Authors: Timothy H. Parsons
Tags: #Oxford University Press, #9780195304312, #Inc
control over local communities. Similarly, the Church did not get its
lands back and continued to lose infl uence in secular matters.
It would take another half century for the ruling dynasty in
Piedmont to create the modern Italian state, and historians of Italy
are divided over whether Napoleon advanced or retarded unifi cation.
At the very least, he opened politics to the middle classes, and his
centralizing imperial program left Italian rulers with a greater capacity to impose their authority on the countryside. Broers is therefore
probably correct in referring to the state-sponsored version of Italian
286 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
nationalism that legitimized Italian unifi cation as the “bastard child
of Napoleonic cultural imperialism.”38 Indeed, the Italian experience
of subjecthood under French imperial rule did not produce a unifying
collective or popular sense of national identity. Napoleon’s imperial
project fl oundered in Italy because rural communities mobilized to
resist him on the basis of local particularism rather than a larger
nationalistic sense of Italian patriotism.
At fi rst glance, the comparatively quick defeat and collapse of
Napoleon’s grand European empire seemed to suggest that the era of
empire building was over. This was largely the case in western Europe,
where local communities eventually and grudgingly made their peace
with nationalism while defi antly rejecting the much more oppressive
weight of imperial subjecthood. Rural Italians fought a rearguard
action against Napoleonic centralization and direct state control,
but in time they eventually became Italian “citizens.” National consciousness thus spread, sometimes forcibly so, from intellectuals and
romantic thinkers to the middle and lower classes. Citizenship was
burdensome in many ways, but it also tempered the enhanced power
of the western European nation-state to oppress them. Consequently,
just as it became unacceptable in the early modern era for Europeans
to be slaves, the slow emergence of nationalism in the nineteenth
century meant that it gradually became equally unacceptable for
them to be the subjects of a foreign imperial power. This was a halting process that slowly spread eastward, but it ultimately doomed
the great multiethnic Habsburg and Ottoman empires. The Russian
Empire survived into the twentieth century in the guise of the supposedly anti-imperial Soviet Union, but eventually its subjects also
asserted their right to self-determination.
Thus nationalism corroded empires. Conventional imperial rule
required local partners, and Spanish conquistadors and British nabobs
built viable and long-lived empires in the early modern era by exploiting the divisions among Asians and Americans. As the nineteenth
century progressed, the spread of nationalist sentiment in Europe
made it diffi cult to rally local intermediaries as the strength of larger
collective identities made it treasonous and dangerous to cooperate
with a foreign regime. Similarly, liberal democracy and the collective rights of national citizenship made imperial extraction equally
unfeasible and intolerable. Finally, the grand coalition that overthrew
Napoleon demonstrated that the nations of Europe would not allow
Napoleonic
Italy 287
one of their number to upset the balance of power on the continent
by building an empire by force of arms.
The nineteenth century therefore appeared to mark the end of
empire. The once powerful early modern Spanish, Portuguese, and
Dutch empires dwindled to a handful colonies scattered around the
globe. Britain lost most of its original empire with the American Revolution, and the Indian revolt of 1857 marked the demise of the once
powerful East India Company. At home, British liberals and free traders attacked empire as expensive, exploitive, and ultimately unnecessary at a time when Britain emerged from the Napoleonic wars as the
world’s dominant industrial and ocean-going power. In arguing that
scattered outposts were an unnecessary drain on the metropolitan
budget, they exposed how irrelevant and unproductive empire had
become for nation-states.
Yet the age of formal empire was not yet over. In the fi nal decades
of the nineteenth century a new generation of imperial entrepreneurs
and aspiring conquistadors tried to recapture the glory and wealth of
the early modern empires. With Europe and the Americas wrapped in
a protective carapace of emerging nationalism, they turned to Africa
and Asia to exploit vulnerable communities who still identifi ed themselves in local rather than collective terms. The British government
underwrote the speculative conquest of what was to become Kenya
because well-meaning Britons accepted the promise of the smugly
confi dent “new imperialists” to create a liberal empire that would
rule for the good of its subjects. This was a self-serving lie, but the
new rulers of Africa found that the supposedly primitive population
was not so different from the ordinary Italians who were so effective
in thwarting Napoleon’s ambitions. Like countless earlier generations
of subjects who despised their imperial conquerors, the British army
veteran Daniel Nguta disdained the British. The imperial enthusiasts
who justifi ed his subjugation on the grounds that he and his people
were primitive and inferior soon realized that these supposedly simple “tribesmen” could bring down mighty empires.
ETHIOPIA
Moyale
N
Mt.
Kapenguria
Elgon
Maralal
Kitale
Eldoret
Baringo
Kakamega
Thomson’s
Isiolo
Falls Nanyuki
Kisumu
Meru
Aberdare
Nakuru
Mt. Kenya
Range
Lake
Kericho
Gilgil
Nyanza
Nyeri Embu
Kisi
Fort Hall
Naivasha
Narok
Kjambu
Thika
Tan
Nairobi
aR
Machakos
.
Kabado
Magadi
AthiR.
Lamu
Mt. Kilimanjaro
Malindi
Voi
Kikuyu Reserves
White highlands
Mombasa
0
50
100 mi
0
50
100
150 km
Kenya
6
The Short Life of the New Imperialism
In 1905, some 373 years after Atawallpa met Pizarro on the plaza
of Cajamarca, the Nandi
orkoiyot
Koitalel arap Samloei encountered
another imperial entrepreneur in the highlands of Kenya. This heir of
the conquistadors was a commissioned British military offi cer named
Richard Meinertzhagen. In 1905, he was on secondment to the King’s
African Rifl es (KAR), Britain’s ragtag but grandly named East African
colonial army. Unlike the Inka ruler, Koitalel was fully aware that this
twentieth-century imperial soldier was a serious threat. Indeed, for
the previous decade the Nandi had fought a war of attrition against
the encroaching British Empire.
At fi rst glance, it might seem odd that a supposedly “tribal” people
such as the Nandi held a “modern” western power at bay for over
ten years when the Inkas had succumbed to Pizarro and the conquistadors so quickly. Firmly entrenched in the cool, well-watered East
African highlands, the Nandi had a conventional mixed agricultural
and pastoral economy. Politically, they had no centralized institutions of authority and could be properly described as stateless. In the
late nineteenth century, they divided their lands into six or seven
counties (
emotinwek
) of two thousand to fi ve thousand people under
councils of elders (
kokwotinwek
) at which any married man could
speak. In times of crisis special councils consisting of the most infl uential Nandi elders, military leaders, and ritual experts (
orkoiik
) made
the key decisions.
The Nandi may have been stateless, but they were a signifi cant
military power in the highlands. In the decades before the British
289
290 THE RULE OF EMPIRES
arrival, victories over neighboring communities allowed them to
assimilate conquered populations and acquire new crops and technologies. Known originally as the Chemwal, they earned the name
Mnandi from the coastal ivory traders whose caravans they raided
repeatedly. This was the Swahili word for “cormorant,” a bird with a
reputation for rapaciousness in East Africa.
The rising Nandi fortunes were largely the work of an infl uential
family of
orkoiik
that used their ability to divine the future to usurp
the authority of the
kokwotinwek
councils. These ritual experts were
actually refugees from a nearby Maasai community who took control of important agricultural and initiation rituals after fi nding refuge with a Nandi clan. The
orkoiyot
Kimnyole arap Turukat, who
was Koitalel’s father, organized the Nandi regiments into a powerful
military force that drove off the Maasai and raided their remaining
neighbors for cattle.
Later, the British claimed that these “witch doctors” were tyrannical autocrats, but the Nandi warriors beat Kimnyole to death in
1890 after he led them on a disastrous raid that resulted in the death
of fi ve hundred of their comrades. Nevertheless, Koitalel and his
brother Kipchomber arap Koilegei retained signifi cant infl uence in
Nandi society and waged a fi erce succession struggle to assume their
father’s place. Koitalel enjoyed the backing of an aggressive younger
faction of Nandi warriors who wanted to continue the cattle raids,
which gave him the means to drive his brother into exile. With his
power secure, he directed the Nandi recovery from the epidemics,
cattle blight, drought, locusts, and famine that disastrously weakened
the East African highland communities at the turn of the twentieth
century. The Nandi were therefore much better prepared than their
neighbors to face the British imperial menace.
Richard Meinertzhagen personifi ed that threat. When he met
Koitalel under the equivalent of a fl ag of truce he did so as the military representative of the East Africa Protectorate (EAP), which
became the Colony and Protectorate of Kenya in 1920. The EAP was
actually the successor state to the anemic Imperial British East Africa
Company (IBEAC), a chartered company that the metropolitan British government used to stake its initial claim to the region. The European chartered company was a powerful imperial tool in the early
modern era, but it was an ineffectual anachronism in the late nineteenth century. Although the IBEAC reserved a slice of East Africa
British
Kenya 291
for Britain, its small and ill-equipped private army could not cope
with the Nandi and other powerful local forces. Under both Kimnyole and his son Koitalel the Nandi raided passing caravans and stole
copper telegraph wire and raw materials from construction parties
building a railway from the port of Mombasa to Uganda. The EAP,
which replaced the company in 1895, mounted successive “pacifi cation campaigns” against them, but the Nandi wisely avoided a direct
confrontation with its Maxim guns and other western fi rearms.
Fed up with Nandi intransigence, the British demanded that
Koitalel and his followers pay a fi ne of three hundred cattle or face
the consequences. They knew full well that the Nandi would refuse,
and Meinertzhagen was part of a massive punitive expedition consisting of eighty British offi cers, fi fteen hundred African soldiers
and policemen, thirty-fi ve hundred armed and unarmed porters, one
hundred Somali “levies,” one thousand Maasai “auxiliaries,” ten
machine guns, and two armored trains. This represented the protectorate’s ultimate solution to the Nandi problem.1 The Nandi Field
Force’s mission was to provoke the Nandi into standing and fi ghting
by seizing their cattle. The Nandi elders’ protests that they had little
authority over Koitalel and his reckless younger followers were of
no consequence.
The British framed their East African imperial project in moral
and humanitarian terms. Denying that they were conquerors, they
claimed that military force was the only way to compel the backward peoples of the highlands to respect civilized authority. By their
count, the Nandi transgressions included the murder of Europeans,
straightforward theft, and, most signifi cant, demonstrating to other
African communities that it was possible to defy imperial Britain. It
mattered little that most of the Nandi’s European victims were part
of a marginal, often brutal rabble who sought to enrich themselves
by leveraging their privileged status as “white men.” They were
clearly heirs of the Pizarrists, but the absence of lootable empires in
the highlands forced them to seek their fortunes through cattle theft,
petty fraud, and thinly disguised slave raiding. The Nandi recognized
these men for what they were. Responding in kind, they murdered a