Kalema of Buganda

Ssekabaka Rashid Kalema Muguluma
Kabaka of Buganda
Reign October 21, 1888 - October 05, 1889
Predecessor Kiweewa of Buganda
Successor Mwanga II of Buganda
Died 1891
Bunyoro
Burial Mmende, Busiro
Spouse 1. Lady Nabikukuzi
2. Lady Sofia Kabak'alongoosa
3. Lady Nakibuuka I
4. Zefiria Nnampa Nakibuuka II
5. Lady Nabibooge
6. Lady Veneneka Nabiwemba
7. Lady Njera Saabaddu
Father Muteesa I of Buganda
Mother Namasole Ndibuwakanyi

Rashid Kalema Muguluma was Kabaka of the Kingdom of Buganda, from October 21, 1888 until October 5, 1889. He was the thirty-third (33rd) Kabaka of Buganda.

Claim to the throne

Kalema Muguluma was the son of Kabaka Mukaabya Walugembe Muteesa I Kayiira, Kabaka of Buganda, who reigned between 1856 and 1884. His mother was Ndibuwakanyi, of the Mamba clan. He was declared Kabaka by the Muslim forces that deposed his elder brother Kabaka Kiweewa Mutebi Nnyonyintono on October 21, 1888. He maintained his capital at Mengo Hill.

Married life

He is recorded to have married the following wives:

  1. Nabikukuzi, daughter of Jjumba, of the Nkima clan
  2. Sofia Kabakalongoosa, daughter of Kinyolo, of the Nkima clan
  3. Nakibuuka, daughter of Mugema, of the Nkima clan
  4. Zefiria Nnampa Nakibuuka, daughter of Bakkabulindi of the Ngeye clan
  5. Nabibooge, daughter of Kibaya, of the Nsenene clan
  6. Veneneka Nabiwemba, daughter of Wakooli, a Musoga, of the Ngabi clan
  7. Njera Saabaddu, daughter of Gabunga, of the Mamba clan

Issue

His recorded children include:

  1. Prince (Omulangira) Kiweewa Zzimbe, whose mother was Nabikukuzi
  2. Prince (Omulangira) Edmond Alamanzaani Ndawula, whose mother was Zefiria Nnampa. He died on July 1, 1916
  3. Prince (Omulangira) Yozefu Musanje Walugembe, MBE. He was born on August 31, 1889. His mother was Nabibooge. He was educated at Namilyango College. In October 1914, he was commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant in the African Native Medical Corps. In 1915 he was promoted to Lieutenant. He served in the First World War from 1915 until 1919. He was decorated with the Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE), the 1915 Star and the British War and Allied Victory medals. On November 18, 1907, he married Sala Kiire, daughter of Chevalier Stanislas Mugwaanya, OBE, GCSG, at the White Fathers' Mission, Nsambya. Prince Musanje fathered two sons and one daughter: (a) Prince (Omulangira) Joseph Mukaabya (b) Prince (Omulangira) Daudi Kimera and (c) Princess (Omumbejja) Tereza Namukaabya.
  4. Princess (Omumbejja) Yuniya Maliamu Kamuwanda, whose mother was Veneneka Nabiwemba. Princess Kamuwanda was installed as Naalinnya to Kabaka Daudi Chwa II on August 14, 1897. She received the Silver Jubilee medal in 1935, the Coronation Medal in 1937 and the Papal medal "Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice" in 1951. She died on May 30, 1951.
  5. Princess (Omumbejja) Besemerese Hana Dimbwe. She was born in Kampala in 1887. Her mother was Sofia Kabak'alongoosa. In September 1905, she married, at Mbale, as his third wife, Semei Lwakirenzi Kakungulu, then Kabaka of Bukedi.[1]

His reign

The period from 1884 through 1897 witnessed tremendous strife in Buganda. Sufficient Baganda had converted to one of the three major religions in the kingdom; Catholicism, Protestantism or Islam. As the ruling class in the kingdom attempted to adjust to the loss of absolute authority over their subjects' lives to these new religions; the kingdom was thrown into turmoil, rebellion, counter-rebellion and religious persecution.

Within a period of thirteen years from 1884 until 1897, Buganda witnessed the change of leadership at Mengo, six times, which was unprecedented in the kingdom. Various Kabaka's took sides with one religion or the other, only to be deposed by the supporters of the religions they did not choose. And the cycle repeated itself.

In October 1888, the Muslim faction was dominant in Buganda. All Christian missionaries were expelled, and Kabaka Kiweewa Mutebi Nnyonyintono was deposed. Kabaka Kalema Muguluma, who had converted to Islam and taken on the name Rashid, was installed on the throne. However, only one year later, he was forced to step down by the British imperial forces. He was offered an ultimatum by the British: either convert to Christianity and retain the throne, or remain Muslim and lose the throne. He evidently chose Islam and was deposed.

The final years

After his removal from the throne by the British, Kabaka Kalema went into exile in Bunyoro. He died in exile from complications of smallpox in January 1891. At the time of his death, his age is estimated to have been in the mid-twenties. His remains were repatriated and buried at Mmende in Busiro.[2]

Succession table

Preceded by
Kiweewa Nnyonyintono
King of Buganda
1888–1889
Succeeded by
Mwanga II Mukaabya

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, March 15, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.