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Shaka, son of Senzangakhona. Senzangakhona married at least sixteen women by which he had fourteen known sons. His daughters were not recorded. Nandi kaBhebhe eLangeni (Nandi, daughter of Bhebhe, from eLangeni district), bore him his first son Shaka, said to have been conceived during an act of ukuhlobonga, a form of coitus interruptus without penetration allowed to unmarried couples at a time ...
Shaka (roughly translated as "intestinal beetle") was born to the Zulu king. He was the eldest of many sons, but was considered to be a bastard child and was sent away to live with his mother's tribe, known as the Elangeni, leaving his half-brother to rule the Zulu kingdom. [5]
Princess Mkabayi kaJama (c. 1750–1843) was a Zulu princess [citation needed], the head of the Qulusi military kraal, and a regent of the Zulu Kingdom. She persuaded her father, the Zulu King Jama kaNdaba , to remarry, and acted as a regent during the reign of her half-brother, Senzangakhona .
Senzangakhona kaJama (c. 1762–1816), son of Jama, chief 1787 to 1816; ... After Dingiswayo's death at the hands of Zwide, king of the Ndwandwe, around 1818, ...
Mkabayi kaJama, daughter of Jama; Senzangakhona kaJama (ca. 1757–1816), son of Jama, chief of the Zulu clan from 1781 to 1816; Shaka kaSenzangakhona (ca. 1787–1828), son of Senzangakona, king from 1816 to 1828; Dingane kaSenzangakhona (ca. 1795–1840), son of Senzangakhona and half-brother of Shaka, king from 1828 to 1840
Sigujana kaSenzangakhona (died 1816) was King of the Zulu people in 1816. He was the son of Senzangakhona kaJama and half-brother of Dingane kaSenzangakhona and Shaka kaSenzangakhona.
The Jamas and Senzangakhona agreed to pay the damages demanded by Mhlongo people so as to avoid war. On the other hand, Senzangakhona did truly love Nandi. After Nandi gave birth to her son, Shaka, she initially spent some time at Senzangakhona's kraal before her relationship with Senzangakhona deteriorated, forcing her to leave the kraal.
He married, amongst others, Mthaniya KaSibiya, who bore him Senzangakhona, who succeeded him. [1] Senzangakhona was the father of the three Zulu kings, including the greatest, Shaka. He also had a daughter named Mkabayi kaJama. [2] Another daughter was Mawa kaJama. [3]