Sihayo kaXongo

Map
An 1879 map of Zululand. Sihayo's territory (labelled uSirayo) is shown at the southern end of the western border with the Transvaal (the straight blue line), set out by Sihayo and Pretorius.

Sihayo kaXongo (c. 1824 – 2 July 1883) was a Zulu inKosi (chief). In some contemporary British documents he is referred to as Sirhayo or Sirayo. He was an inDuna (commander) of the iNdabakawombe iButho (social age group and regiment) and supported Cetshwayo in the 1856 Zulu Civil War. Under Cetshwayo, Sihayo was a chief of a key territory on the border with the British Colony of Natal and had a seat on the iBandla (royal council). Sihayo was an Anglophile who wore European clothes and maintained friendly relations with trader James Rorke who lived nearby at Rorke's Drift. By 1864, Sihayo was head of the Qungebe tribe and that year agreed a new western border of the kingdom with Boer leader Marthinus Wessel Pretorius.

In 1878 two of Sihayo's wives were found to be cheating, were attacked by Sihayo's family, and fled to Natal. Sihayo's sons and brother launched a cross-border raid which captured and executed them. The British authorities objected and demanded Sihayo's family be handed over to face British justice. Cetshwayo refused and the incident became a casus belli of the 1879 Anglo-Zulu War. Sihayo's kraal was attacked on 12 January and one of his sons killed. Sihayo had taken most of his men to Ulundi to join the royal army. The Zulu defeated the British at the Battle of Isandlwana, which some of Sihayo's men participated in, but lost the war in July. The Zulu kingdom was broken up after the war and Sihayo lost his land. Sihayo was killed in July 1883 when Ulundi was overrun by the forces of Zibhebhu kaMaphitha during the Third Zulu Civil War.

Early life

Cetshwayo seated
Cetshwayo, photographed in 1875

Zulu of Sihayo's era did not have English-style surnames, but employed a patrilineal naming system. Thus Sihayo was the son of a man named Xongo.[1] In some contemporary British documents he is referred to as Sirhayo or Sirayo.[2] Years of birth for Zulu of this period are often unknown but can be estimated from their iButho, a grouping of similarly aged men that also functioned as a regiment in times of war; historian John Laband estimates Sihayo's year of birth as 1824.[3] Sihayo became an inDuna (commander) of the iNdabakawombe iButho.[4]

Sihayo was a supporter of Cetshwayo's claim to leadership of the Zulu Kingdom. He supported Cetshwayo in his claim as heir to his father, King Mpande, over that of Cetshwayo's brother Mbulazi during the 1856 civil war.[5] The war culminated in the 2 December 1856 Battle of Ndondakusuka in which Cetshwayo's forces killed Mbulazi, his six other brothers, and the entire 30,000-strong iziGqoza faction.[6] Cetshwayo afterwards seized de facto control of the kingdom, though his father remained nominal king until his death in October 1872.[7] Sihayo seems to have enjoyed a close relationship with Cetshwayo and sat on his iBandla (royal council).[4]

By 1864 Sihayo was chief of an important stretch of the kingdom's border with the British Colony of Natal on the Buffalo River, in the south-west of the kingdom. He made his homestead, known by English speakers as a kraal, on the bank of the river near Rorke's Drift.[8] The drift was named after the Irish trader Jim Rorke who had made his home there and was a friend of Sihayo.[9] Sihayo was an Anglophile who wore European clothes rather than traditional Zulu dress.[9] He owned two high-quality, English-made shotguns and was reported to be a good shot at hunting.[10][11]

In 1864 Sihayo was confirmed as head of the Qungebe tribe of Zulu with additional territories adjoining those he already possessed.[5] That same year he met with Boer leader Marthinus Wessel Pretorius to delineate the kingdom's western border with the South African Republic, which had previously been undefined and disputed. The two men jointly erected stone cairns to mark the line.[8]

1878 border incident

In July 1878 Sihayo was attending the court of Cetshwayo at the Zulu capital, Ulundi, when his son, Mehlokazulu, discovered that Sihayo's Great Wife (and Mehlokazulu's mother) Kaqwelebana and one of Sihayo's junior wives were having affairs with younger lovers.[12][13][4] Mehlokazulu conferred with his uncle, Sihayo's brother Zuluhlenga, and three brothers (Bhekuzulu, Nkumbikazulu and Tshekwane) who decided that Kaqwelebana should be executed as was customary in Zulu law for this offence. The men attacked Kaqwelebana's hut and she was wounded, but escaped with the junior wife to Natal.[12]

Buffalo river
The crossing of the Buffalo River at Rorke's Drift

Sihayo's wives and their lovers sought refuge in the kraals of two Natal border guards. The colonial authorities had long permitted Zulu refugees to settle in Natal but, until 1875, fleeing wives were regarded as chattels and returned to their husbands. The Zulu had crossed into Natal in 1877 to capture a female refugee and the lieutenant-governor of Natal, Henry Ernest Gascoyne Bulwer, had complained to Cetshwayo. The British frequently crossed the border in the other direction in pursuit of fugitives and on at least one occasion Cetshwayo had delivered up such men to the British. Mehlokazulu therefore considered that there would be no serious repercussions if he crossed the border to capture the women.[14] Mehlokazulu, and others in Sihayo's household, crossed the border and seized the junior wife, dragged her back to Zululand and killed her.[14] A few days later some eighty of Sihayo's men, led by the five male family members, did the same to Kaqwelebana, killing her on the Zulu bank of the Buffalo, within sight of Rorke's Drift which had become a Swedish missionary post.[15][14] In neither case were the women's male lovers or the border guards harmed.[14]

When Bulwer learnt of the cross-border incident he complained to Cetshwayo and demanded that Sihayo's sons and brother be handed over to face justice in Natal. Cetshwayo was of the opinion that the women were guilty under Zulu law and had not been killed on Natal soil so there was no case to answer.[14] Cetshwayo offered payment of £50, likely all the British money he possessed, as a fine which was rejected by Bulwer. Bulwer was considering levying a fine of 5,000 cattle but British High Commissioner for Southern Africa Sir Henry Bartle Frere determined that the incident was a major transgression and could serve as a casus belli for his long-planned invasion and annexation of Zululand. The surrender of Sihayo's brother and sons was one part of Frere's November 1878 ultimatum to the Zulu.[16]

The ultimatum was harsh, demanding radical change in the Zulu way of life and social system as well as demanding Sihayo's family face British justice; it was intended by Frere that Cetshwayo would reject it.[17] Cetshwayo was of the opinion that to hand over Sihayo's relations would have affected his standing as king since Sihayo was his personal representative on the Natal border.[18] He was also reluctant to hand over Mehlokazulu, who was a royal favourite. Mehlokazulu was also an iNduna in the iNgobamakhosi, the king's favourite iButho, and to hand him over would have insulted the regiment.[5] Some of the king's iBandla thought he should consent to the British demand for members of Sihayo's family, believing it would placate the British.[5][4] Sihayo was criticised by some iBandla members who blamed him for bringing the kingdom into conflict with the British.[4]

Anglo-Zulu War

Baron Chelmsford on a horse
A depiction of Chelmsford observing the action at Sihayo's Kraal

No response was received to the ultimatum and on 11 January 1879 British forces, under Lord Chelmsford invaded Zululand in three columns, starting the Anglo-Zulu War.[19] Sihayo had been gathering cattle to pay the anticipated fine and a large herd were captured by the British centre column, led by Chelmsford which crossed into Zululand at Rorke's Drift.[20] On 12 January Chelmsford sent a force to attack Sihayo's kraal to secure the left flank of his advance and in retribution for the border transgression.[21] Sihayo had left his kraal to assemble with Cetshwayo's army at Ulundi, leaving around 200–300 warriors under Mkumbikazulu. The British defeated Sihayo's men and burnt his kraal, also killing Mkumbikazulu.[22] The survivors from this battle fled to Sotondose's Drift where, on 22 January, they helped kill British troops fleeing from their defeat at the Battle of Isandlwana.[23]

Sihayo seems to have remained out of battle during the war but, together with Mehlokazulu, accompanied the army on its march to Isandlwana.[24][25] Sihayo's scouts were the only mounted troops in the army.[24] His brother Gamdana decided to submit to the British and met with Chelmsford at Isandlwana on 21 January, the day prior to British defeat.[25] Sihayo's son Tshekwane was killed by a party of mounted men from the 80th Regiment of Foot (Staffordshire Volunteers), operating from the western column in the days following the battles of Hlobane and Khambula in late March 1879. The war ended with the defeat of the Zulu by Chelmsford at the 4 July Battle of Ulundi, which Sihayo watched from a nearby hill.[26][27]

Post-war

In August, immediately after the end of the war, Cetshwayo's senior chief Mnyamana kaNgqengelele confiscated all of Sihayo's cattle, as he blamed him for starting the war. As cattle was the basis of wealth in the kingdom Sihayo was left impoverished.[4] As part of the peace terms the British imposed the division of Zululand into 13 chiefdoms, the abolition of the iButho system and the exile of Cetshwayo. The two chiefdoms on the Natal border were granted to Hlubi, a Basuto chief who had fought on the British side, in the west and John Robert Dunn, a British settler who had held territory in pre-war Zululand, in the east.[28] Sihayo's lands fell in Hlubi's chiefdom and in the particular domain of a sub-chief Faku, also a Basuto.[29][30] Faku ordered Sihayo and Mehlokazulu to leave his territory and Sihayo was left landless.[29][30]

Sihayo continued to support the royalist uSuthu faction, which campaigned for the return of Cetshwayo.[31] There was sporadic violence between the uSuthu and the new chiefs and the British recognised that the partition had not worked. Cetshwayo was permitted to return but was granted authority over only nine of the chiefdoms in the centre of Zululand. He was left surrounded by the territories of pro-British chiefs to the north and a Zulu Reserve Territory (formed from Hlubi and Dunn's chiefdoms) to the south. This only served to intensify the conflict into the Third Zulu Civil War in 1883.[32][33] Following the second partition Sihayo had sought refuge in the eastern portion of the Zulu Reserve Territory with the remaining Qungebe. They were attacked there by Hlubi's Tlokwa.[4]

The uSuthu invaded the chiefdom of the pro-British Zibhebhu kaMaphitha but were routed by an assault by the Mandlakazi, who then counter-attacked Ulundi.[33] Sihayo had rallied to Cetshwayo at the capital and was there when it was taken by the Mandlakazi in July 1883.[4][34] He was killed in a hut on 2 July, as were 50 other royalist chiefs and izinDuna.[34][35] Cetshwayo died in exile and the former kingdom was formally annexed by the British in 1887.[36][37]

References

  1. ^ Laband 2009, p. xii.
  2. ^ Greaves 2012b, p. 12.
  3. ^ Laband 2009, p. xii, 256.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Laband 2009, p. 256.
  5. ^ a b c d Knight 1992, p. 63.
  6. ^ Morris 1965, pp. 195–196.
  7. ^ Morris 1965, pp. 198, 204.
  8. ^ a b Morris 1965, pp. 201, 204.
  9. ^ a b Greaves 2012a, p. 75.
  10. ^ Greaves 2005, p. 112.
  11. ^ Greaves 2012b, p. 17.
  12. ^ a b Morris 1965, p. 283.
  13. ^ Greaves 2005, p. 116.
  14. ^ a b c d e Morris 1965, p. 284.
  15. ^ Greaves 2012b, p. 76.
  16. ^ Morris 1965, pp. 285–287.
  17. ^ Paulin 2001, p. 70.
  18. ^ Knight 2004, p. 38.
  19. ^ Laband 2009, p. l.
  20. ^ Morris 1965, p. 320.
  21. ^ Smith 2014, p. 26.
  22. ^ Knight 2004, p. 79.
  23. ^ Knight 2004, p. 105.
  24. ^ a b David 2004, p. 98.
  25. ^ a b Morris 1965, p. 335.
  26. ^ Knight 2004, p. 172.
  27. ^ David 2004, p. 347.
  28. ^ Laband 2009, pp. 319–320.
  29. ^ a b Greaves 2012b, p. 330.
  30. ^ a b Morris 1965, pp. 597–598.
  31. ^ Laband 2009, pp. 256, 319–320.
  32. ^ Laband 2009, p. 321.
  33. ^ a b Laband 2009, p. lii.
  34. ^ a b Morris 1965, pp. 605–606.
  35. ^ Greaves 2005, p. 322.
  36. ^ Laband 2009, p. lii–liii.
  37. ^ Laband 2009, p. liii.

Sources

  • Greaves, Adrian (2005). Crossing the Buffalo: The Zulu War of 1879. London: Cassell. ISBN 978-0-3043-6725-2.
  • Greaves, Adrian (2012a). Rorke's Drift. Orion. ISBN 978-1-78022-497-8.
  • Greaves, Adrian (2012b). Forgotten Battles of the Zulu War. Barnsley, South Yorkshire: Pen & Sword. ISBN 978-1-84884-746-0.
  • Knight, Ian (1992). Zulu: Isandlwana and Rorke's Drift 22nd – 23rd January 1879. Windrow & Greene. ISBN 978-1-872004-23-5.
  • Knight, Ian (2004). The National Army Museum Book of the Zulu War. Pan Books. ISBN 033-0-48629-2.
  • Laband, John (2009). Historical Dictionary of the Zulu Wars. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-6300-2.
  • Morris, Donald R. (1965). The Washing of the Spears. Pen and Sword. ISBN 067-1-63108-X.
  • Paulin, Christopher M. (2001). White Men's Dreams, Black Men's Blood: African Labor and British Expansionism in Southern Africa, 1877–1895. Africa World Press. ISBN 978-0-86543-929-0.
  • David, Saul (2004). Zulu: The Heroism and Tragedy of the Zulu War. London: Penguin. ISBN 978-0-670-91474-6.
  • Smith, Keith (2014). Dead Was Everything: Studies in the Anglo-Zulu War. Frontline Books. ISBN 978-1-4738-3723-2.

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