By the 1950s, many Kenyans were angry. British settlers held the best farmland in the highlands, while African farmers — especially the Kikuyu people — were pushed onto crowded reserves.
In October 1952, a movement called Mau Mau launched an armed uprising against colonial rule. Mau Mau fighters were mostly Kikuyu, and they used guerrilla warfare from forest hideouts in the Aberdare Mountains and Mount Kenya.
Why land mattered so much: Kikuyu farmers had lost land to white settlers under colonial rule. Mau Mau fighters swore secret oaths promising to fight for ithaka na wiyathi — land and freedom. This is the cause every source about the uprising circles back to.
The British governor declared a State of Emergency in October 1952. Britain flew in thousands of troops, built barbed-wire "protected villages" to control the Kikuyu population, and detained tens of thousands of suspects without trial.
- Detention camps — over 80,000 Kikuyu were held in camps like Hola, where prisoners were forced into hard labour and, in some cases, beaten to death.
- Kenyatta's arrest (1953) — Jomo Kenyatta was tried and jailed for allegedly leading Mau Mau, even though the evidence was thin and later shown to be unreliable.
- Military cost — the uprising was crushed militarily by 1956, but it cost Britain far more in money and reputation than colonial rule was worth keeping.
- Death toll — official figures said just over 11,000 Mau Mau fighters and supporters died; historians today think the real number, including camp deaths, was much higher.
Reading a source: a British officer's report: Imagine Source A is a 1954 report by a British army officer describing a raid on a forest camp. Its content might describe Mau Mau fighters as violent and disorganised. But its context — written by the side fighting Mau Mau, for a government audience — means it will downplay British brutality and play up the threat. A historian uses the content for facts about the raid, but reads the context to explain the report's one-sided tone.
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Mau Mau was defeated militarily, but it changed everything politically. Britain realised that holding Kenya by force was too costly, and colonial policy began shifting toward eventual self-rule across Africa.
Between 1960 and 1963, British and Kenyan leaders met in London for a series of Lancaster House Conferences — negotiations to agree a new constitution and a timetable for independence.
Lancaster House I (1960)
Ended the ban on African-led political parties and agreed Africans would get a majority of seats in Kenya's legislative council for the first time.
Multi-party politics emerges
Two rival parties formed: KANU (Kenya African National Union), led by Kenyatta and drawing support mainly from larger ethnic groups like the Kikuyu and Luo, and KADU (Kenya African Democratic Union), representing smaller groups worried about domination by the majority.
Lancaster House II & III (1962–63)
Agreed the final independence constitution, including safeguards for minority groups and a federal-style system called majimbo, and set the date for self-government.
Self-government and independence
Kenya became internally self-governing in June 1963 after KANU won elections, then fully independent on 12 December 1963.
Three conferences, one constitution, one date: 12 December 1963.
Negotiation, not just fighting: It's a common mistake to think Mau Mau alone won independence. The uprising forced Britain to the table, but independence itself came through political negotiation at Lancaster House — a different kind of source evidence (constitutional documents, conference minutes, speeches) from the military reports on Mau Mau.
Source type: a Mau Mau veteran's memoir
- Content: emphasises the uprising as the true cause of independence
- Context: written decades later, by a participant proud of the struggle
- Perspective: independence won through sacrifice and armed resistance
Source type: a Lancaster House conference minute
- Content: records agreed constitutional terms and dates
- Context: an official document, written for both governments
- Perspective: independence achieved through negotiated compromise
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Jomo Kenyatta had been a nationalist leader since the 1920s, campaigning in Britain for African land rights long before Mau Mau began.
In 1953 he was convicted of managing Mau Mau — a charge most historians now doubt — and spent nearly nine years in detention. Yet by the time he was released in 1961, Kenyatta was Kenya's most popular leader.
- 1961 — released from detention and soon became president of KANU, the largest nationalist party.
- 1962–63 — Lancaster House negotiator, representing African interests in the final constitutional talks.
- 1963 — first prime minister of a self-governing, then fully independent, Kenya after KANU's election win.
- 1964 — first president when Kenya became a republic, a position he held until his death in 1978.
Perspectives on Kenyatta differ sharply: British colonial sources from the 1950s often called Kenyatta "leader unto darkness and death" — a dangerous extremist. Kenyan nationalist sources from the 1960s call him Mzee (respected elder) and "father of the nation." Same man, wildly different perspectives — perfect material for a Q3 answer on perspectives across sources.
Once in power, Kenyatta preached Harambee ("let's all pull together"), urging unity between ethnic groups and between former enemies and colonial settlers, to help the new nation move on from the violence of the Emergency.
Cause and consequence, linked: Kenyatta's imprisonment (a consequence of British fears about Mau Mau) became a cause of his later popularity — many Kenyans saw him as a martyr, which helped KANU win the elections that made him prime minister.