Rozwi

Rozwi / Rozvi / Barozwi / Varozwi

The Rozvi (Rozwis, Barozwis, Varozvis, Varozwi) are a Shona people whose origins are quite obscure.

People claiming to be Rozvis are spread through Zimbabwe, and identification as a Rozvi is considered prestigious. The original Rozvis were Shona people associated with the Changamire State in the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Nguni invasions destroyed the ChanĀ­gamire State in the early 1800s, bringing about a widespread dispersal of the Rozvi people.

 

The Rozvi kingdom, Politics, Trade and Architecture

The Rozvi state was made up of many pre-existing Kalanga polities which acknowledged the authority of the Changamire. From their impressive stone-walled towns, the Rozvi aristocracy based their rule on ownership of land and cattle, both of which were distributed to subordinate chiefs in return for tribute. They took over the rich goldfields of Butua and were also engaged in long-distance trade in ivory.

Power in Rozvi was split between the king and a body of councilors who were in charge of adminsitration. The councilors were drawn from the Rozvi aristocracy constituting pre-existing chiefs and provincial chiefs, Rozvi royals, priests, and military leaders. The priests who were involved in the investiture of vassal chiefs and the military which enforced the king's authority, were the most important Rozvi institutions. In particular, the Rozvi army's more professionalized hierarchical structure resembled the formidable 19th century armies of the Zulu more than the pre-existing war bands found in Mutapa.

Contemporary accounts describe the Rozvi royal court at the capital as consisting of several large stone houses within which Changamire used to store his goods. These included firearms that were bought and/or captured from the Portuguese, as well as ivory tusks which are said to have lined the walls of the royal residence. While this account was partly exaggerated, its reflected the external trade of the Rozvi rulers and the basis of their military power, as traditions recall that Dombo built his own capital on (presumably Danangombe) his own hill that was ascended by ivory steps, inorder to overshadow his rivals.

Rozwi People

 

Sources:

  • James S. Olson / Peoples of Africa
  • www.africanhistoryextra.com