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Understanding the socio-political status of Leokwe society during the Middle Iron Age in the Shashe-Limpopo Basin through a landscape approachDu Piesanie, Justine 22 May 2009 (has links)
Calabrese (2005) identified two distinct ceramics styles in the Shashe-
Limpopo basin at the same time – Leokwe and K2. This is the first record of ethnicity
in the Iron Age of southern Africa.
With this identification come new avenues for research. How these groups
interacted, and their relative status through time is the focus of my research.
According to Calabrese, some Leokwe groups maintained a higher, or at least
equal status on initial contact with K2, before K2 became the dominant political
group. He bases this claim on the identification of what he terms ‘Elite Symbolic
Objects’ at sites, such as Castle Rock.
Using GIS, it is clear that the locale of sites differ within the landscape.
Specifically, locations vary through time on the escarpment and floodplain and their
relationship to primary and secondary resources. This variation suggests that access
to resources was controlled, and this implication influences ones assessment of the
relative status of K2 and Leokwe groups.
Additionally, new excavations at Castle Rock call into question the validity of
‘elite symbolic objects’ in determining status.
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Resilient Landscapes: socio-environmental dynamics in the Shashi-Limpopo Basin, southern Zimbabwe c. AD 800 to the presentManyanga, Munyaradze January 2006 (has links)
<p>The general perception today is that the Shashi-Limpopo Basin in southern Africa is hot and dry and not conducive to human habitation. Today there is no doubt that the Shashi-Limpopo Basin has been home to many communities throughout the pre-historical period. A study of the changing ecological conditions in the Mateke Hills and the Shashi-Limpopo Valley as well as historical and present day land-usage offers an alternative explanation of how prehistoric communities could have interacted with this changing landscape. The archaeological record, historical sources and recent land-use patterns show that settlement location has always been orientated towards the rivers and circumscribed environments. The mosaic of floodplains, wetlands, drylands and circumscribed zones provided the ideal ecological setting for the development of socio-political complexity in southern Africa. The resilience of these semi arid savanna regions together with human innovation and local knowledge ensured that societies continued to derive subsistence even in the face of seasonal variability in rainfall and even climate change.</p>
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Resilient Landscapes: socio-environmental dynamics in the Shashi-Limpopo Basin, southern Zimbabwe c. AD 800 to the presentManyanga, Munyaradze January 2006 (has links)
The general perception today is that the Shashi-Limpopo Basin in southern Africa is hot and dry and not conducive to human habitation. Today there is no doubt that the Shashi-Limpopo Basin has been home to many communities throughout the pre-historical period. A study of the changing ecological conditions in the Mateke Hills and the Shashi-Limpopo Valley as well as historical and present day land-usage offers an alternative explanation of how prehistoric communities could have interacted with this changing landscape. The archaeological record, historical sources and recent land-use patterns show that settlement location has always been orientated towards the rivers and circumscribed environments. The mosaic of floodplains, wetlands, drylands and circumscribed zones provided the ideal ecological setting for the development of socio-political complexity in southern Africa. The resilience of these semi arid savanna regions together with human innovation and local knowledge ensured that societies continued to derive subsistence even in the face of seasonal variability in rainfall and even climate change.
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