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THE KING'S GHOST: Contested End of the Ndebele Monarchy

Par : Bloom Tizora
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8232401573
  • EAN9798232401573
  • Date de parution18/11/2025
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurHamza elmir

Résumé

When Cecil?Rhodes's British South Africa Company stormed the Ndebele heartland in 1893, they thought they had sealed the fate of the kingdom. King?Lobengula?Khumalo was forced to torch his capital, Bulawayo, and retreat northward. Yet the victory was incomplete. After his forces wiped out the pursuing Shangani Patrol at the Battle of?Pupu, the king vanished into the mist of the Zambezi valley, leaving a wound that still aches in Southern African memory.
The colonial administration, eager to legitimize its claim, quickly crafted an official story: Lobengula died of smallpox near the Shangani River in early?1894. That narrative lived on in the archives, but it was only half the picture. Parallel to the written record, Ndebele oral tradition-_izindaba_-preserved a very different account. It tells of a calculated flight, of a network of chiefs (including the steadfast Chief?Pashu) who guided the king through tsetse-fly-infested terrain, and of sanctuary offered by the powerful Ngoni king?Mpezeni in what is now Zambia.
According to this tradition, Lobengula lived for years beyond the colonial "death" date, a living symbol of defiance. The tension between these two histories is not merely academic; it has shaped politics and identity for generations. The belief that the king remained alive-or died a free sovereign-kept Ndebele legitimacy alive and sparked the bloody Umvukela uprising of?1896-97. Today, that same ambiguity fuels contemporary debates, from the secret enthronement of King?Bulelani?Lobengula?Khumalo in 2018 to the recent clash between Bulawayo's mayor and Zimbabwe's government over the recognition of the monarchy?¹.
The dispute reminds us that the "King's Ghost" is more than a footnote-it is a living claim to sovereignty and cultural pride. This book is an investigation into that mystery, a study of how official histories are built, contested, and sometimes overturned by the very people they tried to silence. It asks what it means for a nation when its last sovereign's death is unconfirmed, and why that uncertainty remains a powerful act of resistance.
In the end, the greatest victory of King?Lobengula may not be any battlefield triumph, but the mystery itself-a ghost that continues to haunt, inspire, and question the legitimacy of conquest.
When Cecil?Rhodes's British South Africa Company stormed the Ndebele heartland in 1893, they thought they had sealed the fate of the kingdom. King?Lobengula?Khumalo was forced to torch his capital, Bulawayo, and retreat northward. Yet the victory was incomplete. After his forces wiped out the pursuing Shangani Patrol at the Battle of?Pupu, the king vanished into the mist of the Zambezi valley, leaving a wound that still aches in Southern African memory.
The colonial administration, eager to legitimize its claim, quickly crafted an official story: Lobengula died of smallpox near the Shangani River in early?1894. That narrative lived on in the archives, but it was only half the picture. Parallel to the written record, Ndebele oral tradition-_izindaba_-preserved a very different account. It tells of a calculated flight, of a network of chiefs (including the steadfast Chief?Pashu) who guided the king through tsetse-fly-infested terrain, and of sanctuary offered by the powerful Ngoni king?Mpezeni in what is now Zambia.
According to this tradition, Lobengula lived for years beyond the colonial "death" date, a living symbol of defiance. The tension between these two histories is not merely academic; it has shaped politics and identity for generations. The belief that the king remained alive-or died a free sovereign-kept Ndebele legitimacy alive and sparked the bloody Umvukela uprising of?1896-97. Today, that same ambiguity fuels contemporary debates, from the secret enthronement of King?Bulelani?Lobengula?Khumalo in 2018 to the recent clash between Bulawayo's mayor and Zimbabwe's government over the recognition of the monarchy?¹.
The dispute reminds us that the "King's Ghost" is more than a footnote-it is a living claim to sovereignty and cultural pride. This book is an investigation into that mystery, a study of how official histories are built, contested, and sometimes overturned by the very people they tried to silence. It asks what it means for a nation when its last sovereign's death is unconfirmed, and why that uncertainty remains a powerful act of resistance.
In the end, the greatest victory of King?Lobengula may not be any battlefield triumph, but the mystery itself-a ghost that continues to haunt, inspire, and question the legitimacy of conquest.
The Disciplined Glow
Bloom Tizora
E-book
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