Total population | |
---|---|
Tanzanian-born residents 32,630 (2001 census) 35,994 (2011 census) Other population estimates 100,000 (Tanzanian organisations' 2009 estimate) | |
Regions with significant populations | |
London, Birmingham, Reading, Manchester, Milton Keynes | |
Languages | |
Swahili, English, and many other Languages of Tanzania | |
Religion | |
Anglicanism, Pentecostalism, Catholicism, Lutheranism, Sunni Islam, Animism. | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Black British, Asian British, Africans in United Kingdom, Kenyan migration to the United Kingdom, Ugandan migration to the United Kingdom |
Tanzanians in the United Kingdom are citizens or residents of the United Kingdom whose ethnic or national origins lie fully or partially in Tanzania. The Tanzanian community in the UK is the largest of any OECD nation and is ethnically diverse, consisting of indigenous Black Africans alongside thousands of East African Asians who fled from violence during the Zanzibar Revolution.[1]