During the first 10 years (1963-74) of a new Medical Ophthalmology Unit, 368 of 3,930 admissions had endogenous uveitis, anterior in 215 (58 per cent.), posterior in 65 (18 per cent.), and generalized in 88 (24 per cent.). Acute uveitis in 153 patients tended to have a short course counted in months, whereas in 215 with chronic uveitis the condition was measured over years, punctuated by relapses. Sex distribution was equal. At the time of initial presentation, 60 per cent. of patients were aged 20 to 40 years, 8 per cent. were under 20, and 10 per cent. were over 60 years of age.