South
African Ethnic Groups:
The Sotho Family
The population of the Sotho
(known also as BaSotho) who
speak seSotho and related languages is estimated to be at
least 7 million. Another 3 million live in neighboring countries. The
diverse population includes the Northern (Pedi) and
Southern Sotho, along with the Tswana (BaTswana), each of which is itself a
heterogeneous grouping.
Ancestors
of today's population migrated
into the region in the fifteenth century, according to historians,
probably from the area of the northern Transvaal.
Like many neighboring Nguni
peoples, the Sotho
traditionally relied on
a combination of livestock raising and crop cultivation for
subsistence. Most Sotho were herders of cattle, goats, and sheep, and
cultivators of grains and tobacco. In addition, they were skilled
craftsmen, renowned for their metalworking, leatherworking, and wood
and ivory carving.
Also
like the Nguni, most Sotho
lived in small
chiefdoms, in which status was determined in part by relationship to
the chief. Unlike the Nguni, their homesteads were grouped together
into villages, with economic responsibilities generally shared among
village residents. Villages were divided into wards, or residential
areas, often occupied by members of more than one patrilineal descent
group.
The village
chief--a hereditary
position--generally appointed ward leaders, whose residences were
clustered around the chief's residence. Sotho villages sometimes grew
into large towns of several thousand people. Farmland was usually
outside the village, not adjacent to the homestead. This village
organization may have enabled the Sotho villagers to defend themselves
more effectively than they could have with dispersed households, and it
probably facilitated control over ward leaders and subjects by the
chief and his family.
Their villages were also
organized into age-sets,
or groups of men or women who were close in age. Each age-set had
specific responsibilities--men organized for warfare and herding,
depending on age-set, and women for crop cultivation and religious
responsibilities. An entire age-set generally graduated from one task
to the next, and the village often celebrated this change with a series
of rituals and, in some cases, an initiation ceremony.
Descent rules of this group were important, even though
descent groups did not form discrete local groups. Clans were often
totemic, or bound to specific natural objects or animal species by
mystical relationships, sometimes involving taboos and prohibitions.
Major clans included the Lion (Taung), Fish (Tlhaping), Elephant
(Tloung), and Crocodile (Kwean) clans.
Both South African ethnic groups
the Nguni
and Sotho peoples reckoned descent
through patrilineal ties, but their marriage rules differed markedly.
Sotho patri-lineages were usually endogamous--i.e., the preferred
marriage partner would be a person related through parti-lineal descent
ties. Nguni patri-lineages, in contrast, were exogamous--marriage
within the descent group was generally forbidden.
By
the early twentieth century, Sotho villages
were losing their claims to land, largely because of pressure from
whites. Cattle raising became more difficult, and as Western economic
pressures intensified, Sotho people living in Lesotho
and in South Africa
increasingly turned to the mines for work. By the early 1990s, an
estimated 100,000 BaSotho worked in South
Africa's mines, and many
others were part of South
Africa's urban work force
throughout the country.
Northern Sotho (The Pedi)
The
heterogeneous South African ethnic group the Northern Sotho
are often
referred to as the Pedi (or BaPedi), because the Pedi make up the
largest of their constituent groups. Their language is sePedi (also
called seSotho sa Leboa
or Northern Sotho). This society arose in the
northern Transvaal, according to
historians, as a confederation of small chiefdoms some time before the
seventeenth century. A succession of strong Pedi chiefs claimed power
over smaller chiefdoms and were able to dominate important trade routes
between the interior plateau and the Indian Ocean
coast for several generations. For this reason, some historians have
credited the Pedi with the first monarchy in the region, although their
reign was marked by population upheaval and occasional military defeat.
During the nineteenth
century,
Pedi armies were
defeated by the Natal
armies of Mzilikazi and were revived under the command of a Pedi chief,
Sekwati. Afrikaner Voortrekkers in the Transvaal
acquired some Pedi lands peacefully, but later clashed with them over
further land claims. By the 1870s, the Voortrekker armies were
sufficiently weakened from these clashes that they agreed to a
confederation with the British colonies of Natal
and the Cape that would eventually
lead to the South African War in 1899.
The smaller South African
ethnic group called the Lobedu makes up another
subgroup among the Northern Sotho. The Lobedu are closely related to
the Shona population, the largest ethnic group in Zimbabwe,
but the Lobedu are classified among the Sotho primarily because of
linguistic similarities. The Lobedu were studied extensively by the
early twentieth-century anthropologist J.D. Krige, who described the
unique magical powers attributed to a Lobedu female authority figure,
known to outsiders as the rain queen.
The Northern
Sotho homeland of Lebowa was declared
a "self-governing" (not independent) territory in 1972, with a
population of almost 2 million. Economic problems plagued the
poverty-stricken homeland, however, and the population was not unified
by strong ethnic solidarity. Lebowa's chief minister, Cedric Phatudi,
struggled to maintain control over the increasingly disgruntled
homeland population during the early 1980s; his death in 1985 opened
new factional splits and occasioned calls for a new homeland
government. Homeland politics were complicated by the demands of
several ethnic minorities within Lebowa to have their land transferred
to the jurisdiction of another homeland. At the same time, government
efforts to consolidate homeland territory forced the transfer of
several small tracts of land into Lebowa.
Southern Sotho
The
Southern Sotho peoples are a diverse South African ethnic
group
that includes almost 2 million South Africans, many of whom live in the
area surrounding Lesotho,
and 1.6 million residents of Lesotho.
The group was unified during the reign of King Moshoeshoe I
in the 1830s. Moshoeshoe established control over several small groups
of Sotho speakers and Nguni speakers, who had been displaced by the mfecane.
Some of these communities had established ties to San peoples who lived
just west of Moshoeshoe's territory. As a result, Southern Sotho
speech, unlike that of Northern Sotho, incorporates a number of "click"
sounds associated with Khoisan languages.
Southern
Sotho peoples were assigned to the tiny
homeland of QwaQwa, which borders Lesotho,
during the apartheid era. QwaQwa was declared "self-governing" in 1974,
but Chief Minister Kenneth Mopeli rejected independence on the grounds
that the homeland did not have a viable economy. Only about 200,000 people lived in QwaQwa during the 1980s.
A
South African ethnic community of more than 300,000 people,
Botshabelo, was incorporated into QwaQwa in 1987. Officials in the
homeland capital, Phuthaditjhaba, and many homeland residents objected
to the move, and the South African Supreme Court returned Botshabelo to
the jurisdiction of the Orange Free
State a short time later. The
homeland continued to be an overcrowded enclave of people with an
inadequate economic base until the homelands were dissolved in 1994.
Tswana
The South African ethnic,
group, the Tswana
(BaTswana), sometimes referred to as
the Western Sotho, are a heterogeneous group, including descendants of
the once great Tlhaping and Rolong societies, as well as the Hurutshe,
Kwena, and other small groups. Their language, seTswana, is closely
related to seSotho, and the two are mutually intelligible in most
areas. About 4 million Tswana people live in southern Africa--3
million in South Africa
and 1 million in the nation of Botswana. Many of the South African
ethnic group the BaTswana live in the area that formed the numerous
segments of the
former homeland, Bophuthatswana,
as well as neighboring areas of the North-West Province and the
Northern Cape.
Tswana people are also found in most urban areas throughout South
Africa.
By the
nineteenth century, several Tswana
groups
were politically independent, loosely affiliated chiefdoms that clashed
repeatedly with Afrikaner farmers who claimed land in the northern
Transvaal.
In the late nineteenth century, Afrikaner and British officials seized
almost all Tswana territory, dividing it among the Cape Colony,
Afrikaner republics, and British territories. In 1910, when the Cape
and the Transvaal were incorporated
into the Union of South Africa, the Tswana chiefs lost most of their
remaining power, and the Tswana people were forced to pay taxes to the
British Crown. They gradually turned to migrant labor, especially in
the mines, for their livelihood.
South African ethnic group, the
Tswana culture is
similar to that of the related
Sotho peoples, although some Tswana chiefdoms were more highly
stratified than those of other Sotho or the Nguni. Tswana culture was
distinguished for its complex legal system, involving a hierarchy of
courts and mediators, and harsh punishments for those found guilty of
crimes. Tswana farmers often formed close patron-client relationships
with nearby Khoisan-speaking hunters and herdsmen; the Tswana generally
received meat and animal pelts in return for cattle and, sometimes,
dogs for herding cattle.
Bophuthatswana
was declared "independent" in 1977, although no country other than
South
Africa recognized its
independence. The homeland consisted primarily of seven disconnected
enclaves near, or adjacent to, the border between South
Africa and Botswana.
Efforts to consolidate the territory and its population continued
throughout the 1980s, as successive small land areas outside
Bophuthatswana
were incorporated into the homeland. Its population of about 1.8
million in the late 1980s was estimated to be 70 percent Tswana
peoples; the remainder were other Sotho peoples, as well as Xhosa,
Zulu, and Shangaan. Another 1.5 million BaTswana lived elsewhere in
South
Africa.
Bophuthatswana's
residents were overwhelmingly poor, despite the area's rich mineral
wealth. Wages in the homeland's industrial sector were lower than those
in South Africa,
and most workers traveled to jobs outside the homeland each day. The
poverty of South African ethnic homeland residents was especially
evident in comparison with
the world's wealthy tourists who visited Sun City,
a gambling resort in Bophuthatswana.
The non-Tswana
portion of the homeland population
was denied the right to vote in local elections in 1987, and violence
ensued. Further unrest erupted in early 1988, when members of the
Botswana Defense Force tried to oust the unpopular homeland president,
Lucas Mangope. Escalating violence after that led to the imposition of
states of emergency and government crackdowns against ANC supporters in
Bophuthatswana,
who were often involved in anti-Mangope demonstrations. Mangope was
ousted just before the April 1994 elections, and the South African
ethnic homeland was
officially dismantled after the elections.
Source:
U.S.
Library of Congress