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  2. Southern Ndebele people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_Ndebele_people

    The history of the Ndebele people begin with the Bantu Migrations southwards from the Great Lakes region of East Africa. Bantu speaking peoples moved across the Limpopo river into modern day South Africa and over time assimilated and conquered the indigenous San people in the North Eastern regions of South Africa.

  3. Northern Ndebele people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern_Ndebele_people

    The Northern Ndebele people (/ ˌ ɛ n d ə ˈ b ɛ l i,-ˈ b iː l i,-l eɪ /; EN-də-BE(E)L-ee, -⁠ay; Northern Ndebele: amaNdebele) are a Nguni ethnic group native to Southern Africa. Significant populations of native speakers of the Northern Ndebele language (siNdebele) are found in Zimbabwe and as amaZulu in South Africa.

  4. Nyabêla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyabêla

    Nyabêla's ancestors probably moved from the southeast coast of Africa to the Highveld in the sixteenth or seventeenth century and settled near the later Pretoria. These people were later called the Ndebele of Transvaal. Nowadays we call them the Ndebele of South Africa. One of their chiefs, Ndzundza, moved to the Steelpoort Valley in Mpumalanga.

  5. Bantu peoples of South Africa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bantu_peoples_of_South_Africa

    During the establishment and the time throughout the 18th century Cape Colony, South Africa was referred to as The Country of the Hottentots and Caffria, [6] (Hottentot is a deprecated reference to the Khoisan people of Western Cape, South Africa, while Caffria stemming from Kafir/Kaffir which is now an offensive racial slur to South African ...

  6. KwaNdebele - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KwaNdebele

    KwaNdebele was a bantustan in South Africa, intended by the apartheid government as a semi-independent homeland for the Ndebele people. The homeland was created when the South African government purchased nineteen white-owned farms and installed a government. [3]

  7. Lobengula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lobengula

    Lobengula Khumalo (c. 1835 – c. 1894) was the second and last official king of the Northern Ndebele people (historically called Matabele in English). Both names in the Ndebele language mean "the men of the long shields", a reference to the Ndebele warriors' use of the Nguni shield.

  8. Ndebele people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ndebele_people

    Ndebele People of Southern Africa or amaNdebele may refer to: Northern Ndebele people , an ethnic group native to South Africa and Zimbabwe Southern Ndebele people , an ethnic group native to South Africa found mostly in the Mpumalanga and Gauteng provinces

  9. KwaMhlanga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KwaMhlanga

    KwaMhlanga is a town in the Nkangala district municipality of the Mpumalanga province in South Africa. It is the spiritual home of the Ndebele tribe that settled here in the early 18th century. Kwamhlanga now consists of Kwamhlanga, Mandela, Phola, Sun City, Lithuli, Jordan, Mountain View, eMpumelelweni Village, Kingspark Village, and Tweefontein.