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Portuguese, Chikunda, and Peoples of the Gwembe Valley: the Impact of the ‘Lower Zambezi Complex’1 on Southern Zambia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

T. I. Matthews
Affiliation:
Africa Educational Trust, London

Extract

The role of the ‘Lower Zambezi complex’ which developed out of Portuguese and African interaction is examined in the light of recent research in the Gwembe valley, an area of the Middle Zambezi on the far periphery of Portuguese penetration from the east coast. The origins of Lower Zambezi contacts with the peoples of southern Zambia are traced to the late seventeenth century and their development and expansion are examined, on the basis of oral tradition and written sources, through the reopening of Zumbo in 1862, the defeat of the Ndebele at the Kafue confluence around 1870 and the consequent establishment of permanent trading posts in the Gwembe, down to the late 1880s when the increasingly disruptive activities of the Chikunda and their muzungu leaders led to general and successful resistance against them in the form of an armed rising. The effects of the ‘Lower Zambezi complex’ are related to the development of political authority and the introduction of technical and cultural innovations in the Gwembe. Chikunda and muzungu activities are shown to have differed in their effects between the Gwembe and their much better-known and more destructive penetration of the Luangwa valley in the 1880s, partly because of the decentralized nature of Gwembe society.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1981

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References

2 Newitt, M. D. D., ‘The Portuguese on the Zambesi: An Historical Interpretation of the Prazo System’, J. Afr. Hist. x, i (1969), 6785CrossRefGoogle Scholar; idem, Portuguese Settlement on the Zambezi (London, 1972); Isaacman, Allen, ‘The Origin, Formation and Early History of the Chikunda of South Central Africa’, J. Afr. Hist. xiii, iii (1972), 443–61CrossRefGoogle Scholar; idem, Mozambique: the Africanization of a European Institution, the Zambezi Prazos 1750–1902 (Madison, 1972); idem, The Tradition of Resistance in Mozambique: Anti-Colonial Activity in the Zambesi Valley 1850–1921 (London, 1976).

3 The oral traditions drawn upon in this article were collected when I was a Ṛesearch Affiliate of the Institute for African Studies, University of Zambia, supported by a University of London Postgraduate Studentship. An oral archive (fully transcribed and partially translated) has been deposited in the libraries of the University of Zambia and School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. Subsequent references to this oral archive are indicated by ‘VT’. It was the principal source for my Ph.D. thesis, ‘The Historical Tradition of the Peoples of the Gwembe Valley, Middle Zambezi’ (London, 1976).Google Scholar While I have not yet had the opportunity of searching the Portuguese and Mozambican archives, the published material in Portuguese and the publications of other scholars provide only a few scattered references to the Gwembe.

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6 Somewhat confusingly, in view of the similar categorization of regions of the Zambezi itself, the Gwembe is conventionally sub-divided into Upper, Middle, and Lower River areas and each has a distinct character. For their definition, see Colson, , Social Organisation, 4.Google Scholar

7 The extract drawn on here, translated by E. Axelson, appears in Fagan, B. M. et al. , Iron Age Cultures in Zambia, 11 (London, 1969), 148Google Scholar; the complete text appears in O Chronista de Tissuary, 11 (Nova Goa, 1867).Google Scholar

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24 VT 9, Siainga and Kanyemba, 3 May 1974; VT 10, Enock Syabbalo, 4 May 1974.

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37 In 1892 an Ndebele party came into conflict with a Lozi force near the Kafue confluence; National Archives of Zimbabwe, HIST MSS WI 6/1/2, Lewanika to Lobengula, 4 Jan. 1893 (cited by Cobbing, J. R. D., ‘The Ndebele under the Khumalos, 1820–1896’ (Ph.D. thesis, University of Lancaster, 1976).Google Scholar Cobbing dates the Kafue battle to 1892 on the basis of this document which refers to one Ndebele soldier being killed by the Lozi, because the name given for the Ndebele war leader,‘ Kwambeni’ is identical to that cited by White. The balance of the evidence seems to indicate two separate incidents, however, with the one described here falling in the late 1860s or early 1870s. White's Urungwe traditions record that Mzilikazi was the Ndebele king at the time of the raid, which reinforces my proposed chronology (White, ‘History’, 49).

38 Beach, D. N., ‘Ndebele Raiders and Shona Power’, J. Afr. Hist. xv, iv (1974), 648.Google Scholar

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46 Depelchin, H. and Croonenberghs, C., Trois Ans dans l'Afrique Australe (Brussels, 1883), 219Google Scholar; Reed described how, in the 1890s, Lower Zambezi traders used to make ‘a sort of base camp at Mashabba Kraal’ (probably Ciabi's on the right bank of the Upper River). National Archives of Zimbabwe, LO 5/6/8, Capt. William Reed to Acting Administrator, Bulawayo, 23 Feb. 1897 (I am indebted to Dr Cobbing for this reference).

47 VT 1, Johan Siamayuwa, 11 April 1974; VT 28, Condonda Simuyuyu, 23 May 1974; VT 110, Sialuselo Siamayuni, 7 Aug. 1974; Tabler, E. C. (ed.), Zambesia and Matabeleland in the Seventies (London, 1960).Google Scholar ‘The Journal of Richard Frewen, 1877–1878’, 192. Frewen wrote that ‘The Portuguese… come in boats to within 100 miles of Wankie, where there are rapids, and then make the journey overland.’ Selous observed the Chikunda using small canoes in the Middle River, and he described a typical Lower Zambezi flat-bottomed boat reaching Kasoko from Zumbo; Wanderings, 289–90, 296. A few years later Selous described these same boats near Zumbo as ‘capable of carrying about three tons of cargo’; Travels, 60.

48 Thomas, , Eleven Years, 380–1Google Scholar; Terörde, P., Vom Cap sum Sambesi (Freiburg im Breisgau, 1882), 331Google Scholar; one informant claimed the Chikunda used donkeys in the escarpment foothills, but this remains unconfirmed and may simply be an echo of Selous’ expedition in 1877; VT 65, Siatimbula Munjobe, 24 June 1974.

49 Significantly, in 1862, when in the upstream part of the Upper River, Chapman heard about Mamba and learned that the Simamba possessed firearms: Tabler, E. C. (ed.), J. Chapman, Traveller in the Interior of South Africa, 1849–1863 (Cape Town, 1971), 11, 101.Google Scholar

50 See below.

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61 Livingstone referred to this ban but added significantly that ‘many robberies occur’; Schapera, , African Journals, 84.Google Scholar

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64 VT 28, Condonda Simuyuyu, 23 May 1974; VT54, Laisi Sianyanga Sialinda, 14 June 1974; VT 78, Chief Simamba, 20 July 1974; National Archives of Zambia, KTE 2/i; Reynolds, Barrie, The Material Culture of the Peoples of the Gwembe Valley (Manchester, 1968), 188.Google Scholar

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66 VT 97, Siamasandu Cibwalu, 21 May 1974; cf. Kerr, W. M., ‘The Upper Zambesi Zone’, The Scottish Geographical Magazine, ii (1886), 400.Google Scholar

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75 Mesquita e Solla, , ‘ Apontamentos’, 281.Google Scholar

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77 VT 85, Johan Mutana Siamuzya, 25 July 1974; VT 104, Manjolo Jamba, 5 Aug. 1974; cf. White, ‘History’, 46. Kanyemba's raids even extended to the Ila; Smith, E. W. and Dale, A. M., The Ila-speaking peoples of Northern Rhodesia (London, 1920), I, 44.Google Scholar

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92 Gibbons, A. St. H., Exploration and Hunting in Central Africa, 1895–96 (London, 1898), 260Google Scholar; Wallis, J. P. R. (ed.), The Barotseland Journal of James Stevenson-Hamilton, 1898–99 (London, 1953), 8, 30, 231–5Google Scholar; National Archives of Rhodesia, LO 5/6/8.

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