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Arusha

Arusha is the safari capital of East Africa, a bustling, vibrant town with the streets filled with 4X4 game viewing vehicles criss-crossing the potholed roads. Maasai warriors in full regalia stroll the streets, mingling with tourists in crisp khaki,...

Categories: Arusha


Bagamoyo


Categories: Bagamoyo


Baobab Valley


Categories: Baobab Valley


Dar es Salaam

Dar es Salaam in east Tanzania is located on an arm of the Indian Ocean. It is the country's largest city and former capital, chief seaport, and principal commercial, manufacturing, and educational centre. Rail links extend inland to Arusha in the n...

Categories: Dar es Salaam


Fanjove Island


Categories: Fanjove Island


Gombe Stream National Park


Categories: Gombe Stream National Park


Iringa

This town in Tanzania overlooks the Ruaha River and borders the dry belt of central Tanzania. However the cool breeze of the Southern Highlands seeds its already abundant agriculture. With its beautiful scenery and game parks, Iringa is the perfect d...

Categories: Iringa


Karatu


Categories: Karatu


Katavi National Park

Situated in the remote Western Rift Valley between lakes Rukwa and Tanganyika about 870 mi/1,400 km west of Dar es Salaam, the 2,750-sq-mi/4,500-sq-km Katavi is Tanzania's third-largest national park and possibly its most remote. Its isolation, diffi...

Categories: Katavi National Park


Kigoma


Categories: Kigoma


Kilimanjaro International Airport


Categories: Kilimanjaro International Airport


Kilwa Kisiwani


Categories: Kilwa Kisiwani


Korogwe

This large town is a popular lunch stop for travelers by bus between Dar es Salaam and Moshi or Arusha. Visit the cathedral church dedicated to St. Michael or taste the exotic fruits and other delicacies at the neighboring stalls upon waiting for you...

Categories: Korogwe


Lake Eyasi


Categories: Lake Eyasi


Lake Manyara Airport


Categories: Lake Manyara Airport


Lake Manyara National Park

Approaching Lake Manyara National Park the view is spectacular. From the east the Rift Valley escarpment looms on the horizon forming an impressive backdrop to the lake. From the west, the Park lies in a green strip below and the lake glistens in the...

Categories: Lake Manyara National Park


Lake Tanganyika

The world's longest and second-deepest freshwater body, Lake Tanganyika is also exceptionally beautiful, with its crystal clear waters hemmed in by the lush, green mountains of Tanzania's Rift Valley escarpment. Kigoma, the main lake port, is an attr...

Categories: Lake Tanganyika


Latham Island


Categories: Latham Island


Mafia Island

Mafia Island is a spectacular destination off the coast of Tanzania. The Island's Marine Park features, coral reefs, sandy beaches, and sparkling lagoons. To learn more about traditional village culture, visitors go on safari tours and visit local vi...

Categories: Mafia Island


Mahale Mountains National Park

Mahale Mountains National Park is home to some of Africa’s last remaining wild chimpanzees. Located in western Tanzania and named after the Mahale Mountain range, the area was originally inhabited by the Batongwe and Holoholo people. It was onl...

Categories: Mahale Mountains National Park


Marangu

Marangu is a busy little village 17 mi/27 km east of Moshi that most people visit to climb the Marangu Route up the mountain—the entrance to the Kilimanjaro National Park is 3 mi/5 km beyond the village. Marangu is also an excellent base for gentler ...

Categories: Marangu


Mikumi National Park

Tanzania's medium-sized Mikumi National Park (650 sq mi/1,685 sq km) offers good viewing of giraffes, impalas, warthogs, elephants, lions, hippos and other animals. The landscape is woodlands and grassy plains fed by the floodplains of the Mkata Rive...

Categories: Mikumi National Park


Misali Island


Categories: Misali Island


Mount Kilimanjaro

Kilimanjaro is a giant stratovolcano that began forming about a million years ago, when lava spilled from the Rift Valley zone. Two of its three peaks, Mawenzi and Shira, are extinct while Kibo (the highest peak) is dormant and could erupt again. The...

Categories: Mount Kilimanjaro


Mount Meru


Categories: Mount Meru


Mto wa Mbu


Categories: Mto wa Mbu


Musoma


Categories: Musoma


Mwanza

Mwanza is one of the best places in Tanzania to see Lake Victoria, though it is far off the usual tourist itinerary despite being the country's second largest city. It has an attractive setting on the lakeshore and is dominated by Bismarck Rock—a mas...

Categories: Mwanza


Ngorongoro

An ancient hole in northern Tanzania, Ngorongoro Crater is one of Africa's best wildlife-viewing spots since it acts like a natural cage; the crater's depth makes for a difficult escape for some animals, but most have no need to leave, finding plenty...

Categories: Ngorongoro


Nyerere National Park

Established in 1922, the Selous Game Reserve is Africa's largest wildlife reserve (21,235sq mi/55,000 sq km), and is in fact roughly the size of Switzerland and four times larger than the Serengeti. The park is named after Captain Frederick Selous, a...

Categories: Nyerere National Park


Pemba Island

The second-largest island in the Zanzibar Archipelago can be reached by air or ferry. Pemba lies approximately 50 mi/80 km off the Tanzanian mainland directly east of Tanga. Compared to its neighbor Zanzibar Island, which is heavily developed for tou...

Categories: Pemba Island


Ruaha National Park

Ruaha National Park, the second-largest national park in Tanzania, lies about a two-hour drive northwest from Iringa, but is most normally visited by air in conjunction with the Selous Game Reserve. Wild and relatively little-visited, Ruaha is known ...

Categories: Ruaha National Park


Rubondo Island


Categories: Rubondo Island


Rukyira


Categories: Rukyira


Saadani National Park

Saadani National Park is located in the northern coast of Tanzania, Africa. It is the 13th National park and it is a wildlife sanctuary consisting of the big 5.Here you will find a diverse range of habitation and vegetation, from a marine life to ter...

Categories: Saadani National Park


Serengeti

Today, the Serengeti National Park helps protect the greatest and most varied collection of terrestrial wildlife on earth, and one of the last great migratory systems still intact. The Serengeti is the jewel in the crown of Tanzania's protected a...

Categories: Serengeti


Tanga

The fairly uncrowded coastal town of Tanga (meaning "sail" in Kiswahili) was briefly the German colonial capital following the treaty between the Sultan of Zanzibar and the German East Africa Company. Today there is little to see but a walk around th...

Categories: Tanga


Tarangire

As you enter Tarangire National Park a vast number of baobabs catch your eye. The gently rolling countryside is dotted with these majestic trees, which seem to dwarf the animals that feed beneath them. The park is spectacular in the dry season when m...

Categories: Tarangire


Udzungwa National Park

The Eastern Arc Mountains is the collective name used to describe a chain of mountain ranges in Kenya and Tanzania that are influenced by the climate of the Indian Ocean. Blanketed in ancient forests, which support literally thousands of taxa found n...

Categories: Udzungwa National Park


Zanzibar

For many centuries, traders from Europe, India, the Orient and Arabia were lured to these shores. It was from here explorer David Livingstone set off on his last expedition into the heart of the continent. Today, as you walk along the winding street...

Categories: Zanzibar


Tanzania not only has the highest mountain in Africa, (Kilimanjaro is 19,340 feet) but the longest and deepest lake, Tanganyika, which is over 4,000 feet deep and harbors many exotic looking species that exist only here. Lake Victoria, Africa's largest lake covering over 362,000 square miles, also borders this country. Remote beaches far north and south of Dar are beautiful. What is being developed are the Indian Ocean islands. Zanzibar has undergone a total facelift within the past decade, with many new hotels, renovated historical structures, and much improved infrastructure. Mafia and Pemba island have nice resort lodges and facilities for scuba divers. While it can be warm and humid on these islands, as well as the coast, interior Tanzania is crisp and ideal between May and September. (April-May are heavy rains.) For many years most tourists were confined to a Northern Circuit, but now there are new lodges in the south, especially in the Selous, the largest game reserve this side of Lake Chad. The best buys include ebony and soapstone carvings, gemstones, colorful fabrics, pipes, and sisal baskets. Tanzania has colorful cotton sarongs (khangas and kikois.).
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Tanzania


Tanzania's wild places are still gloriously wild. Roads run through them, of course, and they are spotted with campgrounds and lodges. But mostly the wildlife has these places to itself: huge herds of elephants and wildebeests, flocks of flamingos, silent families of giraffes, noisy packs of wild dogs. Lions have no trouble finding lunch; zebras skitter about, worried they'll be lunch; vultures wait to clean up.

The wild remains wild because it is protected. An estimated 28% of Tanzania is designated as national parks and game reserves—from the Serengeti in the north, which sweeps uninterrupted from neighboring Kenya's Masai Mara National Reserve, to Selous in the south, with its long distances and large variety of animals.

No area is more protected, by geography as well as by permit, than the Ngorongoro Crater, whose steep walls create a separate ecosystem with its own representative collection of animals. Combined, the crater, Serengeti and the Masai Mara represent one of the world's most important ecosystems, and it is estimated that some 3 million large animals inhabit this region. Many of them move around the plains of East Africa on the annual wildebeest migration, the largest movement of animals on Earth.

Because these spaces are protected—and because they are so wild—the best way to see them is by guided tour, locally known as safari, which means journey in Swahili. Even the most adventurous traveler will benefit from the guides' expertise: They know where the animals are, and they can take care of entry to the parks quickly and efficiently.

Although most visitors spend their time in the wildlife areas, travelers should make time for Tanzania's other attractions as well. The country boasts Mount Kilimanjaro, the tallest mountain in Africa and the highest mountain in the world that can simply be walked up. There are white-sand beaches on the Indian Ocean along the mainland coast. Then there are the impossibly exotic, evocative islands of the Zanzibar Archipelago, with their intriguing culture, architecture, watersports and wide range of beach accommodations. Tanzania's smaller, lesser-known parks are dedicated to not only big game but forests and mountain ranges, primates and birds, and the marine life along the coast.

The Tanzanian people are friendly and interesting, and there are more than 130 ethnic groups. Culturally, the country is fascinating and incredibly varied. Many of the peoples of the interior—for instance, the pastoralist Maasai and Barabaig, and the hunter-gatherer Hadzabe—still cling proudly to aspects of their traditional lifestyle and animist beliefs.

Despite the many different cultures, Tanzania has had a peaceful history and an enviable political stability compared to some of its neighboring countries.

Geography

Tanzania is located on the east coast of Africa, where it shares borders with eight other countries: Kenya and Uganda to the north; Rwanda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of the Congo to the west; and Zambia, Malawi and Mozambique to the south.

Tanzania is mostly highland plateau, which is bisected by the Great Rift Valley, a geological fault. The rift is dotted with volcanoes, most of which are dormant or extinct—notably mounts Kilimanjaro and Meru, respectively the tallest and fifth-tallest peaks in Africa.

In addition, the continent's largest three lakes, Victoria, Tanganyika and Nyasa-Malawi, all lie partially within Tanzania. Off the eastern coast, in the Indian Ocean, are several islands, including the Zanzibar and Mafia archipelagos. The coast supports a variety of environments, including patches of coastal forest, mangrove swamps and coral reefs.

History

Fossils dating back several million years indicate that some of the world's earliest humans lived in Tanzania. At the Olduvai Gorge, located between the Ngorongoro Crater and the Serengeti, fossils and relics of early humans and prehistoric animals have been unearthed. These include Australopithecus boisei (Nutcracker Man) and Homo habilis (Handy Man), fossilized human remains discovered with stone tools nearby, which are some of the earliest remains of humans ever found. For this reason Tanzania is often dubbed the Cradle of Mankind.

What is now mainland Tanzania was colonized by Germany in the 1880s and then fell under the control of the British in the aftermath of World War I. The British, who ruled the area as a League of Nations protectorate, never expected to stay long and, consequently, did little to improve the country's infrastructure. That set the stage for later difficulties. Tanganyika, the part of the nation on the African mainland, was granted independence in 1961, followed by the island-nation of Zanzibar two years later. In 1964, the two countries merged as the United Republic of Tanzania (a combination of the two names).

Tanzania began independence with high hopes. Julius Nyerere, called Baba wa Taifa ("Father of the Nation" in Kiswahili), became the first president. His idealistic development program was based on an African third way, neither capitalist nor communist. Its goals included decent health care, the establishment of a national language (important in a nation of 130 ethnic groups), increasing international prestige and universal literacy. He improved health conditions somewhat and expanded the usage of Swahili as the national lingua franca, but his economic policies were far less successful.

A declining economy, a bloated and corruption-ridden bureaucracy, the inability to feed a growing population and the failure of one-party democracy have all combined to drag the country deeper into poverty. A war with Uganda—Tanzania won, but it bankrupted itself to do so—and trade disputes with Kenya only made matters worse.

After Nyerere's resignation in 1985, his successor, Ali Hassan Mwinyi, reduced the government's control over the economy, a move intended to attract foreign investment and loans. Benjamin Mkapa, who was elected president in 1995 in the country's first multiparty elections, intensified those efforts. He worked with the World Bank and IMF to implement economic reforms and secure financial aid and debt relief, and was also involved in strengthening regional links with neighboring Kenya and Uganda, and the East Africa Regional Parliament and Court of Justice were opened in Arusha in 2001.

Having served his legal maximum of two presidential terms, Mkapa was succeeded by Jakaya Kikwete in the December 2005 general election, and Kikwete was re-elected in 2010. In 2015, Kikwete was succeeded by John Magufuli.

Tanzania's economy has benefited greatly from mining and mineral resource projects over recent years. Several large scale gold mines have opened in the in the Lake Victoria region since 1998, and Tanzania is now Africa's fourth largest gold producer after South Africa, Ghana and Mali. Additionally, natural gas extraction plants have been operating from the Songo Songo gas fields on the south coast since 2004. Tanzania also ranks among Africa's top earners from tourism.

Snapshot

Tanzania's main attractions are spectacular wildlife, Mount Kilimanjaro, scuba diving, beaches, deep-sea fishing and tribal culture.

Although Tanzania has long been considered East Africa's No. 2 tourist destination, lagging behind Kenya in infrastructure and tourist amenities, that situation is changing as Tanzania puts more emphasis on tourism. There are increasingly more direct flights from international carriers, and there is now an excellent internal air network operated by the domestic carriers that links the out-of-the-way places. Tourism has greatly benefited from road construction in the country, also, and in particular, the coast, the Serengeti and Ngorongoro Crater are now much more accessible. The wildlife parks and reserves feature a choice of upmarket lodges and tented camps, while on the islands (a geographic feature that Kenya doesn't have) are some of the most romantic and luxurious beach hideaways on the East African coast.

Potpourri

Made famous by the movie The Lion King, the saying hakuna matata s Swahili for "no problem," and seems to be an appropriate response to almost any request in Tanzania.

Cichlids, the colorful tropical fish that live in Lake Tanganyika (some are just a little more than 1 in/3 cm long), are popular for aquariums.

Wildebeest calves are up and running only four minutes after birth—just as well, as they are rich pickings for large scavengers and cats.

The gorgeous purple-flowered trees you see in some towns are jacarandas—not, oddly enough, indigenous to Africa, but a South American transplant.

The difference between the highest and lowest points in Tanzania is 20,518 ft/6,254 m. The highest is the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro, the lowest the floor of Lake Tanganyika—these are also the highest and lowest points on the whole of the African continent.




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