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Tag: tshilukwa
Tshilukwa Clan Names, Meaning & History.
Tshilukwa surname info is currently not listed.
Izithakazelo zakwa-Dlungwane
Mpithikeza,
Mathaba,
Ndlalakuhle, Nhlab’shile,
Luqa,
Zondi,Nondaba,
Gagashe!
Popular people from Dlungwane last name
Siphumelele Dlungwane (Finance/Academia)
Chartered accountant and lecturer at University of KwaZulu-Natal. Holds Master of Philosophy in Development Finance from Stellenbosch University. Board member at SA Nuclear Energy Corporation (Necsa) and KZN Trade and Investment Agency. 2023 winner of JCI Ten Outstanding Young Persons Awards (TOYP). [citation:1][citation:8]
Chartered accountant and lecturer at University of KwaZulu-Natal. Holds Master of Philosophy in Development Finance from Stellenbosch University. Board member at SA Nuclear Energy Corporation (Necsa) and KZN Trade and Investment Agency. 2023 winner of JCI Ten Outstanding Young Persons Awards (TOYP). [citation:1][citation:8]
Tshidi Matjeke-Dlungwane (Mining/Business)
Founder and CEO of Stenda Group, a 100% women and youth-owned mining services company with over 300 employees. Holds B.Eng. Metallurgical Engineering from University of Pretoria and MBA from GIBS. Master Franchisor for Sausage Saloon in Mauritius. [citation:9]
Founder and CEO of Stenda Group, a 100% women and youth-owned mining services company with over 300 employees. Holds B.Eng. Metallurgical Engineering from University of Pretoria and MBA from GIBS. Master Franchisor for Sausage Saloon in Mauritius. [citation:9]
Royalty from Ngwane last name
Ngwane People
The Ngwane were the dominant group north of the Ndwandwe and would later become known as the Swazi. During the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, they inhabited the region north of the Pongola River. Their kingdom would eventually evolve into the modern Swazi nation under the leadership of King Sobhuza I and his successors.
The Ngwane were the dominant group north of the Ndwandwe and would later become known as the Swazi. During the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, they inhabited the region north of the Pongola River. Their kingdom would eventually evolve into the modern Swazi nation under the leadership of King Sobhuza I and his successors.
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