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Mzilikazi

 
Biography: Mzilikazi

Mzilikazi (ca. 1795-1868) was a southern African warrior leader who, after being driven out of his homeland, created the Ndebele, or Matabele, kingdom.

Ayounger son of the Kumalo chieftain Mashobane, Mzilikazi spent his early life in the north of what was later to become the Zulu kingdom. During his young manhood, the Kumalo were victims of a power struggle between the Zulu chief, Shaka, and the Ndwandwe chief, Zwide. The latter, Mzilikazi's maternal grandfather, had Mashobane killed, but Mzilikazi, who was elevated to the vacant Kumalo chieftainship, identified his interests with the rising star of Shaka.

Although Shaka's program of conquest and expansion commonly involved the elimination of members of former chiefly houses, Mzilikazi received specially favored treatment and seems to have been left, after the destruction of the Ndwandwe (ca. 1818), with the authority of a territorial subchief on the northern marches of the new Zulu kingdom.

In 1823, after endangering his position by refusing to surrender to Shaka certain cattle captured in a raid, Mzilikazi fled Zululand. With a few hundred warriors he began a career of conquest that contributed to the Difaqane, a violent upheaval among the South African chiefdoms of the interior, which produced political consolidation in certain areas but left much of the central plateau practically uninhabited.

Shifting westward, in stages, across the Transvaal, Mzilikazi eventually settled at Mosega on the Marico River. These moves gave him greater geographical security and enhanced his power. By piecemeal conquest and absorption of Transvaal Sotho groups and by incorporating Nguni refugees from Zululand, his Ndebele state became the dominant power on the "highveld," with an army trained and regimented on the Zulu pattern.

In 1836 Mzilikazi was faced by Trekkers (immigrant Boers, or Afrikaners, from the Cape) seeking lands beyond the area of British control. Although he was by no means ill-disposed toward whites and developed a close friendship with the missionary Robert Moffat, Mzilikazi determined to repulse these uninvited intruders. However, firearms gave the Trekkers and their black supporters an advantage that was ultimately decisive. In January 1837 Mosega was sacked, and in a 9-day battle in November Mzilikazi's warriors were defeated.

An epic journey followed in which the Ndebele made their way northward in two contingents and at last established a new "Matabeleland" beyond the Limpopo. Here, in a portion of the former Rozwi empire, Mzilikazi's Nguni followers and their Sotho adherents superimposed themselves on Shona people and built a military monarchy based on a caste system that only slowly lost its definition.

Mzilikazi is commonly remembered as a marauder who left a trail of devastation in his wake, but his achievement was also a constructive one. Although the Ndebele state collapsed less than 30 years after his death under the tide of white advance, one of the praise-names by which the "Matabele" of Rhodesia remember him is Umdabuli we Sizwe, the Maker of the Nation.

Further Reading

Peter Becker, Path of Blood (1962), is a popular account of the rise and conquests of Mzilikazi, based on oral tradition and written sources. It should be supplemented by A.T. Bryant, Olden Times in Zululand and Natal (1929), and J.D. Omer-Cooper, The Zulu Aftermath (1966). Also helpful is Monica Wilson and Leonard Thompson, eds., The Oxford History of South Africa (1969).

Additional Sources

Knight, Ian, Warrior chiefs of Southern Africa: Shaka of the Zulu, Moshoeshoe of the BaSotho, Mzilikazi of the Matabele, Maqoma of the Xhosa, Poole, Dorset: Firebird Books; New York, NY: Distributed in the United States by Sterling Pub. Co., 1994.

Rasmussen, R. Kent., Migrant kingdom: Mzilikazi's Ndebele in South Africa, London: Collings, 1978.

Rasmussen, R. Kent., Mzilikazi of the Ndebele, London: Heinemann Educational, 1977.

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Wikipedia: Mzilikazi
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Mzilikazi Khumalo
King of Matabeleland
Mzilikazi~detail.jpg
King Mzilikazi, as portrayed by Captain William Cornwallis Harris, circa 1836
Reign ca. 1823 - 1868
Coronation ca. 1820
Born ca. 1790
Birthplace Mkuze, South Africa
Died 9 September 1868
Place of death Matabeleland, buried in a cave at Entumbane, Matobo Hills, Zimbabwe (on 4 November 1868)
Predecessor Founder (father murdered; formerly a lieutenant Zulu King Shaka)
Successor Lobengula
Consort several wives
Offspring Lobengula (son), Nkulumane (son), and many others
Royal House Khumalo; founder of the Ndebele people
Father Matshobana KaMangete (c. late 1700s — c. 1820s),
Mother Nompethu KaZwide, daughter of Chief Zwide of the Ndwandwe people (tribe).

Mzilikazi (meaning The Great Road) (ca. 1790 - 9 September 1868), also sometimes called Mosilikatze, was a Southern African king who founded the Matabele kingdom (Mthwakazi), Matabeleland, in what became Rhodesia and is now Zimbabwe. He was born the son of Matshobana near Mkuze, Zululand (now part of South Africa) and died at Ingama, Matabeleland (near Bulawayo, Zimbabwe). Many consider him to be the greatest Southern African military leader after the Zulu king Shaka. In his autobiography, David Livingstone referred to him as the second most impressive leader he encountered on the African Continent.

Contents

Leaving Zululand

He took his tribe, the Khumalo, on an 800 km long journey from Zululand to what is now called Zimbabwe. Along the way he showed considerable statesmanship, as he was able to weld his own people and the many tribes he conquered into a large and ethnically diverse but centralised kingdom.

He was originally a lieutenant of Shaka, but in 1823 he had a quarrel with him and rebelled. Rather than face ritual execution, he fled northwards with his tribe. He first travelled to Mozambique but in 1826 he moved west into the Transvaal due to continued attacks by his enemies. As he conquered the Transvaal he absorbed many members of other tribes and established a military despotism, such as Mzilikazi's attacks in the Nzunza kraal at Esikhunjini, where the Nzunza king Magodongo and others were kidnapped and subsequently killed at Mkobola river. For the next ten years, Mzilikazi dominated the Transvaal. This period, known locally as the Mfecane (crushing) was characterised by devastation and murder on a grand scale as Mzilikazi removed all opposition and remodelled the territory to suit the new Ndebele order. The death toll has never been satisfactorily determined but the region was so depopulated that the Trekboers were able to occupy and take ownership of all the best land in the 1830s due to the low population of the area.[1][2]

Meeting the Boers

The Boers began to arrive in Transvaal in 1836, and after several confrontations over the next two years the Ndebele suffered heavy losses. By early 1838, Mzilikazi was forced north across the Limpopo and out of Transvaal altogether. Further attacks first caused him to move west again to present-day Botswana and then later northwards towards what is now Zambia. He was unable to conquer the land there due to the prevalence of tsetse fly-borne diseases of oxen. Mzilikazi travelled southeastwards to what became known as Matabeleland (situated in the southwest of present-day Zimbabwe) and settled there in 1840.

After his arrival, he organised his followers into a military system with regimental kraals, similar to those of Shaka, which became strong enough to repel the Boer attacks of 1847 - 1851 and persuade the government of the South African Republic to sign a peace treaty with him in 1852.

Matabele Kingdom

While Mzilikazi was generally friendly to European travellers, he remained mindful of the danger they posed to his kingdom and he usually refused visitors any access to his realm. Some exceptions included Robert Moffat the missionary.

During the tribe's wanderings north of the Limpopo Mzilikazi became separated from the bulk of the tribe who gave him up for dead and hailed his young heir Nkulumane as successor. However, on his reappearance after a traumatic journey through the Zambezi valley, Mzililazi asserted control and had his son and all those chiefs who had chosen him put to death. They were all executed by being cast over a steep cliff of a hill now called Ntabazinduna (Hill of the Chiefs). He made his capital 5 km away and named it Gu-Bulawayo which means "place of slaughter". King Shaka's capital was also called Bulawayo. [3][4]

References

  1. ^ Path Of Blood; Peter Becker,2nd edition, Penguin Books 1979
  2. ^ Mhudi; Sol Plaatje, Lovedale Press, Johannesburg 1930
  3. ^ Path of Blood, Becker, P., Penguin Books, (1979)
  4. ^ The Zulus and Matabele, Warrior Nations, Glen Lyndon Dodds, Arms and Armour Press (1998)

Literature

External links


 
 
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Matabeleland
Ndebele (people, Zimbabwe)
Lobengula

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