|
| Riddle of Great Zimbabwe |
Volume 51 Number 4, July/August
1998 |
| by Roderick J. Mcintosh
|
Among the gold mines of the inland plains between
the Limpopo and Zambezi rivers [there is a]...fortress built of
stones of marvelous size, and there appears to be no mortar
joining them.... This edifice is almost surrounded by hills, upon
which are others resembling it in the fashioning of stone and the
absence of mortar, and one of them is a tower more than 12 fathoms
high. The natives of the country call these edifices Symbaoe,
which according to their language signifies court.--Viçente
Pegado, Captain, Portuguese Garrison of Sofala, 1531
![[image]](archzim_archivos/africa1.gif) |
Sometime in the early
fourteenth century the people of Great Zimbabwe began building
the Great Enclosure, completing the structure over the course
of a century. Scattered remains of the Valley Complex, just
north of the Great Enclosure, can be seen in the foreground.
(David Coulson) [LARGER IMAGE] |
When Portuguese traders first encountered the vast stone ruins of
Great Zimbabwe in the sixteenth century, they believed they had
found the fabled capital of the Queen of Sheba. Later travelers
surmised that the site's impressive stone structures were the work
of Egyptians, Phoenicians, or even Prester John, the legendary
Christian king of lands beyond the Islamic realm. Such misguided and
romantic speculation held for nearly 400 years, until the
excavations of British archaeologists David Randall-MacIver and
Gertrude Caton-Thompson early in this century, which confirmed that
the ruins were of African origin.
The largest ancient stone construction south of the Sahara, Great
Zimbabwe was built between the twelfth and fifteenth centuries by
the ancestors of the Shona, one of Zimbabwe's many Bantu-speaking
groups. The ruins cover nearly 1,800 acres and can be divided into
three distinct architectural groupings known as the Hill Complex,
the Valley Complex, and the Great Enclosure. At its apogee in the
late fourteenth century, Great Zimbabwe may have had as many as
18,000 inhabitants. It was one of some 300 known stone enclosure
sites on the Zimbabwe Plateau. In Bantu, zimbabwe means "sacred
house" or "ritual seat of a king." An important trading center and
capital of the medieval Zimbabwe state, the city controlled much of
interior southeast Africa for nearly two centuries.
Given the sheer scale of Great Zimbabwe compared to its
precursors, archaeologists have been at a loss to explain its sudden
appearance on the southern African landscape. Interpretation of the
site poses a particular problem because it was stripped of nearly
all its in situ cultural material during the nineteenth century by
treasure seekers and those who, believing the site to be of foreign
construction, wished, in the words of turn-of-the-century excavator
Keith M. Hall, "to free it from the filth and decadence of the
Kaffir [South African] occupation."
![[image]](archzim_archivos/africa2.gif) |
A series of
residential and ceremonial enclosures, the Hill Complex, built
ca. A.D. 1250, sits atop a granite dome that overlooks the
rest of the site. Construction of the interior of the Great
Enclosure began sometime in the early fourteenth century; its
outer wall was built nearly 100 years later. The smaller
Valley Complex, dated to the early fifteenth century, was the
last of the architectural undertakings. (Lynda D'Amico) [LARGER IMAGE] |
It is precisely for this reason that Great Zimbabwe has come to
serve as a proving ground for one of archaeology's newest
subspecialties, cognitive archaeology--the science of penetrating
the ancient human mind to glean information about the religion,
ideology, and politics of past cultures. These forces, scholars
contend, are what propel cultures forward, from scattered
hunter-gatherer populations to organized states whose political
rhetoric and ideology serve as vehicles for expansion. Since clear
evidence for belief systems is rarely visible in the archaeological
record, especially when dealing with nonliterate societies such as
Great Zimbabwe, it must be inferred from beliefs of descendant
cultures, historical accounts, and telltale symbolism encoded in
architecture, space use, and a site's relationships to the
surrounding landscape.
The abundant grasslands atop the plateau were ideal for cattle
grazing, but the poor soil would not have supported agriculture on a
scale required to sustain Great Zimbabwe's burgeoning population,
necessitating imports of grain and other staples from distant
tributary sites. Moreover, we now know that the plateau's rich gold
deposits, to which the city's initial prosperity has often been
attributed, were not exploited until perhaps a century after its
founding. The question posed then is "Why here?" How could such an
influential power develop in an area so ill-suited for large-scale
human habitation? Could cattle wealth and trade alone have afforded
the inhabitants of Great Zimbabwe a superior way of life, or was
there something else, a political or religious ideology, that gave
them a competitive edge over neighbors and enabled them to harness
the manpower necessary for the construction of the site?
These questions lie at the heart of a three-way debate between
archaeologist Thomas N. Huffman of South Africa's University of the
Witwatersrand, political historian and student of Shona oral
tradition David N. Beach of the University of Zimbabwe, and
historian Eugenia Herbert of Mount Holyoke College in
Massachussetts. Each has examined the stone-built landscape and
posited a different scenario to explain the ascendancy of southern
Africa's greatest precolonial city.
Roderick J. Mcintosh teaches archaeology at
Rice University and is on ARCHAEOLOGY's Editorial Advisory
Board.
 © 1998 by the
Archaeological Institute of
America www.archaeology.org/9807/abstracts/africa.html | |