Munhumutapa Empire
Monomotapa is also a genus of
jumping spiders.
The Empire of Great Zimbabwe also called
Mwene Mutapa or
Manhumutapa or
Mhunhumutapa or
Monomotapa or
Mutapa or
Mwanamutapa was a medieval kingdom (c.1450-1629) located in
Southern Africa covering mainly the modern states of
Zimbabwe and
Mozambique. Its capital city was the
Great Zimbabwe.
The empire was established by the Gokomere who are the ancestors of the modern day
Shona people. Great Zimbabwe reached its zenith around the
1440s) via the
Gold trade. Gold was exported from the empire to the port of Sofala south of the
Zambezi delta, where
Arab traders waited. The fabrics of
Gujarat were traded for gold along the coast. Soon the pressures from European and Arab traders began to change the balance of power in the region.
The
Portuguese began their attempts to subdue the Shona state as early as
1505 but were confined to the coast for many years, according to
Fernand Braudel until 1513.
The Monomotapa Empire was being torn apart by rival factions, and the gold from the rivers they controlled was exhausted. The trade in gold was replaced by a trade in
slaves. Around this time the Arab states of
Zanzibar and
Kilwa became prominent powers by providing slaves for Arabia, Persia and India. (Braudel p. 430)
The empire was finally conquered in 1629 by the Portuguese and never recovered. Remnants of the government established another Mutapa kingdom in Mozambique sometimes called Karanga. The Karanga kings were called Mambos (plural version) and reigned in the region until 1902.
The Mwenes or Monomatapas of the first Mutapa state:
*Nyatsimba Mutota (c. 1430â€"c. 1450)
*Matope Nyanhehwe Nebedza (c. 1450â€"c. 1480)
*Mavura Maobwe (1480)
*Mukombero Nyahuma (1480â€"c. 1490)
*Changamire (1490â€"1494)
*Kakuyo Komunyaka (1494â€"c. 1530)
*Neshangwe Munembire (c. 1530â€"c. 1550)
*Chivere Nyasoro (c. 1550â€"1560)
*Chisamharu Negomo Mupuzangutu (1560â€"1589)
*Gatsi Rusere (1589â€"1623)
*Nyambo Kapararidze (1623â€"1629)
The Mwenes or Monomatapas of the second Mutapa state:
*Cangara II (1803 - 1804)
*Mutiwapangome (1804 - 1806)
*Mutiwaora (1806)
*Cipfumba (1806 - 1807)
*Nyasoro (1807 - 1828)
*Cimininyambo or Kandeya II (1828 - 1830)
*Dzeka (1830 - 1849)
*Kataruza (1849 - 1868)
*Kandeya III (1868-1870)
*Dzuda (1870-1887)
*Cioko Dambamupute (1887-1902)
The empire had another indirect side effect on the history of Southern
Africa. Gold from the empire inspired in Europeans a belief that Munhumutapa held the legendary mines of King
Solomon as referenced in the
Bible. The belief that the mines were inside the Munhumutapa kingdom in Southern Africa was one of the factors that led to the
Dutch East India Company founding the Cape colony, which would eventually lead to the creation of the country of
South Africa.
This is not to suggest that the legends were the primary cause for founding the colony (its purpose was to be a half-way stop where ships could pick up supplies to and from India), but it was widely used among the less educated populace to recruit early colonists. Some recordings suggest that most of the early colonists dreamed of finding the legendary city of gold in Southern Africa, a belief mirroring early South American colonists search for
El Dorado and quite possibly inspired by it.
Ironically South Africa did have the greatest known gold reserves on earth in what is now
Johannesburg, but it would take well over two hundred years before it was discovered and the city founded. In other words Southern Africa's legendary city of gold didn't exist, but the descendants of those colonists would end up building one. Johannesburg is still often referred to as the "city of gold" and in fact its name in nearly all indigenous languages translates as exactly that (compare Gauteng in
Sotho and Egoli in
Zulu).
*
Braudel, Fernand,
The Perspective of the World vol III of
Civilization and Capitalism 1979 (in English 1984)