East Africa timeline
A primate of this period, at ease both in the trees and on the ground, is probably the common ancestor of gorillas, chimpanzees and humans
Various species of ape develop the habit of walking upright on two feet
Certain primates, in eastern and southern Africa, are by now sufficiently like humans to be classed as hominids
A female of the species Australopithecus Afarensis (nicknamed Lucy when her skeleton is found), lives in the Afar Depression in Ethiopia within 50 miles of where her predecessor Ardi was unearthed
A Homo erectus boy, aged about ten, lives near Lake Turkana in Kenya and dies at Nariokotome
The rulers of Aksum, the first Ethiopian kingdom, claim descent from Solomon and the Queen of Sheba
Voluptas quo cum mol
Iste quibusdam in au
Frumentius, brought to Ethiopia as a slave, becomes the kingdom's first Christian bishop
Christianity reaches the kingdom of Dongola, in present-day Sudan
Islam reaches Shanga, off the east coast of Africa, with the building of a tiny wooden mosque
A Muslim dynasty is established at Kilwa, on the east African coast
Islam replaces Christianity as the religion of the kings of Dongola, in present-day Sudan
A friar, who has failed to find Prester John in the east, publishes a book proving that the fabulous king lives in Ethiopia
Coffee, derived from wild plants in Ethiopia, is cultivated in Arabia
The Portuguese set up a trading post on the east African island of Zanzibar
Ahmad ibn Ibrahim leads Muslim Somalis in a holy war against Christian Ethiopia, destroying churches and shrines
A fleet from Oman evicts the Portuguese from Mombasa and Zanzibar
An Egyptian army makes its camp at Khartoum, subsequently the capital of an Egyptian province in the Sudan
Zanzibar becomes the main place of residence of the sultan of Oman
An Ethiopian baron usurps the throne and proclaims himself emperor, as Theodore II
Speke and Grant find the Ripon Falls, over which the headwater of the Nile flows from Lake Tanganyika
British explorer Samuel Baker annexes the southern Sudan, or Equatoria, on behalf of the khedive of Egypt
The British consul in Zanzibar persuades the sultan to end the island's notorious slave trade
Mohammed Ahmed, proclaiming himself the Mahdi, defeats three Egyptian armies in the Sudan