History, Zimbabwe
Maciej Mońka
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Displayed: times.Iron Age Bantu-speaking peoples began migrating into the area about 2,000 years ago, including the ancestors of the Shona, who account for roughly four fifths of the country's population today. Ruins at Great Zimbabwe, a Shona-speaking state, attest the existence of a medieval Bantu civilization in the region. Linked to the establishment of trade ties with Muslim merchants on the Indian Ocean coast around the early 10th century CE, Great Zimbabwe began to develop in the 11th century. The state traded gold, ivory, and copper for cloth and glass. It ceased to be the leading Shona state in the mid-15th century. In 1837 the Shona were conquered by the Ndebele, led by king Mzilikazi who was fleeing Shaka and his Zulu during the Mfecane, who forced them to pay tribute. Later in the 19th century British and Boer traders, hunters, missionaries, and hunters started encroaching on the area. In 1888 British imperialist Cecil Rhodes extracted mining rights from King Lobengula of the Ndebele. In 1889 Rhodes obtained a charter for the British South Africa Company, which conquered the Ndebele and their territory (named "Rhodesia" in 1895 after Cecil Rhodes) and promoted the colonization of the region and its land, labor, and precious metal and mineral resources. Both the Ndebele and the Shona staged unsuccessful revolts against white colonialist encroachment on their native lands in 1896-1897. In 1911 the territory was divided into Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia) and Southern Rhodesia, the latter becoming a self-governing British colony in 1922. In 1953 the two parts of Rhodesia were reunited in the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, and after its dissolution in 1963 the whites demanded independence from Southern Rhodesia (Rhodesia from 1964). As African majority governments were assuming control in neighboring Northern Rhodesia and in Nyasaland, the white-minority government, led by Ian Smith, declared unilateral independence on November 11, 1965. The United Kingdom called the declaration an act of rebellion but did not reestablish control by force. When negotiations in 1966 and 1968 proved fruitless, the UK requested UN economic sanctions against Rhodesia. The white-minority regime declared itself a republic in 1970. It was not recognized by the UK or by any other nation. As guerrilla activities fighting minority rule intensified, the Smith regime opened negotiations with the leaders of the Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZANU), led by Robert Mugabe after the assassination of Herbert Chitepo in Zambia in 1975, and the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZAPU), led by Joshua Nkomo. With his regime near the brink of collapse, Smith in March 1978 signed a desperate accord with three black leaders who offered safeguards for whites headed by Bishop Abel Muzorewa. Muzorewa, who not only had the support of Smith but with the white-minority regime in South Africa as well, lacked credibility among significant sectors of the African population. The Muzorewa government soon faltered. In 1979 the British Government asked all parties to come to Lancaster House in an attempt to negotiate a settlement in the civil war. Following the conference, held in London (1979-1980), Britain's Lord Soames was appointed governor to oversee the disarming of revolutionary guerrillas, the holding of elections, and the granting of independence to an uneasy coalition government with Joshua Nkomo, head of Zimbabwe African People's Union. In the free elections of February 1980, Mugabe and his Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU) won a landslide victory. Mugabe has won reelection ever since. In 1982 Nkomo was ousted from his cabinet, sparking fighting (known as the Gukurahundi) between ZAPU supporters in the Ndebele-speaking region of the country and the ruling ZANU. A peace accord was negotiated in 1987, resulting in ZAPU's merger (1988) into the ZANU-PF. The drought in southern Africa, perhaps the worst of the century, affected Zimbabwe so severely that a national disaster was declared in 1992. The drought confounded the country's debt crisis. The ensuing IMF-backed economic adjustment and austerity program caused further widespread hardship. Despite majority-rule, whites made up less than 1% of the population but held 70% of the country's commercially viable arable land. Land redistribution reemerged as the vital issue beginning in 1999. In the aftermath of Mugabe's handling of the land crisis, which moved to redistribute land to blacks, Zimbabwe was suspended from the Commonwealth of Nations on charges of human rights abuses and of election tampering in 2002. Later, Zimbabwe withdrew from the Commonwealth. The UN has recently estimated that 34% of the population has HIV/AIDS.
General Tips about Zimbabwe
» Required travel documents for Zimbabwe» Electric power
» Zimbabwe - Zambezi National Park
» Zimbabwe - Nyanga National Park
» Zimbabwe - Lake Mutirikwe Recreational Park
» Zimbabwe - Matusadona National Park
» Zimbabwe - Matobo Hills National Park
» Zimbabwe - Mana Pools National Park
» Zimbabwe - Gonarezhou National Park
» Zimbabwe - Chizarira National Park
» Zimbabwe - Chimanimani National Park
» Zimbabwe - Bulawayo
» Zimbabwe - The Bvumba
» Zimbabwe - Lake Kariba
» Zimbabwe - Victoria Falls
» Water
» Local food and wine
» Driving in Zimbabwe
» Culture and Religion
» Medical Services
» Climate
» Economy
» Geography
» Currency
» Transportation
» Communications
» History
» Charara Safari Area
» Lake Kariba
» Zambezi Valley and Mana Pools
» Gonarezhou National Park
» LAKE MUTIRIKWI AND MUTIRIKWI RECREATION PARK
» Great Zimbabwe
» Eastern Highlands
» Canoeing/game viewing, Falls
» White-water rafting, Falls
» Kame Ruins, Bulawayo
» Tshabalala Game Sanctuary, Bulawayo
» Matobo Hills and Matobos National Park, Bulawayo
» Mzilikazi Arts and Crafts Centre, Bulawayo
» National Art Gallery, Bulawayo
» Railway Museum, Bulawayo
» The Natural History Museum , Bulawayo
» Zimbabwe Parliament Queen Victoria Museum Queen Victoria National Library National Art Gallery
» Redcliff
» Mutare
» Redcliff
» Mutare
» Kariba Dam
» Harare
» Bulawayo
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