Ndaba kaMageba: Difference between revisions
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→External links: {{cite book|last=Granqvist|first=Raoul |title=Culture in Africa |url=187}} |
→External links: http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=x70AzkBF77sC&oi=fnd&pg=PA185&dq=zulu+ndaba&ots=obK71MtTS4&sig=7kyAs4KHFpdDRFnRLMFJelMS4zk#PPA187,M1 |
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*{{cite journal|last=Schryver|first=Gilles-Maurice de |date=2008|title=A New Way to Lemmatize Adjectives in a User-friendly Zulu–English Dictionary|publisher=Lexikos |pages=21|url=http://tshwanedje.com/publications/Zulu-Adj.pdf}} "Nondela had remembered the really old things during the reign of chief Ndaba." |
*{{cite journal|last=Schryver|first=Gilles-Maurice de |date=2008|title=A New Way to Lemmatize Adjectives in a User-friendly Zulu–English Dictionary|publisher=Lexikos |pages=21|url=http://tshwanedje.com/publications/Zulu-Adj.pdf}} "Nondela had remembered the really old things during the reign of chief Ndaba." |
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*{{cite book|last=Guy|first=Jeff |title=The View Across the River |pages=6|url=http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=wiPe1oXJFkAC&oi=fnd&pg=PR1&dq=zulu+ndaba&ots=_hJHclgN1d&sig=k1M0y_6FJx-UxKQO9kflGEK8yY4#PPA6,M1}} "I say that when Mageba died he left the country to Punga; Punga, on his death, left it to Ndaba. Ndaba, on his death, left it to Jama." |
*{{cite book|last=Guy|first=Jeff |title=The View Across the River |pages=6|url=http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=wiPe1oXJFkAC&oi=fnd&pg=PR1&dq=zulu+ndaba&ots=_hJHclgN1d&sig=k1M0y_6FJx-UxKQO9kflGEK8yY4#PPA6,M1}} "I say that when Mageba died he left the country to Punga; Punga, on his death, left it to Ndaba. Ndaba, on his death, left it to Jama." |
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*{{cite book|last=Granqvist|first=Raoul |title=Culture in Africa |
*{{cite book|last=Granqvist|first=Raoul |title=Culture in Africa|pages=187|url=http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=x70AzkBF77sC&oi=fnd&pg=PA185&dq=zulu+ndaba&ots=obK71MtTS4&sig=7kyAs4KHFpdDRFnRLMFJelMS4zk#PPA187,M1}} "And yet it was the great announcement foretold by his great grandfather, Ndaba, that he alone would be a great king, far from his progeny would unexpectedly appear the one who would rule the whole of South Africa." citing, MM Fuze, The Black People and Whence They Came. A Zulu view, transl. H.C. Lugg (Durban 1979). p 58. |
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Revision as of 19:05, 22 February 2009
An editor has nominated this article for deletion. You are welcome to participate in the deletion discussion, which will decide whether or not to retain it. |
Template:Rescue Ndaba kaMageba was King of the Zulu.[1] He was the son of Mageba, and was chief of the Zulu from 1745 to 1763.
References
- ^ Havemann, Louis-John. "History of the Zulu Nation". KwaZulu Natal North Coast Happenings.[unreliable source?]
External links
- Bryant, Alfred T. (1905). A Zulu-English Dictionary. p. 38. "Ndaba downwards the geneology is certain" (Downloadable book)
- Kuper, Adam (August 1 1993). "The 'house' and zulu political structure in the nineteenth century". The Journal of African History.
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suggested) (help) "According to Bryant, Ndaba married one of his daughters into a junior branch of the royal family. " - Gibson, James Young (1911). "The Story of the Zulus": 16.
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(help) "[Tshaka] counted an ancestry of nine chiefs, whose names and order of succession are given as Malandela, Ntombela, Zulu, Nkosinkulu, Punga, Mageba, Ndaba, Jama, and Senzangakona." (Downloadable book) - Vail, Leroy. Power and the Praise Poem. p. 68.
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suggested) (help) - Morris, Donald R. (1998). The Washing of the Spears: A History of the Rise of the Zulu Nation Under Shaka and Its Fall in the Zulu War of 1879. p. 43. ISBN 0306808668.
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suggested) (help) "Punga followed Zulu, and Mageba (who may have been his brother) followed Punga. Ndaba followed Mageba, and Jama followed Ndaba..." - Schryver, Gilles-Maurice de (2008). "A New Way to Lemmatize Adjectives in a User-friendly Zulu–English Dictionary" (PDF). Lexikos: 21.
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(help) "Nondela had remembered the really old things during the reign of chief Ndaba." - Guy, Jeff. The View Across the River. p. 6. "I say that when Mageba died he left the country to Punga; Punga, on his death, left it to Ndaba. Ndaba, on his death, left it to Jama."
- Granqvist, Raoul. Culture in Africa. p. 187. "And yet it was the great announcement foretold by his great grandfather, Ndaba, that he alone would be a great king, far from his progeny would unexpectedly appear the one who would rule the whole of South Africa." citing, MM Fuze, The Black People and Whence They Came. A Zulu view, transl. H.C. Lugg (Durban 1979). p 58.