Mutesa II, King of Buganda

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Information for Authority record
Name (Latin)
Mutesa II, King of Buganda
Other forms of name
Freddie, King
King Freddie
Muteesa II, King of Buganda
Date of birth
1924-11-19
Date of death
1969-11-21
Gender
male
Biographical or Historical Data
elected and proclaimed Kabaka, Aug. 14, 1897
Became officially Kabaka Mutesa II
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 62853020
Wikidata: Q356026
Library of congress: n 80131193
OCoLC: oca00511555
Sources of Information
  • Gt. Brit. Colonial Office.Uganda Protectorate ...
  • Omulembe gwa Muteesa II, 2004.
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Wikipedia description:

Sir Edward Frederick William David Walugembe Mutebi Luwangula Mutesa II (19 November 1924 – 21 November 1969) was a Ugandan royal and statesman who served as the first president of Uganda from 1962 to 1966, when he was overthrown by Milton Obote. Mutesa was also the Kabaka (king) of the traditional kingdom of Buganda in Uganda from 22 November 1939 until his death in 1969. He was often referred as King Freddie by the foreign press, a name rarely used in Uganda. An ardent defender of Buganda's interests, especially its traditional autonomy, he often threatened to make the kingdom independent both before and after Uganda's independence to preserve it. These firm convictions also later led to conflicts with his erstwhile political ally Milton Obote, who would eventually overthrow him. Mutesa was crowned Kabaka on his 18th birthday in 1942, three years after the death of his father Daudi Cwa II of Buganda during British colonial rule in Uganda. In 1953, he attempted to have Buganda secede to retain the kingdom's independence from a proposed British colonial federation in East Africa. He was deposed and exiled by British colonial governor Andrew Cohen, but was allowed to return to the country two years later in the wake of a popular backlash known as the Kabaka Crisis under the terms of the 1955 Buganda Agreement. In the years preceding Uganda's independence from the United Kingdom in 1962, Mutesa became part of the monarchist Kabaka Yekka party which then formed a coalition with Milton Obote's Uganda People's Congress. The year after Uganda's independence, Mutesa was named the first President of Uganda (then a non-executive position) in 1963 with Obote as Prime Minister. Mutesa's alliance with Obote collapsed in 1964 over the Ugandan lost counties referendum. It worsened in 1966, resulting in Obote overthrowing him and forcing him into exile in the United Kingdom, where he died three years later.

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