Ndaba kaMageba
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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?]
Further reading
- Bryant, Alfred T. (1905). A Zulu-English Dictionary. p. 38.
Ndaba downwards the geneology is certain
- Kuper, Adam (1993). "The 'House' and Zulu Political Structure in the Nineteenth Century". The Journal of African History (3 pages=469–487). Cambridge University Press.
According to Bryant, Ndaba married one of his daughters into a junior branch of the royal family
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(help); Text "volume 34" ignored (help) - Gibson, James Young (1911). The Story of the Zulus. p. 16.
[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
- Vail, Leroy (1991). Power and the praise poem: southern African voices in history. Charlottesville, Virginia: University of Virginia Press. p. 68. ISBN 0-8139-1340-3.
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suggested) (help) - Morris, Donald R. 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. 4. ISBN 0-306-80866-8.
Punga followed Zulu, and Mageba (who may have been his brother) followed Punga. Ndaba followed Mageba, and Jama followed Ndaba…
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ignored (help) - de Schryver, Gilles-Maurice (2008). "A New Way to Lemmatize Adjectives in a User-friendly Zulu–English Dictionary" (PDF). Lexikos: 63–91.
Nondela had remembered the really old things during the reign of chief Ndaba
{{cite journal}}
: Text "volume 18" ignored (help) - Guy, Jeff (2002). The view across the river: Harriette Colenso and the Zulu struggle against imperialism. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia. p. 6. ISBN 0-8139-2133-3.
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 (1993). Culture in Africa: An Appeal for Pluralism. Uppsala: Nordiska afrikainstitutet. p. 187. ISBN 91-7106-330-7.
And yet it was the great announcement foretold by [King Shaka's] 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 Fuze, Magema (1979) [1922]. The Black People and Whence They Came: A Zulu View. Pietermaritzburg: University of Natal Press. p. 58. ISBN 0-86980-515-0.{{cite book}}
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