Draft:Tembe Tribal Authority: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Content deleted Content added


Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
Line 25: Line 25:

}}

}}

The Tembe people were historically powerful throughout the ivory trade period along the southeastern African coast, engaging with [[Portuguese]], [[Dutch]], and [[British]] merchants in the 1700s – exchanging ivory and (sometimes slaves) for glass beads, brass and cloth. Wealth from ivory allowed Tembe chiefs to consolidate and cling into regional power and influence neighbouring chiefdoms.

The Tembe people were historically powerful throughout the ivory trade period along the southeastern African coast, engaging with [[Portuguese]], [[Dutch]], and [[British]] merchants in the 1700s – exchanging ivory and (sometimes slaves) for glass beads, brass and cloth. Wealth from ivory allowed Tembe chiefs to consolidate and cling into regional power and influence neighbouring chiefdoms.

The Tembe Tribal Authority continues the chiefly lineage of the [[Tembe Kingdom]] under [[South Africa]]’s formal traditional leadership system.<ref>{{cite web |last=Peace Parks Foundation |title=Tembe Elephant Park |url=https://www.peaceparks.org/parks/tembe-elephant-park/ |access-date=11 November 2025}}</ref> The tribal authority administers land, resolves disputes and maintains cultural and social traditions within the [[Manguzi]] jurisdiction.

The Tembe Tribal Authority continues the chiefly lineage of the [[Tembe Kingdom]] under [[South Africa]]’s formal traditional leadership system.<ref>{{cite web |last=Peace Parks Foundation |title=Tembe Elephant Park |url=https://www.peaceparks.org/parks/tembe-elephant-park/ |access-date=11 November 2025}}</ref> The tribal authority administers land, resolves disputes and maintains cultural and social traditions within the [[Manguzi]] jurisdiction.


Revision as of 05:12, 11 November 2025

The Tembe Tribal Authority (also called Manguzi, Emanguzi or KwaNgwanase) is a traditional governance structure of the Tembe people, based in the northern KwaZulu-Natal region of South Africa, near the border with Mozambique. The Tembe are a Nguni-speaking ethnic group whose ancestral territory historically extended from the coastal areas around Delagoa Bay (present-day Maputo Bay) inland toward the lower Lubombo Mountains.

Local governance structure of the Tembe people

Tembe Tribal Authority

Country South Africa
Province KwaZulu-Natal
District uMkhanyakude
Municipality uMhlabuyalingana
 • Type Traditional council
 • Chief Inkosi Tembe

The Tembe people were historically powerful throughout the ivory trade period along the southeastern African coast, engaging with Portuguese, Dutch, and British merchants in the 1700s – exchanging ivory and (sometimes slaves) for glass beads, brass and cloth. Wealth from ivory allowed Tembe chiefs to consolidate and cling into regional power and influence neighbouring chiefdoms.[1]

The Tembe Tribal Authority continues the chiefly lineage of the Tembe Kingdom under South Africa’s formal traditional leadership system.[2] The tribal authority administers land, resolves disputes and maintains cultural and social traditions within the Manguzi jurisdiction.

The Tembe Tribal Authority co-established Tembe Elephant Park in partnership with Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife in 1983, providing communal land for the reserve and continuing to act as a key traditional stakeholder in its management and conservation activities.[3]

References

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Exit mobile version