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The role of Prince Thimuni kaMudli kaJama in Zulu history with special reference to the activities of his sons, Ndlovu and Chakijana and their descendants, 1842-1980Madlala, Thembinkosi Ntokozo January 1900 (has links)
A dissertation submitted to the Fafulty of Arts in the fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in the Department of History at the University of Zululand, [1996]. / Every nation has its own heroes that form part of its history- The history of the blacks, the Zulus in particular, is characterized by heroism, but very little is nowadays known about our heroes.
The photo and the name of Prince TTiimuni appears in many books, but merely as an example of the traditional attire used by the hero warrior of AmaZuiu. No researcher has taken pains to trace the history of such a remarkable figure in the Zulu history.
Thimuni belonged to Zimpohlo regiment of inkosi Shaka Zulu. He helped Shaka in building a strong Zulu nation by defeating different izizwe. Before the end of the Battle of Ndondakusuka, he crossed Thukela river into the British colony of Natal. Thimuni and his brother Sigwefoana supported Mbuyazi instead of Cetshwayo. Sigwebana died in the battle and Thimuni took over his wives, resulting in the birth of Chakijana and Lokoza. Ndlovu became the son of Thimuni's own first wife, Mkhomoto.
The defeat of Mbuyazi resulted in strained relationship between Thimuni and the Zulu royal house.
When Thimuni reached Maphumuio, inkosi Mkhonto Ntult gave him part of his area where he became inkosi. Thimuni's sons, Ndlovu and Chakijana disputed the heirship and Thimuni separated them. Chakijana was told to go and occupy Mvoti area as inkosi. Both Thimuni's sons used the name Nodunga for their districts and that was in honour of their grandfather, Mudli, whose umuzi was Nodunga.
When the Bhambatha uprising broke out, Ndlovu and Chakijana sided with AmaZulu against the British government. That brought about reconciliation between them and the Zulu Royal House so that their sons Mbango and Piti communicated freely with the Zulu Royal House. Mbango's son, Manukanuka, was evicted in 1972 from his land by the South African government, the reason being that he communicated secreteiy with the British government against the loss of his land to Whites and Indians. The South African government sold Manukanuka's land for the part played by Chakijana in the Bhambatha uprising. Ubukhosi of Ndlovu's Nodunga No. 7 was only disturbed for a short period when Ndlovu was imprisoned. It was put under the Ngubane people under the chieftainship of Sibindi Ngubane of Mabomvini isizwe who made his brother, Mmeleli to be chief of Nodunga isizwe. However, when Ndiovu came back from exile ubukhosi was restored to him and his descendants.
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The history of abakwaMthethwaMthethwa, Absalom Muziwethu. January 1995 (has links)
A research project submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for B.A. Honours degree in the Department of History at the University of Zululand, South Africa, 1995. / AbaKwaMthethwa form a very important component of the
Zulu nation as we know it today. They were in fact
the vanguards in the implementation of the idea of a
confederation of smaller states (clans) under one
supreme ruler or a king who become their overlord.
The history of abaKwaMthethwa is so wide that one
would need volumes to do justice to it. This project
is only going to deal with their movement from around
uBombo mountains round about AD 1500 to 1818 when
king Dingiswyo was assassinated by Zwide, inkosi of
the Ndwandwe people.
This project will furthermore concentrate on the life
of Dingiswayo from the time he escaped death from his
father. The project also seeks to examine the
controversy surrounding Dingiswayo's formative
journey. It is intended that Dingiswayo's influence
and his contribution socially, politically, military
and economically to the upliftment of the Mthethwa
confederacy will be examined. Finally mention will
be made of the royal imizi, some principal imizi not
necessarily royal ones, as well as religious imizi
that are to be found at KwaMthethwa.
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King Dingane : a treacherous tyrant or an African nationalist?Shongwe, Acquirance Vusumuzi. January 2004 (has links)
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Arts in fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History at the University of Zululand, South Africa, 2004. / This thesis focuses on the reasons why King Dingane of the Zulu nation has
been portrayed predominantly as a treacherous tyrant in South Africa's
Eurocentric historical databases and poses the question whether he should,
instead, not be regarded as the forerunner of African nationalism. It also
examines the roots of European imperialism in South Africa, as recorded in
governmental, geographical, trade and missionary records, and points out that,
as with the first colonial invasion by Islam that resulted in the Tarikh chronicles,
European imperialism was also inherently based on foreign and nationalistic
biases. The study concludes that these preconceived notions have adulterated
and overwhelmed the purer African voice that is uniquely represented by the oral
tradition. Because the subdued African voice is regarded as more reliable than
the written Eurocentric records, this study attempts to augment the Africa-
centered work of Africanist historians who have, for several decades, revisited
the oral history of Africa in order to recover, rehabilitate and represent a point of
view and perspective intrinsic and special to Africa.
The history of King Dingane of the Zulus encapsulates the problem of African
historiography best because most of the sources from which accounts of his
reign are reconstructed are European, and for this reason, propagate a
Eurocentric bias. For example, while Eurocentric White historians are able to
present, in print, three eyewitness accounts of the death of Piet Retief, the
African point of view based on oral history is largely disregarded. This study
seeks to redress this imbalance by championing the African point of view,
which is considered to be not only sensible but also plausible and justifiable.
Likewise, much attention has been given to the many studies that demonise
King Dingane for the single act of viciously killing the purportedly innocent and
innocuous Voortrekkers, while the broad contours of context against which his
actions should be judged are disregarded. The purpose of this thesis is to
debunk the myth of King Dingane's unfairness and criminality. It can
therefore be interpreted as an effort at decriminalizing King Dingane's actions
- a dimension that earlier as well as contemporary scholars of African history
have hitherto ignored. It is hoped that in time similar studies on other issues
will broaden this perspective and help to create the balance so sorely missing
in Zulu history.
A theoretical framework for historical representation is provided in chapter
one of the study, while chapter two examines the mindset of the White
explorers that arrived in Africa, and their imperial agenda that sought to
control, drastically change and re-order everything. Chapter three attempts to
portray the greatness of King Dingane in dealing with matters of governance
as well as other issues that were to have a profound impact on the way in
which he came to be portrayed in history books. Chapter four discusses the
relationship between King Dingane and the British Settlers at Port Natal, while
chapter five deals with the relationships between King Dingane and the
Voortrekkers, who sought the very freedom from the British in the Cape
Colony that they were prepared to destroy among Africans in the Zulu
Kingdom. The final chapter deals with public history and perceptions about
King Dingane in the 21^' century. The two museums that commemorate Impi
yase Ncome/the Battle of 'Blood River' on 16 December are contrasted with
each other and their potential for nation building is examined in a critical light.
The central thesis of this study is that the historiography of the early years of
the 19'^ century inevitably, and perhaps even deliberately, represented King
Dingane as a tyrant with neither nationalistic proclivities nor stately qualities.
The popularity of this historiographic perspective is arguably symptomatic of a
hegemonic disciplinary praxis that seeks to privilege the principles of
selection, preference and bias in the use of the vast archive of sources
available to the historian, from the written to the oral source. To all intents and
purposes, this principle, which interpolates the discourse of history as well as
the producers and consumers of historical scholarship, has led to a limited,
over-determined and totalizing view of King Dingane. It is this biased
discourse that articulates with the dominant ideology that not only informed
scholarship, but also reflected the ideology of the institutions responsible for
shaping historiography.
A full analysis of the circumstances surrounding King Dingane at the time,
including the history, the culture, the political dynamics and the personalities
of the actors, leads one to the inexorable conclusion that this thesis arrives at
- namely that the king did what 'a king had to do.' It is furthermore concluded
that the evidence leads one to believe that King Dingane should be seen as a
forerunner of Black Nationalism, instead of being branded as a treacherous,
bloodthirsty tyrant.
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The dynamics of power and conflict in the Thukela-Mzimkhulu Region in the late 18th and early 19th centuries: a critical reconstructionWright, John January 1989 (has links)
A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Arts,
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in
fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of
Doctor of Philosophy / This dissertation sets out to trace the political history
of part of what is now Natal in the period from the third
quarter of the 18th century to the late 1820s. After
briefly describing the nature of political organization in
the region at the beginning of the period, it explains
how, in the later 18th century, several large
paramountcies emerged among the small-scale chiefdoms
which had previously been in exclusive occupation of the
area. It traces continuities between the conflicts which
brought about the formation of these larger polities and
the upheavals which, in the later 1810s and early 1820s,
totally transformed the region's political landscape. It
argues that the concept of the mfecane, which portrays
these upheavals as a product of the violent expansion of
the Zulu state, is based on colonial-made myths and is
devoid of analytical usefulness. It shows that A.T.
Bryant's supposedly authoritative account of the period of
the upheavals is very largely plagiarized from two minor
publications produced long before by Theophilus Shepstone.
It goes on to propose an alternative account which
demonstrates that the.Zulu state was simply one among a
number of important political actors in the ThukelaMzimkhulu
territories in the 1810s and 1820s. Though the
Zulu were eventually able to establish domination of the
region, they did not 'devastate' it, as conventionally
they are supposed to have done, and were unable
effectively to occupy more than a small part of it. The
Zulu were still in the process of establishing a hold on
the region when, in the mid-1820S, its political dynamics
began to be transformed by the increasing involvement of
British traders from Port Natal in the affairs of the Zulu
state. By the end of the 1820s, cape-based commercial and
political interests were beginning to contest Zulu
hegemony in the region south of the Thukela, and a new era
in its history was opening. / AC2017
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Kof' abantu, kosal' izibongo? : contested histories of Shaka, Phungashe and Zwide in izibongo and izithakazelo.Buthelezi, Mbongiseni. January 2004 (has links)
In this dissertation, I argue that there is a pressing need in post-apartheid KwaZulu-Natal to re-assess the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century histories of the region from the perspectives of people whose ancestry was dispossessed and/or displaced in the wars that took place in that period, particularly those that elevated Shaka to dominance. I suggest that because of their retrospective manipulation by the vested interests of power politics, historical processes over the past two centuries, and in the last century in particular, have invested the figure of King Shaka and 'Zulu' ethnic identities with unitary meanings that have made them close to inescapable for most people who are considered 'Zulu'. I argue that there is, therefore, a need to recuperate the histories of the clans which were defeated by the Zulu and welded into the Zulu 'nation'. Following British-Jamaican novelist Caryl Phillips' strategy, I begin to conduct this recuperation through a process of subverting history by writing back into historical records people and events that have been written and spoken out of them. I argue that literary texts, izibongo ('personal' praises) and izithakazelo (clan praises) in this case, offer a useful starting point in recovering the suppressed or marginalised histories of some of the once-significant clans in the region. In the three chapters of this dissertation, I examine the izibongo of three late eighteenth-/early nineteenth-century amakhosi (kings) in the present KwaZulu-Natal region, Shaka kaSenzangakhona of the Zulu clan, Phungashe kaNgwane of the Buthelezi and Zwide kaLanga of the Ndwandwe. In the first chapter, I read Shaka's izibongo as an instance of empire-building discourse in which I trace the belittling representations granted Phungashe and Zwide. In the second and third chapters, I set Phungashe's and Zwide's izibongo, respectively, as well as the histories carried in and alluded to by these texts, and the clans' izithakazelo, alongside Shaka's and examine the extent to which the two amakhosi's izibongo talk back to Shaka's imperialism. I also follow the later histories of the two amakhosi's clans to determine which individuals became prominent in the Zulu kingdom under Shaka and after, as well as point to the revisions of the past that are being conducted in the present by people of the two clans. The versions of the izibongo I study and the hypotheses of history I present are drawn from sources that include the James Stuart Archive, A.T. Bryant, and oral historical accounts from several people I interviewed. Given the present imperatives in South Africa of bringing justice to the various peoples who were dispossessed under colonial and apartheid domination, I argue that recuperating the histories of the clans that were conquered by the Zulu under Shaka's leadership problematises questions of justice in KwaZulu-Natal: if it is legitimate to claim reparation for colonialism and apartheid, then the Zulu kingdom should be viewed under the same spotlight because of the similar suffering it visited on many inhabitants of the region. In that way, we can transcend divisive colonial, apartheid and Zulu nationalist histories that continue to have strong, often negative, effects on the crossing of identity boundaries constructed under those systems of domination. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2004.
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White writers and Shaka ZuluWylie, Dan January 1996 (has links)
The figure of Shaka (c. 1780-1828) looms massively in the historical and symbolic landscapes of Southern Africa. He has been unquestioningly credited, in varying degrees, with creating the Zulu nation, murderous bloodlust, and military genius, so launching waves of violence across the subcontinent (the "mfecane"). The empirical evidence for this is slight and controversial. More importantly, however, Shaka has attained a mythical reputation on which not only Zulu self-conceptions, but to a significant degree white settler self-identifications have been built. This study describes as comprehensively as possible the genealogy of white Shakan literature, including eyewitness accounts, histories, fictions and poetry. The study argues that the vast majority of these works are characterised by a high degree of incestuous borrowing from one another, and by processes of mythologising catering primarily to the social-psychological needs of the writers. So coherent is this genealogy that the formation of an idealised notion of settler identity can be discerned, especially through the common use of particular textual "gestures". At the same time, while conforming largely to unquestioning modes of discourse such as popularised history and romance fiction, individual writers have attempted to adjust to socio-political circumstances; this study includes four close studies of individual texts. Such close stylistic attention serves to underline the textually-constructed nature of both the figure of Shaka and the "selves" of the writers. The study makes no attempt to reduce its explorations to a single Grand Unified Explanation, and takes eclectic theoretical positions, but it does seek throughout to explore the social-psychological meanings of textual productions of Shaka - in short, to explore the question, Why have white writers written about Shaka in these particular ways?
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Sources of succession disputes in respect of ubukhosi / chieftainship with regard to the Cele and Amangwane chiefdoms, KwaZulu-NatalNgubane, Mlungisi January 2005 (has links)
Submitted to the Faculty of Arts in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in the Department of Anthropology and Development Studies at the University of Zululand, 2005. / This dissertation seeks to take up the challenge of contributing to such an understanding of chieftainship by looking at the chieftainship succession disputes in the Cele clan of Phungashe and AmaNgwane clan of Bergville in the Province of KwaZulu -Natal, South Africa. The incorporation of indigenous political structures within the wider South African state has a long history, starting from the movements of people from one area to the other, the formation of smaller chiefdoms and bigger chiefdoms and to the rise of the Zulu kingdom. The entire process of Zulu state formation has been through a series of succession disputes which exist among many clans even nowadays.
Also, the role of successions runs from the arrangements of indirect rule at the latter part of the nineteen-century to the pivotal role played by traditional leaders in the homeland administration and after 1994, the recognition of the institution, status and role of traditional leadership in the country's first democratic constitution and the enactment of the Traditional Leadership and Governance Framework Act. No. 41 of 2003 which makes provision for the establishment of the Chieftainship Dispute Resolution Commission.
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The origin of the Mkhwanazi tribe under Mkhontokayise J. MkhwanaziSimelane, Antonio L. January 1993 (has links)
Submitted to the Faculty of Arts in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree B.A. Honours in the Department of History at the University of Zululand, South Africa, 1993. / The History of the Mkhwanazi tribe between the UMhIathuze and the
UMlalazi rivers in the east and west respectively and the Indian
Ocean and the Ongoye moun tains in the South and North is an off
shoot of the Mkhwanazi tribe of the chief Somkhele in the Hlabisa
district • Its history can be clearly' understood by first
looking at the history of the Mkhwanazi tribe in the Hlabisa district.
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The history and representation of the history of the Mabudu-TembeKloppers, Roelie J. 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--University of Stellenbosch, 2003. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: History is often manipulated to achieve contemporary goals. Writing or narrating history is not merely
a recoding or a narration of objective facts, but a value-laden process often conforming to the goals of
the writer or narrator. This study examines the ways in which the history of the Mabudu chiefdom has
been manipulated to achieve political goals. Through an analysis of the history of the Mabudu
chiefdom and the manner in which that history has been represented, this study illustrates that history is
not merely a collection of verifiable facts, but rather a collection of stories open to interpretation and
manipulation.
In the middle of the eighteenth century the Mabudu or Mabudu-Tembe was the strongest political and
economic unit in south-east Africa. Their authority only declined with state formation amongst the
Swazi and Zulu in the early nineteenth century. Although the Zulu never defeated the Mabudu, the
Mabudu were forced to pay tribute to the Zulu. In the 1980s the Prime Minister of KwaZulu,
Mangusotho Buthelezi, used this fact as proof that the people of Maputaland (Mabudu-land) should be
part of the Zulu nation-state.
By the latter part of the nineteenth century Britain, Portugal and the South African Republic laid claim
to Maputaland. In 1875 the French President arbitrated in the matter and drew a line along the current
South Africa/ Mozambique border that would divide the British and French spheres of influence in
south-east Africa. The line cut straight through the Mabudu chiefdom. In 1897 Britain formally
annexed what was then called AmaThongaland as an area independent of Zululand, which was
administered as ‘trust land’ for the Mabudu people. When deciding on a place for the Mabudu in its Grand Apartheid scheme, the South African
Government ignored the fact that the Mabudu were never defeated by the Zulu or incorporated into the
Zulu Empire. Until the late 1960s the government recognised the people of Maputaland as ethnically
Tsonga, but in 1976 Maputaland was incorporated into the KwaZulu Homeland and the people
classified as Zulu.
In 1982 the issue was raised again when the South African Government planned to cede Maputaland to
Swaziland. The government and some independent institutions launched research into the historic and
ethnic ties of the people of Maputaland. Based on the same historical facts, contrasting claims were
made about the historical and ethnic ties of the people of Maputaland.
Maputaland remained part of KwaZulu and is still claimed by the Zulu king as part of his kingdom.
The Zulu use the fact that the Mabudu paid tribute in the 1800s as evidence of their dominance. The
Mabudu, on the other hand, use the same argument to prove their independence, only stating that
tribute never meant subordination, but only the installation of friendly relations. This is a perfect
example of how the same facts can be interpreted differently to achieve different goals and illustrates
that history cannot be equated with objective fact.
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The people and their forest : an environmental history of the relationship between the Cube people and the iNkandla Forest, KwaZulu-Natal (1820-2000)Ngcobo, Thembisile Theresa (Doh) January 2002 (has links)
In southern Zululand in the province of KwaZulu-Natal within the iNkandla Magisterial District,
a rural area, lies the indigenous iNkandla forest. This is the last remaining rare relict type of
indigenous high wet rain forest in Southern Africa. This forest is of great importance not only for
its unique biodiversity, its perennial source of water, but also as a resource base for the Cube
people. This remote community lives mostly a traditional Zulu lifestyle in an area devoid of
basic infrastructure, municipal services or economic activity. The Cube people are reliant on the
forest resources for some of their daily basic material needs.
This dissertation is an examination of the relationship between the Cube people and the iNkandla
forest over time. The study investigates the ecology and biodiversity of the iNkandla forest. It
also describes the Cube people's lifestyle, history and the continuous utilisation of the forest
resources. The core focus of the study is that the iNkandla forest is not only an integral part of
the Cube people's lives, but also has a rich cultural history.
The research findings show that the daily activities of the Cube are impacting heavily on the
forest resources. In order to minimise negative environmental impacts, sustainable utilisation of
these resources needs to be established. This can enhance the relationship between the Cube
people and the forest. The people's view of the forest and its change with time is investigated.
The goods and services this forest provides to meet people's basic material needs portrays the
relationship between the people and the forest.
To sustain this relationship a model that illustrates a process that can be established and
implemented effectively is recommended. This process will empower the Cube people to make
constructive and effective choices and decisions. It will also inform the people of the sustainable
ways of utilising the forest resources and enhance their relationship with the natural resources.
The aim is to promote future developments that the Cube people are likely to see in future. This
will inform their understanding of sustainable utilisation of the forest resources for future
generations. Empowered people will recognise social principles for appropriate interactions with
nature.
The final part in this study revisits the theory of environmental history. It outlines briefly the
manner in which the environmental history theory has been applied. It also explains the reason
why the principles of environmental history have been adopted for this study. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2002
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