As discussed in the pervious threads Ndebele marriage ceremonies commenced with negotiations where isivulamlomo and kangaziwe were required to be paid by the man's family to the prospective inlaws.
2. Once agreements were reached the girl underwent ukucolwa at home , ukuphehlwa isithundu and umthimba was dispatched to accompany her to her inlaws. There she did ukumekeza and went through ukucolwa by the father in law . After that she was married and started her new home.
3. The Ndebele principle on lobola was that, kulotsholwa abantwana : lobola cattle are a token of appreciation for children born in the marriage. For marriage purposes there was only isivulamlomo which could be a goat, a metal/iron tool, etc and then ukangaziwe, usually one cow.
4. The lobola issue only arose many years into the marriage when children were born and were growing up well. There are two ways in which lobola negotiations were initiated.
5. The bride's father would send someone to the inlaws with this serious message : 'Abako Ndlovu bathe ngizocela abantwana'. The inlaws would reply : 'Pho abakoNdlovu bafuna okunganani? ' The messenger will then relay to them the number of cattle asked for.
6. The other way lobola negotiations were initiated was through the bride's mother. She would randomly visit her daughter, under the pretext of seeing her grand children. She would ask to go back home with all her grand children. She would then stay with them & not return them.
7. It would then be obvious to the son in law that the issue is about lobola. For the children to return home, he had to redeem them, ukuhlenga. The man would send a messenger to advise the inlaws that he wishes to redeem the children and would then be told the number of cattle.
8. Once the man was ready to pay the cattle, the wife would go home in advance to inform them and prepare for the guests. Beer was brewed and a lot of food was cooked in preparation for the day.
9. The son in law herded the cattle to the inlaws accompanied by his representative, umkhongi and delegates. The man would wait afar off with the cattle whilst umkhongi went in to announce their presence. After that the family would step out to inspect the cows.
10. If satisfied, the cattle were ushered into the kraal. Umkhongi would say : 'Nanzo inkomo zamalobolo wena kaDube. Zivela koMpofu. Silobola uThando (referring to umlobokazi) '.
11. One of the cattle was used ukucola the son in law. The rest of the cattle were introduced to the ancestors at the kraal. A cow was slaughtered, shared among the delegates and the remainder cooked or braaid. Lobola cattle belonged to the head of the household, umninimuzi.
12. One cow was given to the mother of the girl and it was called inkomo yohlanga. She could do anything she pleases with the cow. Lobola cattle could not be used to pay lobola elsewhere,either by the girl's father or her brothers.
13. About a month after lobola payment the bride's family prepared special beer known as utshwala bamasondo. This beer was meant to 'remove the hoove marks of the lobola cattle', ukucitsha amasondo enkomo zamalobolo. On that day a big celebration was hosted by the groom's family.
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Princess Mkabayi was the daughter of the Zulu inkosi uJama. She was a twin by conception. Her twin sister was known as Mmama. Inkosi uJama decreed that the twin girls were not to be killed at their infancy. This decision was not well received by the royalty and Zulu society.
2. The twin girls were not loved by the community as there was great fear that they would bring curses and attract ancestral wrath on the Zulu community. This fear was confirmed when the queen mother died before she could bear the king a male heir. Mkabayi and her twin sister bore the brunt of the people's hate and rejection.
3. Mkabayi became the focus of public attention because of her strong willed character and stubbornness. Her sister on the other hand was calm and mellow. As years progressed, inkosi uJama failed to produce a male heir. This was worrisome to the Zulu royals and the nation.
1. WHEN ALLIES FALL OUT : THE TRAGEDY OF KING LOBHENGULA AND CHAMINUKA PASIPAMIRE (Part 1) 🇿🇼
Two political dynasties in the present day Harare province and surrounding areas aligned themselves with the Ndebele in the mid to late 1800s. These were the Rwizi and Hwata dynasties. The relationship was one based on mutual benefits. These two dynasties were however, not the only allies of the Ndebele in present day Zimbabwe outside the borders of the erstwhile Ndebele kingdom. The focus of this thread is on the Rwizi Dynasty-Ndebele relations.
2. After clashes with the Ndebele between 1860-1864 over gold and trade routes , Hwata Nherera Gwindi, travelled to meet King Mzilikazi at his capital where they agreed to have a mutually beneficial alliance . It was agreed that the Ndebele would have partial access to the lucrative Shawasha gold mines and Portuguese trade routes controlled by the Hwata. The Hwata dynasty stretched from present day Harare, past the Mazoe Dam (then commonly known as pagomba) to modern day Glendale and to the heads of the Mazoe, Tateguru and Murowodzi valleys. In return the Ndebele had to assign personal and family bodyguards for Hwata Gwindi and dispatch regiments to protect him from his family contenders and external enemies. With Ndebele backing Hwata Nherera Gwindi and his son Mazarura maintained their territory and retained power for their house up to the late 1880s.
3. At the beginning of the 1880s the emerging Rwizi dynasty of Chitungwiza was ruled by Madzora, but his brother Pasipamire was much more famous. Pasipamire was the medium of the Chaminuka spirit. The Rwizi Dynasty was centred in present day Chitungwiza - Dungwiza – territory of long grass, where Chaminuka Pasipamire's shrine was located. The territory covered the area between the Mupfure and Manyame (Hunyani) rivers, extending as far as Mhondoro in the north-west and Hwedza Hills in the south east.
The contested coronation of King Lobhengula around 1870 was done in three phases over a period of about three months. This was in line with Nguni customs . The first stage was the welcoming of the new king at his father’s old capital, eMhlahlandlela where his ordination would commence.
2. On his arrival at the eMhlahlandlela town gate, he was welcomed with a black ox and invited to enter through the north gate. There were around 15 000 soldiers to welcome him at eMhlahlandlela, singing, dancing and parading.
3. From the gate he was ushered to the goat kraal, where he was welcomed by a senior inyanga yomuzi who,cleansed and purified him as part of an elaborate purification ritual for kings. The vessels to be used in the festivities for his coronation were also purified.
1. THE PRE-COLONIAL UKUCHINSA - FIRST FRUITS CEREMONY OF THE NDEBELE PEOPLE OF ZIMBABWE 🇿🇼
Thread..
After the conclusion of the Inxwala national ceremony , people went back to their respective villages. After a week or two, the king performed the ukuchinsa /dolo qina ceremony.
2. Citizens of the Ndebele state were prohibited from harvesting their crops until the ukuchinsa ceremony was conducted. This was usually around January or February, when the first crops started to appear.
3. The king was the first to partake of the first crops in the kingdom. Anyone who broke this rule was punished by death.Izinyanga -traditional doctors gathered the first crops like amakhomane, marrows and mixed them with medicines. After that the king would eat the first fruits.
The first Portuguese explorers arrived in present day Luanda around 1500s. By 1575 Paulo Dias
de Novais arrived with a hundred families of colonists and four hundred soldiers. They set up a fort at present day Luanda.
2. The Portuguese gradually took control of the coastal area by a series of treaties and wars throughout the 16th century, and their interest in Angola quickly turned to the slave trade.
3. With the capital at Luanda on the coast, the Portuguese struggled against the kingdoms of Kongo, Ndongo, and Matamba to gain control of the interior.
1. THE PRE-COLONIAL INXWALA CEREMONY OF THE NDEBELE PEOPLE OF ZIMBABWE 🇿🇼
Inxwala was a national ceremony for spiritual renewal and thanksgiving for the first fruits in the Ndebele kingdom. The main Inxwala came a lunar month after the conduct of the minor inxwala.
2. Once the date for the main inxwala was set, a clarion call was
was made at all kraals in the regions of the kingdom for people to attend the big ceremony. ‘Umthwakazi kagcobe!’, ‘Let the nation dress up for Inxwala!’ the town criers would announce with great excitement.
3. All roads would then lead to the capital. The people brought with them food, beer and oxen for slaughter. There were special oxen known as amamvubu, the hippo oxen. These oxen were regarded as sacred animals. It was believed that the king’s ancestral spirits lived in them.