Robert Codrington

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Robert Codrington
FRGS
Codrington, Robert.jpg
Born 1869
Died 1908
Residence Blantyre, British Central Africa; 5 Riverdale Road, Twickenham
Government House, Fort Jameson, Rhodesia [1899 vol. 29]
Occupation administrative
Society Membership
membership Ordinary fellow
left 1908 deceased
elected_AI 1898.03.29
societies Royal Geographical Society




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1898.03.08 proposed
death noted in the report of the council for 1908

Notes From Elsewhere

Sir Robert Edward Codrington (6 January 1869 – 16 December 1908) was the colonial Administrator of the two territories ruled by the British South Africa Company (BSAC) which became present-day Zambia. He was Administrator of North-Eastern Rhodesia, based at Fort Jameson, now Chipata, from 11 July 1898 to 24 April 1907, and then of North-Western Rhodesia, based at Livingstone from February 1908 to his death in London on 16 December 1908 from heart disease at the age of only 39. He laid the foundation for the amalgamation of the two territories as Northern Rhodesia four years later.[1]
His administration was influential in establishing British colonial government in Northern Rhodesia and Nyasaland and making them different in character from white-settler-led Southern Rhodesia.[2]

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Codrington studied ethnological aspects of Africa, and collected cultural artefacts. While some of these had been taken from their rightful owners by slave traders whom he had defeated, many valuable pieces including very old works of Luba origin were taken from the court of Mwata Kazembe by the British punitive expedition sent by him against Mwata Kazembe X in 1897, and these he kept. They were placed in 1920 in a museum in Southern Rhodesia, 1000 km from their Kazembe-Lunda owners.[2]