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Sources of the African Past
Sources of the African Past
Sources of the African Past
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Sources of the African Past

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Sources of the African Past combines a case-study approach with an emphasis on primary and orally transmitted sources to accomplish three objectives; to tell a story in some depth, to portray major themes and to raise basic questions of analysis and interpretation. The case studies are set in the nineteenth century and deal with critical periods in the fortunes of five societies in different parts of the continent (South, East, and West Africa). The authors wish students to work with the "raw" materials of history and to that end have provided a workbook for a "laboratory" experience.

Sources of the African Past is designed for use in a wide variety of courses and in conjuction with other texts. The authors have kept their own interpretations to a minimum and invited scrutiny of their decision of selection and arrangement. They chose the cases on the basis of several criteria: geographical coverage, abundance and diversity of primary sources, importance in the secondary literature, and relevance to important historical problems. All the studies emphasize political change. All witness some growth in European intervention.

In selecting the documents, the authors sought a balance of perspective without sacrificing accuracy and relevance. This means a conscious effort to present a variety of views: African and European, internal and external, partipant and observer, those of the victims as well as those of the victors, those of the "people" as well as those of the elite. Within the limitations of space, they have made the excerpts sufficiently long to allow the reader to examine the author's style, purpose and other characteristics. Keeping in mind the limitations of libraries, they have attemted to make each chapter self-contained.

LanguageEnglish
PublisheriUniverse
Release dateJun 21, 1999
ISBN9781475923544
Sources of the African Past
Author

David Robinson

David Robinson, MDiv, DMin Dave has been many things, including business owner, painter, sculptor, creative writer, mentor, counselor, and professor. He is the Director of Creative Interfaces, a nonprofit focused on fostering creativity, personal growth, and spiritual development. The website is creativeinterfaces.org. He lives with his wife, Karen, in Marin County, California, where they have hosted creative events and managed a community house for over twenty years.

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    Sources of the African Past - David Robinson

    Contents

    List of Maps

    List of Plates

    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

    Introduction

    SOURCES OF THE AFRICAN PAST

    Chapter One Shaka, Dingane and the Forging of the Zulu State

    Chapter Two To Build a Nation; The Story of Moshweshwe

    Chapter Three From Autocracy to Oligarchy in Buganda

    Chapter Four The Jihad of Uthman and the Sokoto Caliphate

    Chapter Five Osei Bonsu and the Political Economy of the Asante Empire

    Endnotes

    List of Maps

    1.1 Zululand and Natal on the eve of Shaka’s rise to power

    1.2 General direction of population movements of the Mfecane

    1.3 Eastern South Africa c. 1836

    2.1 Lesotho c. 1840

    2.2 Lesotho and the Napier and Warden Lines

    2.3 Lesotho under British rule

    3.1 Bugandain 1900

    3.2 The capital area

    3.3 The royal enclosure at Mengo Palace

    4.1 Trans-Saharan trading networks

    4.2 Hausalandc. 1750 with approximate boundaries of states

    4.3 Hornemann’s map of Hausa

    4.4 Clapperton’s plan of the town of Kano

    4.5 Main battles and offensives of the jihad 1804-5

    4.6 The Fulani empires of Gwandu and Sokoto c. 1812

    5.1 The Gold Coast, Asante and major road networks in the early nineteenth century

    5.2 The Asante Empire showing main directions of expansion in the eighteenth century

    5.3 Bowdich’s map of Kumasi in 1817

    5.4 The Fante states

    List of Plates

    1.1 A sketch of Dingane’s capital at Mgungundhlovu and the extermination of Retief’s party (see Document 37)

    1.2 The interior of Dingane’s house

    1.3 A sketch of Shaka executed on the basis of recollections

    1.4 Dingane in his ordinary and dancing dress

    2.1 Thaba Bosiu, capital of Lesotho in the days of Moshweshwe

    2.2 Moshweshwe’s method of consolidation and expansion. Morija mission (foreground) in conjunction with Letsie’s village (middle left) and Molapo’s village (centre) (see pages 50-55)

    2.3 Moshweshwe in 1833

    2.4 A sketch of a man from Lesotho made in the 1830s

    3.1 A scene from the court in the early 1860s

    3.2 Mutesa and his chiefs during Stanley’s visit (see Document 8)

    3.3 A naval battle between Buganda and a foe on the eastern frontier

    3.4 Mwanga in 1893

    4.1 Kano in the 1850s (see Document 3)

    4.2 The Sokoto market in the 1850s

    4.3 Al-Kanemi of Bornu (see Document 23)

    4.4 Bodyguard of al-Kanemi

    5.1 The Pra River, dividing the Asante heartland from the southern provinces

    5.2 Bowdich’s sketch of Kumasi (see page 165)

    5.3 Palace of the king’s nephew and Dupuis’ residence

    5.4 Asante priests invoking the national deities (see Document 24)

    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

    Maps 1.1 and 1.2 are adapted from J. D. Omer-Cooper, The Zulu Aftermath (Evanston, Northwestern Press, 1969) and Cambridge History of Africa, Vol. 5. The source for Map 1.3 is M. Wilson and L. M. Thompson, eds, Oxford History of South Africa, Vol. I (1969).

    The maps in Chapter Two are adapted from L. M. Thompson, Survival in Two Worlds (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1976). Map 2.1 is adapted from Omer-Cooper, op. cit.

    In Chapter Three, the map of Buganda in 1900 is adapted from M. S. M. Kiwanuka, A History of Buganda (Longman, Harlow, 1972), and the plans of the capital area and the royal enclosure are from J. F. Faupel, African Holocaust (P. J. Kenedy, New York, 1962).

    In Chapter Four, Map 4.1 is adapted from John D. Fage, An Atlas of African History (Edward Arnold, London, 1963). The map of Hausaland c. 1750 and the two maps showing the main battles and offensives of the jihad, 1804-1805, and the Fulani empires of Gwandu and Sokoto c. 1812, are from M. Hiskett, Sword of Truth (Oxford University Press, New York, 1973). Maps 4.3 and 4.4 are taken from E. W. Bovill, ed, Missions to the Niger (Cambridge University Press for Hakluyt), Vol. I.

    In Chapter Five, the map showing the great roads of Asante in the early nineteenth century is adapted from I. Wilks, Asante in the Nineteenth Century (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1975) and from M. Priestley, West African Trade and Coast Society (Oxford, 1969). The map of the Asante Empire is from J. Ajayi and M. Crowder, eds, History of West Africa (Longman, Harlow, 1971), Vol. I. Bowdich’s map of Kumasi in 1817 is from Kwamina Dickson, A Historical Geography of Ghana (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1969). The Fante states map is adapted from J. Fynn, Asante and its Neighbours (Longman, Harlow, 1971).

    Introduction

    As a field of history, Sub-Saharan Africa has grown rapidly since the Second World War under the impulse of decolonization and independence. Educators now face the problem of developing adequate curricular resources both in Africa, where indigenous history is finally finding its rightful place, and abroad, where misconceptions about Africa are still rampant.

    Developing these resources is not an easy task. One difficulty is the fragmentation of the subject matter. The continent lacks common institutions and identities; even the colonial territories combined many pre-colonial nations and cultures. Consequently, one cannot find a central tradition, comparable to the growth of the English monarchy or the spread of Islam in the Mediterranean basin, upon which to build a narrative and an interpretation. A second problem is the very high proportion of European and European-filtered materials in the available documentation. This stems in part from the relatively weak traditions of literacy in the pre-colonial period and in part from the Western domination of the last hundred years. Taken together, the fragmentation and the disproportion in the documentation have encouraged the production of microscopic monographs and macroscopic surveys. The middle ground of interpretative literature on the common problems of selected African societies has been neglected.

    Sources of the African Past is an effort to confront these issues. As distinguished from surveys, anthologies and specialized documentary collections, it combines a case-study approach with an emphasis on primary and orally transmitted sources to accomplish three objectives: to tell a story in some depth, to portray major themes and to raise basic questions of analysis and interpretation. The case studies are set in the nineteenth century and deal with critical periods in the fortunes of five societies in different parts of the continent. We have assumed that students desire to work with the raw materials of history, and to that end we have provided a workbook for a ‘laboratory’ experience.

    Sources is designed for use in a wide variety of courses and in conjunction with other texts. We have kept our own interpretation to a minimum and invited scrutiny of our decisions of selection and arrangement. We chose the cases on the basis of several criteria: geographical coverage, abundance and diversity of primary sources, importance in the secondary literature, and relevance to the historical problems discussed below. All the studies emphasize political change. All witness some growth in European influence, ending in three instances with substantial European intervention.

    In selecting the documents we sought a balance of perspective without sacrificing accuracy and relevance. This meant, in effect, a conscious effort to present a variety of views: African and European, internal and external, participant and observer, those of the victims as well as those of the victors, those of ‘the people’ as well as those of the elite. In practice, it was often difficult to give voice to the victims and ‘the people’, but this is not a problem peculiar to African history. Within the limitations of space, we have tried to make the excerpts sufficiently long to allow the reader to examine the author’s style, purpose and other characteristics. Keeping in mind the limitations of libraries, we have attempted to make each chapter self-contained.

    The Zulu and Sotho chapters constitute a study in contrast in South Africa. Starting with basically similar forms of social organization, the Zulu created a highly centralized and predatory state under Shaka, while the Sotho developed a more defensively-oriented polity based on consultation through the leadership of Moshweshwe.¹

    The Buganda chapter deals with a period of revolutionary change in East Africa when indigenous Muslims, Protestants, Catholics and traditionalists struggled over power and the identity of the nation. Like the Zulu, the Baganda emphasized military prowess. Like the Sotho, they demonstrated substantial receptivity to the foreign religions and cultures brought to their kingdom. This study ends in 1900 with the full implementation of British rule and consequently offers, together with the South African units, a background for the consideration of European conquest and colonialism.²

    The study of the Sokoto Caliphate portrays the culmination of a process of Islamic reform in the Central Sudan. Using translations of Arabic works in addition to other sources, we have stressed the life of Uthman dan Fodio, the mixture of planning and coincidence in the execution of the ‘holy war’, and the ambiguities involved in implementing a vision of a reformed society.³

    Like the Sokoto chapter, the Asante story is set in the first quarter of the nineteenth century. The Asante Empire controlled the junction of the trading routes north to Sokoto and the savanna with roads leading south to the coast. The sources are principally Dutch and English, while much of the action turns on Asante efforts to control the coast after the British began campaigning against the transatlantic slave trade.⁴

    A Reader’s Guide

    The chapters of Sources are organized into several parts. Each case study begins with a brief introduction and maps designed to familiarize the reader with the people and places to be studied. At the end of each chapter, the reader will find several ‘Aids to Understanding’, consisting of a chronology, glossary, essay of questions and bibliographical material. We recommend consulting the essay of questions before as well as after reading the story. In it we have elaborated on the controversies and issues of importance for the historian, subsuming them under the following categories: the use of sources and interpretation; the state and its leadership; trade, diplomacy, technology and the European presence; social, cultural and religious values. The questions encourage comparisons between the case studies. An index relates the major themes of the various chapters. The bibliographical essay is designed to show the principal secondary sources we have used and to suggest further reading. All the primary and secondary works which have been consulted or cited are found in the bibliography.

    In the Documentary Narrative which forms the bulk of each chapter, we have integrated selections from the sources and explanatory remarks to form a coherent story. Before each document we give notes on words and expressions in the text. Expressions which appear in a number of texts are picked up in the glossary. In the documents, all comments in parenthesis are by the original author; our editorial comments are bracketed.

    Common Problems and Themes

    In what follows we have sought to reflect upon common elements in the five chapters in the hope of assisting those using this material. In terms of sources and interpretation, the case studies share a number of the fundamental difficulties of African history. First, all except Sokoto suffer from a disproportionately large European contribution to the documentation. In the East and South African instances, that contribution comes to a great degree from missionaries, whose values and goals often clashed with those of the local society. Second, much of the material deals with the elite and the court. This is perceived most acutely in Asante and Buganda, but it is present throughout. Finally, in the Sokoto and South African examples the founders of the new regimes loom so large in the minds of their contemporaries and succeeding generations that the record is distorted.

    Such problems are not insoluble and the effort to confront them can be particularly rewarding for the student of history. The European material is not monolithic.

    Much of the distortion can be corrected by comparing Protestant, Catholic and administrative sources in Buganda, Wesleyan and Paris Mission documents in Lesotho, and Dutch and English accounts in Asante. There is good reason to believe that some European texts, such as the minutes of meetings with Moshweshwe between 1848 and 1852, accurately reflect the thoughts of the African actors. The elite bias is more difficult to surmount, but differences within the ruling classes do appear, such as those between Abdullah and Muhammad Bello in Sokoto. Records of the victims of ‘holy war’, the tribes displaced by Shaka, and the chiefs who revolted against Asante have survived. As for reconstructing the early life of a founding hero like Uthman, the convergence of the accounts of Abdullah and Bello gives some confidence about the broad outlines and chronology. For Shaka and Moshweshwe, the task is to weigh surviving oral tradition against the limited evidence of outsiders.

    In relation to the state and its leadership, the five situations offer striking contrasts and comparisons. The Zulu and Sotho chapters describe processes of state formation in societies previously organized around villages or small chiefdoms. Their divergent evolution from similar origins merits examination. In the rise of the movement of Uthman, one also witnesses a process of state formation, but it is set against a more elaborate tradition of statecraft which the movement finally adopted in spite of its commitment to reform. Buganda and Asante had already acquired complex and centralized forms of government by the nineteenth century. Like Sokoto, they constituted vast societies of a different order of magnitude (over a million subjects) from the new states of South Africa (a population of perhaps 100 000 in the Lesotho of 1850 and perhaps 200 000 in the Zulu kingdom of the 1820s).

    The states faced a number of common problems: succession to the kingship, the recruitment and maintenance of an army and an administration, the integration of conquered areas, and the control of trade and other key resources. The ease or difficulty of succession can be traced to a number of causes. Proximity to the founding hero of the state complicated the situation faced by Dingane in Zululand, whereas Bello benefited from his long association with Uthman in the founding of the Sokoto movement. The adoption of filial as opposed to collateral succession in Buganda probably simplified the succession process, but it certainly did not eliminate conflict. The Buganda ruler faced in acute form the general dilemma of constructing a new administration loyal to his person rather than to his predecessor. The existence of procedures, such as those directed by the Queen Mother in Asante and the Chief Minister in Sokoto, facilitated the transition. Sokoto experienced relatively peaceful successions in the nineteenth century, a fact which suggests the importance of its grounding in Islamic law.

    The emphasis on the army is most apparent in the Zulu and Buganda chapters. Here disputes were often resolved by force and promotion was based on military distinction, In contrast to the Zulu, the Sotho and Asante took pains to integrate firearms into their fighting techniques, which helps to explain their relatively greater success against European encroachment. The Buganda factions also adopted firearms, but they used them in civil war rather than resistance, with a heavy toll in lives and suffering.

    Zulu and Sotho administration remained rather simple and personal, consonant with their origins and smaller populations. Sokoto rapidly adopted the complex bureaucratic norms of its Hausa predecessors, despite the principles enunciated by Uthman in the early years. Asante, with its staff of linguists and political agents, was perhaps the most specialized in the tasks of diplomacy and administration. Power in Buganda was extremely centralized, but it is important not to equate this concentration with stability and durability, as the history of that state reveals. In fact, royal authority encountered serious obstacles in all situations, whether from the bureaucracy, the heads of lineages and chiefdoms, or the ruler’s own family.

    The documents yield insight into the administration and integration of conquered areas. Tighter and more direct control could produce revolt as well as obedience, as the Zulu and Asante leaders discovered, while a more relaxed confederation of vassals under Moshweshwe might prove relatively stable. Much depended on the nature of the regime’s demands, its ability to enforce them, the possibilities for the subject group to migrate, and the presence of alternative regimes and sources of support. Shaka’s and Sokoto’s problems stemmed partly from the availability of land around them, while Asante had to contend with the British alternative in the south and the threat of the Kong state in the northwest. Buganda experienced relatively less difficulty in this regard, but it was nonetheless sensitive to any activity on its northern and eastern borders.

    For Asante and Sokoto, the control of trade was a fundamental dimension of statecraft. Asante had to respond to a basic change in its trading system brought on by the campaign against the transatlantic slave trade, and it compensated for the change by expanding its commerce in kola nuts with the north. Sokoto continued the encouragement and regulation of the long-distance trade of its Hausa predecessors. The Asante selections emphasize deception in trade, while the documents in the Sokoto chapter stress the importance of trust and guaranties in commercial affairs. Readers should examine this apparent difference.

    The case studies provide an abundance of data on political leadership. Three pairs of rulers offer intriguing contrasts: Shaka and Dingane in Zululand, Mutesa and Mwanga in Buganda, and Uthman and Bello in Sokoto. Comparisons within and among the pairs should consider the age and background of each ruler, the conditions of his accession, the extent of his consolidation in power, and his relative achievements in the military, political and diplomatic domains. Individual leaders may be tested against their images in the primary and secondary literature; was Mwanga, for example, the ‘cruel despot’ depicted in the Anglican missionary sources?

    Shaka and Moshweshwe benefited from their roles as founding fathers, but this did not protect them against threats from their kinsmen and subjects. Moshweshwe and Osei Bonsu, in spite of the great differences in their regimes, were strikingly similar in their consistent pursuit of negotiated settlements with Europeans, and both encountered increasing impatience with this approach among their followers. Osei Bonsu and the Buganda kings offer an opportunity to examine the aura and institutions of ‘divine kingship’: to what extent did the rituals of office obscure the personality of the office-holder? To what extent did these rituals enhance or limit the ruler’s authority?

    The nature of the European presence in the five situations varies greatly. In Sokoto it is confined principally to the visits of a few explorers. The scene was analagous in South Africa in the 1820s, but the number and threat of Europeans escalated rapidly thereafter. A similar escalation occurred in Buganda fifty years later. The situation changed much less quickly in Asante, but British expansion in the coastal region and the campaign against the export of slaves were harbingers of later conquest. One should also examine the widening technological gap between African and European in the course of the nineteenth century, illustrated most dramatically in the military sphere, and compare attitudes of whites towards Africa in the pre-and post-Darwinian periods (Casalis and Clapperton, for example, in contrast to Stanley and Lugard). The roles and goals of Europeans need to be identified in order to appraise their actions; the documents deal with traders, explorers, missionaries, settlers, soldiers and administrators.

    From the African side, good information was clearly critical to successful diplomacy. Osei Bonsu kept abreast of events through his complex bureaucracy while Moshweshwe worked through a missionary network. Dingane and Mwanga, however, suffered from the absence of good information about European activities and intentions. Dingane relied too much on the hope of dividing the British and Boer communities, while Mwanga was unable to take advantage of the British-German conflict in East Africa.

    The documents suggest frequent difficulties in communication between European and African. An analysis of terms such as ‘tribe’ in the Zulu chapter, ‘boundary’ and ‘clientship’ in Lesotho, ‘oathing’ and ‘human sacrifice’ in Asante, ‘slavery’ in Asante and Sokoto, and ‘circumcision’, ‘polygyny’ and ‘medicine’ in Buganda may cast light on these problems. One should consider to what extent misconceptions, as distinguished from competition for resources, lay at the base of conflicts between European and African. Additional insight into the cross-cultural dimension comes from scrutiny of the narratives of those who moved across geographical and social frontiers: Jacob in the Zulu section, Pasko in Sokoto, and Abu Bakr, Huydecoper and Nieser in Asante.

    On social and religious questions, the documents yield a great deal to close reading. Stratification can be perceived at the top of the scale, around the court and ruling class, and at the bottom, in the material on slaves and servants. The situation of the great number of commoners in the middle is usually less clear. In Buganda, these commoners enjoyed an unusual degree of upward mobility, and a concomitant degree of vulnerability, through the page school. Among those groups which began on a more egalitarian footing (the Zulu, Sotho and the community of Uthman), one can detect an increasing stratification with time.

    We have also selected excerpts relating to cultural and religious identity. The Zulu and Sotho societies were perhaps more capable of absorbing people of diverse origin, at least in their periods of expansion, but the same process occurred in the other areas. Christianity and Islam were not necessarily incompatible with indigenous citizenship. Some Sotho, including members of the royal family, accepted baptism. Many young Baganda became Protestant, Catholic and Muslim. Subsequently, however, these religious factions became highly intolerant of one another in their competition for control of the kingdom. The Asante king did not consider Christianity or Islam acceptable for his subjects and prevented any proselytization. By contrast, Islam had become an integral part of Hausa society by 1800. The effect of Uthman’s preaching was to question the depth of Islamic identity of the ruling classes and finally to equate his vision of reform with the faith. Both the Sokoto and Buganda examples raise the question of what is involved in the incorporation of a ‘universal religion’ into an African society.

    We would like to thank the following for their criticisms of various drafts and chapters: Alison Des Forges of the State University of New York at Buffalo, Richard Elphick of Wesleyan University, Harvey Feinberg of Southern Connecticut State College, Hermann Giliomee of Stel-lenbosch University, Graham Irwin and Paul Martin of Columbia University, Gerald McSheffrey of McGill University, William Worger of Yale University, and Marcia Wright of Columbia University. We owe a special debt of gratitude to Leonard Thompson of Yale University and to the Oxford University Press for the freedom to use Survival in Two Worlds as a guide to the major issues and sources on the life of Moshweshwe.

    DAVID ROBINSON

    East Lansing, Michigan

    DOUGLAS SMITH

    Los Angeles, California

    SOURCES OF THE AFRICAN PAST

    Chapter One

    Shaka, Dingane and

    the Forging of the Zulu State

    133819_text.pdf

    INTRODUCTION

    In the two South African chapters which begin this volume, we study the process by which a large number of relatively autonomous human settlements were welded into a few important states. Chapter 1 deals with the founding of the Zulu kingdom and a man called Shaka. Chapter 2 revolves around the career of Moshweshwe and the Southern Sotho people. Both provide the opportunity to study the formation of large-scale political entities in contrast to the other case studies which deal with the affairs of existing states.

    The principal actors in both instances were leaders of Bantu-speaking people who gained their livelihood by hunting, raising cattle, and cultivating sorghum and other crops. The Sotho lived in the high veld or plateaus west of the Drakensberg Mountains. The Nguni lived on the eastern side of the same range in the area now called Natal. There they enjoyed a relatively favourable environment: sufficient rainfall, good topsoil and some freedom from the tsetse fly. By the late eighteenth century, these conditions had allowed a substantial population growth which in turn challenged the old social and political institutions. Among the northern Nguni, with whom we are concerned, this challenge led to the creation of several loose military confederations which in turn gave way to the cohesive Zulu state.

    Image461.PNG

    MAP 1.1 Zululand and Natal on the eve of Shaka s rise to power

    From the limited evidence available for the period prior to these changes, it appears that the northern Nguni lived in clusters of homesteads near rivers or other water sources. A homestead consisted of several beehive-shaped huts grouped around a cattle enclosure or kraal. Several homesteads constituted a small chiefdom of perhaps 2000 persons. The chief, chosen from one lineage, exercised some judicial, administrative and religious authority over the people, in close consultation with the senior male representatives of the homesteads. In addition to these vertical divisions into lineages, the Nguni were also organized horizontally into cohorts of persons born within the same four-or five-year period. These age cohorts of males and females learned the tasks and traditions of the society at the various stages of life. The most important stage was the transition to adult status in the late teen years. For the males, this initiation involved circumcision, several months of ritual seclusion, and the formation of very strong bonds of loyalty.

    The sources suggest fairly frequent competition between chiefdoms over land, cattle or access to water, and warfare of limited duration and violence. The male members of the homesteads would assemble at the summons of the chief, advance against the foe and throw their spears while protecting themselves with shields. When the warriors of one group had demonstrated their superiority, they seized their opponents’ cattle as spoils. The chief conducted the distribution and kept a portion for himself. In general, the victors did not pursue the vanquished nor bother their women and children.

    Image470.PNG

    MAP 1.2 General direction of population movements of the Mfecane

    Conflict also arose within the cheifdoms, especially between competing male members of the ruling lineage. Nguni custom favoured the first son born to the woman designated as ‘Great Wife’ by the chief after his accession. This son was usually younger than some of the male children of other wives. When the age gap and the ambition of the sons gave rise to succession disputes, the contenders would mobilize their respective age cohorts and challenge each other in battle. The loser, or the one who sensed he was the weaker party, often took his followers to another area where he might assert himself as the chief.

    By the end of the eighteenth century, population growth and land scarcity were making it difficult for unsuccessful contenders to find new areas to move into. Conflict became more intense and violent. Those who succeeded in warfare extended their control and sought to monopolize the trading routes which converged at Delagoa Bay on the Indian Ocean. The northern Nguni chiefdoms now formed three large military confederations : the Ngwane (later to become the Swazi kingdom), the Ndwandwe of Zwide and the Mthethwa of Dingis-wayo.

    Image477.PNG

    MAP 1.3 Eastern South Africa c. 1836

    The leaders of the confederations apparently made important innovations within Nguni society at this time. They abolished circumcision and the period of ritual seclusion, which made the homesteads vulnerable to attack by removing many of the men. In their place they created a system in which initiation to manhood occurred within age-regiments and through warfare. They established tight control over these regiments of warriors and used them as the basis for a standing army. When they conquered an enemy, they often absorbed men, women and children, placing the male prisoners in the regiments. Subordinate chiefs might continue to administer their subjects, but they now had obligations to supply tribute and young men for the new cohorts that were constantly being formed.

    The extant traditions tend to associate these changes with Dingiswayo. His Mthethwa confederation lay to the south and east of the others and included the Zulu chiefdom of Senzangakona. The Zulu eventually dominated the Mthethwa and transformed northern Nguniland under the leadership of Senzangakona’s sons, Shaka and Dingane.

    The sources available for the careers of Shaka and Dingane require special comment. They divide into two main categories: accounts by Europeans who visited the Zulu kingdom between 1824 and 1840, and oral traditions collected among the Zulu in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

    The most important sources in the first category are the works of Henry Francis Fynn and Nathaniel Isaacs. Both were about twenty years old when they met Shaka and sought to develop trade between his kingdom and the community in Cape Colony. By this time the scattered settlements of the northern Nguni had already been transformed into the Zulu state. Fynn lost his original journal and later reconstructed it from memory, with the help of others. Isaacs kept a diary and published a book based upon it. He did not, however, enjoy Fynn’s close relations with the Zulu, nor was he necessarily concerned to present his observations objectively. In a letter in 1832, he gave the following advice to Fynn (Isaacs to Fynn, 10 December 1832, Africana Notes and News, 18, March 1968-December 1969, page 67):

    When do you intend to publish? The sooner the better, and endeavour to exhibit the Zooloo policy in governing their tribe. I mean show their chiefs, both Chaka and Dingarns treachery and intrigues … Make them out as bloodthirsty as you can and endeavour to give an estimation of the number of people that they have murdered during their reign, and describe the frivolous crimes people lost their lives for. Introduce as many anecdotes relative to Chaka as you can; it all tends to swell up the work and makes it interesting.

    The Zulu oral traditions are found primarily in the collections made by two Europeans who were fluent in Zulu: the Catholic missionary A. T. Bryant and a Natal official named James Stuart. Bryant collected and synthesized a vast number of traditions of the northern Nguni from 1883 until the early 1920s. Although he apparently interviewed people who had known Shaka and Dingane, he rarely identified his informants. When he published his findings in 1929, he had this to say about his approach to the material and his audience (Olden Times in Zululand and Natal, 1929, pages viii-ix):

    And, then we are dealing too with a European public to which all history is proverbially insipid; to which that here presented is particularly unattractive, and so alien to its understanding that on that account again, we have been compelled to adopt unusual devices to make our historical reading intelligible and pleasant—by assuming, in general, a light and colloquial style; by creating here and there an appropriate ‘atmosphere’; by supplying a necessary ‘background’; by inducing a proper frame of mind by an appeal to pathos; by clothing the ‘dry bones’ of history in a humorous smile; by uniting disconnected details by patter of our own based on our knowledge of Native character and life.

    In addition to editing Fynn’s Diary, Stuart conducted his collecting between 1902 and 1922. His notebooks are being edited by Colin Webb and J. B. Wright and we have quoted several passages from the first volume of their series, The James Stuart Archive. As a general rule, Stuart noted the date and setting of his interviews, the social and genealogical position of his informants, and the chain of transmission of the testimony. He recorded some of the material in the Zulu of his informants, some in his own English translation. Consequently, it is easier for the historian to evaluate the material prepared by Stuart.

    DOCUMENTARY NARRATIVE

    Shaka’s Early Life and Career

    The nature of the sources makes the reconstruction of Shaka’s childhood and early adult career a difficult task. He was probably born between 1785 and 1790 into the small Zulu chiefdom of the Mthethwa confederation. His father was Senzangakona, the Zulu leader, while his mother Nandi came from the Langeni chiefdom. The traditions differ about the nature of Senzangakona’s and Nandi’s relationship. They tend to agree, however, that the two were not married at the time when Shaka was conceived and that his illegitimate status played an important role in his life. The first two documents give accounts of Shaka’s birth and come from the Bryant and Stuart collections.

    DOCUMENT 1 ‘An intestinal beetle’

    A. T. Bryant Olden Times in Zululand and Natal (1929), pp. 47-8.

    NOTES FOR READING Bebe = great-uncle of Mbengi who was chief of Langeni at this time; ‘fun of the roads’ = fondling and sexual intercourse which stopped short of insemination; Mudhli = Senzangakona’s cousin and co-regent at the time of the latter’s minority.

    The youthful Zulu chieftain, Senzangakóna, already some 26 years old, was present. His kindly manner impressed the èLangeni stranger, who, reaching home, was glowing with his praises. This interested Nandi, daughter of the late king Bébé. Along this selfsame path the èLangeni girls were then themselves about to go, carrying presents of sorghum beer to their relative married in Qungebeland. So Nandi arranged to accompany them; and, in order to facilitate her effort, she begged the aforesaid messenger to pose as chaperon and, as one practised in the art, to push her suit.

    Senzangakóna, still in heart a boy, set blithely forth in company with other youths; and as they larked about the veld in chase of birds, behold a file of damsels four in all, came lilting down the hill,

    Like those fair nymphs that are described to rove

    Across the glades and openings of the grove;

    Only that these are dressed for silvan sports

    And less become the finery of courts.

    Ovid, Metam., VI

    Having reached the Zulu youths, the chaperon advanced, while the girls sat themselves discreetly distant to rest their weary limbs. Soon the latter were bid to approach, and asked, ‘Whence come ye, pretty maidens?’ ‘From iNguga kraal,’they said, ‘in èLangeni land, and on our way to eNtuzuma."And which is the daughter of Bébé?’ they inquired. ‘This here, uNandi.’ ‘And what will ye here?’ Said Nandi, ‘Just come to see the child of the king.’ ‘Why wish to see him?’ Said Nandi, ‘Because I like him.’ ‘And can you point him out?’ There he is,’ said she triumphantly; but inconsiderate time then sped the girls away.

    On the morrow, from eNtuzuma the èLangeni girls retraced their steps homewards. While resting, and bathing their tired feet in the gurgling waters of the Mkumbane, the Zulu youths again espied them, and forsook the birds they were chasing to court the girls. They begged for the ‘fun of the roads’ and flirting on primitive lines followed. Said Senzangakóna, That there is mine; she kneeling on the rock.’ And that was Nandi. Then the lads and lasses, each a loving pair, retired to the privacy of the adjacent bush for the customary intercourse.

    The girls went home, and all was soon forgotten—except by Nandi, who, when the third month came, became aware, as did her mother, that something more than fun had happened. Such was the sorrowful fate of Nandi, daughter of Bébé, a former eLangeni chief, by his great wife, Mfunda, daughter (or sister) of the Qwabe chief, Kóndlo …

    So a messenger was rushed off bearing a formal indictment against the youthful Zulu chief. But Mudli, Ndaba’s grandson and chief elder of the clan, indignantly denied the charge. ‘Impossible,’ said he; ‘go back home and inform them the girl is but harbouring an intestinal beetle’—at that period known as an IShaka, but nowadays, owing to the hlonipà custom, termed an IKàmbì, and held, both then and now, a common cause of suppression of the menses. But, in due season Nandi became a mother. ‘There now!’ they sent word to the Zulu people over the hills; ‘there is your beetle OShaka). Come and fetch it; for it is yours.’ And reluctantly they came, and deposited Nandi, un wedded, in the hut of Senzangakóna; and the child was named uShaka—the year 1787.

    DOCUMENT 2

    ‘She liked the son of the chief’

    From the testimony of Jantshi ka Nongila, son of a man who served as a spy under Senzangakona, Shaka and Dingane, recorded by James Stuart in 1903, and published in Colin de B. Webb and J. B. Wright, eds. and trans., The James Stuart Archive of Recorded Oral Evidence Relating to the History of the Zulu and Neighbouring Peoples …, Vol. I (1976), pp. 178-9.

    NOTES FOR READING Mbengi = chief of the Langeni; Mudhli = cousin of Senzangakona who acted as co-regent during the latter’s minority; isigodhlo = quarters housing the king or chief and his wives; impi = military force.

    Italics indicate passages recorded in Zulu by Stuart and translated by the editors. Zulu terms are written in the orthography of the early twentieth century.

    In the course of a few weeks Mbengi, finding that Nandi had become pregnant (she had at first stated she was suffering from an illness known as itshaka or itshati), sent a report to that effect to Mudhli. Mudhli asked why such report had been made to him. The messengers replied, ‘He acquaints you of this because the girl stated she liked the son of the chief.’ Mudhli retorted, ‘Is that the case?’ ‘Yes’, they answered. Mudhli then said, ‘All right, then please look after that, in case it turns out to be a child. We of the Zulu tribe would be glad if it should happen to be a boy.’ The men from the Langeni then went off and there, for the time being, the matter rested.

    Later on, messengers again came to Mudhli to say the girl had been delivered of a child and it was a boy. Mudhli was pleased at this and said, ‘On no account let his mother suckle him.’ I think this must have been done because royalty were not allowed, by custom, to be suckled by their mothers.

    Mudhli secretly informed Senzangakona’s mother of what had taken place. She then used to send a piece of string to where the child was in order to see how big its waist was. All this time the members of the kraal at which Senzangakona’s mother lived knew nothing of what had happened. When the child had grown a little, Senzangakona’s mother dispatched a man to fetch and bring it to her, which was done. But this act took place at night, and the circumstances appearing to the night guards of the isigodhlo of a strange character, they paid special attention. My father said to me, ‘I cannot think how the persons referred to came to see that there was a child in the hut.’ The persons who saw this belonged to the Zulu tribe. It was the custom to have night guards so as to detect those committing adultery etc. However the incident came to be noticed, the guardians of Senzangakona all came to hear of it, and an impi was sent to Senzangakona’s mother’s kraal the next day to kill off the child, seeing that, at that time, Senzangakona had not been allowed to marry. Senzangakona’s mother had caused mats to be set up at the back of the hut behind which the child was set and where she used to play with it. It was not allowed to sit out in the open in the hut.

    Before this impi had been sent forth, a report reached Senzangakona’s mother to the effect that somehow people had come to hear of the existence of the child there and whose it was. She was advised to have it taken away and sent back to its mother among the Langeni. Senzangakona’s mother acted at once on the advice given her.

    Two men, on the following day, preceded the impi referred to and, making their way to Senzangakona’s mother, asked what she had hidden away behind the mats in her hut. The impi at this time was close up to the kraal. The two men looked about but found nothing. Whilst they were so engaged the impi, in large numbers, arrived and, after searching about the kraal for the child and not finding it, they proceeded at once to destroy the kraal and the members thereof. People were put to death but Senzangakona’s mother somehow escaped being killed…. The child was Tshaka.

    The traditions agree that Shaka spent a number of his early years with Nandi’s Langeni people and that he subsequently went to live at the headquarters of the Mthethwa confederation. For one version of his childhood and adolescence, we return to Bryant.

    DOCUMENT 3

    The childhood shows the man’ Bryant, Zululand, pp. 62-4.

    NOTES FOR READING amaTigulu = Tukela river; Jobe = Dingiswayo’s father; Ngomane = Shaka’s Mthethwa patron who later became one of his principal advisers (see Documents 4, 20, 22).

    Full ten years had passed, and more, since Nandi had been dismissed by the Zulu king and gone home disgraced to eLan-geni-land, 20 miles away.

    There, probably because of his disagreeable character, her little boy, Shaka, proved unpopular with his small companions, and no desirable acquisition to the family.

    The childhood shows the man

    As morning shows the day.

    Milton

    His years of childhood in eLangeni-land do not appear to have been the proverbial ‘happy days’. Many little stories are extant of his unsympathetic treatment there, of which the dreadful echo will be heard years hence.

    Zulu children dearly like to lick the porridge-spoon—with them an oar-shaped piece of wood for stirring. The bullies of the family would find great fun in thrusting this stirrer into the fire and then, when almost burning, ordering Shaka to peel off the porridge, saying, ‘Come, eat this, that we may see whether thou be indeed a chief.’ Or, when he would return from herding the cattle for his midday meal, they would force him to hold out both hands, extended side by side like a saucer, into which they would pour boiling collops, and compel him to eat, threatening him with punishment if he allowed the food to drop. And when on the veld they moulded each for himself a little herd of clay cattle and then led forth their respective bulls to fight, each boy pushing his puppet by the hand, they would grow jealous of his skill and, when gone home, make him a theme of constant complaint to mamma and papa. Then his little crinkled ears and the marked stumpiness of a certain organ were ever a source of persistent ridicule among Shaka’s companions, and their taunts in this regard so rankled in his breast that he grew up harbouring a deadly hatred against all and everything eLangeni.

    Heretofore, according to Zulu usage, the boy Shaka had paraded in puris natura/ibus; but now, the period of puberty drawing nigh, he must go home once more to be presented by his father with his first umuTsha (loin covering, of dressed skin). This was with every Zulu youngster a great event, corresponding to that auspicious occasion among our own when they are permitted for the first time to assume the glory of a pair of breeches. But Shaka, even at this early age, must have shown himself of a particularly intractable and unlovable nature; for he rejected with disdain the umuTsha proferred by his father, and otherwise succeeded in getting himself so generally disliked, that his early return to his mother became imperative.

    After Shaka had been some years back in eLangeni-land, stark famine came to stare him in the face, c. 1802. To add to other miseries, Nandi now found herself unable to provide food for her offspring. It was the calamitous famine of Madlatule (Let one eat what he can and say naught), when people lived on amaHiukwe (fruit of the arum-lily), on uBoqo roots (ipomcea ovata) and other wild plants. The cup of Nandi, with two famished children wailing on her hands, was now filled. So she shook once more the dust from off her feet and, with her family, took the path to Mpapala, at the sources of the amaTigulu river, where, among the emaMbedwini folk (sub-clan of Qwabes), there dwelt a man, Ngendeyana (or Gendeyana), by whom she had already borne a son, named

    Ngwadi. She was affectionately received, and therefor a while they all remained.

    But even here the boy Shaka, now about 15 years of age, found no sure asylum. In this strange kraal he held no rightful place, and both his father’s and his mother’s people were pressing for his return. So on his mother’s advice he was taken onwards once more, now, some say, to Macingwane, of the emaCunwini clan, his father’s dreaded neighbour. Hearing of this new evasion, Senzangakona, it is said—though we doubt the report—sent presents to the Cunu chieftain ‘to induce him to betray his trust and destroy his guest. This the chief nobly refused to do, informing Shaka that he could no longer afford him protection.’

    As a last resource, Nandi bethought herself of her father’s sister, down in Mtetwaland, near the coast, and there Shaka was forthwith hurried. It must not be supposed that either Shaka or his mother was a personage of any consequence at this early period; on the contrary, as destitute vagrants, they were everywhere despised. Jobe was then Mtetwa king; but he knew nothing, and would have cared less, about the arrival amongst his people of a mere homeless woman. But headman in charge of the district in which they settled was Ngomane, son of Mqombolo, of the emDIetsheni clan, and with him they soon became acquainted. He treated Nandi and her boy in a friendly manner, and his kindness then Shaka never forgot, and in the day of his greatness elevated him to the very highest position in his realm next after himself. There in a real ‘home’, surrounded by sympathy and kindness, Shaka at last had come to anchor in a haven of rest. Henceforth happy and glorious were his days, and he never again quitted his adopted country for his own, until that auspicious day arrived when he returned there in triumph to ascend its throne and wreak vengeance, swift and awful, on all his former tormentors.

    When Shaka reached his early twenties, he joined his age-mates in an Mthethwa army regiment. He soon distinguished himself as a warrior and was chosen to lead his division. He gained Dingiswayo’s attention, rising to become one of his most important advisors, and served the Mthethwa in a series of difficult confrontations with the rival confederation of Zwide.

    In Document 4 Fynn describes his impressions of Shaka’s early manhood, based on observations made at the Zulu court in the 1820s.

    DOCUMENT 4 ‘Dingiswayo’s hero’

    H. F. Fynn, The Diary of Henry Francis Fynn, ed. J. Stuart and D. Malcolm (1950), p. 13.

    When Dingiswayo heard of Shaka he invited him to come under his protection, saying that, as he had been driven from his father, and had become an outcast wherever he went, Shaka should be under his especial care. Shaka accordingly went, when he was put under the care of Ngomane, com-mander-in-chief of Dingiswayo’s army.

    He distinguished himself at an early age, by his courage and self-command, being always the first in attack, and courting every danger. He was known by the name of Sikiti, also by that of Sidlodlo sekhanda (the honour of the heads of regiments). Various were the acts by which he signalized himself in action, much against the express wish of Dingiswayo, who objected to his taking an active part in battle, considering it unnecessary for a prince to expose himself to that extent. On such occasions, in consequence of his keenness to fight, Dingiswayo would order his shield to be taken from him. Shaka, however, always managed to steal another from one of his companions. He soon became known among the neighbouring tribes as ‘Dingiswayo’s hero’.

    In 1816 Senzangakona died and Shaka became chief of the Zulu. The sources disagree on three subsidiary questions: (1) whether Shaka returned to the Zulu chiefdom before or after his father’s death; (2) to what degree Dingiswayo supported his bid for the chieftaincy; and (3) the degree of resistance which Shaka faced. Documents 5 and 6 present different perspectives.

    DOCUMENT 5

    ‘No one was ousted by Tshaka’

    Excerpts from the testimony of Jantshi ka Nongila, recorded by Stuart in 1903 and published in Webb and Wright (eds), The James Stuart Archive, I, pp. 181,199.

    NOTES FOR READING giya = to dance; Dingana, Sigujana, et al. = Shaka’s half brothers of whom Sigujana was in line to succeed Senzangakona; Mkabayi = Shaka’s aunt; Ndukwana = another informant who accompanied Jantshi. For italics, see notes for Document 2.

    After some years Senzangakona decided to go down to Dingiswayo’s to look for a new wife. When Dingiswayo saw him he specially invited him to come at a later time and join in festivities he was going to bring about in the shape of a public dance. Senzangakona proceeded home and informed his brothers Zivalele and Sitayi, and also the important men Mudhli and Menziwa (father of Mvundhlana) and other people, of the invitation.

    Senzangakona thereupon went back to Dingiswayo’s with the heads of his tribe and many ordinary members, including my father Nongite. Nothing took place on the day of his arrival. It was arranged that the dance should take place the day following. The next day Senzangakona and his party danced first. After he had concluded, Dingiswayo’s people danced. Whilst Dingiswayo’s party were dancing, Tshaka was shut up in the calf pen out of sight of the Zulu people. This had been arranged by Dingiswayo. When dancing had been going on some time, Dingiswayo came forward and said, ‘Where is the hoe that surpasses other hoes?’ He thereupon directed someone to go and open the pen for him and, as the messenger proceeded to carry out the instruction, Dingiswayo sang out his praises. Tshaka then came out of the pen carrying his war shield of one colour. It had pieces of skins of various wild animals placed in those holes in the shield caused by assegai thrusts. In Tshaka’s shield the following skins were used for this purpose: meercat (like a mongoose, but smaller), mongoose, and genet. Tshaka came out and then began at once to g/’ya. As he did so, Dingiswayo shouted his praises. Whilst giyaing, he ran round and round in circles and eventually ended off in front of Senzangakona where he stood still. He then said to his father, ‘Father, give me an assegai, and I shall fight great battles for you!’ His father directed assegais to be fetched from the huts. A pile was accordingly brought. Senzangakona said, ‘Take one yourself.’ Tshaka replied, ‘No, let it come from your hand; / cannot take it myself.’ Senzangakona thereupon felt a number, one by one, and deciding on one, gave it to Tshaka. Tshaka, after getting the assegai, resumed his giyaing, and when he had finished he walked off in a certain direction in which it appeared Dingana, Sigujana, Mhlangano, Ngqojana, Mpande, and Maqu ban a were seated. He then went up to Sigujana and, tapping him on the head with his assegai, said, ‘Greetings, my brother.’ Sigujana responded. They conversed a little, after which Tshaka went off and joined the dancing party, taking part in the dance.

    When Tshaka arrived in the Zulu country, Senzangakona was certainly dead. I have not heard that Senzangakona declared Tshaka to be his legitimate son.

    I do not know if Tshaka became an induna to Dingiswayo. Probably not. He was a favourite there because he was a great warrior.

    It was general knowledge that on Tshaka’s dying Mhlangana would rule. Ndukwana says this. Ndukwana has heard that Mkabayi ruled a little after Senzangakona’s death, so she may have done so to allow Tshaka to come up.

    Senzangakona had no one who stood armed by his grave as his successor. Sigujana did not stand thus, for when Tshaka got up, people accepted him without a fight. No one was ousted by Tshaka. It is probable then that Tshaka was offered the position of king.

    DOCUMENT 6 ‘Resolved to dethrone him’

    Nathaniel Isaacs, Travels and Adventures in Eastern Africa, 2 vols. (1836), Vol. I, pp. 264-5.

    NOTES FOR READING Zovecedie = Zwide; Umtatwas = the Mthethwa; Tingiswaa = Dingiswayo; Umgartie = Ngwadi, Shaka’s maternal half-brother. Isaacs arrived in Zululand in 1825.

    At the death of his father, a younger brother took possession of the Zoola crown; Chaka at once resolved to dethrone him, and place himself at the head of the nation.

    After several attempts the king succeeded in driving him (Chaka) away to a distant and formidable chief, called Zovecedie, who was then at war with the Umtatwas; this induced Tingiswaa to assist Chaka in obtaining possession of the Zoola kingdom.

    Meeting, however, with many obstacles in the way, he formed a sure plan of destroying the young king, which was very soon carried into execution. Umgartie, his younger brother, and companion in exile, repaired to the residence of the young monarch with a story, that Tingiswaa had killed Chaka, that he was obliged to fly for his life, and throw himself at his brother’s feet for protection. This important and wished-for information was readily believed, and Umgartie was soon installed in the office of chief domestic; being now constantly about the king’s person, he took an early opportunity to effect his bloody mission.

    It was his province to attend him every morning while bathing. On a chosen occasion he sent two of his friends to conceal themselves in the long grass by the river-side, and at a signal given, while the king was in the act of plunging into the water, they rushed forward and speared him to death; the news soon reached Chaka, who marched at the head of the Umtatwas, and took possession of the throne.

    The first act that marked his bloody reign, was his putting to death all the principal people of his brother’s government; those who were suspected to be inimical to his becoming king, were also speared.

    From Chiefdom to Kingdom

    As chief of the Zulus, Shaka transformed his army on the basis of his experience fighting for Dingiswayo. He organized his soldiers by age-regiment, housed them in barracks and required them to remain celibate. He introduced the short ‘stabbing’ spear to Zulu weaponry, thereby emphasizing hand-to-hand combat in place of spear throwing, and designed the ‘chest and horns’ battle formation, in which the two wings of the army surrounded the enemy while the centre attacked. He increased the mobility of his warriors by having them go barefoot and relieved them of the responsibilities of carrying their own baggage. Finally, Shaka broke with Nguni tradition by commanding his men to kill all who resisted—even the women, children and elderly associated with such resistance. In the following selections, Bryant and Isaacs describe these radical changes.

    DOCUMENT 7

    ‘His first real fighting force’

    Bryant, Zululand, pp. 123-5.

    NOTE FOR READING head-ring = sign of adulthood.

    Things having thus been brought into order at home, Shaka turned his attention to pressing needs of state. The most urgent of these was the provision of an adequate defence—and still more, offence—force. Plainly, he could not spend the rest of his life ‘doing nothing’. And what had he been doing all his life hereto but fighting? He looked around for the Zulu army, and found none. Obviously the Zulu state was as deplorably organized as the Zulu kitchen. Nothing but a lot of guild-boys, circumcised and otherwise, to

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