Mtoni Palace Publication
The Mtoni Palace Publication is part of the larger Mtoni
Conservation Project, which was originated by the Department of Archives,
Museums and Antiquities of Zanzibar and Mtoni Marine Center in order to
safeguard the conservation of Mtoni Palace. Above parties have asked
ArchiAfrika to coordinate and execute part of their project, namely the
editing of a publication on Mtoni Palace. ArchiAfrika has involved three
students from the Technical University of Delft to do part of the
necessary research.
Historical background Mtoni Palace
Beit el Mtoni, which literally means the palace on the creek, was the
first and largest palace on Zanzibar during the reign of Sultan Said who
shifted his residence from Muscat in Oman to Zanzibar in 1828. The core
of the palace is probably even older. There is mention of an older
mansion owned by a Saleh B. Haramil al-Abry, who is supposed to be the
person who introduced clove growing to the island.
Around a thousand people lived in the palace and its direct surroundings
during the thirties to seventies of the nineteenth century. During
the1880s the palace was abandoned and fell into ruin.
In Mtoni palace princess Salme was born. She would become world famous
as Emily Ruete, the wife of a German merchant, who eloped with her to
Hamburg. In her beautiful book – Leben in Sultanspalast – Salme paints a
vivid and detailed picture of the bristling palace during her youth,
and, later on her sentimental journey back to Zanzibar in 1885, its
decay and ruin. The palace played a crucial role during the heyday of
the history of Zanzibar, when it was a place of immense wealth and great
power.
Mtoni Palace belongs, together with the old fort, Beit el Sahel (the
Palace Museum) and a few mosques to the eldest buildings on the island.
Mtoni Conservation Project
In January 2005 the long time existing public-private cooperation
between the Department of Archives, Museums and Antiquities of the
Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports of the Revolutionary
Government of Zanzibar (DAMA) and Mtoni Marine Center (MMC) was sealed
by a formal agreement on a 10-year lease of the palace premises to the
latter party. Mtoni Marine is one of the older tourist hotels in
Zanzibar and located right next to the Mtoni Palace Ruins. DAMA and MMC
both aim at preserving the oldest palace on Zanzibar. Therefore, their
partnership is referred to as the Mtoni Conservation Project.
Since the early nineties of last century, maintenance and repair works
have been jointly undertaken by the two above parties. The site was
cleared, weeds were removed from the ruins and salvaging works have been
carried out. Recently, piecemeal reconstruction of the palace baths has
commenced. These works are carried out by tradesman who have followed a
restoration course, and under supervision of DAMA.
MMC has cleared the gardens, replanted them with original species and
laid out a natural-historical trail through the grounds, which has
opened the site to the public.
Although the cooperation has proven to be successful, the efforts rely
on meager funds and a lot of goodwill. The available means are
unfortunately not sufficient to prevent further decay of the palace.
Constantly exposed to the elements, the original structure is being
severely damaged.
The Mtoni Conservation Project has therefore decided to start a new
project which aims at boosting the conservation budget by creating an
income-generating activity: the publication of a guidebook on Mtoni
Palace. ArchiAfrika has been asked to do the editing of this publication.
A guidebook for Beit el Mtoni
As a first step towards self-reliance of the Mtoni Conservation Project,
a guidebook is being prepared, that will raise awareness under the
public and institutions and simultaneously create revenue. The guidebook
is meant for a broad public. To the envisaged readers belong tourists to
Zanzibar, amateurs of African architecture and history and scholars on
the subject. The book is foreseen to be distributed locally but also
available abroad.
The book will consist of a historical and an architectural part. The
historical essay will zoom in on the advent of Omani rule on Zanzibar,
the life of Princess Salme and the decay of the palace.
The architectural part will consist of an architectural analysis of
Omani architecture in a Zanzibari context, the description of the palace
into detail along with a virtual reconstruction and ideas on the future
of the ruins. Foreseen authors will be both Zanzibar’ and foreign
experts in the field.
Involvement TU Delft
In order to find information on the initial shape and construction of
the palace, extensive research needs to be done. Therefore, the
Technical University of Delft in the Netherlands has been involved in
the project.
Three master students of the TU Delft have decided to do their final
thesis on Mtoni Palace. Karin Meijer, Susanne Pot and Xiaoguang Zhang,
have traveled to Zanzibar to do research at the National Archives, to
talk to local experts and execute excavations under supervision of Dr.
Abdurahman M. Juma at the palace premises. The outcome of their research
will be used in the Mtoni Palace Publication.
All three students will graduate on a personal design for the future use
of Mtoni Palace. This could vary from a complete reconstruction of the
old palace, to minimal measures for the protection of the existing ruins.
The final designs will be handed over to the Mtoni Conservation Project
Team and might give them new ideas for the future conservation of Mtoni
Palace.
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Project Team Mtoni Conservation Project
Department of Archives, Museums and Antiquities (DAMA) - Dr. Hamad Omar
Mtoni Marine Center - Nicola Colangelo
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Project Team Publication
Mtoni Conservation Project:
Stefanie Schötz – overall project coordinator Zanzibar
ArchiAfrika:
Anne-Katrien Denissen – editing project coordinator ArchiAfrika
Antoni Folkers – chief editor
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This project is supported by: