A comprehensive knowledge graph of European (British, Boer, Italian, Greek, and other) presence in Kenya's history from early explorers through post-independence.
This is an Index page - see the links below for detailed articles.
Overview and Identity
- European Settlement Overview - Timeline and population dynamics
- The White Highlands - The reserved lands system
Explorers and Early Arrivals (1840s-1880s)
- Johann Ludwig Krapf - German missionary and Mount Kenya discoverer
- Joseph Thomson - Scottish explorer through Maasailand
- Frederick Lugard - British imperial administrator
- John Ainsworth - Early colonial administrator
Missionaries
- Church Missionary Society in Kenya - CMS missions and education
- Church of Scotland Mission - CSM and Kikuyu elite
- The Holy Ghost Fathers and Catholics - Catholic mission presence
Settler Era (1900-1963)
- Lord Delamere - The most influential settler
- Karen Blixen - Author and farmer
- Elspeth Huxley - Chronicler of settler Kenya
- Denys Finch Hatton - Aristocrat and big-game hunter
- Happy Valley Set - Decadent settler society
- The Erroll Murder - The unsolved 1941 scandal
- Boer Settlers Kenya - Post-Boer War migration
- Italian Prisoners of War Kenya - WWII POW presence
- Greek Community Kenya - Commerce and industry
- Jewish Presence in Kenya - The small Jewish community
The Land System
- Crown Lands Ordinance - Legislation and land alienation
- The Squatter System - African labor on European farms
- Land in the Rift Valley - The heartland of settlement
- Land Tenure Reform and Europeans - Post-independence transitions
Colonial Administration
- East Africa Protectorate to Colony - Political transitions
- The Legislative Council - Colonial governance
- The Kenya Settlers and London - Settler political pressure
- District Commissioners and Indirect Rule - Administration methods
WWII and Transition to Independence
- Kenya in WWII - The East Africa Campaign
- The Lancaster House Conferences - Independence negotiations
Post-Independence Europeans: Generational Arc and Contemporary Families
- Europeans who Stayed - Why some remained
- The Decision to Stay or Go - Emigration decisions across generations
- Settler Families Across Generations - Five generations from 1900s to 2026
- White Kenyans Today - Contemporary community
- White Kenyan Identity in 2026 - Belonging and ambiguity in contemporary Kenya
- Mixed Marriages and Mixed Families - Intermarriage across settler-Kenyan lines
- The Guilt Inheritance - Psychological burden of inherited dispossession
- European Conservation Establishment - Wildlife and land
- Joy and George Adamson - Wildlife conservationists
- Kuki Gallmann - Modern conservationist
Contemporary Settler Communities and Land Issues
- Laikipia Ranch Families - White-owned land in Laikipia plateau
- The Naivasha Flower Farm Community - Cut-flower farming and labor
- Karen and Langata Old Families - Nairobi suburbs and transition from farming to urban life
- Muthaiga Club and White Social Life - Social institutions and settler networks
- Land Restitution by White Kenyans - Voluntary land return and community partnership
- Paying for Sins of Ancestors - Pressure for restitution and community contributions
- White Kenyans and the 2007-2008 Violence - Post-election violence and white settler property
Culture and Legacy
- Out of Africa and Its Legacy - Karen Blixen's cultural impact
- European Architecture Kenya - Colonial built environment
- Nairobi Club Culture - Colonial social institutions
- Settler Diaries and Archives - Documentary legacy
- The Norfolk Hotel - Colonial social center
Critical Perspectives
- Ngugi wa Thiong'o on the Settler - African literary critique
- Land Restitution Debate - Contemporary land questions
- White Privilege in Contemporary Kenya - Social realities
- Settler Nostalgia - Colonial romanticism
Specific Events and Timeline
- Nairobi's Founding - Establishment as capital
- The 1923 Devonshire Declaration - African interests paramount
- The 1952 Imposition of Emergency - State of Emergency declared
- Pipeline of Independence - 1959-1963 transition sequence
- Europeans and the Coast - Mombasa, Malindi, Lamu
- Europeans in Kenya Timeline - Chronological reference