Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_T - Tanzania Regional History
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-98 of 98    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Tanzania Regional History:     more detail
  1. Maziwi Island off Pangani (Tanzania): History of its destruction and possible causes (Regional seas) by Mario Fay, 1992
  2. Kilimanjaro: A Regional History: Production and Living Conditions 1800-1920 by Ludger Wimmelbucker, 2003-05-01
  3. Iron and regional history: Report on a research project in southwestern Tanzania by Marcia Wright, 1985
  4. Development for Exploitation: German Colonial Policies in Mainland Tanzania, 1884-1914, 2d ed. (book reviews): An article from: Canadian Journal of History by Philip Stigger, 1996-08-01
  5. Working papers in planning by Tukumbi Lumumba-Kasongo, 1992

81. The Parliament Of Tanzania | Main
EMPLOYMENT history. Company Name, Position, From Date, To Date. Ministry ofRegional Administration Local Govt. Copyright © 2003 tanzania Parliament.
http://www.parliament.go.tz/bunge/Bunge.asp?Menu=110&fpkey=201

82. Africa - Antarctica - Asia/Pacific - World Regional General Sites
Map/DEM; African Great Lakes Region Related Internet East Africa - photos; GeneralHistory of Other Ngorongoro Crater, tanzania - photos/carl Axell; Nyiragongo
http://www.usra.edu/esse/ford/ESS301/g301www/g301wwwreg5.html

83. The Environmental History Of Africa: Topic 10
with Germany and Britain dividing region by treaty under increasingly autocratic ruleand tanzania budding democracy evolved its own ecological history based on
http://www.bu.edu/africa/envr/topic10.html
The Environmental History of Africa
Topic 10 - Images of Degradation: The Serengeti
  • The Serengeti-Mara Plain lies across the Tanzania/Kenya border and is roughly the size of Connecticut and Rhode Island. The Kenyan national park portion of the Serengeti plain is called Maasai-Mara. This area as a whole is symbolic of a landscape that epitomizes the concept of African Eden, a landscape protected by European interest in preserving what they perceive as an unchanging piece of Africa as a preserve of African wildlife free from human depredations. Analyzing it as a dynamic ecosystem thus has particular value.
    My thesis that the Serengeti-Mara is an anthropogenic landscape requires challenging the idea that it was a pristine historically unchanging ecosystem. Part of the argument also is that its status has been a product of the sweep of human demography, regional economic change, and political movements within the East African region.
    Serengeti-Mara most affected by its geological and climatic status as highland plain surrounded by mountains, shallow agriculturally marginal soils, and swept annually by wet/dry oscillations of the ITCZ that creates seasonal pasture, water sources, and a pattern of herbivore migration and predator hunting. In historical terms there were historical periods from 1800-present:
  • 1800-1850 Part of limited regional economy dominated by Maasai transhumant pastoralism, trade links to adjacent cereal-producing zones, long-distance trade in iron, salt, and ivory. Mixed grassland and scrub acacia landscapes allowed limited contact with tsetse fly that meant a degree of immunity from sleeping sickness. Human competition over water sources and seasonal pasture favored pastoral control over central plain. Larger scale kingdoms grew up around lakes region. Most people had very limited contact with a wider world. Was this ecology control?
  • 84. African Wildlife Foundation: Over 40 Years Of History
    in Rwanda and although many aid workers leave the region, IGCP personnel AWF establishesits first Conservation Service Center in Arusha, tanzania and hires a
    http://www.awf.org/about/history.php
    ABOUT AWF Our Mission Over 40 Years of History AWF Publications A Message from Our ... Wildlife Wallpaper This chronology highlights important steps in AWF's growth and success over the past 42 years. AWF begins a large carnivore research program focusing on lions and the spotted hyena in the Chobe National Park in northeastern Botswana and the eastern Caprivi Strip of Namibia. Award-winning author Peter Matthiessen agrees to be keynote speaker for the AWF Fundraising dinner in New York City. Mr. Matthiessen has written about Africa in his books "In Sand Rivers", "The Tree Where Man Was Born", "African Silences", and "Shadows of Africa". AWF collaborates on conservation business ventures with two community-run lodges in Okavango Delta, Botswana- Tsaro Elephant and Santawane lodges. AWF meets with Ron Wood, a member of the Rolling Stones and visual artist, in New York City. He generously donates a series of his endangered species prints to be auctioned in the fundraiser for AWF in New York City. The Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park is launched resulting from the persistence of AWF's work in the Limpopo Heartland doubling the protected area (35,000 square kilometers or 13,500 square miles) for animals and including communities outside the park.

    85. Country Home Page
    of USAID Reports and Project history documents. South Africa Sudan Swaziland TanzaniaTogo Tunisia Caribbean regional Central America regional Latin American
    http://www.dec.org/country/index.cfm

    86. World History Archives: The Contemporary Political History Of East Africa As A W
    The history in general of East Africa. East African Community are now headed for regionalintegration Kenya, Uganda and tanzania have drawn up a new development
    http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/36/index-ab.html
    The contemporary political history of
    East Africa as a whole
    Hartford Web Publishing is not the author of the documents in World History Archives The history in general of East Africa
    Cooperation with Mauritius
    The Indian Ocean Newsletter, 4 February 1995. Delegates to the third meeting of the Seychelles-Mauritius joint cooperation commission, held in Mahe on January 31 and February first, agreed to bilaterial cooperation in education, industry, and agriculture.
    Capitals Rocked By Bomb Blasts
    By Philip Ngunjiri, IPS, 7 August 1998. A powerful bomb near the Kenyan Cooperative Bank and the United States Embassy has so far left more than 24 people dead. A similar explosion hit the Tanzanian capital of Dar es Salaam Friday, killing at least six people and injuring 72 others.
    Analysts Look beyond Tragic Bombings to Assess Future of East Africa
    From Institute for Public Accuracy, 13 August 1998.
    Bombings in Africa Raise Many Questions
    By Monica Moorhead, in Workers World

    87. Anthropology | About Us | World Of Chicago Anthropology | Africa
    Grootaers Central African Republic (Zande); “A history and Ethnography of CharlesMusiba (P) - Serengeti Region, tanzania (Laetoli); “Laetoli Pliocene
    http://anthropology.uchicago.edu/about/africa.html
    Africa East Asia Western Europe Native North America ... Oceania, Australia, New Zealand
    University of Chicago Anthropologists in Africa Faculty
    Students:

    Preparing for the field

    In the field
    ...
    Recent PhDs

    FACULTY:
    • Michael Dietler - Southern France; Kenya (Luo)
    • Kesha D. Fikes - Cape Verde Islands, Lusophone Africa, Portugal
    • James Fernandez - Gabon, Dahomey, Togo, Ghana, Natal; Asturias, Spain; Ethnohistorical research in Madrid, Barcelona, Castile, Hamburg, Berlin, Frankfort, Cologne, Paris
    • Ronald Singer - South Africa; Grenada, West Indies
    • Russell Tuttle - Japan, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, Kenya, Tanzania, South Africa (primates, bipedalism)
    to top STUDENTS: Preparing for the Field
    • Betsey Brada - South Africa/Botswana (medical anthropology/anthropology of the body/science studies; nation state; colonialism/post-colonialism, internationalism, globalization, NGOs, history of development, international health)
    • Erik Brodnax - Senegal (healing, religion, mental health care delivery)

    to top In the Field

  • to top
    Writing Up

  • to top
    Recent PhDs
  • to top University of Chicago Social Sciences Division About these Images 1126 E. 59th Street, Chicago, IL 60637
  • 88. Tanzania: Area Web Sites
    tanzania regional Focused WebSites
    http://www.witchvox.com/vn/rg/tzxx_rg.html
    dqmcodebase = "http://www.witchvox.com/jv/" //script folder location Your browser does not support script
    Tanzania
    V8 Help.. Intro v8 Features Can't Login Login Info Password Email Photo Your Name Removal F.A.Q.s Creeps Spam Privacy History
    [Problems?]
    Hot Sections...
    Loc. News

    Events

    Poetry

    Personals...
    Adults

    Military

    Teens
    New Posts Groups/Orgs... Adult Family Teen College ... Notices Local Web... EGroups Resources Activists Total Area Resources Sponsors vox menus... Page: Tanzania: Area Web Sites Total Views: Tanzania: Regional Focused WebSites... There are presently Listings for this Area. (Sorted by Vox Sponsors then by Township) Township WebSite Name (Hot Link) Owner State/Country flags created by 3dflags.com and are used with permission Vx Articles Search 96-04 Keywords Author Chapter Wren's Nest News 97-04 Article Title Source Record Wk. Updates Weeks 97-04 Keywords Pagan Web 7,000 Links Profile SiteName Owner Category Postal City Pagan/Witch 50,000 Profiles Name City Profile Path Likes Dislikes SexOrient Relation US Postal Sponsor TWV Home Map TWV Logos ... News and Information Chapters: Pagan/Heathen Basics Pagan BOOKS Popular Pagan Holidays Cats of the Craft ... Healing Planet Earth Your Voices: Adult Essays Young Pagan Essays Pagan Perspectives (On Hold) WitchWars: Fire in the Craft Gay Pagan Pagan Parenting Military ... Pagan Passages Pagan Music: Pagan Musicians Bardic Circle at WitchVox Free Music from TWV Vox Central: About TWV Wren: Words, Wrants and Wramblings

    89. MediSend International
    Shipment history Back to Previous Page. tanzania $4,500, 00R15, RegionalHospital Maweni, tanzania, 1/1/2000, $160,679, 579. 00R69,
    http://www.medisend.org/medisend2/shipment_history.asp?menuItem=3&action=bycount

    90. Nairobi, Regional Delegation (Djibouti, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda)
    106-1997 Annual Report 1996 Nairobi, regional delegation (Djibouti,Kenya, tanzania, Uganda). regional coordination In 1996, the
    http://www.icrc.org/Web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/iwpList150/68482810DDA00104C1256B66005A
    About the ICRC ICRC activities The ICRC worldwide Focus ... Annual Report Annual Report Nairobi, regional delegation (Djibouti, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda)
    Regional coordination
    In 1996, the regional delegation in Nairobi continued to act as a coordinating centre for specialized and support services for other ICRC operations in the region, particularly in Burundi, Rwanda, Somalia, the Sudan and Zaire. Throughout the year, specialists based in Nairobi offered other delegations their services in many fields: agricultural, veterinary and nutritional expertise, water supply and sanitation, tracing, logistics and airborne operations, supply and management of emergency stocks, administration of a regional technical workshop, means of transport, administrative support, assistance to staff, dissemination of humanitarian law to the armed forces and other bearers of weapons, relations with the media and promotion of the ICRC's activities in the neighbouring countries.
    Besides providing services for other delegations and engaging in long-term activities to promote knowledge of humanitarian law and cooperation with the National Societies of the region, the delegation was particularly concerned with the growing tension in northern Uganda and, to a lesser extent, the situation of Rwandan refugees in Tanzania, displaced persons in the Rift Valley in Kenya and detainees in Djibouti.
    For Uganda, 1996 was a year of contrasts. In May, the presidential elections - the first to be held for 16 years - brought a landslide victory for President Museveni. As in previous years, the country's economy continued to expand, with particularly high GNP growth rates.

    91. Nairobi, Regional Delegation (Comoros, Djibouti, Kenya, Madagascar, Mauritius, S
    tanzania The regional delegation sent missions to encourage the government to recognizethe competence of the FactFinding Commission established pursuant to
    http://www.icrc.org/Web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/iwpList140/2C9F4FA391E53D21C1256B660058
    About the ICRC ICRC activities The ICRC worldwide Focus ... Annual Report Annual Report Nairobi, regional delegation (Comoros, Djibouti, Kenya, Madagascar, Mauritius, Seychelles, Tanzania, Uganda)
    Introduction
    In 1994 the regional delegation in Nairobi once again provided a range of services for major ICRC operations in the region. Many of the agricultural and water and sanitation programmes implemented in East Africa required backup from Nairobi. The regional delegation also provided logistic support, tracing services, telecommunications, administrative assistance and information and press services for the large-scale operation in Rwanda. For tracing services alone, the delegation in Nairobi hired about 60 employees to work around the clock processing the files for Rwanda. Details concerning some 60,000 people were entered on computer in Nairobi. Activities were also conducted in Tanzania and Uganda for victims of the conflict in Rwanda and of those in Sudan and Somalia (see the relevant chapters).
    The regional water and sanitation coordinator worked mainly in connection with the crisis in Rwanda. Several evaluation missions were conducted early in the year from Burundi and Uganda to areas controlled by the two sides; these were followed up with logistic support. The ICRC dispatched chemicals (some 300 tonnes of aluminium sulphate and 50 tonnes of chlorination products) for water treatment from the delegation in Nairobi and from Kampala and Dar es Salaam. Emergency repair equipment was also supplied. In addition, the regional coordinator gave support to the ICRC's water and sanitation activities in Somalia and Sudan.

    92. CENTER FOR CIVILIZATIONAL AND REGIONAL STUDIES
    Sacralization of Power in the history of Civilizations season for the Expedition toTanzania during which Center for Civilizational and regional Studies (like
    http://civreg.ru/english/culture/research.html

    MAIN
    ABOUT PEOPLE RESEARCH ... RUSSIAN CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY / RESEARCHES CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY
    News

    Researches

    People

    Publications
    ...
    African Expedition (2003)

    RESEARCHES
    Department of Cultural Anthropology of the Center for Civilizational and Regional Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences is one of a few specialized anthropological research institutions in Russia. The basic principles of its activities may be summarized as follows:
    The Department members also take part in common projects of the Center for Civilizational and Regional Studies (like the one on the study of radical xenophobia), in collective grants of various national and international foundations.
    Besides separate monographs and collections of papers, the Department publishes two series of individual and collective monographs: Civilizational Dimension (eight volumes had been published by mid-2004 and two more are in progress) and Images of the World (Two volumes have been published while two other are in print). Today four graduate students have been doing Ph.D. research under Department members? supervision. The sessions of the Seminar take place at 1 p.m.

    93. Camelot Village: Britain's Heritage And History
    1400, Engaruka community farms land in tanzania. c. 1420, Portuguese sailors beginto explore west coast of Africa. 1420s, Songhai people in Gao region, West Africa
    http://www.camelotintl.com/world/africa.html

    Stay with us and see
    The Bazaar
    Africa
    AD 1 Revolt of Tacfarinas, Numidian leader, against Roman government in North Africa Mauretania (now northern Morocco and northwestern Algeria) annexed by Rome Roman force explores up the Nile Valley into Sudan
    AD 100 c. 100 Aksum becomes capital of major state in Eritrea, northern Ethiopia Revolt of Jewish community in Cyrenaica (northeastern Libya) against Roman administration Libyan Septimius Severus is emperor of Rome
    AD 200 c. 200 Roman emperor Septimius Severus strengthens frontier defences in North Africa with chain of forts and long ditches Revolt in Africa against Roman rule begins half-century of unrest Emperor Diocletian reorganizes local government in North Africa
    AD 300 c. 300 - 400 Bantu cereal cultivators in southeast Africa begin to herd cattle c. 330 - 40 Beginning of conversion of kingdom of Aksum in Ethiopia-Eritrea to Christianity, by Bishop Frumentius c. 350 End of Kushite civilization at Meroe; it is possibly brought down by invasion from kingdom of Aksum c. 397

    94. Evangelical Lutheran Church In Tanzania
    been a center for drought relief in its region. Seminary at Morogoro has a long historyof providing attracts highly qualified students from all over tanzania.
    http://www.elca.org/dgm/country_packet/tanzania/church.html

    Church contact information and statistics
    Find out more about education partnerships between the ELCA and ELCT through Mwangaza Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania The Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania is a large, robust, fast-growing church with a complex history. Mission work was begun in Tanzania by a number of European Lutheran groups, especially German and Swedish. Both World War I and World War II presented major crises for work in Tanzania. American Lutheran work began in 1922 when the Augustana Synod sent Ralph Hult to the former Tanganyika. During the next decades, many more Augustana missionaries arrived and served in central Tanganyika, in the area in and around Singida. During World War II, 172 German missionaries were interned. Their work in the northern part of the country around Arusha was taken over by Americans in a cooperative program coordinated by the National Lutheran Council. The cooperation between mission groups to respond to the needs of "orphaned missions" was a new dynamic in inter-Lutheran relationships, and was an important factor leading to the formation of the Lutheran World Federation in 1947. The Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanganyika was officially formed in 1963 by the merger of seven churches, each of which had been established by Lutheran mission work from Europe or the U.S.A. The new ELCT had 400,000 baptized members. The current Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania has over 2.5 million members and is one of the largest Lutheran churches in the world. It is led by a presiding bishop and twenty diocesan bishops.

    95. AMECEA History And Development
    THE history OF AMECEA. was the brainchild of the Catholic Bishops of Tanganyika (today sTanzania). there be collaboration among Catholic Bishops in the region.
    http://www.amecea.org/amecea-history.htm
    About Us Departments
    • Secretary General Social Communication
      • ADS
      Pastoral
      • ANA COLEA
      Institutions Countries Publications Vision Statistics SECAM ... Home THE HISTORY OF AMECEA BEGINNING OF AMECEA
      AMECEA (then ITEBEA) was the brainchild of the Catholic Bishops of Tanganyika (today's Tanzania). In 1960 they proposed, through the then Apostolic Delegation (today's Nunciature) in Nairobi, that there be collaboration among Catholic Bishops in the region. That time the following countries were under the Nairobi Apostolic Delegation namely Kenya, Nyasaland (today's Malawi), Uganda, Sudan, Tanganyika and Northern Rhodesia (today's Zambia). When these other Bishops' Conferences agreed to the necessity of working together, the then Apostolic Delegate (today's Nuncio) Monsignor Guido Del Mestri consulted Rome. Rome gave its approval. REASONS FOR SOLIDARITY
      There were at that time winds of change in both the Church and society in this region.

    96. Memory Of The World Register - Nominated Documentary Heritage – Collection Of A
    to the study of various aspects of Islam, Arabic literature and rhetoric, historyof ideas in Zanzibar and the Eastern African region. Country tanzania.
    http://www.unesco.org/webworld/mdm/2001/nominations_2001/tanzania/form.html
    Memory of the World Register - Nomination Form Tanzania
    Collection of Arabic manuscripts and books – Zanzibar National Archives Abstract Part A - Essential Information Identity and Location Legal Information Identification Management Plan ... Nominator Part B - Subsidiary Information Assessment of Risk Preservation Assessment Abstract
    The Collection of more than 800 manuscripts and printed editions from Zanzibar under the custody of the National Archives is unique material to the study of the social and cultural heritage of Zanzibar and the Eastern African region. Some of these go back to 300 years providing data of all kinds and they are of great interest to the study of various aspects of Islam, Arabic literature and rhetoric, history of ideas in Zanzibar and the Eastern African region. In addition to cultural content, the manuscripts represent good artistic works showing the art of calligraphy, the arrangement of margins and other points connected with artistic embellishment.
    Identity and Location
    Name of the Documentary Heritage:
    Arabic Manuscripts and Books collection Country:
    Tanzania State, Province or Region:

    97. Iarw-conf : [iarw] Comment From Tanzania
    I am presently in Mbeya region tanzania. My own work looks at precolonial historywith an emphasis on economy and how historical economic practices might be
    http://lists.kabissa.org/lists/archives/public/iarw-conf/msg00082.html
    Bulletin Board
    Webmail Postoffice

    Domain Control Panel
    Search: All of Kabissa Whole Internet Pambazuka News Home Contact Directory African Mailing Lists African Websites ... Set Up a New List
    iarw-conf : [iarw] Comment from Tanzania
    Date Prev Date Next Thread Prev Thread Next ... Thread Index Hi I am Cymone Fourshey, I teach African History at Susquehanna University in Pennsylvania USA. I am presently in Mbeya region Tanzania. My own work looks at precolonial history with an emphasis on economy and how historical economic practices might be remembered and reinvented for modern day prosperity. I am not able to check my e-mail frequently or cheaply thus I am coming to the conversation a bit late, and may be repeating what someone else has already said.
    Thank you all.
    Dr. C. Cymone Fourshey History Department 514 University Ave Susquehanna University Selinsgrove, PA 17870 570-372-4479
    ...if I dreamed natural dreams
    of being a natural woman
    doing what a woman does when she's natural I would have a revolution
    Nikki Giovanni

    98. Iarw-conf : Re: [iarw] Comment From Tanzania
    I am presently in Mbeya region tanzania. My own work looks at precolonialhistory with an emphasis on economy and how historical economic
    http://lists.kabissa.org/lists/archives/public/iarw-conf/msg00120.html
    Bulletin Board
    Webmail Postoffice

    Domain Control Panel
    Search: All of Kabissa Whole Internet Pambazuka News Home Contact Directory African Mailing Lists African Websites ... Set Up a New List
    iarw-conf : Re: [iarw] Comment from Tanzania
    Date Prev Date Next Thread Prev Thread Next ... Thread Index
    • Subject : Re: [iarw] Comment from Tanzania From waltersarrey@yahoo.com Date : Tue, 11 Jun 2002 13:26:14 -0700 (PDT)
    http://lists.kabissa.org/mailman/listinfo/iarw-conf http://fifaworldcup.yahoo.com http://lists.kabissa.org/mailman/listinfo/iarw-conf ===== Walters Arrey ARREY Research Fellow/Freelance Writer Integrated Biodiversity Conservation and Development 7020 West 13th Street, Apt. # 10 Berwyn, IL 60402-1077, USA. Tel: 1-708 749 4970 (Home) Tel: 1-708 488 9850 (Work) Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! - Official partner of 2002 FIFA World Cup http://fifaworldcup.yahoo.com

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 5     81-98 of 98    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 

    free hit counter