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・ William Iddison
・ William Ifor Jones
・ William II
・ William II Canynges
・ William II Courtenay (1451-1512)
・ William II Crispo
・ William II de Cantilupe
・ William II de Haya
・ William II de La Marck
・ William II de Soules
・ William II Jordan
・ William II Longespée
・ William II of Agen
・ William II of Angoulême
・ William II of Baux
William II of Bimbia
・ William II of Bures
・ William II of Cagliari
・ William II of Dampierre
・ William II of England
・ William II of Geneva
・ William II of Holland
・ William II of Isenburg-Wied
・ William II of Narbonne
・ William II of Pernstein
・ William II of Provence
・ William II of Sicily
・ William II of the Netherlands
・ William II of Weimar
・ William II of Württemberg


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William II of Bimbia : ウィキペディア英語版
William II of Bimbia
Young King William, born Ngombe or Ngomb' a Bila〔Ardener offers both names: Ngombe on p. 48 and Ngomb' a Bila on p. 105.〕 (died 1882), was, as William II of Bimbia, the chief and king of Bimbia on the coast of Cameroon and of the Isubu ethnic group who lived there. Young King William inherited a kingdom where power was shifting from the monarchy to wealthy traders, a situation that only grew worse under William II's impotent rule. As competition for European trade among the coastal peoples of Cameroon grew more intense, young King William's rivals multiplied and his centralised authority crumbled. He was murdered in 1882.
==Reign==
Ngombe was born to King William I of Bimbia. As a Bimbian prince, Ngombe enjoyed a status equal to that of Isubu chiefs. On 31 March 1848, for example, he was among the signatories for an engagement ending human sacrifice in Bimbia.〔Ardener 355-6.〕 William I died sometime before 1877.〔Elango 55 explains that Acting () Consul Hopkins officially reported the death in December 1878, but that the real date is uncertain.〕 Bimbia had been in a state of almost perpetual war since its height in the early 19th century, as rival factions fought for favour with European traders. The power of the Isubu monarchy thus waned as well. Although Ngombe was next in the line of succession, his ascension was opposed by another claimant, known as Yellow Money. Acting Consul Hopkins of Great Britain was called in to settle the dispute, although his degree of input is not known. Ngombe won the contest and was crowned William II of Bimbia.〔Elango 55.〕
European traders and missionaries saw the new monarch as, in the words of Baptist missionary Thomas Comber, "a quiet, well-meaning, young man"〔Comber, 1877. Quoted in Ardener 141 note 4.〕 and dubbed him young King William. Despite his agreeable nature, young William inherited a state in tatters. His difficult accession was a symptom of the many inter-Isubu conflicts that characterised the coast. Wealth had become just as important as heredity in determining social status, which had allowed several rivals to William's primacy to emerge. Sometime between 1878 and 1879, Thomas Comber asked William to prevent a Bimbian man from being hanged for witchcraft. William expressed his agreement that something should be done but stated that he was too afraid to call the chiefs to a palaver in Williamstown, his capital. The king explained that Comber would have to get several other powerful Bimbian chiefs to agree to take action, since they had just as much power as William did.〔Elango 56.〕
Another of young William's major concerns was the Europeans' steady push inland. Although most of these explorers were missionaries, William feared that their efforts would result in direct trade with the inland tribes and the elimination of the Isubus' role as middlemen.〔 Baptist missionary Quintin Thomas described a confrontation with the king on a ship awaiting landfall at Bonjongo, a settlement of a rival ethnic group, the inland Bakweris:

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