
Please select a historical
period:
25
years ago / 50 years ago
/ 80 years ago / 125
years ago / 150 years ago
250 years ago / 400
years ago / 700 years ago
/ 1,200 years ago
1,500 years ago / 2,000
years ago / 3,000 years ago
/ 4,000 years ago / 5,000
years ago / 10,000 years ago
700
Years Ago in South Africa
According
to Karanga oral history, by 1400 one of their chiefs had risen
above all his rivals and became king. In 1440, the successor
to the throne, King Mutota of the Rozwi, a sub-clan of the larger
Karanga nation, had assembled a powerful army. In a decade he
had expanded the kingdom into an empire covering almost the
whole Zimbabwe plateau. Due to his victories, he was given the
title Mwene Mutapa, "master conqueror", and this was
the name eventually given to the empire. To the Europeans, Mwene
Mutapa became known as the empire of Monomotapa.
The emperor did not have a single capital but moved around his
lands as needed. In 1480, one of the provincial leaders, Changmire,
revolted and succeeded in making himself emperor. Great Zimbabwe
was his capital. Usually only the emperor and his family and
bodyguard lived at the capital, but that could still be huge
number of people. Most people lived in scattered farming villages.
At its peak, Great Zimbabwe covered an area of 25 hectares.
Built on top of a kopje, a steep rocky hill, there was a series
of fortress-like walls with a complex network of corridors,
called the "acropolis" because of its similarity to
the hilltop fortresses of ancient Greek cities. Some 70 metres
below this, is the temple, a large oval enclosure 100 metres
long and 70 wide, with a stone tower ten metres high. In between
these two major sites are a number of other smaller stone ruins.
The Mwene Mutapa empire eventually was taken back by a member
of the Mutota family, but Great Zimbabwe remained as the capital
of a smaller, now independent Changmire kingdom. Zimbabwe was
inhabited until the city was destroyed during the Zulu Wars
in the 1830s.
San and Khoi peoples are now largely driven back into the Kalahari
desert by expansion of the Bantu.
In 1488, Bartolomeo Diaz of Portugal sails around the Cape of
Good Hope in Southern Africa. He becomes the first European
since ancient times to reach the Indian Ocean.
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25
years ago / 50 years ago
/ 80 years ago / 125
years ago / 150 years ago
250 years ago / 400
years ago / 700 years ago
/ 1,200 years ago
1,500 years ago / 2,000
years ago / 3,000 years ago
/ 4,000 years ago / 5,000
years ago / 10,000 years ago