Bungoma District
Bungoma District was a district in the former Western Province of Kenya. Its capital town was Bungoma. It had an area of 2,069 km2.[1]
In 1956, Elgon Nyanza District was split from North Nyanza District. The new district was headquartered at Bungoma.[2][3] In 1963, the district was split into two districts: Bungoma and Busia, all within Western Province.[4]
By 2005, Bungoma District was completely nonexistent after it had been divided into smaller districts, namely; Mt. Elgon, Bungoma East, Bungoma North, Bungoma South, and Bungoma West. All with a total population of 1,375,063.[5]
In 2010, after the promulgation of the new constitution of Kenya, counties were to be created based on the districts of Kenya as at 1992. This effectively led to the creation of Bungoma County.
Administration
[edit]Local authorities (councils) | |||
Authority | Type | Population* | Urban pop.* |
---|---|---|---|
Bungoma | Municipality | 60,650 | 44,196 |
Kimilili | Municipality | 71,299 | 10,261 |
Webuye | Municipality | 48,806 | 19,606 |
Malakisi | Town | 38,004 | 3,762 |
Sirisia | Town | 22,703 | 822 |
Bungoma County | County | 635,029 | 10,852 |
Total | - | 876,491 | 89,499 |
* 1999 census. Source: [1] |
Administrative divisions | |||
Division | Population* | Urban pop.* | Headquarters |
---|---|---|---|
Bumula | 129,011 | 0 | |
Central | 60,605 | 0 | |
Chwele | 41,174 | 2,677 | Chwele |
Kanduyi | 163,568 | 38,407 | Bungoma |
Kimilili | 96,674 | 9,631 | Kimilili |
Malakisi | 36,042 | 3,341 | Malakisi |
Ndivisi | 57,336 | 1,905 | |
Sirisia | 44,088 | 769 | Sirisia |
Tongaren | 133,296 | 5,313 | |
Webuye | 114,697 | 18,257 | Webuye |
Total | 876,491 | 79,490 |
The district had five constituencies:
- Kimilili Constituency
- Webuye Constituency
- Sirisia Constituency
- Kanduyi Constituency
- Bumula Constituency
References
[edit]- ^ statoids.com – Districts of Kenya
- ^ "description of the districts and provinces". Syracuse University. p. 6. Retrieved 1 October 2023.
- ^ Makana, Nicholas E. (2009-01-01). "Metropolitan Concern, Colonial State Policy and the Embargo on Cultivation of Coffee by Africans in Colonial Kenya: the Example of Bungoma District, 1930–1960". History in Africa. 36: 315–329. doi:10.1353/hia.2010.0007. ISSN 0361-5413.
- ^ "Kenya Gazette dated 2nd April, 1963" (PDF). Gazettes.Africa. Retrieved 1 October 2023.
- ^ "The 2009 Kenya Population and Housing Census" (PDF). Amazonaws. p. 198. Retrieved 28 September 2023.