Global Information Lookup Global Information

Ndau people information


The Ndau are an ethnic group which inhabits the areas in south-eastern South Africa. The name "Ndau" means Land. Just like the Manyika people in northern Manicaland, their name Manyika also meaning "Owners of the Land", the name Ndau means Land. E.g "Ndau yedu" meaning "our land" When the Ngoni observed this, they called them the Ndau people, the name itself meaning the land, the place or the country in their language. Some suggestions are that the name is derived from the Nguni words "Amading'indawo" which means "those looking for a place" as this is what the Gaza Nguni called them and the name then evolved to Ndau. This is erroneous as the natives are described in detail to have already been occupying parts of Zimbabwe and Mozambique in 1500s by Joao dos Santos.[1] The five largest Ndau groups are the Magova; the Mashanga; the Vatomboti, the Madanda and the Teve. Ancient Ndau People met with the Khoi/San during the first trade with the Arabs at Mapungumbwe (mapungubwe is "place of Jackals" not shiriyantonnton)and its attributed to the Kalanga people not Ndau. They traded with Arabs with “Mpalu” “Njeti” and “Vukotlo’’ these are the red, white and blue coloured cloths together with golden beads. Ndau people traded traditional herbs, spiritual powers, animal skins and bones.

The ancient Ndau people are historically related to the Karanga tribe, and were already in Mozambique and parts of Zimbabwe by the 1500s.[2] Because of the large-scale conquests of the Ngunis in the 1820s a lot of the Ndau ancestry evolved to include the Nguni bloodline and ancestry. This is evident in the wealth of Nguni words in the Ndau language, Nguni names and surnames. In the 1820s, during a period of severe drought, northern Nguni armies particularly the (Zulu, Swazi, Ndwandwe, Khumalo, Xhosa and Ndebele) people who speak related Bantu languages and inhabit southeast Africa from Cape Province to southern Mozambique, began to migrate to Mozambique from what is now South Africa. One Nguni chief, Nxaba, established a short-lived kingdom inland from Sofala, but in 1837 he was defeated by Soshangane, a powerful Nguni rival. Eventually Soshangane established his capital in the highlands of the middle Sabie River in what is present day South Africa. The Nguni-Shangaans established the Gaza-kingdom in southern Mozambique and subjugated many of the Ndau people who were already living in that area.[3] This history shows that the Nguni invaders had slain a lot of the Ndau men and taken their wives. Due to this, a lot of the "Ndau people" have a lineage with Nguni influences. This was further cemented by the intermarriages between the Nguni and Ndau. The more appropriate term to describe the resultant group including the modern Ndau is Shangaan. The Ndau culture also evolved to include Nguni practices in the same that many Nguni words became part of the Ndau language.

According to Earthy, when the Ndau people were conquered by the Ndwandwe-Ngunis, some of the Ndau people took refuge among the Chopi (Copi) people, who had amassed rifles from the Portuguese in order to protect themselves.[4] It is suggested by some that some of the Chopi people remained independent of the Nguni Gaza Empire. In forming the Gaza empire, Soshangane and his Nguni impis [armies] overran and incorporated the Tsonga, Shongonono, Ngomane, Portuguese, Hlengwe, Nyai, Rhonga, Shona, Xhosa, Zulu, Senga, Chopi as well as the Ndau tribes in a new nation with the people collectively called Shangani.

With the prolonged drought, the rise of Gaza, the dominance of the slave trade, and the expansion of Portuguese control in the Zambezi Valley, the once-mighty African chieftaincies of the Zambezi region declined. In their place, valley warlords established fortified strongholds at the confluence of the major rivers, where they raised private armies and raided for slaves in the interior. The most powerful of these warlords was Manuel António de Sousa, also known as Gouveia, a settler from Portuguese India, who by the middle of the 19th century controlled most of the southern Zambezi Valley and a huge swath of land to its south. North of the Zambezi, Islamic slave traders rose to power from their base in Angoche, and the Yao chiefs of the north migrated south to the highlands along the Shire River, where they established their military power.[1] As a result of this settlement in Chipinge, some Ndau-Shangaan settled in what is now modern day Mozambique for it has to be borne in mind that prior to the arrival of the Portuguese and English in the colonization of what is now Zimbabwe and Mozambique respectively. Historically through hundreds of years of mixing with other Shona groups, the Ndau language and customs evolved . The intermarriage with the conquering Ngunis added a Nguni flavour to the language and culture. Ancient Ndau could be one of the most ancient form of all modern day Nguni languages. It is possible that the ancient Ndau are one of the first ancestral tribes of the Ngunis, similarly to the Mthethwas, Lala, and Debe who are descended from the Thonga-Tekelas.[5] This is all conjecture at this point and further research would need to be carried out to establish this.

In a strict sense of the term the Ndau language is mainly spoken in the following southern districts of the Sofala province: Machanga, Chibabava, Machaze (Danda), Buzi and in Nhamatanda, Dondo and Beira (Bangwe) and resembles the Shona language with many Nguni words. It is also  partly spoken in Mambone (Inhambane province) and Mossurize. They also speak Portuguese in Mozambique, English in Zimbabwe and Xhosa in South Africa. In Zimbabwe, Ndau is mainly spoken in Chipinge and Chimanimani districts.-
  1. ^ dos Santos, J. Ethiopia Oriental, Evora, 1609, Liv. II, Cap. VIII Santos Ethiopia Oriental 1609.
  2. ^ Junod, Henri (1977), Matimu Ya Vatsonga: 1498-1650, Braamfontein: Sasavona Publishers.
  3. ^ Broch-Due, Vigdis (2005). Violence And Belonging:The Quest For Identity In Post-Colonial Africa. Psychology Press. p. 97. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
  4. ^ Earthy, E.D. (2009), Annals of the Transvaal Museum: III. On Some Ritual Objects of the Vandau in South Chopiland Gaza, Portuguese East Africa, pp. 125‒128.
  5. ^ Muzi Mthethwa (1995), "The History of abakwaMthethwa, Research Project", Department of History, University of Zululand.

and 29 Related for: Ndau people information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8571 seconds.)

Ndau people

Last Update:

The Ndau are an ethnic group which inhabits the areas in south-eastern South Africa. The name "Ndau" means Land. Just like the Manyika people in northern...

Word Count : 1828

Ndau

Last Update:

Ndau may refer to: Ndau people Ndau language This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Ndau. If an internal link led you here...

Word Count : 39

Shona people

Last Update:

language/dialect clusters: Manyika, Karanga, Zezuru, Korekore, and Ndau. The Shona people are grouped according to the dialect of the language they speak...

Word Count : 2284

Ndau dialect

Last Update:

Ndau (also called chiNdau, Chindau, Ndzawu, Njao, Chidanda) is a Bantu language spoken by 1,400,000 people. Ndau and has often been included as Nguni dialect...

Word Count : 261

Muchongoyo dance

Last Update:

It particularly identifies with the Ndau people, though less strongly identifies with the Tsonga (Shangani) people. Muchongolo is the name of it in Tsonga...

Word Count : 849

Tsonga people

Last Update:

the word Nguni), the Ndau and the Malopo. The Ndau spirit possesses the descendants of the Gaza soldiers who had slain the Ndau and taken their wives...

Word Count : 4430

Chimanimani Mountains

Last Update:

vegetation. The Ndau people have lived in the area around the Chimanimani Mountains for centuries. In the early 19th century, Nguni-speaking people left what...

Word Count : 1616

Shona language

Last Update:

over 14,000,000 people. The larger group of historically related languages—called Shona or Shonic languages by linguists—also includes Ndau (Eastern Shona)...

Word Count : 1518

Hama Thai

Last Update:

including chief of the air force and minister for Veteran's Affairs. He speaks Ndau, Shona, Russian, Portuguese, and English. Frelimo Denies Plan to 'Finish...

Word Count : 53

Chipinge District

Last Update:

292 (2012 census). Ndau people, a sub group of the Shona people, inhabit the north and central portions of the district. Tswa people live in the south...

Word Count : 534

Hmong people

Last Update:

embroidery work (called pa ndau or paj ntaub, literally "flower cloth"). When Western authors first came in contact with Hmong people in the 18th century, they...

Word Count : 9023

Manicaland Province

Last Update:

District, the MaUngwe people use the chiUngwe. In Chipinge District the Ndau people use chiNdau and the Machangana/ Shangaani people use chiChangana/ Shangaan...

Word Count : 1510

Sena people

Last Update:

them for the loss of her work output in her birth home. Sena language Ndau people Finex Ndhlovu (2009). The Politics of Language and Nation Building in...

Word Count : 2311

Soshangane

Last Update:

to the Gaza army and the Ndau lost a high proportion of their men in this way. The Gaza intermarried with the local people, but were less successful...

Word Count : 5765

Mount Selinda

Last Update:

The dominant people of the area are the Ndau tribe, who claim close links with the Zulu tribe of South Africa. Their language is chiNdau. Most of them...

Word Count : 1607

Bantu peoples

Last Update:

The Bantu peoples are an ethnolinguistic grouping of approximately 400 distinct native African ethnic groups who speak Bantu languages. The languages...

Word Count : 4766

Languages of Zimbabwe

Last Update:

official languages, namely Chewa, Chibarwe, English, Kalanga, Koisan, Nambya, Ndau, Ndebele, Shangani, Shona, sign language, Sotho, Tonga, Tswana, Venda, Xhosa...

Word Count : 4636

Demographics of Mozambique

Last Update:

Shangana, Chokwe, Manyika, Sena, Makua, Ndau, among others) make up 98.61% of Mozambique's total population. People of mixed race are the largest minority...

Word Count : 2005

Demographics of Zimbabwe

Last Update:

16 official languages: Chewa, Chibarwe, English, Kalanga, Koisan, Nambya, Ndau, Ndebele, Shangani, Shona, sign language, Sotho, Tonga, Tswana, Venda, and...

Word Count : 2479

Abun people

Last Update:

having socialized with the Biak people [id] near the coastline, they were then called the Karon (meaning: the people from within), while the ones who...

Word Count : 401

Hmong textile art

Last Update:

of traditional and modern textile arts and crafts produced by the Hmong people. Traditional Hmong textile examples include hand-spun hemp cloth production...

Word Count : 2183

Zimunya

Last Update:

the East, waBocha People under Chief Marange, waUngwe People under Chief Makoni, as well as the waHera in the west, the Ndau People to the south, with...

Word Count : 805

Languages of Mozambique

Last Update:

Mozambique has 22 Bantu origin languages which are: Swahili, Makhuwa, Sena, Ndau, Tswa-Ronga (Tsonga), Lomwe, Ekoti, Nahara, Makonde, Chopi, Chuwabu, Ronga...

Word Count : 534

Machaze District

Last Update:

400 millimetres (55 in). In the 15th century, the area was settled by Ndau people who moved out of the Rozwi Empire to fine more fertile lands. The district...

Word Count : 368

Tribalism and regionalism in Zimbabwe

Last Update:

of Perrance Shiri and president Mnangagwa’s role in Gukurahundi. Karanga people were the main force to oust 37 year old Zezuru rule which was led by Mugabe...

Word Count : 354

Zimbabwe

Last Update:

Africa. Other ethnic groups include Venda, Tonga, Tsonga, Kalanga, Sotho, Ndau, Nambya, Tswana, Xhosa and Lozi. Minority ethnic groups include white Zimbabweans...

Word Count : 19829

Swan maiden

Last Update:

The narrative of the Sky-Maiden was collected in song form from the Ndau people, titled Legend and Song of the Sky-Maiden: the daughter of a powerful...

Word Count : 44888

List of official languages

Last Update:

English, Shona, Ndebele, Chirbawe, Kalanga, "Koisan" (Tshuwau), Nambya, Ndau, Zimbabwean sign language, Tonga, Tswana, Venda, Xhosa) Chirbawe (Sena):...

Word Count : 8841

Zimbabwe African National Union

Last Update:

a minor party with support among the Ndau. Politics of Zimbabwe Rhodesian propaganda war Zimbabwe African Peoples Union (ZAPU) Ndlovu-Gatsheni, Sabelo...

Word Count : 765

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net