How I Found Livingstone Travels, Adventures And Discoveries In Central Africa Including Four Months Residence With Dr. Livingstone By Sir Henry M. Stanley
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In Mazanderan, Persia, Such A Scene
Would Have Answered Our Expectations, But Here It Was Totally
Unexpected.
The town may contain a population of 3,000, having
about 1,000 houses; being so densely crowded, perhaps 5,000 would
more closely approximate.
The houses in the town are eminently
African, but of the best type of construction. The fortifications
are on an Arabic Persic model - combining Arab neatness with Persian
plan. Through a ride of 950 miles in Persia I never met a town
outside of the great cities better fortified than Simbamwenni.
In Persia the fortifications were of mud, even those of Kasvin,
Teheran, Ispahan, and Shiraz; those of Simbamwenni are of stone,
pierced with two rows of loopholes for musketry. The area of
the town is about half a square mile, its plan being quadrangular.
Well-built towers of stone guard each corner; four gates, one facing
each cardinal point, and set half way between the several towers,
permit ingress and egress for its inhabitants. The gates are
closed with solid square doors made of African teak, and carved
with the infinitesimally fine and complicated devices of the Arabs,
from which I suspect that the doors were made either at Zanzibar
or on the coast, and conveyed to Simbamwenni plank by plank;
yet as there is much communication between Bagamoyo and Simbamwenni,
it is just possible that native artisans are the authors of this
ornate workmanship, as several doors chiselled and carved in the
same manner, though not quite so elaborately, were visible in the
largest houses. The palace of the Sultan is after the style of
those on the coast, with long sloping roof, wide eaves, and
veranda in front.
The Sultana is the eldest daughter of the famous Kisabengo, a name
infamous throughout the neighbouring countries of Udoe, Ukami,
Ukwere, Kingaru, Ukwenni, and Kiranga-Wanna, for his kidnapping
propensities. Kisabengo was another Theodore on a small scale.
Sprung from humble ancestry, he acquired distinction for his
personal strength, his powers of harangue, and his amusing and
versatile address, by which he gained great ascendency over
fugitive slaves, and was chosen a leader among them. Fleeing
from justice, which awaited him at the hands of the Zanzibar Sultan,
he arrived in Ukami, which extended at that time from Ukwere to
Usagara, and here he commenced a career of conquest, the result
of which was the cession by the Wakami of an immense tract of
fertile country, in the valley of the Ungerengeri. On its most
desirable site, with the river flowing close under the walls,
he built his capital, and called it Simbamwenni, which means
"The Lion," or the strongest, City. In old age the successful
robber and kidnapper changed his name of Kisabengo, which had
gained such a notoriety, to Simbamwenni, after his town; and when
dying, after desiring that his eldest daughter should succeed him,
he bestowed the name of the town upon her also, which name of
Simbamwenni the Sultana now retains and is known by.
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