Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,077 pages of information about Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa.

Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,077 pages of information about Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa.
The only evidence of greatness possessed by his successor is his having about a hundred wives.  When he dies a disputed succession and much fighting are expected.  In reference to the term Monomotapa, it is to be remembered that Mono, Moene, Mona, Mana, or Morena, mean simply ‘chief’, and considerable confusion has arisen from naming different people by making a plural of the chief’s name.  The names Monomoizes, spelled also Monemuiges and Monomuizes, and Monomotapistas, when applied to these tribes, are exactly the same as if we should call the Scotch the Lord Douglases.  Motape was the chief of the Bambiri, a tribe of the Banyai, and is now represented in the person of Katolosa.  He was probably a man of greater energy than his successor, yet only an insignificant chief.  Monomoizes was formed from Moiza or Muiza, the singular of the word Babisa or Aiza, the proper name of a large tribe to the north.  In the transformation of this name the same error has been committed as in the others; and mistakes have occurred in many other names by inattention to the meaning, and predilection for the letter R. The River Loangwa, for instance, has been termed Arroangoa, and the Luenya the Ruanha.  The Bazizulu, or Mashona, are spoken of as the Morururus.

The government of the Banyai is rather peculiar, being a sort of feudal republicanism.  The chief is elected, and they choose the son of the deceased chief’s sister in preference to his own offspring.  When dissatisfied with one candidate, they even go to a distant tribe for a successor, who is usually of the family of the late chief, a brother, or a sister’s son, but never his own son or daughter.  When first spoken to on the subject, he answers as if he thought himself unequal to the task and unworthy of the honor; but, having accepted it, all the wives, goods, and children of his predecessor belong to him, and he takes care to keep them in a dependent position.  When any one of them becomes tired of this state of vassalage and sets up his own village, it is not unusual for the elected chief to send a number of the young men, who congregate about himself, to visit him.  If he does not receive them with the usual amount of clapping of hands and humility, they, in obedience to orders, at once burn his village.  The children of the chief have fewer privileges than common free men.  They may not be sold, but, rather than choose any one of them for a chief at any future time, the free men would prefer to elect one of themselves, who bore only a very distant relationship to the family.  These free men are a distinct class who can never be sold; and under them there is a class of slaves whose appearance as well as position is very degraded.  Monina had a great number of young men about him from twelve to fifteen years of age.  These were all sons of free men, and bands of young men like them in the different districts leave their parents about the age of puberty, and live with such men as Monina for the sake of instruction.  When I asked the

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Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.