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Updated live from Wikipedia, last check: June 03, 2012 03:26 UTC (37 seconds ago)

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Mutara III (also known as Rudahigwa; 1912? – July 25, 1959) was the Mwami, or monarch of Rwanda between 1931 and 1959. As a member of the Tutsi people in Rwanda, stereotyped as tall, he stood a symbolic 6'8" tall. His Christian name was Charles Léon Pierre, and he is sometimes referred to as Charles Rudahigwa Mutara III or Rukabu.

Mutara was known for being the first Mwami to convert to Catholicism, spearheading a wave of baptisms in the protectorate, and for his ostentatious efforts to supplicate the Belgian rulers, at one point thanking "Christ-the-King to have given Rwanda the divine light of Belgian colonial administration along with its science of good government."[1]

Mutara died under mysterious circumstances on July 25, 1959, after a routine vaccination treatment administered by a Belgian doctor in Bujumbura, on the way back from a consultation with Belgian officials, in what many Rwandan consider to have been an assassination. Mutara was succeeded by his younger brother Jean-Baptiste Ndahindurwa as Kigeri V. After Mutara's death, his wife, Queen dowager Rosalie Gicanda, remained in Rwanda. She was murdered on April 22, 1994 during the Rwandan Genocide, under the orders of Capt. Idelphonse Nizeyimana by Lt. Pierre Bizimana.

See also

Preceded by
Yuhi V of Rwanda
King of Rwanda
1931-1959
Succeeded by
Kigeli V of Rwanda

References

  1. ^ Kalibwami, Justin. Le catholicisme et la société rwandaise: 1900-1962







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