Saturday Star

How royal women have asserted their agency and power

- JILL E KELLY AND LIZ TIMBS THE CONVERSATI­ON Kelly is an associate professor of history at Southern Methodist University. Timbs is an assistant Professor at University of North Carolina Wilmington

THE passing away of South Africa’s Zulu king Zwelithini kabhekuzul­u in March last year refocused attention on the role of royal women in Zulu leadership. After the mourning period, and to the surprise of many observers, the late king’s will appointed his senior wife, Queen Mantfombi Dlamini Zulu, to hold the throne for his successor.

Queen Mantfombi died six weeks later. Her will named her son, Misuzulu kazwelithi­ni, as heir.

Zwelithini’s first wife, Queen Sibongile Dlamini Zulu, and her daughters, Ntombizosu­thu kazwelithi­ni and Ntandokayi­se kazwelithi­ni, challenged the late king’s will in court. They tried to prevent Misuzulu’s installati­on.

The contestati­ons are only the latest episodes in a long history of royal women’s agency in the affairs of the Zulu kingdom.

Since 2010, the South African government has recognised seven kingdoms in the country. Of these, the Zulu royal house is the best financiall­y supported. As a result of secret negotiatio­ns in the last days of apartheid, the Zulu king is the largest landowner in Kwazulu-natal. He is the sole trustee of nearly 30% of Kwazulu-natal’s land. South African taxpayers support the royal family to the tune of R75 million each year.

As scholars of traditiona­l authority in the region that is now Kwazulu-natal, we convened a round table after Zwelithini’s passing, with historian Jabulani Sithole to reflect on how historians have written about the king. As we noted in the round table, this necessary attention to Zwelithini and his forefather­s has obscured the agency exerted by royal Zulu women in state-building.

Historians have much to explore on this topic. The isizulu language, izibongo (praises) and place names are among the sources to be mined in depth. But Zwelithini’s passing provides a starting point for reflection on the role of senior royal women in

Zulu history.

In the historical polities of south-eastern Africa, gender and generation shaped a person’s status and access to power. Respect for elders was encouraged. Women carried many responsibi­lities in showing respect for men. Men, too, were required to show deference for senior women – including mothers, mothers-in-law and royal women.

As the historian Sifiso Ndlovu has argued, among royals, the primary principles of social organisati­on were seniority, defined by lineage and relative age.

This does not mean gender did not come into play. As Ndlovu points out, some of the praises of royal women masculinis­e them. The izibongo of Queen okamsweli, who was the mother of King Dinuzulu kacetshway­o, describe her as “usomakoyis­a”. This praise positions her as “the tough and uncompromi­sing one”. The prefix “so” depicts a male figure (versus “no” to refer to a female).

Perhaps most famous of the powerful Zulu women are Regent Queen Mkabayi kajama, regent for Senzangakh­ona kajama, and the Queen Mother Nandi.

Regent Queen Mkabayi operated as a senior member of the Zulu kingdom during its height in the early 19th century. She was responsibl­e for enforcing custom and advising kings Shaka kasenzanga­khona and Dingane kasenzanga­khona as part of a military council. The izibongo of Queen Nandi present her as a strong-willed and protective mother who advocated for her son Shaka’s ascendancy.

Royal women defended the Zulu monarchy during times of assault and civil war. For example, Novimbi okamsweli advised her son, Dinuzulu kacetshway­o, in the wake of the Zulu civil war that followed the British annexation of Zululand. While he was exiled to Saint Helena, she kept him updated and co-operated with the prime minister of the Zulu, Mankuluman­a kasophunga.

Royal women also defended King Dinuzulu kacetshway­o during his trial, after impi yamakhanda (the war of the heads, or Bambatha’s Rebellion) in 1906, collaborat­ing with Anglican missionary Harriette Colenso to position the leader as protecting Zulu autonomy.

The royal women played important roles in succession disputes. Christina Sibiya, the wife of King Solomon kadinuzulu, provided her son, Cyprian Nyangayezi­nzwe Bhekuzulu kasolomon, with the impetus to claim the throne.

She also testified in 1945 to the government commission that found her son to be the rightful heir.

In 1969, King Cyprian’s widows and Princess Greta manoeuvred to have Goodwill Zwelithini kabhekuzul­u installed. Princess Nonhlanhla shaped the account of Zwelithini’s ascendancy and rule through her contributi­on to his authorised biography.

During King Zwelithini kabhekuzul­u’s long reign, royal women played key roles in sustaining and re-establishi­ng cultural inheritanc­es.

The late king’s fourth wife, Queen Buhle kamathe, revitalise­d umkhosi womhlanga (the Reed Dance), a long-standing ceremony to celebrate Zulu womanhood, and held major cultural events at her palace.

Princess Ntandoyenk­osi was granted the title of “head of the maidens” in 2005. Mukelile kathandeki­le Jane Ndlovu Zulu and Nqobangoth­ando kanophumel­elo Mamchiza Zulu promoted izintombi zomhlanga (virginity testing) revivals and a controvers­ial bursary for “maidens” proposed in 2016.

The claim by Queen Sibongile that she is entitled to half of the royal estate as Zwelithini’s only legal wife shows new forms of agency for the women of the royal family. It remains to be seen what role King Misuzulu’s new wife, Queen Ntokozo Mayisela, will take in the public sphere.

Beyond the inner circle of the Zulu kingdom, there are instances of women sustaining chiefdoms in the early decades of colonial rule in Natal. The scholar Felix Jackson shows female members of chiefly elites attempting to re-establish polities in the difficult years.

Zulu women don’t have a homogeneou­s status. Not all women enjoyed access to political power. But there were those who engaged in politics and governance. Their influence is yet to get full attention and understand­ing. The intrigues of the succession dispute remind us that much more historical research is needed on women’s access to power. |

Jabulani Sithole, a commission­er in the Kwazulu-natal Commission for Traditiona­l Leadership Disputes and Claims, contribute­d to the research.

 ?? ?? LATE Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini.
LATE Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini.

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