Chipata, Zambia

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Chipata, Zambia
the zambian royal ceremonies series: nc'wala
nc'wala is the traditional first fruits ceremony of the ngoni people of eastern province, celebrated annually in chipata in february. the kingdoms series described the ngoni in part 4 — the warriors who came from kwaZulu, who marched three thousand kilometres from natal, who established a kingdom at fort jameson that the colonial administration could not suppress for thirty years.
the ceremony's meaning: the new season's harvest is presented to the paramount chief before anyone in the ngoni kingdom is permitted to eat from the new season's crops. the paramount chief — inkosi yamakhosi — is the first to taste the new fruits. his tasting is the permission for the rest of the community to eat. the chief as mediator between the community and the ancestors who guarantee the harvest — one of the most ancient forms of traditional political authority in africa, performed with the warrior energy and regimental discipline the ngoni brought from kwaZulu.
the ceremony's performance. nc'wala takes place at the paramount chief's palace in chipata in the last week of february. male participants arrive in regimental formation — groups from the different ngoni chieftaincy areas, dressed in traditional warriors' regalia of animal skins, carrying shields and sticks, moving in disciplined formation to the rhythms of ngoni war songs. the regimental dances whose choreography reflects the military traditions of the kwaZulu origin are unique to the ngoni and recognisably distinct from any other zambian ceremony.
the paramount chief addresses his people. the first fruits are presented. the traditional beer brewed from the new season's grain is distributed. the warriors dance.
nc'wala is the ceremony at which paramount chief mpezeni IV presided for 44 years — described in the tribute to his passing on 31 may 2026. the nc'wala of the future will be presided over by whoever the ngoni kingdom chooses as the next inkosi yamakhosi. the ceremony outlasts the chief. that is what ceremony means.
the zambian royal ceremonies series continues. 🇿🇲👑
the zambian kingdoms series: a tribute to paramount chief mpezeni iv
zambia mourns tonight.
paramount chief mpezeni IV — inkosi yamakhosi, the king of kings of the ngoni — passed away on saturday, 31 may 2026, at the university teaching hospital in lusaka, at the age of 75. his death was confirmed by senior chief nzamane IV at a press briefing at the palace in chipata. he had been on the ngoni throne for 44 years.
the zambian kingdoms series described the ngoni in part 4 — the warriors who came from KwaZulu, who marched three thousand kilometres from natal, who crossed the zambezi and the luangwa and established a kingdom at fort jameson that the colonial administration could not suppress for thirty years. the ngoni arrived in zambia as conquerors. they stayed as a kingdom. and at the centre of that kingdom, for 44 years, was this man.
born david njengembaso jere in the village of efeni in chipata district, mpezeni IV grew up in eastern province and worked in a factory in livingstone before ascending to the ngoni throne in june 1982 following the death of his father, paramount chief pontino jere. he was approximately 30 years old when he was crowned. he was 75 when he died.
in the 44 years between: governments came and went. political alliances rose and collapsed. constitutional debates emerged and faded. through it all, the ngoni throne remained. his ability to maintain relevance without becoming attached to any particular administration was what distinguished him above all others in zambia's traditional leadership landscape.
the nc'wala ceremony — the first fruits ceremony of the ngoni, celebrated in february in chipata — was the ceremony over which mpezeni IV presided for four decades. the warrior regalia. the war cry. the tasting of the first fruits by the paramount chief. every nc'wala that the royal ceremonies series will describe was conducted under his authority. every nc'wala for the next generation will be conducted under his successor's authority.
the ceremony outlasts the chief. that is what ceremony means.
inkosi yamakhosi. the king of kings. 44 years on the throne. the keeper of the nc'wala. the voice of the ngoni.
rest in peace, your royal highness. 🏴️
the zambian kingdoms series: the ngoni kingdom
the story begins in the mfecane — the great scattering — when the rise of shaka zulu's military state in what is now kwazulu-natal disrupted the political and social order of the entire southern african region. zwangendaba — a military commander of the emancwangeni alliance who had come into conflict with shaka's forces — chose to flee rather than submit or be destroyed.
zwangendaba led his followers — initially perhaps one thousand people — northward. through mozambique. through zimbabwe. crossing the zambezi river at zumbo on the 20th of november 1835 — a date known precisely because a solar eclipse occurred at the moment of the crossing, independently recorded by european astronomers. the ngoni saw the eclipse as a powerful omen.
north of the zambezi, zwangendaba's group continued travelling and fighting and absorbing — incorporating the men of defeated peoples into their fighting regiments, taking the women as wives. the ngoni were not simply refugees. they were a military state in motion — using the zulu system of age-based fighting regiments called impi, armed with the short stabbing spear, maintaining a discipline and tactical coherence that allowed a small core group to defeat much larger settled populations.
zwangendaba died near lake tanganyika around 1845 to 1848. his death triggered a succession dispute that split the ngoni movement. his eldest son mpezeni turned south — back toward the fertile valleys of eastern zambia.
by the 1860s, mpezeni had established a formidable state in what is now chipata district. ngoni raiding parties reached the bemba to the north, the bisa to the west, the chewa and nsenga peoples all around. the ngoni integrated conquered subjects into their organisation — becoming more a ruling class than a single ethnic group.
mpezeni's ngoni fought the bemba and were given a bemba wife — creating a cousinship between the two peoples cherished to this day. the ngoni men married nsenga women. over generations the ngoni language — a zulu dialect brought from kwazulu-natal — was lost. the language of the mothers prevailed.
a warrior people who had walked 1,600 kilometres carrying their language lost it not to conquest but to marriage.
cecil rhodes sent agents — alfred sharpe in 1889, joseph maloney in 1895 — to obtain a treaty from mpezeni. both were unsuccessful.
in december 1897, mpezeni's son prince nsingu mobilised over 4,000 warriors against the british taking control of north-eastern rhodesia. early attacks succeeded, forcing the british to retreat temporarily. captain brake arrived with machine guns and artillery. at the battle of luangweni in january 1898, technology overwhelmed courage. nsingu was executed — betrayed, oral tradition holds, by a fellow ngoni warrior named chapalapata.
mpezeni signed the treaty. the paramount chieftainship survived. his successors take the title paramount chief mpezeni to this day.
every february, thousands gather near chipata for the nc'wala ceremony — the first fruits celebration — where the ngoni king blesses the harvest, the regiments perform, and a people who walked from kwazulu-natal in the 1830s remember exactly who they are and where they came from.
the zambian kingdoms series continues. 🇿🇲
king lobengula: the four-month journey
after the battle of pupu — in which his imbizo regiment under general mtshane khumalo annihilated major allan wilson's patrol, killing every man and buying the king the time he needed — lobengula was a man over sixty years old. in poor health. moving continuously since the burning of bulawayo in early november. leading a royal party including his household, his royal guard, and thirteen wagons drawn by oxen carrying the treasure that john jacobs later documented — two safes of gold sovereigns, two boxes of raw gold, one box of raw diamonds, quantities of ivory.
the colonial pursuers were following the wagon tracks. a false route was cleared at intervals. the royal salute was chanted loudly to derail them. the ndebele rearguard — highly disciplined, intimately familiar with the terrain, motivated by the most urgent possible cause — was running a sophisticated military deception operation while moving an elderly king and his treasure through the african bush in the wet season.
at the zambezi river, the royal party required assistance. chief pashu sianganza of the tonga people helped him cross. canoes were carved. the crossing was made. the river in flood season is formidable. chief pashu sianganza and his people took a calculated risk in assisting a king whom the british south africa company was actively pursuing.
on the zambian side, lobengula was in foreign territory. beyond the immediate reach of the BSA company's authority. among people with no obligation to him and every reason to be cautious. and yet. the oral tradition of the communities through whose territory the royal party passed — moving east toward the luangwa valley and the eastern province — holds that the king was aided, sheltered, and guided along the route.
what happened to the thirteen wagons and their contents during those four months is one of the great unresolved questions of the lobengula story. whether the treasure was buried in stages along the route. whether the wagons were abandoned and the most portable items carried forward. whether the full thirteen wagons somehow made the journey to chipata. the honest answer is that nobody outside the ngoni royal house — and perhaps not even they — knows.
what is documented is the arrival. lobengula arrived in mpezeni's ngoni area in early 1894. his cousin king mpezeni had shifted his capital to the luangeni area. lobengula — still thinking strategically — chose the principal military area of luangeni as his base.
a sixty-year-old king in poor health who had just completed a four-month journey through some of the most difficult terrain in central africa, crossing the zambezi in flood, evading colonial pursuers. and still chose the militarily defensible position.
that tells you something about lobengula.
the ngoni people told the 2024 delegation that they were disappointed because they had come too late — the people who actually saw king lobengula had already passed on.
the living witnesses are gone. but the oral tradition, the historical record, and the landscape of eastern province together tell a story that time has not been able to erase.
the research continues. 🇿🇲
king lobengula in zambia: the unresolved question
a correction. or more precisely — a clarification that the zimbabwean state media did not give the story it deserved.
when the march 2024 delegation returned from chipata and reports began circulating that king lobengula's tomb had been found, the story travelled fast. president mnangagwa spoke about it at a state banquet. multiple outlets ran the headline. the mystery was solved.
but the historian who led the delegation — phathisa nyathi, one of zimbabwe's most respected chroniclers of ndebele history — gave a different account when pressed for details.
"we didn't climb the mountain. we only saw the locality. no tomb was discovered."
that is what nyathi told the southern eye newspaper four days after the original reports. the delegation had gone to chipata. they had met chief mpezeni. the paramount chief had confirmed what oral tradition had always held. they had been shown the general area of sanjika cave from a distance — approximately 800 metres away. they had not gone to the cave. they had not seen the tomb. they had not physically located the burial site.
what they confirmed was the oral tradition. not the physical location.
this distinction matters enormously. and it does not diminish the significance of what was established. it clarifies it.
three things were confirmed on the basis of a government-funded, historian-led, khumalo-family-accompanied fact-finding mission.
one — lobengula did not die at or near pupu in december 1893. he escaped. the escape was engineered through the sacrifice of general magwegwe fuyana, whose death and grave were used to deceive colonial pursuers. the deception worked for 130 years.
two — lobengula crossed the zambezi river, aided by chief pashu sianganza and the tonga people, and arrived in chipata approximately four months after the battle of pupu. he was received by chief mpezeni as a king, as a cousin, as a fellow leader under the same colonial pressure.
three — lobengula lived among the ngoni people of chipata for approximately four years and was buried in accordance with ndebele royal custom at sanjika cave. the ngoni royal house has kept the precise location a closely guarded secret for 130 years.
what the delegation did not establish — and what no expedition has yet established — is the physical location of the burial site or of the treasure lobengula is documented to have carried in thirteen wagons.
nyathi's comment on this: "some cultures will use archaeology, others will use geophysical surveys and africans do these things their own way."
the ngoni royal house's decision to maintain the secrecy of lobengula's burial site is not obfuscation. it is a deliberate act of custodianship — of a king, of a story, of a relationship between the living and the dead conducted on african terms.
the question of where lobengula is buried — and where his treasure is — will not be answered by an expedition. it will be answered, if it is ever answered, by a relationship of trust that the khumalo family and phathisa nyathi have begun.
the story of lobengula's final years is a zambian story as much as a zimbabwean one. the ngoni of eastern province protected a king for four years and have protected his grave for 130.
the research continues. the story is not finished.
and that is exactly as it should be. 🇿🇲
King lobengula died in zambia
This is the piece of history most Zambians do not know. and i think it deserves to be told properly.
lobengula khumalo was the second and last king of the ndebele nation — the matabele people who had built their kingdom across what is now western zimbabwe, founded by his father mzilikazi after a rupture with shaka and a migration north. when lobengula inherited the kingdom, it was powerful, militarily disciplined, and sitting directly in the path of cecil rhodes and the british south africa company.
the rudd concession of 1888 was the beginning of the end. lobengula signed a document he understood — based on what was told to him — as granting a small number of white men the right to dig in one location. what it actually granted, in legal language that was not accurately translated, was the mineral rights of the entire kingdom. when he understood what had happened, he repudiated the concession and sent envoys to queen victoria to protest. rhodes had already moved.
the anglo-ndebele war of 1893 was the final act. paramilitaries with maxim guns. ndebele warriors with spears and shields. extraordinary courage on one side. industrial killing on the other. the capital bulawayo was taken. lobengula burned it himself rather than let it fall intact.
and then he ran.
he crossed the shangani river. the famous shangani patrol — major allan wilson and his men who crossed in pursuit — were cut off by the rising river and killed to the last man by lobengula's rearguard under general mtshane khumalo. it was one of the most complete military victories of the entire war. it bought the king time.
the colonial authorities told the world he had died — of smallpox, or by his own hand, at pupu. they placed his artefacts on the grave of his sacrificed prime minister, general magwegwe fuyana, to complete the deception. for over a century, the official version held.
the truth — preserved in ndebele oral tradition and in the memory of the ngoni people of eastern zambia — is different.
lobengula crossed the zambezi river. chief pashu sianganza of the tonga people helped him. canoes were carved. the king and his royal party were ferried across. and lobengula — the last king of the ndebele, fleeing the most powerful colonial enterprise on the continent — came to chipata. to the kingdom of chief mpezeni. to ngoniland.
he and mpezeni were cousins. the ngoni and the ndebele share zulu roots. when lobengula arrived at mpezeni's capital at luangeni in early 1894, he was received as a king. he became an advisor to mpezeni. two men, the same heritage, the same colonial pressure, the same dispossession.
lobengula lived among the ngoni for four years. he died in 1897, in chipata, in zambia's eastern province.
in march 2024, a zimbabwean delegation funded by president mnangagwa, accompanied by lobengula's own khumalo descendants, travelled to zambia. they met chief mpezeni. the paramount chief confirmed what oral tradition had always held — that lobengula lived with them and was buried among them. the delegation was shown the locality of sanjika cave, where the king is said to have been interred according to ndebele royal burial customs — the soil must never touch a ndebele king. rock, not earth, must cover him.
the exact location remains a closely guarded secret among the ngoni royal house.
now. the treasure.
lobengula did not flee empty-handed. a king of the nineteenth century southern african interior kept his wealth in gold, in uncut diamonds, in the gold sovereigns that british and boer traders had paid for ivory and cattle and mineral rights. oral tradition — and a century of treasure hunters who have pursued this story — holds that lobengula's treasure was buried with him or concealed in a cave somewhere in the craggy hills of chipata.
the hills of ngoniland are exactly the kind of terrain where a royal treasure could remain undiscovered for 130 years. many hills. many caves. a royal house that has kept the secret with the discipline that royal traditions demand.
what do i make of this?
lobengula's presence in chipata is not legend. it is documented oral history, confirmed by the paramount chief himself to a government delegation as recently as 2024. the king was here. he lived here. he died here.
zambia is sitting on a piece of history that belongs as much to this country as to zimbabwe. the last great king of the ndebele lived his final four years on zambian soil, among zambian people who received him with the honour that his dignity deserved. the ngoni of eastern province kept his secret for 130 years.
that is not a small thing.
it is the kind of thing that, properly told and properly presented, could make chipata and ngoniland one of the most historically significant cultural destinations in southern africa.
the story of king lobengula does not end at the shangani river. it continues — quietly, carefully kept — in the hills of eastern province.
and zambia owns that continuation of the story. 🇿🇲
On kapata market and the place where the buses load
Kapata market in chipata is the only market in this series where you can buy tomatoes and board a bus to lusaka from the same piece of ground.
power tools. Ubz ,jonda. Zambia, malawi. andrich., bili., victoria. seven ngosa.
the long-distance buses load right there. at the market. among the produce and the fabric and the dried on kapata market and the place where the buses load
kapata market in chipata is the only market in this series where you can buy tomatoes and board a bus to lusaka from the same piece of ground.
power tools. ubz. jonda. zambia malawi. andrich. bili. victoria. seven ngosa.
the long-distance buses load right there. at the market. among the produce and the fabric and the dried fish and the groundnuts. a woman finishes selling for the day and boards a bus home. a traveller steps off a bus from the copperbelt and walks directly into a functioning market. a trader from malawi arrives, buys stock, and loads it onto a departing bus the same afternoon.
nobody designed this.
it grew because it made sense. because the people who used kapata understood, practically and completely, that trade and movement are not separate things. they are the same thing. commerce needs to go somewhere. transport needs a reason. kapata is where those two truths meet every single day.
chipata has always been a city in motion. it sits at the eastern edge of zambia close to malawi and mozambique, at a crossroads that has been a crossroads for centuries. the ngoni arrived here in the nineteenth century and stayed and built a culture of pride and ceremony and rootedness that is still completely present. the nc'wala — first fruits of the harvest brought to paramount chief mpezeni — connects the food that grows from this soil to the history of the people who have farmed it for generations.
and then the buses load.
and the food goes out.
to lusaka. to the copperbelt. to malawi. to wherever the road goes.
i have been thinking, across this entire series, about what connects all of these markets. soweto and kasumbalesa and nakodoli and chawama and main masala and kapata.
the answer is movement.
not just the movement of goods. the movement of people who know what they need and go to get it. who grow things and carry them to where they are wanted. who load buses at dawn and unload them at dusk and do it again tomorrow.
zambia is its markets.
and its markets are always, already, in motion.
kapata just makes that visible. 🇿🇲