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izithakazelo

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Izithakazelo zakwa Mdluli Nyoka Dladlama clan names & History

Mdluli, Nyoka, Dladlama, Nkonyeni, Sewula ukusinda kuswele ngoba kuswele abanumzane, Ndabezitha wena Ndaba ka Bayeni, Thandile, Sonkophe, Sikwayo!

(Legal)
Law firm specializing in Commercial, Corporate, Insolvency, Business Rescue and Information, Communications and Technology Law. Based in Johannesburg.

Appointed as Director in the Corporate practice at DLA Piper’s Johannesburg office in August 2021. Previously worked at Bowmans and spent time on secondment at Davis Polk & Wardwell in New York.

His reign occurred during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries when the centralisation of polities east of the Drakensberg Mountains disturbed life in the region.

Forced to pledge allegiance to various powers to survive, Nomsimekwana and his followers affiliated first with the Ngwane, later the Mkhize, then the Zulu, and eventually the British. Their associations shifted as threats changedโ€”armies, hunger, marauders, and Boer settlers. After years of displacement, Nomsimekwana finally returned home to re-establish a chiefdom from the remnants who survived the transformation of the region. His story demonstrates the persistence of amalala identities in Natal through the mid-twentieth century.

Their history reflects the complex relationships between smaller polities and the larger Zulu kingdom, with some Mdluli families now being recognised as traditional leaders in areas like Mtubatuba, though this recognition is sometimes contested by other clans who claim earlier occupation.

Izithakazelo zakwa Mathe clan names & History

mathe, nombokodo, sjekula kamaqandahleli kamaflathel indlu yengwenya, omajicwana kanoma kamafahlaz ntomb’ ibuy’ esokeni layo!

Ndzimbovu clan names & History

Ndzimbovu uLombe uKoqo koqo uCha Cha Cha ubuhle obuthengwayo Ngwane u Gwiliza umthondo unethusi!

Mdluli clan names & History

Mina ngithi Mdluli, Nyoka, Dladlama, Nkonyeni, Ukusinda kuswele ngoba kuswele abanomzane, Sewula, Ndabezitha, Ndaba ka Bayeni, Thandile, Sonkophe!

His reign occurred during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries when the centralisation of polities east of the Drakensberg Mountains disturbed life in the region. Forced to pledge allegiance to various powers to survive, Nomsimekwana and his followers affiliated first with the Ngwane, later the Mkhize, then the Zulu, and eventually the British. Their associations shifted as threats changedโ€”armies, hunger, marauders, and Boer settlers. After years of displacement, Nomsimekwana finally returned home to re-establish a chiefdom from the remnants who survived the transformation of the region. His story demonstrates the persistence of amalala identities in Natal through the mid-twentieth century. Their history reflects the complex relationships between smaller polities and the larger Zulu kingdom, with some Mdluli families now being recognised as traditional leaders in areas like Mtubatuba, though this recognition is sometimes contested by other clans who claim earlier occupation.

Page 18 of 2068

ยฉ 2026