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History Of Money In South Africa From 1782 To 2011

Journal of Southern African Studies

journal article

'He Wears Short Clothes!': Rethinking Rharhabe (c.1715—c.1782)

Journal of Southern African Studies

Published By: Taylor & Francis, Ltd.

Journal of Southern African Studies

https://www. jstor .org/stable/23266575

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Abstract

'Rethinking Rharhabe' is an attempt to grapple with the history of the Eastern Cape in the eighteenth century, a period for which little written and no archaeological evidence is available. The limited information which we have comes from recorded oral traditions, which have heretofore been distorted within a framework of Conventional Wisdom derived from reading history backwards. A closer look at the oral sources reveals significant shifts in the political geography of the Eastern Cape, starting with the revelation that the amaXhosa kingdom, westernmost of all the Eastern Cape kingdoms at the time of the colonial encounter, was formerly located well to the southeast, but moved rapidly westwards during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The dynamics of such radical shifts are explored by considering the life of Rharhabe (c.1715—c.1782), Right-Hand Son of King Phalo (c.1690—1775). Rharhabe's career is here reconstructed by assembling and mapping all sixteen known episodes in his life, rather than the four allowed by the Conventional Wisdom. This more detailed reconstruction shows that Rharhabe's movements were more spasmodic but greater in scope than formerly appreciated. The article concludes by drawing out the implications of the Rharhabe case for the analysis of migrations, state structures and social identities, and for the nature of oral texts as a historical source.

Journal Information

Journal of Southern African Studies is an international publication for work of high academic quality. It aims to generate fresh scholarly inquiry and exposition in the fields of history, economics, sociology, demography, social anthropology, geography, administration, law, political science, international relations, literature and the natural sciences, in so far as they relate to the human condition. It represents a deliberate effort to draw together the various disciplines in social science and its allied fields. Southern Africa represents a unique opportunity for the study of a wide variety of social problems. The journal presents work, which reflects new theoretical approaches, and work, which discusses the methodological framework in general use by students of the area. The region covered embraces the following countries: the Republic of South Africa, Namibia, Botswana, Lesotho and Swaziland; Angola and Mozambique; Zambia, Malawi, Zimbabwe; and occasionally, Zaire, Tanzania, Madagascar and Mauritius.

Publisher Information

Building on two centuries' experience, Taylor & Francis has grown rapidlyover the last two decades to become a leading international academic publisher.The Group publishes over 800 journals and over 1,800 new books each year, coveringa wide variety of subject areas and incorporating the journal imprints of Routledge,Carfax, Spon Press, Psychology Press, Martin Dunitz, and Taylor & Francis.Taylor & Francis is fully committed to the publication and dissemination of scholarly information of the highest quality, and today this remains the primary goal.

History Of Money In South Africa From 1782 To 2011

Source: https://www.jstor.org/stable/23266575

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