The Formation of the Zulu Kingdom in South Africa, 1750-1840This study argues that the Zulu kingdom did not emerge as a revolutionary outburst; rather, that state formation among the northern Nguni-speaking peoples of Southern Africa began as much as a half-century before Shaka. |
Common terms and phrases
According African History amabutho Andrew Smith Annals of Natal Bantu Basuto Bryant Cape Town cattle chief chiefdom chieftain Delagoa Bay Diary difaqane Dingane Dingane's Dingiswayo Drakensberg Early Iron Age early nineteenth eastern ecological Ellenberger European evidence Facsimile reprint FOKENG formation Fynn Griqua highveld historian Hlubi homestead Hurutshe Iron Age Journal Khumalo kraal Kwena late eighteenth century later Iron Age Lobedu London lowlands Lye's Notes maize major Makaba Matiwane mfecane Mfolozi Mhlatuze migration miles military millet missionaries Moffat Mohlomi Moletsane Moshoeshoe Mthethwa Mutapa Mzilikazi Ndebele Ndebele kingdom Ndwandwe Nguni Ngwaketse Ngwane nineteenth century OHSA Olden Omer-Cooper Pedi Phongolo political population pre-difaqane pre-Shakan Zululand Qwabe rainfall regiments region ritual River Rolong ruling lineage Schapera Shaka Shona Society socio-political Sotho South Africa Southern Africa Struik Stuart and Malcolm Swazi Taung Theal Thukela Tlhaping Tlokwa trade traditions Transvaal Tswana University Press uplands Vaal Zulu Zulu king Zulu kingdom Zululand Zwide
References to this book
The Dust Rose Like Smoke: The Subjugation of the Zulu and the Sioux James O. Gump No preview available - 1996 |