Basotho boy's blanket, Lesotho, by Chris Parkes
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Basotho boy's blanket, Lesotho, by Chris Parkes
Hey have you ever heard the Basotho folktale of Thakane? She's a dragon slaying Basotho princess. I just think the story is rather cool and I feel more people should know about it. Here and here.
I would have posted the links but Tumblr acting funky for me.
When her deadbeat brothers demanded the impossible, this South African princess carried through, and slayed a dragon.
Variations: Dinanabolele, Linanabolele (pl.) Thakáne and her two brothers were the children of a Basotho chief. In some versions there is on
No 🤣🤣🤣 because as an older sister with a spoiled ass little brother, the way I felt the hell out of this story?? @spacebeyonce aye come look at this!! The shit we do for our brothers.
I love this!! I am so happy to know this myth, thank you so much!! And I love how simple the motivation behind this story, and the fact that she DID it. Straight up said "you goofballs are so full of shit" and then went and hunted down (crocodile) hide for em 🤣 yeah that's about a Black older sister lmaoooo I am enamored of this myth. Thákane is legendary in my eyes 🙌🏾
TRIBE OF THE DAY : Basotho
The Sotho people, or Basotho, are a Bantu ethnic group of Southern Africa who speak Sesotho. They are native to modern Lesotho and South Africa. The Basotho have inhabited the region since around the fifth century CE and are closely related to other Bantu peoples of the region.
The modern Basotho identity emerged from the accomplished diplomacy of Moshoeshoe I who unified the disparate clans of Sotho–Tswana origin that had dispersed across southern Africa in the early 19th century. Most Basotho today live in Lesotho or South Africa, as the area of the Orange Free State was originally part of Moshoeshoe's nation (now Lesotho).
Ntsoana-Tsatsi is believed to be the place of origin of the Sotho/Basotho people. It is both a mythical and physical place. The mythical aspect of it, as described by Ellenberger (1988) is a place from where the first Sotho people emerged.
They are believed to have come from the ground at Ntsoana-Tsatsi, where there is a lot of water and reeds. The geographical location of this place is believed to be Vrede in the Free State Province of South Africa, according to accounts by informants. It still carries this name and some Sotho people are still found in the area.
Early history. Bantu-speaking peoples had settled in what is now South Africa by about 500 CE. Separation from the Tswana is assumed to have taken place by the 14th century. The first historical references to the Basotho date to the 19th century. By that time, a series of Basotho kingdoms covered the southern portion of the plateau (Free State Province and parts of Gauteng). Basotho society was highly decentralized, and organized on the basis of kraals, or extended clans, each of which was ruled by a chief. Fiefdoms were united into loose confederations.
19th century. In the 1820s, refugees from the Zulu expansion under Shaka came into contact with the Basotho people residing on the highveld. In 1823, pressure caused one group of Basotho, the Kololo, to migrate north. They moved past the Okavango Swamp and across the Zambezi into Barotseland, which is now part of Zambia. In 1845, the Kololo conquered Barotseland.
Thato Mokhali (Basotho) - Maletsunyane Falls (2013, gouache)
This Is Not a Burial, It's a Resurrection (Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese - 2019)
Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese - This is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection (2019)
The Drakensberg. South Africa
Basotho hunters on Cleft Peak (over 3353 m) - the “roof” of this mighty mountain range.
Die Drakensberg. Suider-Afrika
Basoetoe-jagters by Cleft-piek (meer as 3353 m) - die “dak” van dié majestueuse bergreeks.