Cetshwayo biography of donald
•
Herbert Isaac Ernest Dhlomo
Herbert Isaac Ernest Dhlomo was born in Edendale, Natal on February 26th, He was the second son to Ezra and Sardinia Dhlomo. Ezra came from a line of ancestors connected to a royal Zulu family from the Makabaleni area, north of Kranskop. Sardinia came from an aristocratic family who emphasized their Christian and Victorian values, claiming to be amongst the first converts of Rev. James Allison, whose följare founded Edendale in Ezra and Sardinia had fyra children tillsammans – three boys and a girl. Herbert was the younger brother of Rofles Robert Reginald Dhlomo (R.R.R.), a prominent Zulu writer among Black South Africans in the early twentieth century. Together, R.R.R and Dhlomo and served as editors of Ilanga Lase Natal in the s.
From a very early age, Herbert was exposed to the sharp class and racial differences. Most of Dhlomo’s childhood was spent in Johannesburg, where his father earned a modest income working in the mines and his mother worked
•
Cetshwayo
King of the Zulu Kingdom (–)
Cetshwayo kaMpande (; Zulu pronunciation:[ᵏǀétʃwajokámpande]; c. – 8 February ) was the king[a] of the Zulu Kingdom from to and its Commander in Chief during the Anglo-Zulu War of His name has been transliterated as Cetawayo, Cetewayo, Cetywajo and Ketchwayo. Cetshwayo consistently opposed the war and sought fruitlessly to make peace with the British and was defeated and exiled following the Zulu defeat in the war. He was later allowed to return to Zululand, where he died in
Early life
[edit]Cetshwayo was a son of Zulu king Mpande[1] and Queen Ngqumbazi, half-nephew of Zulu king Shaka and grandson of Senzangakhona. In he defeated and killed in battle his younger brother Mbuyazi, Mpande's favourite, at the Battle of Ndondakusuka. Almost all of Mbuyazi's followers were massacred in the aftermath of the battle, including five of Cetshwayo's brothers.[2] Following this he became the ruler of
•
Related Works in English--Biography, History, Music, Politics, Religion, & Society
- The Anglo-Zulu war : new perspectives. Edited by Andrew Duminy, Charles Ballard. Pietermaritzburg : University of Natal Press, ( p.) [Papers presented at the Centenary Conference on the Anglo-Zulu War at the University of Natal, Durban, ]
- Arndt, Jochen S. Divided by the word : colonial encounters and the remaking of Zulu and Xhosa identities. Charlottesville : University of Virginia Press, ( p.)
--See also: E-book - Ballard, Charles. The house of Shaka : the Zulu monarchy illustrated. Marine Parade, South Africa : Emoyeni Books, c ( p.)
- Ballard, Charles. John Dunn : the white chief of Zululand. Craighall [South Africa] : Ad. Donker, ( p.)
- Barker, Anthony. Physic and protocol among the Zulus. ISMA paper; no. Johannesburg: Institute for the Study of Man in Africa []. (13 p.)
- Barnes, Leonard. Zulu paraclete; a sentimental record. London: P. Davies, ( p.)
- Barter, Catherine. Al