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Lugard, Frederick John Dealtry Lugard, 1st Baron
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Lugard, Frederick John Dealtry Lugard, 1st Baron (lgärd`), 1858–1945, British colonial administrator. After an early military career, he entered (1889) the service of the British East Africa Company and was sent (1890) to Uganda. After securing British predominance in the area he returned (1892) to England and was instrumental in persuading the British government to assume (1894) a protectorate over Uganda. Appointed British commissioner for N Nigeria, he created the West African Frontier Force in 1897 and by 1903 had subdued N Nigeria. Lugard was governor of all Nigeria from 1912 to 1919, welding its diverse territories into a single administrative unit. He developed the doctrine of indirect rule, which Great Britain employed in many of its African colonies. According to his views the colonial administration should exercise its control of the subject population through traditional native institutions. Lugard expounded his theory in The Dual Mandate in British Tropical Africa (1922). He was raised to the peerage in 1928.

Bibliography

See biography by M. Perham (2 vol., 1956; repr. 1968).



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Among the people profiled in individual chapters: Evelyn Baring, the British consul-general of Egypt from 1883 to 1907; Frederick Lugard, Governor-General of Nigeria who had served in the Afghan War of 1879-1880 and the Sudan campaign of 1884-1885; Mark Sykes, the British politician forever associated with the Sykes-Picot Agreement; A.
[18] This was the situation that the British met in 1900, when Frederick Lugard declared the Protectorate of northern Nigeria.
The help came in the form of Frederick Lugard, who started as a freelance fighter and big game-hunter in East Africa, then annexed Uganda to Britain, sorted out Malawi and Tanzania, and retired as a knighted governor living on a pension paid by the British colonies in West Africa.
 
 
 
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