Southern Africa (820 – 963 CE): Early…
820 CE to 963 CE
Southern Africa (820 – 963 CE): Early Agro-Pastoral Growth, San Continuity, and Wetland Frontiers
Geographic and Environmental Context
Southern Africa in this age encompassed the Highveld and Drakensberg uplands, Great Zimbabwe plateau, Okavango–Caprivi wetlands, Etosha basin, and Namib–Cape littorals—a region of diverse ecologies linking temperate grasslands to tropical wetlands and arid deserts.
It comprised two complementary zones:
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Temperate Southern Africa—the Republic of South Africa, Lesotho, Eswatini, most of Namibia and Botswana (excluding far-northern zones), southern Zimbabwe, and southwestern Mozambique.
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Tropical West Southern Africa—the northern reaches of Namibia and Botswana, including the Caprivi Strip, Okavango Delta, Etosha Pan, and the Skeleton Coast.
Rivers and wetlands—Limpopo, Zambezi, Okavango, and Chobe—stitched the landscape together, feeding pastoral plains, marshes, and forager ranges from the plateau to the coast.
Climate and Environmental Shifts
During the early Medieval Warm Period, conditions across Southern Africa became slightly warmer and wetter, favoring pasture and cultivation:
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Highveld and Great Zimbabwe plateau supported millet, sorghum, and cattle herding.
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Okavango and Caprivi wetlands enjoyed stable rainfall and perennial floodplains rich in fisheries and fertile soils.
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Etosha Pan alternated between saline flats and shallow wetlands, sustaining cyclical grazing.
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The Cape littoral remained seasonally dry, sustaining fynbos vegetation and hunter–gatherer mobility.
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The Skeleton Coast stayed arid but was seasonally exploited for salt and marine resources.
Overall, this was a time of environmental productivity and settlement expansion tempered by regional contrasts between humid deltas and desert margins.
Societies and Political Developments
Temperate Southern Africa: Agro-Pastoral Consolidation and San Persistence
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Bantu-speaking agro-pastoralists expanded across the Highveld, Great Zimbabwe plateau, and Maputo Bay hinterland, cultivating cereals and managing large herds of cattle.
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San hunter–gatherers remained predominant in the Cape, Namaqualand, and Kalahari, sustaining mobility through hunting, gathering, and small-scale exchange with farmers.
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Interaction zones fostered trade and cultural exchange—hides, ivory, iron tools, and salt moved between herding villages and forager bands.
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On the Great Zimbabwe plateau, early stone foundations and ritual landscapes foreshadowed the monumental centers of later centuries.
Tropical West Southern Africa: Wetland Economies and Desert Edge Societies
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Okavango–Caprivi communities combined millet and sorghum farming with cattle herding on the savanna margins; fishing and floodplain gardening produced surpluses.
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San communities in Etosha and along the Skeleton Coast relied on foraging and hunting, exploiting seasonal resources and maintaining intergroup exchange networks.
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Agricultural and pastoral settlements expanded around the Zambezi and Chobe corridors, integrating with interior trade routes that would later link to the Zambezi–Limpopo complex and the Indian Ocean coast.
Economy and Trade
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Crops and livestock: millet, sorghum, and beans sustained farming villages; cattle became both subsistence resource and wealth marker, central to exchange and ritual.
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Iron smelting was widespread, producing hoes, spearheads, and trade goods for interregional networks.
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Okavango–Caprivi corridor: exported fish, grain, and cattle; served as conduit between tropical and temperate settlements.
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Ivory, copper, and hides circulated northward through Maputo Bay toward the early Swahili trade system.
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Etosha Pan yielded salt, exchanged for grain and tools; Skeleton Coast provided seals, fish, and shellfish for inland barter.
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Seasonal fairs and kin-linked exchanges tied farmers, herders, and foragers into complementary economic circuits.
Subsistence and Technology
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Agriculture: shifting cultivation and flood-recession farming near rivers; dryland millet and sorghum on upland soils.
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Pastoralism: large herds grazed the Highveld and Great Zimbabwe plateau; seasonal migration balanced grazing pressure.
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Fishing and gathering: Okavango and Caprivi wetlands supplied steady protein; Etosha and Cape littorals yielded small game and marine harvests.
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Iron and ceramics: smelting and pottery production diffused widely; San continued to rely on microlithic hunting technologies alongside traded metal implements.
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Architecture: wattle-and-daub homesteads clustered around cattle enclosures; early stone enclosures on the Great Zimbabwe plateau marked emerging complexity.
Belief and Symbolism
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Ancestral cults centered on cattle, rainmaking, and lineage graves; wealth and ritual authority intertwined in pastoral society.
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San cosmologies interpreted landscape and animal spirits through trance dances, rock art, and storytelling; the eland remained a sacred archetype of vitality and transformation.
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Rainmaking and fertility rites spread across farming and foraging groups, binding communities to land and season.
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Rock art across the Drakensberg, Kalahari, and Cederberg recorded shared spiritual vocabulary of human–animal transformation.
Adaptation and Resilience
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Mixed economies—agriculture, cattle, fishing, and foraging—buffered environmental stress.
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Mobility and exchange: farmers and foragers adjusted to drought cycles through migration and reciprocal trade.
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Ecological complementarity: upland herders and wetland cultivators shared surplus through kin and ritual ties, stabilizing food security.
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Technological continuity: iron tools increased productivity but did not replace indigenous hunting knowledge; both persisted in symbiosis.
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Cultural balance: San traditions coexisted with expanding agro-pastoral systems, maintaining spiritual depth and environmental knowledge.
Long-Term Significance
By 963 CE, Southern Africa had developed a stable and interdependent cultural ecology:
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Agro-pastoral villages dotted the Highveld, Great Zimbabwe plateau, and Maputo Bay, laying foundations for later state formation.
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San communities remained vital across the Cape and Kalahari, preserving ancient cosmologies and adaptable subsistence strategies.
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Wetland and savanna societies of the Okavango–Caprivi–Etosha corridor thrived on mixed economies of grain, cattle, and fish.
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Ivory and copper trade through Maputo Bay and interior river routes prefigured the emergence of Great Zimbabwe and its regional network.
This age forged the enduring duality of Southern Africa’s history—mobile foragers and settled herders, sacred cattle and sacred trance, wetlands and highveld plains—each sustaining the other in a dynamic landscape of ecological and cultural balance.