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stopped, peace established between the tribes, and the head-
quarters of the company’s government removed from Blan-
tyre to Fort Jameson. Late in 1898, Codrington, at the in-
vitation of the “White Fathers,” who had been prevailed
upon by King Mwamba to take land and set up a mission
near his capital earlier in the year, sent M’Kinnon and
Young to Kasama and secured a protectorate over the
Awemba — the most powerful tribe of the whole region.!
Within a year he succeeded in organizing the whole north-
eastern province into nine fiscal and magisterial districts and
in placing the administration on a sound and permanent
basis. And in 1899 and 1900, the entire region, reaching
from the Zambesi to the borders of the Congo and German
East Africa, was divided and organized into two separate
protectorates known as Northeastern and Northwestern
Rhodesia, the definite boundary between Northwestern Rho-
desia and Portuguese West Africa being finally adjusted in
the Barotse treaty between England and Portugal in 1905.2
Thus, and chiefly through the efforts of the South African
Company, a vast territory — amounting approximately to
£80,000 square miles — had been secured for England. If
we add to this the area — 293,000 square miles — of the
three other protectorates controlled by Britain — Bechuana-
land, Basutoland, and Swaziland — we get the total of
773,000 square miles; and putting with this the territory of
the Union, the grand total of land under the British flag in
South Africa is 1,246,000 square miles. If then we add
further the mandated territory of Southwest Africa, the
grand total of South African territory subject in some meas-
ure to British control is 1,611,000 square miles or over one
half the size of the United States, not counting Alaska and
! Gouldsbury and Sheane, The Great Plateau of Northern Rhodesia,
Arnold, 1911.
2 Hertslet, Com. Treaties, vol. 24, p. 939.