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1
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0005149716
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Ngamiland
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discusses the highly localised nature of river names, and speculates that the ultimate origin of 'Kavango' came from its upper course in Angola as no variants of the name existed in the lower course
-
A.G. Stigand, 'Ngamiland', The Geographical Journal, 62, 6 (1923), pp. 410-11, discusses the highly localised nature of river names, and speculates that the ultimate origin of 'Kavango' came from its upper course in Angola as no variants of the name existed in the lower course.
-
(1923)
The Geographical Journal
, vol.62
, Issue.6
, pp. 410-411
-
-
Stigand, A.G.1
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2
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57249092507
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-
J. Poroto and T. Kupembona, interviewed, Gumma village, Namibia, 18 July 2005
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J. Poroto and T. Kupembona, interviewed, Gumma village, Namibia, 18 July 2005
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-
-
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3
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57249090150
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S. Hausiku, interviewed Sauyemwa village, Namibia, 21 July 2005.
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S. Hausiku, interviewed Sauyemwa village, Namibia, 21 July 2005.
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-
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4
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-
33748912822
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-
The best summary of the river's hydrology and surrounding terrestrial environment is found in, Cape Town, Struik Publishers
-
The best summary of the river's hydrology and surrounding terrestrial environment is found in J. Mendelsohn and S. el Obeid, Okavango River: The Flow of a Lifeline (Cape Town, Struik Publishers, 2004).
-
(2004)
Okavango River: The Flow of a Lifeline
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-
Mendelsohn, J.1
el Obeid, S.2
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5
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57249100194
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While the Namibian section of the Kavango is often conceived as part of the lower Kavango, in this article I refer to it as the 'Middle Kavango' in recognition of the distinctive human-environmental relationships that emerged there, centred as it was between upstream population clusters in much wetter environments and the downstream Delta communities
-
While the Namibian section of the Kavango is often conceived as part of the lower Kavango, in this article I refer to it as the 'Middle Kavango' in recognition of the distinctive human-environmental relationships that emerged there, centred as it was between upstream population clusters in much wetter environments and the downstream Delta communities.
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6
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57249090149
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The Kwito, its major tributary, joins the Kavango in Namibia, but it too receives no water from this area and is simply bringing water from rainier points to the north
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The Kwito, its major tributary, joins the Kavango in Namibia, but it too receives no water from this area and is simply bringing water from rainier points to the north.
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7
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57249092506
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The presence of these fertile riverbeds was recognised by European visitors quite early, indicating that in the mid and late nineteenth century, settlement patterns very much adhered to these patterns of soil fertility
-
The presence of these fertile riverbeds was recognised by European visitors quite early, indicating that in the mid and late nineteenth century, settlement patterns very much adhered to these patterns of soil fertility.
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9
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57249085503
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When political conditions in Angola have permitted, these are favoured sites for cultivation. On the heavily settled southern bank of the Kavango in Namibia, however, these soils have been altered - for the worse - through the introduction of ploughing in recent decades. This has mixed infertile layers of subsoil with the fertile but thin layer of topsoil, resulting in a decline in overall fertility. Mendelsohn and el Obeid, Okavango River, pp. 41-45.
-
When political conditions in Angola have permitted, these are favoured sites for cultivation. On the heavily settled southern bank of the Kavango in Namibia, however, these soils have been altered - for the worse - through the introduction of ploughing in recent decades. This has mixed infertile layers of subsoil with the fertile but thin layer of topsoil, resulting in a decline in overall fertility. Mendelsohn and el Obeid, Okavango River, pp. 41-45.
-
-
-
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10
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-
4243674497
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The Archaeology of the Kavango
-
See, for example
-
See, for example, L. Jacobson, 'The Archaeology of the Kavango', Journal of the SWA Scientific Society, 40-41 (1987), pp. 155-56.
-
(1987)
Journal of the SWA Scientific Society
, vol.40-41
, pp. 155-156
-
-
Jacobson, L.1
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12
-
-
0034495982
-
See for example T. Giles-Vernick, 'Doli: Translating an African Environmental History of Loss in the Sangha River Basin of Equatorial Africa'
-
Themes of loss and nostalgia may be common in oral traditions dealing with environmental history
-
Themes of loss and nostalgia may be common in oral traditions dealing with environmental history. See for example T. Giles-Vernick, 'Doli: Translating an African Environmental History of Loss in the Sangha River Basin of Equatorial Africa', International Journal of African Historical Studies, 32, 2/3 (1999), pp. 373-94
-
(1999)
International Journal of African Historical Studies
, vol.32
, Issue.2-3
, pp. 373-394
-
-
-
13
-
-
16244414528
-
Living with the River: Landscape and Memory in the Zambezi Valley Northwest Zimbabwe
-
W. Beinart and J. McGregor eds, Oxford, James Currey
-
J. McGregor, '"Living with the River": Landscape and Memory in the Zambezi Valley Northwest Zimbabwe', in W. Beinart and J. McGregor (eds), Social History and African Environments (Oxford, James Currey, 2003), pp. 87-106.
-
(2003)
Social History and African Environments
, pp. 87-106
-
-
McGregor, J.1
-
14
-
-
0036095444
-
-
Enfield and Nash refer to this tendency as 'environmental nostalgia' and note that it operated among missionaries and local people alike (albeit for different reasons). G. Enfield and D. Nash, 'Drought, Desiccation and Discourse: Missionary Correspondence and 19th-century Climate Change in Central Southern Africa', The Geographical Journal, 168, 1 (March 2002), pp. 33-47, especially pp. 40-1.
-
Enfield and Nash refer to this tendency as 'environmental nostalgia' and note that it operated among missionaries and local people alike (albeit for different reasons). G. Enfield and D. Nash, 'Drought, Desiccation and Discourse: Missionary Correspondence and 19th-century Climate Change in Central Southern Africa', The Geographical Journal, 168, 1 (March 2002), pp. 33-47, especially pp. 40-1.
-
-
-
-
16
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-
0005482104
-
Kapako and Vungu Vungu: Iron Age Sites on the Kavango River
-
found early Iron Age pottery in conventionally Bantu styles dating back to perhaps the ninth century, and dated artefacts clearly related to the current inhabitants' material culture to the seventeenth century
-
B. Sandelowsky, 'Kapako and Vungu Vungu: Iron Age Sites on the Kavango River', South African Archaeological Society Goodwin Series, 3 (1979), pp. 52-61, found early Iron Age pottery in conventionally Bantu styles dating back to perhaps the ninth century, and dated artefacts clearly related to the current inhabitants' material culture to the seventeenth century.
-
(1979)
South African Archaeological Society Goodwin Series
, vol.3
, pp. 52-61
-
-
Sandelowsky, B.1
-
17
-
-
0005437082
-
Settlement Patterns and Regional Exchange: Evidence from Recent Iron Age Sites on the Kavango River, North-Eastern Namibia
-
Also see
-
Also see J. Kinahan, 'Settlement Patterns and Regional Exchange: Evidence from Recent Iron Age Sites on the Kavango River, North-Eastern Namibia', Cimbebasia, 3, 4 (1986), pp. 110-16
-
(1986)
Cimbebasia
, vol.3
, Issue.4
, pp. 110-116
-
-
Kinahan, J.1
-
20
-
-
21744454044
-
-
Portsmouth, NH, Heinemann
-
K. Klieman, 'The Pygmies Were Our Compass': Bantu and Batwa in the History of West Central Africa, Early Times to 1900 C.E. (Portsmouth, NH, Heinemann, 2003), pp. 68, 74
-
(2003)
The Pygmies Were Our Compass': Bantu and Batwa in the History of West Central Africa, Early Times to 1900 C.E
-
-
Klieman, K.1
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22
-
-
57249085505
-
-
This argument has been made in various instances of autochthonous-immigrant relationships, perhaps most sweepingly by Klieman, Pygmies
-
This argument has been made in various instances of autochthonous-immigrant relationships, perhaps most sweepingly by Klieman, 'Pygmies'.
-
-
-
-
26
-
-
57249100192
-
-
M. Salokoski, How Kings are Made, How Kingship Changes (Helsinki, University of Helsinki Research Series in Anthropology, 2006).
-
M. Salokoski, How Kings are Made, How Kingship Changes (Helsinki, University of Helsinki Research Series in Anthropology, 2006).
-
-
-
-
27
-
-
57249100195
-
-
Klieman, 'Pygmies', p. 74.
-
Klieman, 'Pygmies', p. 74.
-
-
-
-
28
-
-
54749091090
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-
Portsmouth, NH, Heinemann
-
E. Kreike, Re-Creating Eden: Land Use, Environment, and Society in Southern Angola and Northern Namibia (Portsmouth, NH, Heinemann, 2004)
-
(2004)
Re-Creating Eden: Land Use, Environment, and Society in Southern Angola and Northern Namibia
-
-
Kreike, E.1
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31
-
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57249085493
-
-
All of these narratives were recorded on the Namibian side of the border, for the simple reason that, by the 1950s, relatively few people appear to have been left on the Angolan side - and those few crossed during the era of the liberation wars beginning in the 1960s. By the 1980s, the Angolan side of the river was virtually depopulated. Residents from the Kavango banks were not seen as 'refugees' per se, but rather as people who had never broken ties with their particular polity. This movement from Angola to Namibia is reflected in the large number of people I interviewed who were born on the Angolan side of the river.
-
All of these narratives were recorded on the Namibian side of the border, for the simple reason that, by the 1950s, relatively few people appear to have been left on the Angolan side - and those few crossed during the era of the liberation wars beginning in the 1960s. By the 1980s, the Angolan side of the river was virtually depopulated. Residents from the Kavango banks were not seen as 'refugees' per se, but rather as people who had never broken ties with their particular polity. This movement from Angola to Namibia is reflected in the large number of people I interviewed who were born on the Angolan side of the river.
-
-
-
-
32
-
-
57249085489
-
-
See, for example, the traditions recorded in Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past; also G. Gibson et al., The Kavango Peoples (Wiesbaden, Steiner, 1981). Traditions in the two western, upstream polities of Mbunza and Kwangari (closely related groups) recount two possible points of origin: Either the Linyanti region to the east or a point to the northwest, where the Kunene, Cuvelai and Kavango rivers flow close to each other.
-
See, for example, the traditions recorded in Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past; also G. Gibson et al., The Kavango Peoples (Wiesbaden, Steiner, 1981). Traditions in the two western, upstream polities of Mbunza and Kwangari (closely related groups) recount two possible points of origin: Either the Linyanti region to the east or a point to the northwest, where the Kunene, Cuvelai and Kavango rivers flow close to each other.
-
-
-
-
33
-
-
57249090146
-
-
See Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past, pp. 179-80
-
See Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past, pp. 179-80
-
-
-
-
35
-
-
57249090144
-
-
Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past, pp. 37-54.
-
Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past, pp. 37-54.
-
-
-
-
36
-
-
57249100193
-
-
Some of the traditions, not surprisingly, suggest ultimate origins from places further away, but the Zambezi link is most clearly and consistently emphasised
-
Some of the traditions, not surprisingly, suggest ultimate origins from places further away, but the Zambezi link is most clearly and consistently emphasised.
-
-
-
-
37
-
-
57249085485
-
-
Vansina, How Societies Are Born, pp. 183-6, notes the contradiction between the linguistic and oral evidence. He says that Kwangari, Mbunza, Shambyu and Gciriku communities all speak a language that is most closely related to Umbundu, although none of their traditions posits historical links with that area. But he does not really explore the reasons for the contradiction, in part because he is not particularly interested in how Middle Kavango communities view their own identity. Rather, he (correctly) sees the area as a long-time magnet for refugees from all directions, as evidenced by a mix of political and linguistic influences from many places. But his conclusion, that the area is marked by 'a mix of impoverished reminiscences of rich features that are typical for one or another of the surrounding regions but nothing original to the region itself' with 'no original forms of social institutions, p. 185, is likely to offend most Kavango residents and certainly flies in the face of t
-
Vansina, How Societies Are Born, pp. 183-6, notes the contradiction between the linguistic and oral evidence. He says that Kwangari, Mbunza, Shambyu and Gciriku communities all speak a language that is most closely related to Umbundu, although none of their traditions posits historical links with that area. But he does not really explore the reasons for the contradiction, in part because he is not particularly interested in how Middle Kavango communities view their own identity. Rather, he (correctly) sees the area as a long-time magnet for refugees from all directions, as evidenced by a mix of political and linguistic influences from many places. But his conclusion, that the area is marked by 'a mix of impoverished reminiscences of rich features that are typical for one or another of the surrounding regions but nothing original to the region itself' with 'no original forms of social institutions' (p. 185), is likely to offend most Kavango residents and certainly flies in the face of their own historical experiences.
-
-
-
-
38
-
-
57249092504
-
-
M. Kandambo, interviewed Katere village, Namibia, January 2007.
-
M. Kandambo, interviewed Katere village, Namibia, January 2007.
-
-
-
-
39
-
-
57249090143
-
-
This is a common opposition in Bantu-speaking African communities, from as far away as the central African forest Klieman, Pygmies, to neighbouring Ovambo communities in Namibia and Angola, as described in Kreike, Re-Creating Eden
-
This is a common opposition in Bantu-speaking African communities, from as far away as the central African forest (Klieman, 'Pygmies') to neighbouring Ovambo communities in Namibia and Angola, as described in Kreike, Re-Creating Eden.
-
-
-
-
40
-
-
57249085500
-
-
M. Kandambo, interview, January 2007.
-
M. Kandambo, interview, January 2007.
-
-
-
-
41
-
-
57249090140
-
-
All names in these traditions, including all place names, appear as Bantu in origin with the sole exception of 'Tjaube'. Other versions of this tradition draw a distinction between Bushmen and the Tjaube, arguing that the Tjaube preceded Bushmen into the area.
-
All names in these traditions, including all place names, appear as Bantu in origin with the sole exception of 'Tjaube'. Other versions of this tradition draw a distinction between Bushmen and the Tjaube, arguing that the Tjaube preceded Bushmen into the area.
-
-
-
-
42
-
-
57249090130
-
-
The entire Chronicle is reprinted in Fleish and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples, pp. 29-56; a very similar version was recounted by D. Kashera, interview, Kambowo village, 20 January 2007. Iron-working is attested at these sites by archaeological evidence; the tradition also refers to a wetter climate phase in the region since it argues that routes were traversed by boats that would be impossible today.
-
The entire Chronicle is reprinted in Fleish and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples, pp. 29-56; a very similar version was recounted by D. Kashera, interview, Kambowo village, 20 January 2007. Iron-working is attested at these sites by archaeological evidence; the tradition also refers to a wetter climate phase in the region since it argues that routes were traversed by boats that would be impossible today.
-
-
-
-
43
-
-
57249090135
-
-
D. Kashera, interview, 20 January 2007.
-
D. Kashera, interview, 20 January 2007.
-
-
-
-
44
-
-
57249090134
-
-
Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past, pp. 48-51.
-
Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past, pp. 48-51.
-
-
-
-
45
-
-
57249085501
-
-
S. Hausiku, interview, 21 July 2005.
-
S. Hausiku, interview, 21 July 2005.
-
-
-
-
48
-
-
57249090131
-
-
See, for example, London, John Lane
-
See, for example, A. St. H. Gibbons, Africa from South to North through Marotseland, Vol. 1 (London, John Lane, 1904), pp. 217-18.
-
(1904)
Africa from South to North through Marotseland
, vol.1
, pp. 217-218
-
-
Gibbons, A.S.H.1
-
49
-
-
57249100179
-
-
G. Gibson, T. Larson, C. McGurk, The Kavango Peoples (Wiesbaden, Franz Steiner, 1981, pp. 99, 163, asserts the absence of people in Shambyu and Gciriku settlement zones, while the histories of the Kwangari, Mbunza and Mbukushu essentially assume the absence of prior inhabitants. This study argues that anikhwe and Yeyispeaking inhabitants along this stretch of Kavango are more recent arrivals, whereas the indigenous traditions argue for them as first-comers p. 23, Some Shambyu traditions describe prior Bantu-speaking inhabitants along this stretch of the river, claiming that they bought a river valley from Mbunza who were already settled upstream. In Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past, the Chronicles of the Shambyu, Gciriku, Kwangari and Mbunza all leave the impression of uninhabited territory upon the founders' arrivals
-
G. Gibson, T. Larson, C. McGurk, The Kavango Peoples (Wiesbaden, Franz Steiner, 1981), pp. 99, 163, asserts the absence of people in Shambyu and Gciriku settlement zones, while the histories of the Kwangari, Mbunza and Mbukushu essentially assume the absence of prior inhabitants. This study argues that anikhwe and Yeyispeaking inhabitants along this stretch of Kavango are more recent arrivals, whereas the indigenous traditions argue for them as first-comers (p. 23). Some Shambyu traditions describe prior Bantu-speaking inhabitants along this stretch of the river, claiming that they bought a river valley from Mbunza who were already settled upstream. In Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past, the Chronicles of the Shambyu, Gciriku, Kwangari and Mbunza all leave the impression of uninhabited territory upon the founders' arrivals.
-
-
-
-
50
-
-
57249085499
-
-
A. Sipandeka and S. Kandere, interview, Kaisosi village, 20 July 2005
-
A. Sipandeka and S. Kandere, interview, Kaisosi village, 20 July 2005
-
-
-
-
51
-
-
57249100177
-
-
Poroto and Kupembona interview, 18 July 2005.
-
Poroto and Kupembona interview, 18 July 2005.
-
-
-
-
52
-
-
57249085487
-
-
National Archives of Namibia, 'unpublished report by the Kavango Native Commissioner', 4 January 1963. I wish to thank Mattia Fummati for giving me a copy of this document.
-
National Archives of Namibia, 'unpublished report by the Kavango Native Commissioner', 4 January 1963. I wish to thank Mattia Fummati for giving me a copy of this document.
-
-
-
-
53
-
-
57249090133
-
-
D. Kashera interview, 20 January 2007
-
D. Kashera interview, 20 January 2007
-
-
-
-
54
-
-
57249100178
-
-
also S. Kandere, interview, Rundu, 28 January 2007.
-
also S. Kandere, interview, Rundu, 28 January 2007.
-
-
-
-
55
-
-
57249090145
-
-
Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past, pp. 51-2.
-
Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past, pp. 51-2.
-
-
-
-
56
-
-
57249092490
-
-
Ibid., p. 54.
-
-
-
-
57
-
-
57249100174
-
-
This is in direct conflict with the Mbukushu tradition recorded in Van Tonder, Hambukushu, p. 49, which argues that part of the anikhwe community were made slaves of the Mbukushu while others moved away; earlier parts of Van Tonder's version do however indicate an earlier relationship through marriage of chiefs and autochthons, p. 45
-
This is in direct conflict with the Mbukushu tradition recorded in Van Tonder, 'Hambukushu', p. 49, which argues that part of the anikhwe community were made slaves of the Mbukushu while others moved away; earlier parts of Van Tonder's version do however indicate an earlier relationship through marriage of chiefs and autochthons, p. 45.
-
-
-
-
58
-
-
57249100176
-
-
There are many indications that none of these polities was ethnically 'pure'. The Tjaube Chronicle is one; another is the findings of a South African researcher in 1960 who concluded that nearly one-third of those in Shambyu Footnote 40 continued belonged to the vaKwandjadi clan, making it the largest matrilineage long after its conquest. J.L. Bosch, 'Die Shambiu van die Okavango, 'n Volkekundige Studie' (PhD, University of Stellenbosch, 1964), p. 130. Similarly, there are stories of Gciriku men being wiped out in a punitive expedition led by Europeans and being replaced by migrants from other Kavango communities.
-
There are many indications that none of these polities was ethnically 'pure'. The Tjaube Chronicle is one; another is the findings of a South African researcher in 1960 who concluded that nearly one-third of those in Shambyu Footnote 40 continued belonged to the vaKwandjadi clan, making it the largest matrilineage long after its conquest. J.L. Bosch, 'Die Shambiu van die Okavango, 'n Volkekundige Studie' (PhD, University of Stellenbosch, 1964), p. 130. Similarly, there are stories of Gciriku men being wiped out in a punitive expedition led by Europeans and being replaced by migrants from other Kavango communities.
-
-
-
-
59
-
-
57249090138
-
-
Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past, pp. 53-4.
-
Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past, pp. 53-4.
-
-
-
-
60
-
-
57249085488
-
-
Ibid., pp. 132-75.
-
-
-
-
61
-
-
57249090137
-
-
Kandambo, interview, January 2007: The interviewee and her daughter had an extensive debate about the historical role of the Kwandadji clan. The interviewee, the mother of the hompa in Angola, noted that the Kwandadji clan was her father's clan, indicating that perhaps marriage patterns between royal families and purported autochthons do exist in this area.
-
Kandambo, interview, January 2007: The interviewee and her daughter had an extensive debate about the historical role of the Kwandadji clan. The interviewee, the mother of the hompa in Angola, noted that the Kwandadji clan was her father's clan, indicating that perhaps marriage patterns between royal families and purported autochthons do exist in this area.
-
-
-
-
62
-
-
57249092496
-
-
Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past, pp. 137-8.
-
Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past, pp. 137-8.
-
-
-
-
63
-
-
57249090142
-
-
I.J. Haididira, interview, Kauti village, 31 December 2006.
-
I.J. Haididira, interview, Kauti village, 31 December 2006.
-
-
-
-
64
-
-
57249100189
-
-
The Mbukushu royal title was fumu, again reflecting distinctive origins of their language and political institutions.
-
The Mbukushu royal title was fumu, again reflecting distinctive origins of their language and political institutions.
-
-
-
-
65
-
-
57249100187
-
How Societies are
-
He does not deal with Mbukushu kingships
-
Vansina, How Societies are Born, p. 185. He does not deal with Mbukushu kingships.
-
Born
, pp. 185
-
-
Vansina1
-
66
-
-
57249100184
-
-
The only figure who seems to have asserted any real authority over life and death was the Mbukushu fumu, and his seems to have been restricted to sacrificing members of his family as part of the rain-making ceremonies. When the fumu took to selling his subjects into slavery in the late nineteenth century, they deserted him in large numbers, moving downstream to the northern regions of the Okavango Delta
-
The only figure who seems to have asserted any real authority over life and death was the Mbukushu fumu, and his seems to have been restricted to sacrificing members of his family as part of the rain-making ceremonies. When the fumu took to selling his subjects into slavery in the late nineteenth century, they deserted him in large numbers, moving downstream to the northern regions of the Okavango Delta.
-
-
-
-
67
-
-
57249092494
-
-
Salokoski, How Kings Are Made, pp. 88-92, has carefully examined Oshiwambo oral traditions to the west and has also concluded that Bushmen were erased from royal histories. She assumes this happened at the very beginnings of the consolidation of royal power, despite the fact that traditions of crucial San roles in the creation and maintenance of royal authority survived into the 1960s.
-
Salokoski, How Kings Are Made, pp. 88-92, has carefully examined Oshiwambo oral traditions to the west and has also concluded that Bushmen were erased from royal histories. She assumes this happened at the very beginnings of the consolidation of royal power, despite the fact that traditions of crucial San roles in the creation and maintenance of royal authority survived into the 1960s.
-
-
-
-
68
-
-
57249092499
-
-
Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past, p. 53.
-
Fleisch and Moḧlig, Kavango Peoples in the Past, p. 53.
-
-
-
-
69
-
-
84931271858
-
Reports from 'Beyond the Line': The Accumulation of Knowledge of Kavango and its Peoples by the German Colonial Administration 1891-1911'
-
Quoted in
-
Quoted in A. Eckl, '"Reports from 'Beyond the Line'": The Accumulation of Knowledge of Kavango and its Peoples by the German Colonial Administration 1891-1911', Journal of Namibian Studies, 1 (2007), pp. 21-2.
-
(2007)
Journal of Namibian Studies
, vol.1
, pp. 21-22
-
-
Eckl, A.1
-
70
-
-
57249090132
-
-
In interviews, some people said kings did sell local people into slavery, but portrayed this as a partnership between the chiefs and families looking to get rid of their troublesome members. D. Kashera, interview, 20 July 2007. 53 Many of these monarchs had their courts on the Angolan side of the river when Europeans first arrived but relocated to the Namibian side in the early twentieth century as the Portuguese consolidated their rule
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In interviews, some people said kings did sell local people into slavery, but portrayed this as a partnership between the chiefs and families looking to get rid of their troublesome members. D. Kashera, interview, 20 July 2007. 53 Many of these monarchs had their courts on the Angolan side of the river when Europeans first arrived but relocated to the Namibian side in the early twentieth century as the Portuguese consolidated their rule.
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-
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71
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-
57249090136
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-
K. M. Likuwa, 'Rundu, Kavango: A Case Study of Forced Relocations in Namibia, 1954 to 1972' (MA thesis, University of the Western Cape, 2005), p. 109, argues that under colonialism chiefs went from being owners of the land to being salaried officials under a government that owned the land - and that the chiefs did not fully realise this. But this alliance, while certainly forced upon the chiefs, did provide an external authority to back up their own power locally over their subjects.
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K. M. Likuwa, 'Rundu, Kavango: A Case Study of Forced Relocations in Namibia, 1954 to 1972' (MA thesis, University of the Western Cape, 2005), p. 109, argues that under colonialism chiefs went from being owners of the land to being salaried officials under a government that owned the land - and that the chiefs did not fully realise this. But this alliance, while certainly forced upon the chiefs, did provide an external authority to back up their own power locally over their subjects.
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-
-
-
72
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-
57249085486
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-
This movement, too, is conceptualised within a framework of loss today, as informants report that the Angolan side of the river is far more fertile and was usually the preferred site for permanent settlement prior to Portuguese colonial abuses
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This movement, too, is conceptualised within a framework of loss today, as informants report that the Angolan side of the river is far more fertile and was usually the preferred site for permanent settlement prior to Portuguese colonial abuses.
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-
-
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74
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-
57249100181
-
-
Eckl, 'Reports', p. 16.
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Eckl, 'Reports', p. 16.
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-
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75
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-
57249085494
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Poroto and Kumpembona, interview, 18 July 2007.
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Poroto and Kumpembona, interview, 18 July 2007.
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76
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-
57249085490
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-
Likuwa, 'Rundu', is a study of forced relocations and removals - beginning with a 1950s-era relocation from a flood-prone zone and continuing through the liberation war of the 1960s and 1970s.
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Likuwa, 'Rundu', is a study of forced relocations and removals - beginning with a 1950s-era relocation from a flood-prone zone and continuing through the liberation war of the 1960s and 1970s.
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-
-
-
77
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-
57249092492
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Quoted in Likuwa, 'Rundu', p. 95.
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Quoted in Likuwa, 'Rundu', p. 95.
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78
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-
57249085496
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-
Sipandeka and Kandere, interview, 20 July 2007.
-
Sipandeka and Kandere, interview, 20 July 2007.
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-
-
-
80
-
-
57249085495
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-
Sipandeka and Kandere, interview, 20 July 2007
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Sipandeka and Kandere, interview, 20 July 2007
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-
-
-
82
-
-
57249092493
-
-
Kandambo, interview, January 2007
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Kandambo, interview, January 2007
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-
-
-
83
-
-
57249092491
-
-
Poroto and Kumpembona, interview, 18 July 2005.
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Poroto and Kumpembona, interview, 18 July 2005.
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-
-
-
84
-
-
57249085492
-
-
K. Mberekera, interview, Kambowo village, January 2007.
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K. Mberekera, interview, Kambowo village, January 2007.
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-
-
-
85
-
-
57249090139
-
-
S. Kandere, interview, 20 July 2007.
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S. Kandere, interview, 20 July 2007.
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-
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