 m. | 1·240 m. | 1·365 m. | 1·280 m. Height from shoulder ... ... . | 1·116 m. | 1·021 m. | 1·110 m. | 1·090 m. Height from navel ... ... .... | 0·835 m. | 0·725 m. | 0·785 m. | 0·970 m. Length of arm from shoulder | | | | to tip of middle finger .... | 0·707 m. | 0·571 m. | 0·580 m. | 0·540 m. Breadth from shoulder to | | | | shoulder ... ... ... ... ... | 0·320 m. | 0·304 m. | 0·295 m. | 0·260 m. Circumference below nipples .. | 0·710 m. | 0·660 m. | 0·710 m. | 0·640 m. Circumference under armpit ... | 0·720 m. | 0·660 m. | 0·710 m. | 0·630 m. Greatest longitudinal diameter | | | | of head ... ... ... ... .... | 200 mm. | 176 mm. | 180 mm. | 175 mm. Smallest transversal diameter | | | | of head ... ... ... ... .... | 147 mm. | 150 mm. | 145 mm. | 140 mm. Breadth of the nose ... ... .. | 60 mm. | 60·5 mm. | 65 mm. | 65 mm. Circumference of skull ... ... | 530 mm. | 535 mm. | 510 mm. | 510 mm. Length of foot ... ... ... ... | 220·5 mm.| 190 mm. | 212 mm. | 190 mm.
Bodies covered with stiffish, grey, short hair.--DR. EMIN.
[10] This is added to make the table more complete.
[11] This list is not complete, inasmuch as Moslems have a strong disinclination to permit their women to appear in public, others affected not to understand the necessity of the muster.
[12] Several of the officers informed me that Emin was alone responsible for the offer to the Mahdi of the surrender of the province. He certainly signed the document, but I am inclined to believe that he did it for the purpose of deceiving Karamalla, and his subsequent acts seem to prove this.
[13] Judge Charles P. Daly, President of the American Geographical Society, New York.
[14] It was devoted to the same uses down to the time of Emin Pasha.
[15] Victoria Nyanza, Lake of Likuri, so called after a tribe named the Wakuri, or Wakori, on the north shore of Lake Victoria, who still exist there. See ‘Life of Bishop Hannington.’ This tribe of Wakuri may be the remnant of what was once a powerful nation.
[16] I have not learned that Lieutenant Stairs in his ascent was guilty of such extravagance.
[17] Extremely like the description of what was to be seen on Ruwenzori, according to the Wahuma herdsmen.
[18] Madagascar.
[19] Enoch.
[20] I wonder if this renowned Idrisi is the same as the patriarch Kintu in the legend of the Waganda. See ‘Through the Dark Continent.'
[21] It is exceedingly like the legend of Kintu, only it possesses more details.
[22] Lake Albert.
[23] Mount Ajif(?) if the lake was 50 feet higher--Ajif might be so described.
[24] Lake Albert Edward(?).
[25] Perhaps he means Zing, or Eastern littoral called Zinghiber, Zanjibar--Zanzibar.
[26] Batwa(?), from the pigmies.
[27] Lake Albert.
[28] Albert Nyanza.
[29] Because of the mist?
[30] Turkan?
[31] From the tribe Wakuri, or Bakuri, on the north shore of Lake Victoria, where it exists to this day.
[32] I sent a bottle full of this brine to the Laboratoire Khedivial in Cairo to be analysed by the Government chemists, and the following report was made:--
LABORATOIRE KHEDIVIAL.
Le Cairo, _25th Mars, 1890_.
The composition of this water is as follows:--
Potash, K_{9}O 2.667 Soda, N_{3}O 13.94 Inhydrous sulphuric acid (combined), 5O_{3} 3.17 “ carbonic “ ( “ ), 8O_{2} 2.36 Chlorine ( “ ), Cl 11.33 Sulphuretted hydrogen ( “ ), SH_{2} .02 Lime and magnesia traces Silica .01 Water 68.77 ----- 102.26 Deduct oxygen equivalent to chlorine 2.55 ----- 99.71
Calculating the bases to the oxides, the composition is--
Sodium chloride 18.67 Sodium sulphate 5.63 Sodium carbonate 2.72 Potassium carbonate 3.87 Potassium sulphyrate .04 Silica .01 Lime and magnesia traces Water 68.77 ------ 99.71
The difference between the total found and 100 is probably accounted for by small quantities of organic matter.
The density is 1·2702; using this figure, the results, as expressed in grains per litre, are:--
Sodium chloride 237·15 “ sulphate 61·51 “ carbonate 34·55 Potassium carbonate 49·16 “ sulphydrate ·51 Silica ·12 ------- Total salts per litre 383·00 grains.
When received the sample had an odour of sulphuretted hydrogen, due to the sulphides present, and a slight pink colour, caused by matter in suspension. The quantity of the sample was too small to admit of an examination of this or of the organic matter in the water.
This water, consisting as it does of a nearly saturated solution, is a very remarkable one, and a natural water of this composition is very rarely met with. The presence of sulphides is due to the action of reducing organisms on the sulphates. The bottle in which the sample was was quite full, and securely corked for several months.
A. PAPPE. } _Les Chémistes._ H. DROOP RICHMOND. }
“Snow Hill Buildings, London, E.C. “1st May, 1890.
“DEAR MR. STANLEY,--
“The following is the result of the quantitative analysis of the natural crystalline salt you submitted to me:--
Per cent. Water ·82 Oxide of iron (Fe_{2}O_{3}) ·15 Potash (K_{2}O) 4·56 Soda (Na_{2}O) 47·68 Carbonic acid (CO_{2}) 1·02 Sulphurous acid (SO_{3}) 6·87 Chlorine 50·42 ------ 111·52 Less oxygen equivalent to chlorine 11·36 ------ 100·16
“It is quite impossible to say with certainty how the bases and acids are combined, but, calculated in the order of their mutual affinities, the following is the arrangement into which they would naturally fall:--
Per cent. Potassium sulphate 8·43 Sodium sulphate 5·32 Sodium carbonate 2·46 Sodium chloride 82·71 Oxide of iron ·15 Water ·82 ---- 99·89
“Trusting this may be of service to you, “I remain yours ever truly, “HENRY S. WELLCOME.”
“To H. M. Stanley, Esq.”
[33] By a letter dated November 21st, 1889, written from Bukumbi, south end of Lake Victoria, I learn from Mr. C. Stokes that he reached Mwanga’s island safely. On his arrival he found that, though in a tolerably favourable position, food was scarce, and sickness was troubling the camp. He resolved to make a bold advance to the capital, and for this purpose requested the chief of the Christians in Uddu to advance by land. On reaching within one day’s march of the capital the Christians were attacked and in great danger, but Mr. Stokes, Mwanga, and his faithful followers hurried to their aid, and Karema and the Mohammedan party were defeated. On the 4th of October another battle took place close to the capital Rubaga, whereat Karema and his Arab confederates were completely routed, and on the 5th, Mwanga and his white friend entered the capital. Karema and his Arab auxiliaries attempted to take refuge in Unyoro, but Kabba Rega, the King of Unyoro, refused to admit him unless he parted from his Arab friends. He was therefore compelled to seize a position near the northern frontier of Uganda, where he remained at last accounts with 500 guns. So ends this romantic history for the time. Mwanga is again on his throne, and the English and French missionaries are again established in Uganda.
[34] It therefore appears necessary, when speaking of the coloured races of Inner Africa, to bear in mind that they are now developed into five distinct types, which may be called Pigmy, Negro, Semi-Ethiopic, Ethiopic, and Berberine or Mauresque, and that among these types there are found a number modified by amalgamation of one with another, such as Pigmy with Negro--producing tribes whose adult males have an average height of 5 feet 2 inches; Negro with Omani Arabs, as on the Eastern sea-board; Ethiopic with Arab, as along the littoral in the neighbourhood of the Jub; Berberine with Negro, as in Darfour, Kordofan, the herdsmen of the Upper Nile, and east of Sierra Leone.
I regret that time does not permit me to illustrate what has been stated above by a map, by which every reader would understand at a glance what has been effected during fifty centuries by long successive waves of migration from Asia into Africa.
[35] While the French priest Père Girault has publicly and privately acknowledged the kindness he received, Père Schintze has, I regret to say, assumed quite a hostile tone. We received them with open arms, we supplied them and their people with meat rations daily to the coast. We paid their tribute to the Wagogo. They were invited to every banquet of which we partook at Bagamoyo and Zanzibar, and the British Consul-General, Col. Euan Smith, honoured them with the kindliest hospitalities. Meanwhile Père Schintze, by his own account, was taking advantage of the few querulous remarks of the Pasha, uttered during moments of suffering from fatigue, to form a breach between the Pasha and ourselves, by communicating to him certain criticisms reported to be made by our officers on the character of the refugees, which Emin’s extremely susceptible nature took umbrage at. The impressions I received from this person have thus been fully verified.
[36] The Pasha arrived at Zanzibar about the beginning of March, 1890, perfectly recovered.
[37] Difficult to distinguish from borro, which translated is man
Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber:
voluntered=> volunteered {pg 180}