History, Tribes & Geology Of Mt. Kilimanjaro - Tanzania Climbs - AfricanMecca Safaris - 1 views
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Life-giving streams fertilized and watered lower mountain slopes, providing an ideal environment for early man to develop from nomadic hunter-gatherer to settled farmer, building villages and developing a cohesive society. Apart from a few stone bowls, you will find no traces of these early settlements on trek tours of Kilimanjaro.
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katlegomodiba on 26 Apr 23Early man thrived in this ideal environment as he transitioned from a nomadic hunter-gatherer to a sedentary farmer, creating villages and a coherent society. Life-giving streams fertilized and watered lower mountain slopes. On Kilimanjaro trek excursions, you won't see any remnants of these early communities except than a few stone bowls.
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The mountain was a landmark for Arab and Chinese traders
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In 1849, missionary Johann Rebmann, published an account that was not believed. Kilimanjaro became part of a German Protectorate in 1885. Hans Meyer was the first European to climb Mount Kilimanjaro to reach the summit of Kibo in October of 1889. At this point, it was actually described as “The highest mountain in Germany”! The German colonial government made Mount Kilimanjaro a game reserve together with its surrounding forests until it was allocated to the British as a Protectorate under the League of Nations until Tanzanian Independence in 1961.
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Johann Rebmann, a missionary, published an unverified report in 1849. In 1885, the German Protectorate annexed Kilimanjaro. In October 1889, Hans Meyer became the first European to ascend Mount Kilimanjaro and reach the peak of Kibo. It was literally referred to at this point as "The highest mountain in Germany"! Mount Kilimanjaro and the surrounding forests were designated a game reserve by the German colonial administration before being given to the British as a Protectorate under the League of Nations until Tanzanian Independence in 1961.
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