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Pedi people

The Pedi /pɛdi/ or Bapedi /bæˈpɛdi/, also known as the Sotho, Basotho,[2] Northern Sotho, Basotho ba Lebowa,[3] Transvaal Sotho,[4] Marota, or Bamaroteng[5] are a Sotho-Tswana ethnic group that speak Pedi or Sepedi,[6] which is one of the 12 official languages in South Africa.[7] They are primarily situated in Limpopo, Gauteng and northern Mpumalanga.[8]

Pedi people
Bapedi
Pedi living culture route
Limpopo, South Africa
Total population
7,004,000[1]
Regions with significant populations
 South Africa4,618,576 (9.1% of population)
 Botswana14,000
Languages
First language
Pedi
Second language
English, Afrikaans, other South African Bantu languages
Religion
Christianity, African traditional religion
Related ethnic groups
Lobedu people, Sotho people, Tswana people, Pulana people, Lozi people, Kgalagadi people, Tlôkwa people, and other Sotho-Tswana peoples
Pedi
PersonMopedi
PeopleBapedi
LanguageSepedi
CountryBopedi

The Pedi people are part of the Bantu ethnic group. Their common ancestors, along with the Sotho and Tswana, migrated from East Africa to South Africa no later than the 7th century CE. Over time, they emerged as a distinct people between the 15th and 18th centuries, with some settling in the northern region of the Transvaal. The Pedi maintained close ties with their relatives and neighboring tribes.[9]

Towards the end of the 18th century, the primary Pedi state was established, led by supreme leaders from the Maroteng clan. In the early 19th century, the Pedi state faced significant challenges from the Nguni, particularly the Northern Ndebele under Mzilikazi[10] and the Swati. A pivotal figure in preserving the Pedi state was Sekwati I[11](1827–1861), the paramount leader who introduced reforms in the military and internal administration and welcomed Christian missionaries.

After Sekwati I's passing, his son Sekhukhune took control but reversed some reforms, including Christianization. From 1876 to 1879, the Pedi engaged in wars with the Boers and the British, resulting in defeat and the Pedi state falling under Boer influence. In 1882, Sekhukhune was assassinated by conspirators, leading to the dismantling of the monarchy and statehood. In 1885, the Transvaal government only allocated a small territory to the Pedi, with the majority of the people living outside of it.

In the 1950s, the Sotho language committee recognized the Pedi language as distinct from Sesotho.

Throughout history, the Pedi actively participated in the struggle against colonization and apartheid in South Africa, joining the broader movement of African peoples fighting for their rights and freedom.

Name and Terminology edit

Rev. Alexander Merensky, a German missionary, had an extensive understanding of the Bapedi tribe, surpassing that of any other European of his time. According to Merensky, Sekhukhune's people were a fusion of various tribes, with the most significant group identifying as the "Bapedi" or "Baperi," meaning the "Family of the King." This tribe had settled along the Steelpoort River nearly two centuries prior, and Merensky found the name of their kingdom, 'Biri,' on antique Portuguese maps.[12]

The origin of the Bapedi name is uncertain, but it may have come from an ancestral figure or the land they inhabited. What is significant is that the tribe founded by Thobela and its various divisions revered the porcupine as their totem and identified as Bapedi.[12]

History edit

 
South Africa in 1885.
 
A Pedi woman breastfeeding. Alfred Duggan-Cronin. South Africa, early 20th century. The Wellcome Collection, London

Early history edit

Proto-Sotho people are thought to have migrated south from eastern Africa (around the African Great Lakes) in successive waves spanning five centuries.[13] They made their way along with modern-day western Zimbabwe, with the last group of Sotho speakers, the Hurutse, settling in the region west of Gauteng around the 16th century. The Pedi people originated from the Kgatla offshoot, a group of Tswana speakers.[14] In about 1650, they settled in the area to the south of the Steelpoort River. Over several generations, linguistic and cultural homogeneity developed to a certain degree. Only in the last half of the 18th century did they broaden their influence over the region, establishing the Pedi paramountcy by bringing smaller neighboring chiefdoms under their control.

During migrations in and around this area, groups of people from diverse origins began to concentrate around dikgoro, or ruling nuclear groups. They identified themselves through symbolic allegiances to totemic animals such as tau (lion), kolobe (pig), and kwena (crocodile). The Pedi people show a considerable amount of Khoisan admixture.[15]

The Marota Empire/ Pedi Kingdom edit

The Pedi polity under King Thulare (c. 1780–1820)[5] was made up of land that stretched from present-day Rustenburg to the lowveld in the west and as far south as the Vaal River.[16] Pedi power was undermined during the Mfecane by Ndwandwe invaders from the south-east. A period of dislocation followed, after which the polity was re-stabilized under Thulare's son, Sekwati.[17]

Sekwati succeeded Thulare as paramount chief of the Pedi in the northern Transvaal (Limpopo) and was frequently in conflict with the Matabele under Mzilikazi and plundered by the Zulu and the Swazi. Sekwati has also engaged in numerous negotiations and struggles for control over land and labor with the Afrikaans-speaking farmers (Boers) who have since settled in the region.

These disputes over land occurred after the founding of Ohrigstad in 1845, but after the town was incorporated into the Transvaal Republic in 1857 and the Republic of Lydenburg was formed, an agreement was reached that the Steelpoort River was the border between the Pedi and the Republic. The Pedi were well equipped to defend themselves, though, as Sekwati and his heir, Sekhukhune I were able to procure firearms, mostly through migrant labor to the Kimberley diamond fields and as far as Port Elizabeth. The Pedi paramountcy's power was also cemented by the fact that chiefs of subordinate villages, or kgoro, took their principal wives from the ruling house. This system of cousin marriage resulted in the perpetuation of marriage links between the ruling house and the subordinate groups and involved the payment of an inflated magadi, or brideprice mostly in the form of cattle, to the Maroteng house.

Swazi Campaigns edit

The Campaigns against the Pedi refer to a sequence of military operations undertaken by the Swazi in their endeavors to subjugate the Pedi people. Despite their persistent efforts, the Swazi forces faced significant challenges in conquering the Pedi's formidable mountain fortresses, which served as robust strongholds for the Pedi people. As a consequence of the Swazi's inability to completely overpower the Pedi, some Pedi fugitives successfully reassembled, allowing them to sustain their resistance against the Swazi forces.

Sekhukhune Wars edit

 
King Sekhukhune 1881

Sekhukhune I succeeded his father in 1861 and repelled an attack against the Swazi. At the time, there were also border disputes with the Transvaal, which led to the formation of Burgersfort, which was manned by volunteers from Lydenburg. By the 1870s, the Pedi were one of three alternative sources of regional authority, alongside the Swazi and the ZAR (Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek).

Over time, tensions increased after Sekhukhune refused to pay taxes to the Transvaal government, and the Transvaal declared war in May 1876. It became known as the Sekhukhune War, the outcome of which was that the Transvaal commando's attack failed. After this, volunteers nevertheless continued to devastate Sekhukhune's land and provoke unrest, to the point where peace terms were met in 1877.

Unrest continued, and this became a justification for the British annexing the Transvaal in April 1877 under Sir Theophilus Shepstone. Following the annexation, the British also declared war on Sekhukhune I under Sir Garnet Wolseley, and defeated him in 1879. Sekhukhune was then imprisoned in Pretoria, but later released after the first South African War, when the Transvaal regained independence.

However, soon after his release, Sekhukhune was murdered by his half-brother Mampuru,[18] and because his heir had been killed in the war and his grandson, Sekhukhune II was too young to rule, one of his other half-brothers, Kgoloko, assumed power as regent.

Apartheid edit

In 1885, an area of 1,000 square kilometres (390 sq mi) was set aside for the Pedi, known as Geluk Location created by the Transvaal Republic's Native Location Commission. Later, according to apartheid segregation policy, the Pedi would be assigned the homeland of Lebowa.

Culture edit

Use of Totems edit

Like the other Sotho-Tswana groups, the Bapedi people use totems to identify sister clans and kinship. The most widely used totems in Sepedi are as follows:

English Pedi
Warthog Kolobe
Lion Tau
Crocodile Kwena
Porcupine Noko
Monkey Kgabo
Buck Phuthi
Elephant Tlou
Buffalo Nare

Settlements edit

In pre-conquest times, people settled on elevated sites in relatively large villages, divided into kgoro (pl. dikgoro, groups centered on agnatic family clusters). Each consisted of a group of households in huts built around a central area that served as a meeting place, cattle byre, graveyard, and ancestral shrine. Households' huts were ranked in order of seniority. Each wife of a polygynous marriage had her own round thatched hut, joined to other huts by a series of open-air enclosures (lapa) encircled by mud walls. Older boys and girls, respectively, would be housed in separate huts. Aspirations to live in a more modern style, along with practicality, have led most families to abandon the round hut style for rectangular, flat-tin-roofed houses. Processes of forced and semi-voluntary relocation and an apartheid government planning scheme implemented in the name of "betterment", have meant that many newer settlements and the outskirts of many older ones consist of houses built in grid formation, occupied by individual families unrelated to their neighbors.[citation needed]

Politics edit

Kgoshi – a loose collection of kinsmen with related males at its core, was as much a jural unit as a kinship one, since membership was defined by acceptance of the kgoro-head's authority rather than primarily by descent. Royal or chiefly kgoros sometimes underwent rapid subdivision as sons contended for positions of authority.

Marriage edit

Marriage was patrilocal. Polygamy was practiced mostly by people of higher, especially chiefly, status. Marriage was preferred with a close or classificatory cousin, especially a mother's brother's daughter, but this preference was most often realized in the case of ruling or chiefly families. Practiced by the ruling dynasty, during its period of dominance, it represented a system of political integration and control over the recycling of bridewealth (dikgomo di boela shakeng; returning of bride cattle). Cousin marriage meant that the two sets of prospective in-laws were closely connected even before the event of a marriage, and went along with an ideology of sibling-linkage, through which the Magadi (bridewealth) procured for a daughter's marriage would, in turn, be used to get a bride for her brother, and he would repay his sister by offering a daughter to her son in marriage. Cousin marriage is still practiced, but less frequently. Polygyny too is now rare, many marriages end in divorce or separation, and a large number of young women remain single and raise their children in small (and often very poor) female-headed households. But new forms of domestic cooperation have come into being, often between brothers and sisters, or matrilineally linked relatives.[original research?]

Inheritance edit

Previously, the oldest son of a household within a polygynous family would inherit the house-property of his mother, including its cattle, and was supposed to act as custodian of these goods for the benefit of the household's other children. With the decline of cattle-keeping and the sharp increase in land shortages, this has switched to a system of last-born inheritance, primarily of land.

Initiation edit

The life cycle for both sexes was differentiated by important rituals. Both girls and boys underwent initiation. Boys (bašemane, later mašoboro) spent their youth looking after cattle at remote outposts in the company of peers and older youths. Circumcision and initiation at koma (initiation school), held about once every five years, socialized youths into groups of cohorts or regiments (mephato) bearing the leader's name, whose members then maintained lifelong loyalty to each other, and often traveled together to find work on the farms or in the mines. Girls attended their own koma and were initiated into their own regiments (ditswa-bothuku), usually two years after the boys. Initiation is still practiced, and provides a considerable income to the chiefs who license it for a fee or, in recent years, to private entrepreneurs who have established initiation schools beyond the chiefs' jurisdiction.[19]

Music and Arts edit

 
Traditional Dancers Performing at a wedding

Important crafts included metalsmithing, beadwork, pottery, house building and painting, and woodworking (especially the making of drums).

The arts of the Pedi are known for metal forging, beading, pottery, woodworking, much more in drum making, and also painting.[20]

Mmino wa Setšo edit

Pedi music consists of a single six-note scale traditionally played on reeds, but currently it is played more on a jaw harp or autoharp. Migrants influenced by Kibala music play aluminum pipes of different heights to reproduce vocal harmonies. In traditional dances, women dance on their knees, usually accompanied by drums, backing vocals, and a lead singer. These dances involve vigorous topless shaking from the upper torso while the women kneel on the floor.[20]

Songs are also part of Pedi culture. While working, the Pedi sang together to finish the job faster. They had A song about killing a Lion to become a man; it was a bit peculiar. The act of killing a Lion is very unusual and is no longer practiced. In fact, it was so unusual that if a boy was successful, he would get high status and the ultimate prize - marrying the chief's daughter.[21] The Bapedi also have different types of cultural music:

  1. Mpepetlwane: played by young girls;
  2. Mmatšhidi: played by older men and women;
  3. Kiba / Dinaka: played by men and boys and now joined by women;
  4. Dipela: played by everyone
  5. Makgakgasa is also played by older women.[22]

Pedi music (mmino wa setso: traditional music, lit. music of origin) has a six-note scale. The same applies to variants of Mmino wa Setšo as practiced by Basotho ba Leboa (Northern Sotho) tribes in the Capricorn, Blouberg, Waterberg districts, as well as BaVhenda in the Vhembe district. Mmino wa Setšo (indigenous African music) can also be construed as African musicology, a concept that is often used to distinguish the study of indigenous African music from the dominant ethnomusicology discipline in academia. Ethnomusicology has a strong footprint in academia spanning several decades. Such a presence is evident in ethnomusicology journals that can be traced back to the 1950s.[23] Ethnomusicologists who study indigenous African music have been criticized for studying the subject from a subjective Western point of view, especially given the dominance of the Western musical canon in South Africa.[24] In South Africa, authors such as Mapaya[25] indicate that for many years, African Musicology has been studied from a multi-cultural perspective without success. Scholars of African Musicology such as Agawu,[26] Mapaya,[27] Nketia,[28] and Nzewi[29] emphasize the study of indigenous African music from the perspective, and language of the practitioners (baletši). These scholars argue for the study of African Musicology from an angle that elevates the practitioners, their actions, and their interactions.

Categories of Mmino wa Setšo edit

Mmino wa Setšo in Limpopo province has a number of categories. Categories of Mmino wa Setšo are distinguished according to the function they serve in the community.

Dinaka/Kiba edit

The peak of Pedi (and northern Sotho) musical expression is arguably the kiba genre, which has transcended its rural roots to become a migrant style. In its men's version, it features an ensemble of players, each playing an aluminum end-blown pipe of a different pitch (naka, pl. dinaka) and together producing a descending melody that mimics traditional vocal songs with richly harmonized qualities. Mapaya[30] provides a detailed descriptive analysis of Dinaka/Kiba music and dance, from a Northern Sotho perspective.

Alternatives to Dinaka or Kiba edit

In the women's version, a development of earlier female genres that has recently been included within the definition of kiba, a group of women sing songs (koša ya dikhuru, loosely translated: knee-dance music). This translation has its roots in the traditional kneeling dance that involves salacious shaking movements of the breasts accompanied by chants. These dances are still very common among Tswana, Sotho, and Nguni women. This genre comprises sets of traditional songs steered by a lead singer accompanied by a chorus and an ensemble of drums (meropa), previously wooden but now made of oil drums and milk urns. These are generally sung at drinking parties and/or during celebrations such as weddings.[original research?]

Mmino wa bana edit

Children occupy a special place in the broader category of Mmino wa Setšo. Research shows that mmino wa bana can be examined for its musical elements, educational validity, and general social functions[31]

Pedi Heartland edit

The present-day Pedi area, Sekhukhuneland, is situated between the Olifants River (Lepelle) and its tributary, the Steelpoort River (Tubatse); bordered on the east by the Drakensberg range, and crossed by the Leolo mountains. But at the height of its power, the Pedi polity under Thulare (about 1780–1820) included an area stretching from the site of present-day Rustenburg in the west to the Lowveld in the east, and ranging as far south as the Vaal River. Reliable historians and sources also credit the Pedi kingdom as the first and dominant monarchy established in the region. The kingdom, which boasted numerous victories over the Boers and the British armies, was one of the strongest and largest in Southern Africa in the mid- to late 1800s under the warrior king Sekhukhune I, whose kingdom stretched from the Vaal River in the south to the Limpopo River in the north.[32]

Apartheid edit

The area under Pedi's control was severely limited when the polity was defeated by British troops in 1879. Reserves were created for this and for other Northern Sotho groups by the Transvaal Republic's Native Location Commission. Over the next hundred years or so, these reserves were then variously combined and separated by a succession of government planners. By 1972, this planning had culminated in the creation of an allegedly independent national unit, or homeland, named Lebowa. In terms of the government's plans to accommodate ethnic groups separated from each other, this was designed to act as a place of residence for all Northern Sotho speakers. But many Pedi had never resided here: since the polity's defeat, they had become involved in a series of labor-tenancy or sharecropping arrangements with white farmers, lived as tenants on crown land, purchased farms communally as freeholders, or moved to live in the townships adjoining Pretoria and Johannesburg on a permanent or semi-permanent basis. In total, however, the population of the Lebowa homeland increased rapidly after the mid-1950s, due to the forced relocations from rural areas and cities in common South Africa undertaken by apartheid's planners, and to voluntary relocations by which former labor tenants sought independence from the restrictive and deprived conditions under which they had lived on the white farms.[original research?]

Subsistence and economy edit

 
Overgrazed Bapedi reserve near Pietersburg, Drakensberg

The pre-conquest economy combined cattle-keeping with hoe cultivation. The principal crops were sorghum, pumpkins, and legumes, which were grown by women on fields allocated to them when they married. Women hoed and weeded, did pottery, built and decorated huts with mud; made sleeping mats and baskets, ground grain, cooked, brewed, and collected water and wood. Men did some work in fields at peak times; they hunted and herded; they did woodwork, prepared hides, and were metal workers and smiths. Most major tasks were done communally by matsema (work parties).[original research?]

The chief was depended upon to perform rainmaking for his subjects. The introduction of the animal-drawn plow, and of maize, later transformed the labor division significantly, especially when combined with the effects of labor migration. Men's leaving home to work for wages was initially undertaken by regimental groups of youths to satisfy the paramount's firepower requirements but later became increasingly necessary to individual households as population increase within the reserve and land degradation made it impossible to subsist from cultivation alone. Despite increasingly long absences, male migrants nonetheless remained committed to the maintenance of their fields; plowing had now to be carried out during periods of leave or entrusted to professional plowmen or tractor owners. Women were left to manage and carry out all other agricultural tasks. Men, although subjected to increased controls in their lives as wage-laborers, fiercely resisted all direct attempts to interfere with the spheres of cattle-keeping and agriculture. Their resistance erupted in open rebellion, ultimately subdued, during the 1950s. In later decades, some families have continued to practice cultivation and keep stock.

In the early 1960s, about 48% of the male population was absent as wage-earners at any given time. Between the 1930s and the 1960s, most Pedi men would spend a short period working on nearby white farms, followed by a move to employment in the mines or domestic service, and later, especially in more recent times, to factories or industry. Female wage employment began more recently and is rarer and more sporadic. Some women work for short periods on farms; others have begun, since the 1960s, to work in domestic service in the towns of the Witwatersrand. But in recent years, there have been rising levels of education and expectations, combined with a sharp drop in employment rates.

Land tenure edit

The pre-colonial system of communal or tribal tenure, which was broadly similar to that practiced throughout the southern African region, was crystallized but subtly altered, by the colonial administration. A man was granted land by the chief for each of his wives; unused land was reallocated by the chief rather than being inherited within families. Overpopulation resulting from the government's relocation policies resulted in this system being modified; a household's fields, together with its residential plot, are now inherited, ideally by the youngest married son. Christian Pedi communities that owned freehold farms were removed to the reserve without compensation, but since 1994, many have now reoccupied their land or are preparing to do so, under restitution legislation.

Religion edit

Ancestors are viewed as intermediaries between humans and The Creator or God (Modimo/Mmopi) and are communicated to by calling on them using a process of burning incense, making an offering, and speaking to them (go phasa). If necessary, animal sacrifice may be done or beer presented to the children on both the mother's and father's sides. A key figure in the family ritual was the kgadi (who was usually the father's elder sister).[11] The position of ngaka (diviner) was formerly inherited patrilineally but is now commonly inherited by a woman from her paternal grandfather or great-grandfather. This is often manifested through illness and through violent possession by spirits (malopo) [11] of the body, the only cure for which is to train as a diviner. There has been a proliferation of diviners in recent times, with many said to be motivated mainly by a desire for material gain.[33]

Rulers edit

Name Notes
Thulare I Thulare unified many smaller Sotho-Tswana tribes and founded the Marota Empire with the Bapedi in the seat of leadership. died in 1824, on the day of a solar eclipse and this is the first definite date we can establish in the history of the Bapedi.
Molekutu I After the death of Thulare I, his eldest son Molekutu I ascended to the throne only to be killed two years later with the arrival of Mzilikazi north of the Vaal.
Phetedi I Molekutu I was succeeded by his brother. Phetedi but Phetedi ruled for less than a year before befalling the same fate as his older brother Molekutu under the spear of Mzilikazi's impi.
Sekwati I Sekwati was the youngest son of Thulare I repelled Mzilikazi and the Mthwakazi attacks by holding ground in the forests north of Magoebaskloof. Long after the defeat of Mzilikazi at Silkaatsnek, Sekwati I returned to the lands of the Marota and ascended to the throne as Kgošigolo. Sekwati died in 1861.
Sekhukhune I Upon the death of Sekwati, Sekhukhune challenged his brother Mampuru II to combat in a succession dispute. Mampuru II is said to have declined and Sekhukhune was made Kgoši. Sekhukhune expanded both the wealth and military power of the Marota empire and when war broke out between the ZAR and the Marota, Sekhukhune was victorious. After another war with British forces Sekhukhune was captured and held in Pretoria. Sekhukune was later assassinated by his brother Mampuru II.
Mampuru II There is much debate over the succession dispute of Sekhukhune and Mampuru II. What is known is that with the aid of British forces, Mampuru succeeded in overthrowing Sekhukhune and personally killed him in 1882. Mampuru himself ruled in exile for about a year before being executed by the ZAR government for the murder of his brother.
Kgoloko (regent) After the death of Sekhukhune's son Morwamoche II, It was decided that Kgoloko the son of Sekwati and half brother of both Sekhukhune I and Mampuru II would rule as regent until Sekhukhune's grandson and son of Morwamoche II was old enough to rule.
Sekhukhune II Sekhukhune II was the grandson of Sekhukhune I and the son of Morwamoche II and succeeded his uncle Kgoloko as soon as he was deemed old enough.Sekhukhune II took advantage of wartime conditions during the Anglo - Boer War to reshape the pattern of colonial relations imposed on them by the ZAR, to attempt to re-establish the dominance of the Marota in the eastern Transvaal and to negotiate favourable terms with the occupying British military forces once the ZAR was defeated.
Thulare II Thulare II the son of Sekhukhune II died without issue.
Morwamoche III Upon the death of his older brother, Morwamoche III held the throne until his death.
Mankopodi (regent) When Morwamoche III died, his heir Rhyane Thulare was too young to rule and so Morwamoche III's wife and mother to Rhyane ruled as regent.
Rhyane Thulare Sekhukhune III Had allegedly refused to ascend to the throne without his mother's blessing. Rhyane however did not renounce his claim to the rulership. Rhyane reasserted his claim for the throne in 1989. Rhyane Thulare died in 2007.
Kgagudi Kenneth Sekhukhune aS (regent) Kgagudi Kenneth Sekhukhune was the son of Morwamoche III and was installed as "acting king" in 1976 until such time as the complications surrounding Rhyane Thulare's succession was sorted out. However, when Rhyane Thulare died, Kgagudi Kenneth Sekhukhune attempted to establish himself as the rightful Kgošikgolo (King) of the Bapedi.
Victor Thulare III as Thulare III Thulare III was the son of Rhyane Thulare and had disputed the kingship with the acting king, his uncle, Sekhukhune III. A court ruling in 2018 recognised Thulare III as the incumbent, but this was still disputed by his uncle, who declared his son, Sekwati II Khutšo Sekhukhune, the new king. Thulare III was confirmed as king in July 2020 after the court ruled Sekwati II's rule unlawful and ordered him to vacate the throne. Thulare III died on 6 January 2021 .[34]
Manyaku Thulare (regent) Upon the death of her son, the Queen mother Manyaku Thulare was announced as regent for the Bapedi people.[35] Ramphelane Thulare, the uncle of the late King Victor Thulare III announced that none of the late kings 5 children are eligible to ascend the throne as their mothers are not "candle wives".[36] The Bapedi nation intends to marry a 'candle wife' in Lesotho who will give birth to the heir to the throne as per as per the wishes of the late king. Therefore, Queen mother Manyaka Thulare will act as the regent until the candle wife is married.[37]


Notable Pedi People edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Pedi, North Sotho". joshuaproject.net. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  2. ^ "Sotho | South Africa, Lesotho, Language | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
  3. ^ "free online course". www.unisa.ac.za. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
  4. ^ Joubert, Annekie; Grobler, Gerrie; Kosch, Inge; Kriel, Lize (1 January 2015), "Article 21 (1957). Customs and Traditions of the Sotho People in Northern Transvaal—Mekgwa le botlwaelo bja Basotho ba Transfala-Lebowa", Ethnography from the Mission Field, Brill, pp. 898–939, ISBN 978-90-04-29772-2, retrieved 3 August 2023
  5. ^ a b "History of the Pedi". southafrica.co.za. Retrieved 3 August 2023.
  6. ^ Allen, Harold B.; Linn, Michael D., eds. (1 January 1986), "Introduction to Dialect Theory", Dialect and Language Variation, Boston: Academic Press: 3–4, doi:10.1016/b978-0-12-051130-3.50005-7, ISBN 978-0-12-051130-3, retrieved 14 February 2021
  7. ^ "Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 - Chapter 1: Founding Provisions | South African Government". www.gov.za. Retrieved 20 July 2023.
  8. ^ "Culture – Limpopo Provincial Government". www.limpopo.gov.za. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  9. ^ "Pedi - African Tribe - South Africa..." www.krugerpark.co.za. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  10. ^ "Bapedi history, traditions, culture and food (ZA)". www.southafrica.net. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  11. ^ a b c "Bapedi history, traditions, culture and food (BW)". www.southafrica.net. Retrieved 3 August 2023.
  12. ^ a b "South African Military History Society - Journal- THE SEKUKUNI WARS". samilitaryhistory.org. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  13. ^ "Pedi - African Tribe - South Africa..." www.krugerpark.co.za. Retrieved 31 August 2023.
  14. ^ Huffman, Thomas N. (1 January 2020). "Ceramic datums and history: Sotho-Tswana pottery in southern Africa". Southern African Humanities. 33 (1): 169–224.
  15. ^ Sengupta, Dhriti; Choudhury, Ananyo; Fortes-Lima, Cesar; Aron, Shaun; Whitelaw, Gavin; Bostoen, Koen; Gunnink, Hilde; Chousou-Polydouri, Natalia; Delius, Peter; Tollman, Stephen; Gómez-Olivé, F. Xavier; Norris, Shane; Mashinya, Felistas; Alberts, Marianne; Hazelhurst, Scott (7 April 2021). "Genetic substructure and complex demographic history of South African Bantu speakers". Nature Communications. 12 (1): 2080. doi:10.1038/s41467-021-22207-y. ISSN 2041-1723.
  16. ^ "Royal battle looms as Bapedi go to court again". The Mail & Guardian. 5 October 2018. Retrieved 27 September 2020.
  17. ^ "History of the Pedi". southafrica.co.za. Retrieved 9 July 2020.
  18. ^ "The Long March to Freedom". www.longmarchtofreedom.co.za. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  19. ^ Roberts & Winter 1916.
  20. ^ a b "BaPedi People".
  21. ^ "Pedi - African Tribe - South Africa".
  22. ^ "Bapedi history, traditions, culture and food (ZA)".
  23. ^ "Ethnomusicology on JSTOR". jstor.org. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
  24. ^ Harop-Allin, Susan (2005). "Ethnomusicology and Music Education: developing the dialogue". Researchgate. Retrieved 14 February 2021.
  25. ^ Mapaya, Geoff (2011). "The indigenous music learning process". Southern African Journal for Folklore Studies. 21: 65–76.
  26. ^ Agawu, Kofi (1 July 2008). "Meki Nzewi and the discourse of African musicology: a 70th birthday appreciation". Journal of the Musical Arts in Africa. 5 (1): 1–18. doi:10.2989/JMAA.2008.5.1.1.784. ISSN 1812-1004. S2CID 145596657.
  27. ^ Mapaya, Madimabe Geoff (3 September 2014). "The Study of Indigenous African Music and Lessons from Ordinary Language Philosophy 1". Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences. 5 (20): 2007. ISSN 2039-2117.
  28. ^ Nketia, Kwabena JH (1974). The Music of Africa. New York: W.W Norton. ISBN 9780393021776.
  29. ^ Nzewi, Meki (1974). "Melo-Rhythmic Essence and Hot Rhythm in Nigerian Folk Music". The Black Perspective in Music. 2 (1): 23–28. doi:10.2307/1214145. ISSN 0090-7790. JSTOR 1214145.
  30. ^ Mapaya, Madimabe Geoff (3 September 2014). "Indigenous African Music: A Descriptive Analysis of Mmino wa Setšo from a Northern Sotho Perspective". Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences. 5 (20): 2211. ISSN 2039-2117.
  31. ^ Mokgehle, Morokolo (2018). Mmino wa Bana: An African musicological study of Moletjie community musical practices. [P.h.D Thesis] (Thesis). Venda: University of Venda.
  32. ^ "History of the Pedi". southafrica.co.za. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
  33. ^ "Pedi | South African History Online".
  34. ^ Koko, Khaya (11 January 2021). "Calls for calm over fractious BaPedi kingship". Mail & Guardian. Retrieved 12 January 2021.
  35. ^ "Queen Mother Manyaku Thulare appointed regent of the Bapedi nation". 21 March 2021.
  36. ^ "Bapedi kingdom announces stand-in queen, while awaiting 'candle wife'".
  37. ^ "Rifts in Bapedi nation over appointment of Queen Mother as regent". MSN.
  38. ^ "Profile: South Africa's Kgalema Motlanthe". BBC News. 13 December 2012. Retrieved 22 August 2020.
  • Delius, Peter (1984). The Land Belongs to Us: The Pedi Polity, the Boers, and the British in the Nineteenth-century Transvaal. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-05148-5.
  • Kinsey, H.W. (June 1973a). "The Sekukuni Wars". Military History Journal. South African Military History Society. 2 (5).
  • Kinsey, H.W. (December 1973b). "The Sekukuni Wars Part II". Military History Journal. South African Military History Society. 2 (6).
  • Roberts, Noel; Winter, C. A. T. (1916). The Kgoma Or Initiation Rites of the Bapedi: Bantu Tribe of Sekukuniland. Southern Africa Association for the Advancement of Science.

Further reading edit

  • Amies, C; Murray, N.L.; Scott, J.G.; Warren, R.S. (1953). "Trachoma in the South African Bantu; a survey in Sekukuniland". International Review of Trachoma. 30 (3): 405–10. PMID 13135066.
  • Longmore, L. (1952). "Death and burial customs of the Bapedi of Sekukuniland". African Studies. 11 (2): 83–84. doi:10.1080/00020185208706871. ISSN 0002-0184.

External links edit

  • The Loreto Mission, Glen Cowie, Sekukuniland
  • The Pedi

pedi, people, pedi, bapedi, also, known, sotho, basotho, northern, sotho, basotho, lebowa, transvaal, sotho, marota, bamaroteng, sotho, tswana, ethnic, group, that, speak, pedi, sepedi, which, official, languages, south, africa, they, primarily, situated, limp. The Pedi p ɛ d i or Bapedi b ae ˈ p ɛ d i also known as the Sotho Basotho 2 Northern Sotho Basotho ba Lebowa 3 Transvaal Sotho 4 Marota or Bamaroteng 5 are a Sotho Tswana ethnic group that speak Pedi or Sepedi 6 which is one of the 12 official languages in South Africa 7 They are primarily situated in Limpopo Gauteng and northern Mpumalanga 8 Pedi peopleBapediPedi living culture routeLimpopo South AfricaTotal population7 004 000 1 Regions with significant populations South Africa4 618 576 9 1 of population Botswana14 000LanguagesFirst languagePediSecond languageEnglish Afrikaans other South African Bantu languagesReligionChristianity African traditional religionRelated ethnic groupsLobedu people Sotho people Tswana people Pulana people Lozi people Kgalagadi people Tlokwa people and other Sotho Tswana peoplesPediPersonMopediPeopleBapediLanguageSepediCountryBopediThe Pedi people are part of the Bantu ethnic group Their common ancestors along with the Sotho and Tswana migrated from East Africa to South Africa no later than the 7th century CE Over time they emerged as a distinct people between the 15th and 18th centuries with some settling in the northern region of the Transvaal The Pedi maintained close ties with their relatives and neighboring tribes 9 Towards the end of the 18th century the primary Pedi state was established led by supreme leaders from the Maroteng clan In the early 19th century the Pedi state faced significant challenges from the Nguni particularly the Northern Ndebele under Mzilikazi 10 and the Swati A pivotal figure in preserving the Pedi state was Sekwati I 11 1827 1861 the paramount leader who introduced reforms in the military and internal administration and welcomed Christian missionaries After Sekwati I s passing his son Sekhukhune took control but reversed some reforms including Christianization From 1876 to 1879 the Pedi engaged in wars with the Boers and the British resulting in defeat and the Pedi state falling under Boer influence In 1882 Sekhukhune was assassinated by conspirators leading to the dismantling of the monarchy and statehood In 1885 the Transvaal government only allocated a small territory to the Pedi with the majority of the people living outside of it In the 1950s the Sotho language committee recognized the Pedi language as distinct from Sesotho Throughout history the Pedi actively participated in the struggle against colonization and apartheid in South Africa joining the broader movement of African peoples fighting for their rights and freedom Contents 1 Name and Terminology 2 History 2 1 Early history 2 2 The Marota Empire Pedi Kingdom 2 3 Swazi Campaigns 2 4 Sekhukhune Wars 2 5 Apartheid 3 Culture 3 1 Use of Totems 3 2 Settlements 3 3 Politics 3 4 Marriage 3 5 Inheritance 3 6 Initiation 4 Music and Arts 4 1 Mmino wa Setso 4 1 1 Categories of Mmino wa Setso 4 1 1 1 Dinaka Kiba 4 1 1 1 1 Alternatives to Dinaka or Kiba 4 1 1 2 Mmino wa bana 5 Pedi Heartland 5 1 Apartheid 6 Subsistence and economy 6 1 Land tenure 7 Religion 8 Rulers 9 Notable Pedi People 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksName and Terminology editRev Alexander Merensky a German missionary had an extensive understanding of the Bapedi tribe surpassing that of any other European of his time According to Merensky Sekhukhune s people were a fusion of various tribes with the most significant group identifying as the Bapedi or Baperi meaning the Family of the King This tribe had settled along the Steelpoort River nearly two centuries prior and Merensky found the name of their kingdom Biri on antique Portuguese maps 12 The origin of the Bapedi name is uncertain but it may have come from an ancestral figure or the land they inhabited What is significant is that the tribe founded by Thobela and its various divisions revered the porcupine as their totem and identified as Bapedi 12 History edit nbsp South Africa in 1885 nbsp A Pedi woman breastfeeding Alfred Duggan Cronin South Africa early 20th century The Wellcome Collection LondonEarly history edit Proto Sotho people are thought to have migrated south from eastern Africa around the African Great Lakes in successive waves spanning five centuries 13 They made their way along with modern day western Zimbabwe with the last group of Sotho speakers the Hurutse settling in the region west of Gauteng around the 16th century The Pedi people originated from the Kgatla offshoot a group of Tswana speakers 14 In about 1650 they settled in the area to the south of the Steelpoort River Over several generations linguistic and cultural homogeneity developed to a certain degree Only in the last half of the 18th century did they broaden their influence over the region establishing the Pedi paramountcy by bringing smaller neighboring chiefdoms under their control During migrations in and around this area groups of people from diverse origins began to concentrate around dikgoro or ruling nuclear groups They identified themselves through symbolic allegiances to totemic animals such as tau lion kolobe pig and kwena crocodile The Pedi people show a considerable amount of Khoisan admixture 15 The Marota Empire Pedi Kingdom edit The Pedi polity under King Thulare c 1780 1820 5 was made up of land that stretched from present day Rustenburg to the lowveld in the west and as far south as the Vaal River 16 Pedi power was undermined during the Mfecane by Ndwandwe invaders from the south east A period of dislocation followed after which the polity was re stabilized under Thulare s son Sekwati 17 Sekwati succeeded Thulare as paramount chief of the Pedi in the northern Transvaal Limpopo and was frequently in conflict with the Matabele under Mzilikazi and plundered by the Zulu and the Swazi Sekwati has also engaged in numerous negotiations and struggles for control over land and labor with the Afrikaans speaking farmers Boers who have since settled in the region These disputes over land occurred after the founding of Ohrigstad in 1845 but after the town was incorporated into the Transvaal Republic in 1857 and the Republic of Lydenburg was formed an agreement was reached that the Steelpoort River was the border between the Pedi and the Republic The Pedi were well equipped to defend themselves though as Sekwati and his heir Sekhukhune I were able to procure firearms mostly through migrant labor to the Kimberley diamond fields and as far as Port Elizabeth The Pedi paramountcy s power was also cemented by the fact that chiefs of subordinate villages or kgoro took their principal wives from the ruling house This system of cousin marriage resulted in the perpetuation of marriage links between the ruling house and the subordinate groups and involved the payment of an inflated magadi or brideprice mostly in the form of cattle to the Maroteng house Swazi Campaigns edit The Campaigns against the Pedi refer to a sequence of military operations undertaken by the Swazi in their endeavors to subjugate the Pedi people Despite their persistent efforts the Swazi forces faced significant challenges in conquering the Pedi s formidable mountain fortresses which served as robust strongholds for the Pedi people As a consequence of the Swazi s inability to completely overpower the Pedi some Pedi fugitives successfully reassembled allowing them to sustain their resistance against the Swazi forces Sekhukhune Wars edit nbsp King Sekhukhune 1881Sekhukhune I succeeded his father in 1861 and repelled an attack against the Swazi At the time there were also border disputes with the Transvaal which led to the formation of Burgersfort which was manned by volunteers from Lydenburg By the 1870s the Pedi were one of three alternative sources of regional authority alongside the Swazi and the ZAR Zuid Afrikaansche Republiek Over time tensions increased after Sekhukhune refused to pay taxes to the Transvaal government and the Transvaal declared war in May 1876 It became known as the Sekhukhune War the outcome of which was that the Transvaal commando s attack failed After this volunteers nevertheless continued to devastate Sekhukhune s land and provoke unrest to the point where peace terms were met in 1877 Unrest continued and this became a justification for the British annexing the Transvaal in April 1877 under Sir Theophilus Shepstone Following the annexation the British also declared war on Sekhukhune I under Sir Garnet Wolseley and defeated him in 1879 Sekhukhune was then imprisoned in Pretoria but later released after the first South African War when the Transvaal regained independence However soon after his release Sekhukhune was murdered by his half brother Mampuru 18 and because his heir had been killed in the war and his grandson Sekhukhune II was too young to rule one of his other half brothers Kgoloko assumed power as regent Apartheid edit In 1885 an area of 1 000 square kilometres 390 sq mi was set aside for the Pedi known as Geluk Location created by the Transvaal Republic s Native Location Commission Later according to apartheid segregation policy the Pedi would be assigned the homeland of Lebowa Culture editUse of Totems edit Like the other Sotho Tswana groups the Bapedi people use totems to identify sister clans and kinship The most widely used totems in Sepedi are as follows English PediWarthog KolobeLion TauCrocodile KwenaPorcupine NokoMonkey KgaboBuck PhuthiElephant TlouBuffalo NareSettlements edit In pre conquest times people settled on elevated sites in relatively large villages divided into kgoro pl dikgoro groups centered on agnatic family clusters Each consisted of a group of households in huts built around a central area that served as a meeting place cattle byre graveyard and ancestral shrine Households huts were ranked in order of seniority Each wife of a polygynous marriage had her own round thatched hut joined to other huts by a series of open air enclosures lapa encircled by mud walls Older boys and girls respectively would be housed in separate huts Aspirations to live in a more modern style along with practicality have led most families to abandon the round hut style for rectangular flat tin roofed houses Processes of forced and semi voluntary relocation and an apartheid government planning scheme implemented in the name of betterment have meant that many newer settlements and the outskirts of many older ones consist of houses built in grid formation occupied by individual families unrelated to their neighbors citation needed Politics edit Kgoshi a loose collection of kinsmen with related males at its core was as much a jural unit as a kinship one since membership was defined by acceptance of the kgoro head s authority rather than primarily by descent Royal or chiefly kgoros sometimes underwent rapid subdivision as sons contended for positions of authority Marriage edit Marriage was patrilocal Polygamy was practiced mostly by people of higher especially chiefly status Marriage was preferred with a close or classificatory cousin especially a mother s brother s daughter but this preference was most often realized in the case of ruling or chiefly families Practiced by the ruling dynasty during its period of dominance it represented a system of political integration and control over the recycling of bridewealth dikgomo di boela shakeng returning of bride cattle Cousin marriage meant that the two sets of prospective in laws were closely connected even before the event of a marriage and went along with an ideology of sibling linkage through which the Magadi bridewealth procured for a daughter s marriage would in turn be used to get a bride for her brother and he would repay his sister by offering a daughter to her son in marriage Cousin marriage is still practiced but less frequently Polygyny too is now rare many marriages end in divorce or separation and a large number of young women remain single and raise their children in small and often very poor female headed households But new forms of domestic cooperation have come into being often between brothers and sisters or matrilineally linked relatives original research Inheritance edit Previously the oldest son of a household within a polygynous family would inherit the house property of his mother including its cattle and was supposed to act as custodian of these goods for the benefit of the household s other children With the decline of cattle keeping and the sharp increase in land shortages this has switched to a system of last born inheritance primarily of land Initiation edit The life cycle for both sexes was differentiated by important rituals Both girls and boys underwent initiation Boys basemane later masoboro spent their youth looking after cattle at remote outposts in the company of peers and older youths Circumcision and initiation at koma initiation school held about once every five years socialized youths into groups of cohorts or regiments mephato bearing the leader s name whose members then maintained lifelong loyalty to each other and often traveled together to find work on the farms or in the mines Girls attended their own koma and were initiated into their own regiments ditswa bothuku usually two years after the boys Initiation is still practiced and provides a considerable income to the chiefs who license it for a fee or in recent years to private entrepreneurs who have established initiation schools beyond the chiefs jurisdiction 19 Music and Arts editSee also Music of South Africa Pedi traditional nbsp Traditional Dancers Performing at a weddingImportant crafts included metalsmithing beadwork pottery house building and painting and woodworking especially the making of drums The arts of the Pedi are known for metal forging beading pottery woodworking much more in drum making and also painting 20 Mmino wa Setso edit Pedi music consists of a single six note scale traditionally played on reeds but currently it is played more on a jaw harp or autoharp Migrants influenced by Kibala music play aluminum pipes of different heights to reproduce vocal harmonies In traditional dances women dance on their knees usually accompanied by drums backing vocals and a lead singer These dances involve vigorous topless shaking from the upper torso while the women kneel on the floor 20 Songs are also part of Pedi culture While working the Pedi sang together to finish the job faster They had A song about killing a Lion to become a man it was a bit peculiar The act of killing a Lion is very unusual and is no longer practiced In fact it was so unusual that if a boy was successful he would get high status and the ultimate prize marrying the chief s daughter 21 The Bapedi also have different types of cultural music Mpepetlwane played by young girls Mmatshidi played by older men and women Kiba Dinaka played by men and boys and now joined by women Dipela played by everyone Makgakgasa is also played by older women 22 Pedi music mmino wa setso traditional music lit music of origin has a six note scale The same applies to variants of Mmino wa Setso as practiced by Basotho ba Leboa Northern Sotho tribes in the Capricorn Blouberg Waterberg districts as well as BaVhenda in the Vhembe district Mmino wa Setso indigenous African music can also be construed as African musicology a concept that is often used to distinguish the study of indigenous African music from the dominant ethnomusicology discipline in academia Ethnomusicology has a strong footprint in academia spanning several decades Such a presence is evident in ethnomusicology journals that can be traced back to the 1950s 23 Ethnomusicologists who study indigenous African music have been criticized for studying the subject from a subjective Western point of view especially given the dominance of the Western musical canon in South Africa 24 In South Africa authors such as Mapaya 25 indicate that for many years African Musicology has been studied from a multi cultural perspective without success Scholars of African Musicology such as Agawu 26 Mapaya 27 Nketia 28 and Nzewi 29 emphasize the study of indigenous African music from the perspective and language of the practitioners baletsi These scholars argue for the study of African Musicology from an angle that elevates the practitioners their actions and their interactions Categories of Mmino wa Setso edit Mmino wa Setso in Limpopo province has a number of categories Categories of Mmino wa Setso are distinguished according to the function they serve in the community Dinaka Kiba edit The peak of Pedi and northern Sotho musical expression is arguably the kiba genre which has transcended its rural roots to become a migrant style In its men s version it features an ensemble of players each playing an aluminum end blown pipe of a different pitch naka pl dinaka and together producing a descending melody that mimics traditional vocal songs with richly harmonized qualities Mapaya 30 provides a detailed descriptive analysis of Dinaka Kiba music and dance from a Northern Sotho perspective Alternatives to Dinaka or Kiba edit In the women s version a development of earlier female genres that has recently been included within the definition of kiba a group of women sing songs kosa ya dikhuru loosely translated knee dance music This translation has its roots in the traditional kneeling dance that involves salacious shaking movements of the breasts accompanied by chants These dances are still very common among Tswana Sotho and Nguni women This genre comprises sets of traditional songs steered by a lead singer accompanied by a chorus and an ensemble of drums meropa previously wooden but now made of oil drums and milk urns These are generally sung at drinking parties and or during celebrations such as weddings original research Mmino wa bana edit Children occupy a special place in the broader category of Mmino wa Setso Research shows that mmino wa bana can be examined for its musical elements educational validity and general social functions 31 Pedi Heartland editThe present day Pedi area Sekhukhuneland is situated between the Olifants River Lepelle and its tributary the Steelpoort River Tubatse bordered on the east by the Drakensberg range and crossed by the Leolo mountains But at the height of its power the Pedi polity under Thulare about 1780 1820 included an area stretching from the site of present day Rustenburg in the west to the Lowveld in the east and ranging as far south as the Vaal River Reliable historians and sources also credit the Pedi kingdom as the first and dominant monarchy established in the region The kingdom which boasted numerous victories over the Boers and the British armies was one of the strongest and largest in Southern Africa in the mid to late 1800s under the warrior king Sekhukhune I whose kingdom stretched from the Vaal River in the south to the Limpopo River in the north 32 Apartheid edit The area under Pedi s control was severely limited when the polity was defeated by British troops in 1879 Reserves were created for this and for other Northern Sotho groups by the Transvaal Republic s Native Location Commission Over the next hundred years or so these reserves were then variously combined and separated by a succession of government planners By 1972 this planning had culminated in the creation of an allegedly independent national unit or homeland named Lebowa In terms of the government s plans to accommodate ethnic groups separated from each other this was designed to act as a place of residence for all Northern Sotho speakers But many Pedi had never resided here since the polity s defeat they had become involved in a series of labor tenancy or sharecropping arrangements with white farmers lived as tenants on crown land purchased farms communally as freeholders or moved to live in the townships adjoining Pretoria and Johannesburg on a permanent or semi permanent basis In total however the population of the Lebowa homeland increased rapidly after the mid 1950s due to the forced relocations from rural areas and cities in common South Africa undertaken by apartheid s planners and to voluntary relocations by which former labor tenants sought independence from the restrictive and deprived conditions under which they had lived on the white farms original research Subsistence and economy edit nbsp Overgrazed Bapedi reserve near Pietersburg DrakensbergThe pre conquest economy combined cattle keeping with hoe cultivation The principal crops were sorghum pumpkins and legumes which were grown by women on fields allocated to them when they married Women hoed and weeded did pottery built and decorated huts with mud made sleeping mats and baskets ground grain cooked brewed and collected water and wood Men did some work in fields at peak times they hunted and herded they did woodwork prepared hides and were metal workers and smiths Most major tasks were done communally by matsema work parties original research The chief was depended upon to perform rainmaking for his subjects The introduction of the animal drawn plow and of maize later transformed the labor division significantly especially when combined with the effects of labor migration Men s leaving home to work for wages was initially undertaken by regimental groups of youths to satisfy the paramount s firepower requirements but later became increasingly necessary to individual households as population increase within the reserve and land degradation made it impossible to subsist from cultivation alone Despite increasingly long absences male migrants nonetheless remained committed to the maintenance of their fields plowing had now to be carried out during periods of leave or entrusted to professional plowmen or tractor owners Women were left to manage and carry out all other agricultural tasks Men although subjected to increased controls in their lives as wage laborers fiercely resisted all direct attempts to interfere with the spheres of cattle keeping and agriculture Their resistance erupted in open rebellion ultimately subdued during the 1950s In later decades some families have continued to practice cultivation and keep stock In the early 1960s about 48 of the male population was absent as wage earners at any given time Between the 1930s and the 1960s most Pedi men would spend a short period working on nearby white farms followed by a move to employment in the mines or domestic service and later especially in more recent times to factories or industry Female wage employment began more recently and is rarer and more sporadic Some women work for short periods on farms others have begun since the 1960s to work in domestic service in the towns of the Witwatersrand But in recent years there have been rising levels of education and expectations combined with a sharp drop in employment rates Land tenure edit The pre colonial system of communal or tribal tenure which was broadly similar to that practiced throughout the southern African region was crystallized but subtly altered by the colonial administration A man was granted land by the chief for each of his wives unused land was reallocated by the chief rather than being inherited within families Overpopulation resulting from the government s relocation policies resulted in this system being modified a household s fields together with its residential plot are now inherited ideally by the youngest married son Christian Pedi communities that owned freehold farms were removed to the reserve without compensation but since 1994 many have now reoccupied their land or are preparing to do so under restitution legislation Religion editAncestors are viewed as intermediaries between humans and The Creator or God Modimo Mmopi and are communicated to by calling on them using a process of burning incense making an offering and speaking to them go phasa If necessary animal sacrifice may be done or beer presented to the children on both the mother s and father s sides A key figure in the family ritual was the kgadi who was usually the father s elder sister 11 The position of ngaka diviner was formerly inherited patrilineally but is now commonly inherited by a woman from her paternal grandfather or great grandfather This is often manifested through illness and through violent possession by spirits malopo 11 of the body the only cure for which is to train as a diviner There has been a proliferation of diviners in recent times with many said to be motivated mainly by a desire for material gain 33 Rulers editName NotesThulare I Thulare unified many smaller Sotho Tswana tribes and founded the Marota Empire with the Bapedi in the seat of leadership died in 1824 on the day of a solar eclipse and this is the first definite date we can establish in the history of the Bapedi Molekutu I After the death of Thulare I his eldest son Molekutu I ascended to the throne only to be killed two years later with the arrival of Mzilikazi north of the Vaal Phetedi I Molekutu I was succeeded by his brother Phetedi but Phetedi ruled for less than a year before befalling the same fate as his older brother Molekutu under the spear of Mzilikazi s impi Sekwati I Sekwati was the youngest son of Thulare I repelled Mzilikazi and the Mthwakazi attacks by holding ground in the forests north of Magoebaskloof Long after the defeat of Mzilikazi at Silkaatsnek Sekwati I returned to the lands of the Marota and ascended to the throne as Kgosigolo Sekwati died in 1861 Sekhukhune I Upon the death of Sekwati Sekhukhune challenged his brother Mampuru II to combat in a succession dispute Mampuru II is said to have declined and Sekhukhune was made Kgosi Sekhukhune expanded both the wealth and military power of the Marota empire and when war broke out between the ZAR and the Marota Sekhukhune was victorious After another war with British forces Sekhukhune was captured and held in Pretoria Sekhukune was later assassinated by his brother Mampuru II Mampuru II There is much debate over the succession dispute of Sekhukhune and Mampuru II What is known is that with the aid of British forces Mampuru succeeded in overthrowing Sekhukhune and personally killed him in 1882 Mampuru himself ruled in exile for about a year before being executed by the ZAR government for the murder of his brother Kgoloko regent After the death of Sekhukhune s son Morwamoche II It was decided that Kgoloko the son of Sekwati and half brother of both Sekhukhune I and Mampuru II would rule as regent until Sekhukhune s grandson and son of Morwamoche II was old enough to rule Sekhukhune II Sekhukhune II was the grandson of Sekhukhune I and the son of Morwamoche II and succeeded his uncle Kgoloko as soon as he was deemed old enough Sekhukhune II took advantage of wartime conditions during the Anglo Boer War to reshape the pattern of colonial relations imposed on them by the ZAR to attempt to re establish the dominance of the Marota in the eastern Transvaal and to negotiate favourable terms with the occupying British military forces once the ZAR was defeated Thulare II Thulare II the son of Sekhukhune II died without issue Morwamoche III Upon the death of his older brother Morwamoche III held the throne until his death Mankopodi regent When Morwamoche III died his heir Rhyane Thulare was too young to rule and so Morwamoche III s wife and mother to Rhyane ruled as regent Rhyane Thulare Sekhukhune III Had allegedly refused to ascend to the throne without his mother s blessing Rhyane however did not renounce his claim to the rulership Rhyane reasserted his claim for the throne in 1989 Rhyane Thulare died in 2007 Kgagudi Kenneth Sekhukhune aS regent Kgagudi Kenneth Sekhukhune was the son of Morwamoche III and was installed as acting king in 1976 until such time as the complications surrounding Rhyane Thulare s succession was sorted out However when Rhyane Thulare died Kgagudi Kenneth Sekhukhune attempted to establish himself as the rightful Kgosikgolo King of the Bapedi Victor Thulare III as Thulare III Thulare III was the son of Rhyane Thulare and had disputed the kingship with the acting king his uncle Sekhukhune III A court ruling in 2018 recognised Thulare III as the incumbent but this was still disputed by his uncle who declared his son Sekwati II Khutso Sekhukhune the new king Thulare III was confirmed as king in July 2020 after the court ruled Sekwati II s rule unlawful and ordered him to vacate the throne Thulare III died on 6 January 2021 34 Manyaku Thulare regent Upon the death of her son the Queen mother Manyaku Thulare was announced as regent for the Bapedi people 35 Ramphelane Thulare the uncle of the late King Victor Thulare III announced that none of the late kings 5 children are eligible to ascend the throne as their mothers are not candle wives 36 The Bapedi nation intends to marry a candle wife in Lesotho who will give birth to the heir to the throne as per as per the wishes of the late king Therefore Queen mother Manyaka Thulare will act as the regent until the candle wife is married 37 Notable Pedi People editKgalema Motlanthe 3rd President of South Africa 38 Charlotte Makgomo Maxeke Activists Lillian Masediba Ngoyi Activists Lesetja Kganyago Governor of the South African Reserve Bank Edward Lekganyane the Zion Christian Church ZCC leader Engenas Lekganyane the founder of Zion Christian Church ZCC Sefako Makgatho second President of the African National Congress born in Ga Mphahlele village Malegapuru William Makgoba doctor Thabo Makgoba Anglican Archbishop of Cape Town David Makhura Premier of Gauteng Province Julius Malema former leader of the ANC Youth League and current Commander in Chief of the Economic Freedom Fighters EFF Mampuru II King of the Pedi 1879 1883 Richard Maponya a South African businessman and founder and first president of the National African Federated Chamber of Commerce NAFCOC Born in Lenyeye Tzaneen Cassel Mathale third premier of Limpopo province Yvonne Chaka Chaka born Yvonne Machaka is an internationally recognized South African singer songwriter actress entrepreneur humanitarian and teacher Lebo Mathosa musician Kenneth Meshoe politician Peter Mokaba a former leader of the ANC Youth League Lydia Mokgokoloshi actress Sello Moloto former premier of Limpopo province Trott Moloto former South African National Soccer Coach Mathole Motshekga Politician Aaron Motsoaledi Minister of Health South Africa and nephew of Elias Motsoaledi Caroline Motsoaledi political activist and wife of Elias Motsoaledi Elias Motsoaledi anti apartheid activist and one of the eight men sentenced to life imprisonment at the Rivonia Trial Es kia Mphahlele is a writer educator artist and activist Letlapa Mphahlele is the former President of the Pan Africanist Congress PAC Gift Ngoepe the first black South African and the sixth South African to sign a professional baseball contract when he signed in October 2008 Lilian Ngoyi anti apartheid activist Maite Nkoana Mashabane Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform South Africa Ngoako Ramatlhodi first premier of Limpopo province Gwen Ramokgopa Deputy Minister of Health former MEC of Health in Gauteng Province Mamphela Ramphele former director at the World Bank Former principal of the University of Cape Town Sello Rasethaba businessman Thabo Sefolosha American basketball player His father Patrick Sefolosha was a musician from South Africa King Matsebe Sekhukhune son of King Sekwati He fought two wars first successfully in 1876 against the SAR and their Swazi allies then unsuccessfully against the British and Swazi in 1879 during the Sekukuni Wars Caiphus Semenya musician Tokyo Sexwale former Premier of Gauteng Caster Semenya athlete and Olympic Games medal winner Judith Sephuma musician Hilda Tloubatla lead singer of Mahotella Queens Africa Tsoai actor Master KG famous artist and composer of the popular song Jerusalema Kgosientsho Ramokgopa former mayor of City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Head of the Investment and Infrastructure Office in the Presidency at Infrastructure South Africa Phuti Mahanyele CEO of Shanduka Group Kamo Mphela amapiano artist Focalistic rapperSee also editTswana people Sotho people Sotho Tswana peoples Barotseland Lozi people BokoneReferences edit Pedi North Sotho joshuaproject net Retrieved 15 March 2018 Sotho South Africa Lesotho Language Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 22 August 2023 free online course www unisa ac za Retrieved 22 August 2023 Joubert Annekie Grobler Gerrie Kosch Inge Kriel Lize 1 January 2015 Article 21 1957 Customs and Traditions of the Sotho People in Northern Transvaal Mekgwa le botlwaelo bja Basotho ba Transfala Lebowa Ethnography from the Mission Field Brill pp 898 939 ISBN 978 90 04 29772 2 retrieved 3 August 2023 a b History of the Pedi southafrica co za Retrieved 3 August 2023 Allen Harold B Linn Michael D eds 1 January 1986 Introduction to Dialect Theory Dialect and Language Variation Boston Academic Press 3 4 doi 10 1016 b978 0 12 051130 3 50005 7 ISBN 978 0 12 051130 3 retrieved 14 February 2021 Constitution of the Republic of South Africa 1996 Chapter 1 Founding Provisions South African Government www gov za Retrieved 20 July 2023 Culture Limpopo Provincial Government www limpopo gov za Retrieved 23 July 2023 Pedi African Tribe South Africa www krugerpark co za Retrieved 23 July 2023 Bapedi history traditions culture and food ZA www southafrica net Retrieved 23 July 2023 a b c Bapedi history traditions culture and food BW www southafrica net Retrieved 3 August 2023 a b South African Military History Society Journal THE SEKUKUNI WARS samilitaryhistory org Retrieved 23 July 2023 Pedi African Tribe South Africa www krugerpark co za Retrieved 31 August 2023 Huffman Thomas N 1 January 2020 Ceramic datums and history Sotho Tswana pottery in southern Africa Southern African Humanities 33 1 169 224 Sengupta Dhriti Choudhury Ananyo Fortes Lima Cesar Aron Shaun Whitelaw Gavin Bostoen Koen Gunnink Hilde Chousou Polydouri Natalia Delius Peter Tollman Stephen Gomez Olive F Xavier Norris Shane Mashinya Felistas Alberts Marianne Hazelhurst Scott 7 April 2021 Genetic substructure and complex demographic history of South African Bantu speakers Nature Communications 12 1 2080 doi 10 1038 s41467 021 22207 y ISSN 2041 1723 Royal battle looms as Bapedi go to court again The Mail amp Guardian 5 October 2018 Retrieved 27 September 2020 History of the Pedi southafrica co za Retrieved 9 July 2020 The Long March to Freedom www longmarchtofreedom co za Retrieved 23 July 2023 Roberts amp Winter 1916 a b BaPedi People Pedi African Tribe South Africa Bapedi history traditions culture and food ZA Ethnomusicology on JSTOR jstor org Retrieved 8 March 2021 Harop Allin Susan 2005 Ethnomusicology and Music Education developing the dialogue Researchgate Retrieved 14 February 2021 Mapaya Geoff 2011 The indigenous music learning process Southern African Journal for Folklore Studies 21 65 76 Agawu Kofi 1 July 2008 Meki Nzewi and the discourse of African musicology a 70th birthday appreciation Journal of the Musical Arts in Africa 5 1 1 18 doi 10 2989 JMAA 2008 5 1 1 784 ISSN 1812 1004 S2CID 145596657 Mapaya Madimabe Geoff 3 September 2014 The Study of Indigenous African Music and Lessons from Ordinary Language Philosophy 1 Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences 5 20 2007 ISSN 2039 2117 Nketia Kwabena JH 1974 The Music of Africa New York W W Norton ISBN 9780393021776 Nzewi Meki 1974 Melo Rhythmic Essence and Hot Rhythm in Nigerian Folk Music The Black Perspective in Music 2 1 23 28 doi 10 2307 1214145 ISSN 0090 7790 JSTOR 1214145 Mapaya Madimabe Geoff 3 September 2014 Indigenous African Music A Descriptive Analysis of Mmino wa Setso from a Northern Sotho Perspective Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences 5 20 2211 ISSN 2039 2117 Mokgehle Morokolo 2018 Mmino wa Bana An African musicological study of Moletjie community musical practices P h D Thesis Thesis Venda University of Venda History of the Pedi southafrica co za Retrieved 22 August 2023 Pedi South African History Online Koko Khaya 11 January 2021 Calls for calm over fractious BaPedi kingship Mail amp Guardian Retrieved 12 January 2021 Queen Mother Manyaku Thulare appointed regent of the Bapedi nation 21 March 2021 Bapedi kingdom announces stand in queen while awaiting candle wife Rifts in Bapedi nation over appointment of Queen Mother as regent MSN Profile South Africa s Kgalema Motlanthe BBC News 13 December 2012 Retrieved 22 August 2020 Delius Peter 1984 The Land Belongs to Us The Pedi Polity the Boers and the British in the Nineteenth century Transvaal University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 05148 5 Kinsey H W June 1973a The Sekukuni Wars Military History Journal South African Military History Society 2 5 Kinsey H W December 1973b The Sekukuni Wars Part II Military History Journal South African Military History Society 2 6 Roberts Noel Winter C A T 1916 The Kgoma Or Initiation Rites of the Bapedi Bantu Tribe of Sekukuniland Southern Africa Association for the Advancement of Science Further reading editAmies C Murray N L Scott J G Warren R S 1953 Trachoma in the South African Bantu a survey in Sekukuniland International Review of Trachoma 30 3 405 10 PMID 13135066 Longmore L 1952 Death and burial customs of the Bapedi of Sekukuniland African Studies 11 2 83 84 doi 10 1080 00020185208706871 ISSN 0002 0184 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Northern Sotho people The Loreto Mission Glen Cowie Sekukuniland The Pedi Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pedi people amp oldid 1184272337, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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