Shaka now incorporates the Mthethwa under his…
1816 CE to 1827 CE
By the mid-1820s, Shaka rules a kingdom of more than one hundred thousand people with a standing army of forty thousand men.
He centralizes power in the person of the king and his court, collects tribute from regional chiefs, and places regiments throughout his state to ensure compliance with his orders.
These regiments also look after the royal herds and carried out public works.
Women, too, are incorporated into their own age regiments, which are paired with male regiments to
provide food and other services for the soldiers.
Shaka forbids members of these regiments to marry, however, until they have completed their military service.
For men this means their late thirties, and for women their late twenties.
Only after marriage can men and women leave their regiments and set up their own homesteads.
Shaka fosters a new national identity by stressing the Zuluness of the state.
All subjects of the state become Zulu and owe the king their personal allegiance.
Zulu traditions of origin become the national traditions of the state.
Customary Nguni festivals, such as planting and harvest celebrations, become occasions on which Shaka gathers vast numbers of his people and extolsthe virtues of the state.
Through such means, Shaka develops a Zulu consciousness that transcends the original identities and lineages of the various peoples who are his subjects.
Groups
Khoikhoi
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San (Bushmen)
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Dutch people
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Sotho (Basotho or Basuto) people
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Zulu people
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Portuguese people
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Nguni people
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Portuguese Mozambique
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Huguenots (the “Reformed”)
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Dutch East India Company (Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie or VOC in Dutch, literally "United East Indies Company")
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Cape Colony, Dutch East India Company's
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Boers
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Zululand
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Zulu, Kingdom of the
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Sotho kingdom
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