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Libafazi bedube inyama
Lesi simo sokukhuluma sichaza ukubanda nokuguqubala kwezulu
Umsuka: sonke siyazi ukuthi mangabe kunomcimbi komakhelwane kuyaye kuze omama basize ngokuqoba imifino nangokugeza inyama, manje mangabe kwakwenzeka loyo msebenzi uqondane nesimo sezulu esibandayo omama babebikelwa makumele bayosiza ngoba phela kuyabanda beth “ubani nje ongagezana nenyama kubanda kanje”
Popular people from Dube last name
Legendary South African reggae musician (1964-2007). One of South Africa’s biggest-selling artists who recorded 22 albums in Zulu, English, and Afrikaans. His music addressed social issues and injustice. [citation:4]
Founding member and first President of the African National Congress (ANC) in 1912. Educator, journalist, and editor of Ilanga lase Natal newspaper. First principal of Ohlange Institute. [citation:4]
Botswana Olympic 800m runner who competed at the 2000 Sydney Olympics and 2004 Athens Olympics. Represented Botswana in international athletics competitions. [citation:4]
Royalty from Dube last name
The Dube clan is one of the royal families in northern KwaZulu-Natal whose traditional council receives mining royalties from Richards Bay Minerals. Alongside the Mkhwanazi, Mbonambi, and Sokhulu clans, the Dube royal family oversees community development funds from titanium mining operations on their ancestral lands.
Former Ngwempisi MP in Eswatini who sought and received a royal pardon from King Mswati III. His case follows centuries-old tradition of seeking forgiveness from the monarch, similar to the Magagula clan who received pardon from King Mswati II around 1845 through the intercession of Prince Madzanga I.
Izithakazelo zabaThembu
Mvelase
Nin’enavel’eNyandeni
Ngomthwalo wakwaMabaso
Nina bakwaGogolazitha
Nina bakwaNobasali
Nina bakwaVezi uNonyanda
Nina bakaNgoz’akakhokhobi
Ngoba wakhokhobel’izinkomo zamadoda
Nina bakaVezi kaMandulo
Nina bakaNotsele kaNodada
Nina bakaSibhuzikazi simayikayika
Nina bakaPhumuz’abant’amaphiko
BaThemb’abaseng’inkom’izele
Nina bakaGude…
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Royalty from Mthembu last name
Founding ancestor of the AbaThembu nation, grandson of Mbulali. He settled with his people in Mbabane, Swaziland, and later moved to kwaMsinga in Natal. He had two sons, Ndilo and Mvelase (also known as Qudeni), and founded the tribe known as Abathembu BakwaMvelase. His descendants would go on to establish the Thembu Kingdom, one of the most significant Xhosa federations in the Transkeian territories [citation:2].
The first legitimate king of abaThembu, ruling during the 16th century. He led the migration from Dedesi to Msana in the Mthatha district and was responsible for assimilating various fragments from tribes such as amaBomvana, amaVundle, amaMpondomise, and amaMfengu to build his kingdom. His reign unified the Thembu people and established the royal lineage that continues to this day [citation:6].
Under the reign of Ngxeko, the Thembu emerged as a unified people. He united clans living in Thembuland into a single political entity, owing allegiance to the Thembu royal family, or “Hala Mvelase.” This unification laid the foundation for the independent Thembu Kingdom that would exist until British conquest in the 19th century [citation:2].
Recent Thembu kings, including Buyelekhaya Zwelibanzi Dalindyebo and Sabata Jonguhlanga Dalindyebo, took the surname Dalindyebo after a 19th-century king. The Thembu royal house continues to be recognized as traditional leaders in South Africa. Famous Thembus include Nelson Mandela, whose father was a reigning nobleman from a junior branch of the Madiba clan of kings, and Walter Sisulu [citation:2].

