On 24 October 1964 C.E., the Union Jack came down over Lusaka and a new flag rose in its place. Northern Rhodesia — a territory Britain had controlled for more than 75 years — became the Republic of Zambia, with Kenneth Kaunda sworn in as its first president. Thousands gathered to watch. Across the continent, the moment landed as more than a national event. It was one more signal that the era of African colonial rule was ending.
Key facts
- Zambia independence: Northern Rhodesia officially became the Republic of Zambia on 24 October 1964 C.E., after Britain had administered the territory as a protectorate since 1924.
- Kenneth Kaunda: The leader of the United National Independence Party (UNIP) became Zambia’s first president, having led the independence movement through nonviolent mass organizing and sustained political pressure.
- Federation dissolution: Zambia’s path to independence accelerated after the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland was dissolved in December 1963 C.E., following years of resistance from Africans who had opposed forced federation from the start.
A territory, not a blank slate
The land that became Zambia had been home to human communities for an extraordinary span of time. Fossil remains near Broken Hill (now Kabwe) date to between 300,000 and 125,000 B.C.E. Ancient camping tools near Kalambo Falls have been dated to more than 36,000 years ago.
By around 300 C.E., Bantu-speaking peoples had begun settling across the region, joining the Khoisan and Batwa who had lived there for much longer. Over centuries, sophisticated states emerged — including parts of the Luba Kingdom, which ran extensive trade networks linking the Congo Basin to both the Atlantic and Indian Ocean coasts. The trading site of Ingombe Ilede in southern Zambia connected local merchants to traders from Great Zimbabwe, the Swahili Coast, and as far away as India and China.
When Britain declared Northern Rhodesia a protectorate in 1924 C.E., it was imposing external control over communities with deep, layered histories — not discovering an empty frontier.
The wind of change
In February 1960 C.E., British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan delivered his famous “Wind of Change” speech in Cape Town, acknowledging that African nationalism was a political force Britain could no longer ignore. His words were partly response to pressure from independence movements that had been building for years across the continent.
In Northern Rhodesia, the African National Congress of Zambia and then UNIP, under Kaunda’s leadership, organized boycotts, strikes, and political campaigns that made continued British administration increasingly untenable. The dissolution of the Central African Federation in December 1963 C.E. — itself a response to sustained African opposition — cleared the final constitutional path to self-rule.
Zambia was not alone. Between 1956 and 1966 C.E., more than 30 African nations gained independence. Each one was the result of organized, sustained work by Africans who had been asserting their rights long before formal independence arrived.
Lasting impact
Zambian independence carried significance well beyond its borders. The new government became a base of support for liberation movements still fighting across southern Africa — in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), South Africa, and Namibia. Lusaka hosted exiled activists and, at considerable risk, gave them political shelter during some of the most dangerous years of that struggle.
At home, independence opened Zambia’s school system to the full population for the first time. University of Zambia, founded in 1965 C.E., trained the doctors, engineers, and civil servants the country needed. Zambia today has one of the youngest and fastest-urbanizing populations in the world — a direct result of infrastructure investments and institutional development that began in the years after independence.
The copper boom of the late 1960s and early 1970s C.E. funded significant public investment. And while that boom eventually ended badly, the institutional foundations built during that period — a functioning civil service, national educational infrastructure, and a constitutional framework — remained.
Blindspots and limits
Independence did not resolve every tension colonialism had created. Zambia’s economy remained tightly dependent on copper exports, a vulnerability that became painfully clear when global copper prices collapsed in the mid-1970s C.E. Kaunda’s government also grew increasingly authoritarian over time, declaring a one-party state in 1972 C.E. — a reminder that independence and democracy are not always the same thing.
The voices of Zambian women in the independence movement have been less documented than those of male political leaders, even though women participated in boycotts, community organizing, and civil disobedience throughout the campaign. That record deserves more attention than it typically receives.
Colonial borders, drawn by Europeans with little regard for existing communities, created ethnic and regional tensions that Zambia — like many African nations — has had to manage ever since. The work of building a shared national identity across dozens of language groups has been real, ongoing, and largely unacknowledged by outside observers.
What 24 October 1964 C.E. meant
Independence days can be reduced to ceremonies — flags, speeches, the formal transfer of documents. But what happened in Lusaka in October 1964 C.E. reflected something much deeper: the end of a legal structure that had denied millions of people control over their own land, labor, and political future.
The people who made it happen — organizers, teachers, farmers, miners, and political leaders working across years and under real risk — did not appear from nowhere. They came from communities with long memories of self-governance, trade, and collective life. The United Nations Charter, signed in 1945 C.E., had enshrined the right of peoples to self-determination. Zambia’s independence was one more country making that principle real.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — History of Zambia: Independence and Cold War
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana establishes a marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Uganda reintroduces rhinos to Kidepo Valley
- The Good News for Humankind archive on Zambia
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