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UKHAHLAMBA

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

A History of the World in 100 Objects
Bradshaw Foundation Books
Umlando wezintaba zoKhahlamba
Exploring the History of the uKhahlamba Mountains by Aron Mazel & John Wright
 
• EAN: 9781868145287
• Publication Date: 2012
• Dimensions and Pages: 220 x 200 mm, 96 pp
• Format: Paperback
 
This is an abbreviated version of Tracks in a Mountain Range, and is published in dual format in English and isiZulu.
 
The uKhahlamba mountains have been the home of many different groups of people for a very long time. Small groups of hunter-gatherers began living in rock shelters there at least 27 000 years ago. Their descendants were San people who still lived there as recently as a hundred years ago.
 
About 600 years ago, groups of African farmers began building their villages near the foothills, and grazing their cattle into the mountains. From the 1840s, European settlers
in the colony of Natal began laying out farms for sheep and cattle in the foothills of the mountains. They drove out the San, and brought the African farmers under their domination.
 
In the twentieth century the settlers and their descendants began to use the land for purposes besides farming, especially for developing tourism and leisure activities, and
supplying water for industry. Africans became labourers on the farms and in South Africa’s towns and cities.
 
Exploring the History of the uKhahlamba Mountains tells about the coming of these different peoples to the mountains, and describes the different ways of life that they established, sometimes peacefully, sometimes violently. It is copiously illustrated with photographs in full colour.
 
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Aron Mazel
Aron Mazel is an archaeologist at the International Centre for Cultural and Heritage Studies, Newcastle University, United Kingdom. Following a long career in research and museum management in South Africa, Aron Mazel moved to Newcastle University in the middle of 2002 to lead the 'Northumberland Rock Art: Web Access to the Beckensall Archive' project (rockart.ncl.ac.uk). After the completion of this project, he took up a lecturing position at ICCHS in January 2005.
 
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John Wright is an Emeritus Professor of History at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
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