Cetshwayo

Cetshwayo
born с 1826, near Eshowe, Zululand [S.Af.]
died Feb. 8, 1884, Eshowe

Last great king of the Zulus (r. 1872–79).

Nephew of the great Shaka, Cetshwayo commanded a disciplined army of 40,000. Attacked by the British in 1879, he defeated them at Isandhlwana but lost at Ulundi. Part of his kingdom was returned in 1883, but his rivals drove him out of power.

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▪ Zulu king
also spelled  Cetewayo  
born c. 1826, near Eshowe, Zululand [now in South Africa]
died Feb. 8, 1884, Eshowe

      last great king of the independent Zulus (Zulu) (reigned 1872–79), whose strong military leadership and political acumen restored the power and prestige of the Zulu nation, which had declined during the reign of his father, Mpande (Panda). As absolute ruler of a rigidly disciplined army of 40,000 men, Cetshwayo was considered a threat to British colonial interests; the Zulu War (1879) and subsequent destruction of Zulu power removed that threat.

      Cetshwayo distinguished himself early in life, taking part in the 1838 Zulu attempt to evict the invading Boers (Boer) from Natal, and in the early 1850s he was involved in fighting between the Zulu and the Swazi for control of the Pongola region. By the mid-1850s Cetshwayo was head of a young Zulu group known as the Usuthu. During a Zulu civil war in 1856, Cetshwayo's Usuthu force defeated his rival and brother Mbuyazwe's Gqoza group in a violent encounter at the Battle of Ndondakasuka (near the lower Tugela River). After his victory, Cetshwayo was widely regarded as the de facto heir to Mpande, and from about 1861, as his father aged, Cetshwayo effectively ruled Zululand. After his father's death in 1872, Cetshwayo's position as ruler was formalized. His sovereignty was also recognized by the neighbouring British administration, which controlled the colony of Natal to the immediate south of the Zulu kingdom.

      In 1877 the British annexed the Boer republic of Transvaal, an event that fostered a drive to federate the southern African white colonies and to destroy the autonomy of the independent southern African kingdoms. The British took over preexisting Boer claims to parts of western Zululand, and in early 1878 Sir Theophilus Shepstone (Shepstone, Sir Theophilus), the Transvaal administrator, and Sir Bartle Frere (Frere, Sir Bartle, 1st Baronet), the high commissioner of the Cape (see Cape of Good Hope (Cape Province)), began a propaganda campaign against Cetshwayo and the Zulu. Their campaign centred on the reluctance of the Zulu to work in the British colonies near Zululand and on an alleged Zulu military threat to the colony of Natal. Cetshwayo was depicted as a military despot barely able to hold back his warriors from attacking Natal, and the Zulu kingdom as a steam engine with a stuck safety valve about to explode. As British intentions became clear, Cetshwayo, eager to avoid the slightest hint of provocation, withdrew his army to well behind the border.

      In December 1878 Frere issued an ultimatum to Cetshwayo that was designed to be impossible to satisfy: the Zulu were, among other things, to dismantle their “military system” within 30 days. As expected, the ultimatum was not met, and in January 1879 the British attacked Zululand. However, through incompetence and overconfidence they had a column destroyed at Isandhlwana by the Zulu later that month (see Battles of Isandhlwana and Rorke's Drift (Isandhlwana and Rorke's Drift, Battles of)). The British recovered from their defeat and later reached Ulundi (the capital of Zululand), seizing and burning it in July of that year; this was followed by Cetshwayo's capture in August and his subsequent exile to Cape Town. The British partitioned the now-defeated Zululand between themselves and Zulu enemies of Cetshwayo, particularly Hamu in the northwest and Zibhebhu (of the Mandlakazi group) in the northeast.

      In July 1882 Cetshwayo was permitted to travel to the United Kingdom to seek support from British politicians for the restoration of the Zulu monarchy. Permission was granted, but the ensuing plan ensured the permanent emasculation of the monarchy. The southern part of Zululand between the Tugela and Mhlatuze rivers was annexed by Britain as the Zulu Native Reserve. Cetshwayo returned to Ulundi in January 1883, and, although he was welcomed by his Usuthu supporters, Zibhebhu and his Mandlakazi supporters prepared for civil war. Mandlakazi raids into the northern parts of the dwindling area under Cetshwayo's control culminated in a Mandlakazi attack on Ulundi and the final defeat of Cetshwayo's Usuthu supporters on July 21, 1883; it is to this, known as the second Battle of Ulundi, that modern historians date the demise of the Zulu kingdom. Cetshwayo fled to the British Zulu Native Reserve, where he later died at the British administrative centre of Eshowe in February 1884. The official cause of his sudden death was given as a heart attack, though the Zulu believed he had been poisoned. Cetshwayo's grave, in the Nkandla forest, is considered sacred and is guarded by the Zulu.

Additional Reading
C.T. Binns, The Last Zulu King (1963); Donald R. Morris, The Washing of the Spears (1965, reissued 1986); and Jeff Guy, The Destruction of the Zulu Kingdom (1979).

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Universalium. 2010.

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