Article contents
John Dunn and Cetshwayo: the Material Foundations of Political Power in the Zulu Kingdom, 1857–1878
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2009
Extract
John Dunn entered Zululand in 1857. He observed Zulu customs and law and he exploited Zulu soial institutions to his political and economic advantage. His accumulation of land, cattle, wives and clients made him one of the wealthiest men in the Zulu kingdom. Dunn manipulated and utilized his wealth to increase his status and influence. His privileged position with Cetshwayo, his alliances with many clans through marriage and his access to firearms made Dunn a powerful figure in the Zulu kingdom.
Dunn's varied career as a trader, labour recruiter, arms supplier and adviser underlines the freedom of political and economic action available to white frontiersmen operating in those zones that straddled the boundaries separating black African states from white colonial societies. The failure of the Zulu royal family to solve the succession question – the essential malaise that plagued the Zulu political system periodically throughout much of the kingdom's history and which, at times, threatened to destroy national unity – presented opportunities for white frontiersmen, like Dunn, to advance their careers. Dunn became involved in Zululand's internal affairs during a period of political turbulence and internecine warfare. The civil war of 1856 had killed off no less than eight potential heirs to the throne and sent Mpande's political career into permanent decline. But new rivalries between the royal princes Cetshwayo, Hamu and Zibepu emerged almost immediately. Cetshwayo used Dunn's assistance to secure his claim to the throne. Dunn's own economic interests prompted him to support Cetshwayo's political aspirations. The control of vital resources, strategic trade routes and firearms was a crucial factor in Cetshwayo's accession in 1873. John Dunn played a major role in providing the material foundations of Cetshwayo's power.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1980
References
1 Binns, C. T., The Last Zulu King (London, 1965), 186.Google Scholar
2 Cf. Brookes, E. H. and Webb, C. de B., A History of Natal (Pietermaritzburg, 1965), 99.Google Scholar
3 Moodie, D. C. F. (ed.), John Dunn, Cetywayo and the Three Generals (Pietermaritzburg, 1886), 5–7.Google Scholar
4 Webb, C. de B. and Wright, J. (eds.), The James Stuart Archive (Pietermaritzburg, 1976), 1, 3.Google Scholar
5 Moodie, , Three Generals, 7.Google Scholar
6 Ibid. 10–12.
7 Ibid. 13.
8 File, John Dunn, Campbell, Killie Africana Library (K.C.L.), copy of letter from Shepstone to Scott, 2 December 1856.Google Scholar
9 Ibid. Scott to Sir George Grey, 15 December 1856.
10 Moodie, , Three Generals, 14.Google Scholar
11 Domenic Dunn Papers (K.C.L.), MS Dun. 2.09, MS 1459, 3. The papers of Domenic Dunn, a son of John Dunn, are an invaluable collection of unpublished memoirs, family history and praise songs. A wealth of detailed information related to John Dunn's domestic establishment, political acquaintances and economic pursuits are contained therein.
12 Ibid. 2.
13 Ibid. MS 1467a, 31, 32.
14 Webb, and Wright, , Stuart Archive, 99.Google Scholar
15 Legassick, Martin, ‘The Griqua, the Sotho-Tswana, and the Missionaries, 1780–1840: The Politics of a Frontier Zone’ (Ph.D. thesis, U.C.L.A., 1969), 9.Google Scholar
16 Webb, and Wright, , Stuart Archive, 111–12.Google Scholar
17 Ballard, C., ‘Natal, 1824–1844: The Emergence and Decline of a Frontier Zone’ (unpublished seminar paper presented at the University of Natal, Department of History, Oct. 1977), 8–9.Google Scholar
18 Morris, Donald, The Washing of the Spears (London, 1966), 170.Google Scholar
19 Moodie, , Three Generals, 3.Google Scholar
20 See Allen, and Isaacman, Barbara, ‘The Prazeros as Transfrontiersmen: A study in Social and Cultural Change’, International Journal of African Historical Studies, viii (1975), 2.Google Scholar
21 Moodie, , Three Generals, 94.Google Scholar
22 Ballard, C., ‘Migrant Labour in Natal 1860–1879: With Special Reference to Zululand and the Delagoa Bay Hinterland’, Journal of Natal and Zulu History, i (1978), 35.Google Scholar
23 See the collected papers of Guy, J. J., Colenbrander, P. and Kennedy, P. presented at the Workshop on Production and Reproduction in the Zulu Kingdom (University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, Oct. 1977).Google Scholar
24 Dunn Papers, MS 1467a, 31–2.Google Scholar
25 See Guy, J. J., ‘A Note on Firearms in the Zulu Kingdom: With Special Reference to the Anglo-Zulu War, 1879’, Journal of African History, xii, (1971), 559–60.Google Scholar
26 Dunn Papers, MS 1459, 8.Google Scholar
27 Ibid.
28 Guy, , ‘The Destruction of the Zulu Kingdom: The Civil War in Zululand, 1879–1884’ (Ph.D. thesis, University of London, 1975), 57.Google Scholar
29 Wilson, Monica, ‘Changes in Social Structure in Southern Africa’ in Thompson, L. (ed.), African Societies in Southern Africa (London, 1969), 78.Google Scholar
30 Bryant, A. T., Olden Times in Zululand and Natal (London, 1929), see map, 698.Google Scholar
31 Harries, P., ‘Labour Migration from the Delagoa Bay Hinterland to South Africa: 1852–1895’, The Societies of Southern Africa in the 19th and 20th Centuries, vii (Institute of Commonwealth Studies, London, 1977), 63.Google Scholar
32 Dunn Papers, MS Dun. 1.092, 6Google Scholar. Information taken from the unpublished memoirs of Domenic Dunn entitled ‘This is my Country’.
33 Moodie, , Three Generals, 30.Google Scholar
34 Dunn Papers, MS Dun. 1.092, 2.Google Scholar
35 Krige, E., The Social System of the Zulus (London, 1936), 39.Google Scholar
36 Dunn Papers, MS Dun. 1.092, 2.Google Scholar
37 Ibid. 10.
38 Ibid. MS 1467, 31.
39 Ibid. MS 1459, 6–7.
40 Moodie, , Three Generals, 120–3.Google Scholar
41 Mitford, B., Through the Zulu Country (London, 1883), 198.Google Scholar
42 Moodie, , Three Generals, 26–7.Google Scholar
43 Ibid.
44 Ibid. 28.
45 Ibid.
46 Brookes, and Webb, , History of Natal, 99.Google Scholar
47 Moodie, , Three Generals, 29.Google Scholar
48 See Barber, S. R., ‘John Dunn and Zululand, 1857–1883’ (Honours thesis, University of Natal, 1972).Google Scholar
49 Gluckman, Max, Ideas and Procedures in African Customary Law (Oxford, 1969), 256.Google Scholar
50 Moodie, , Three Generals, 29–30.Google Scholar
51 Ibid. 94.
52 Dunn Papers, MS 1459, 3.Google Scholar
53 Leroux, S. D., Pioneers and Sportsmen of South Africa (Salisbury, 1930), 106.Google Scholar
54 Krige, , Social System, 241.Google Scholar
55 Dunn Papers, MS 1459, 5.Google Scholar
56 Ibid. MS 1.092, 2.
57 See Ritter, E. A., Shaka Zulu (London, 1968), 14Google Scholar, and Omer-Cooper, J. D., The Zulu Aftermath (London, 1966), 46–7 and 171–3.Google Scholar
58 Etherington, Norman, ‘The Rise of the Kholwa in South-East Africa: African Christian Communities in Natal, Pondoland, Zululand’ (Ph.D. thesis, Yale University, 1971), 184Google Scholar; see also idem, Preachers, Peasants and Politics in South-East Africa, 1835–1880 (London, 1978).
59 See Mael, R., ‘The Problem of Political Integration in the Zulu Empire’ (Ph.D. thesis, University of California, Los Angeles, 1974).Google Scholar
60 See Kennedy, P., ‘The Transformation of Mpande’ (unpublished paper presented to the Workshop on Production and Reproduction in the Zulu Kingdom, University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, October 1977).Google Scholar
61 Gibson, , Story of the Zulus, 123.Google Scholar
62 Ibid.
63 Mael, , ‘Political Integration’, 321.Google Scholar
64 Morris, , Washing of the Spears, 200.Google Scholar
65 Moodie, , Three Generals, 58Google Scholar. Dunn claimed that the 1873 coronation was successful because Cetshwayo had proved his military superiority; he said that ‘after this things went on well and peacefully; owing, I am sure, to nothing but my having advised Cetywayo, and shown – to the intimidation of the rival factions – that he could produce a good stand of arms.’
66 Ibid. 42.
67 Parl. Pap. C-1137 of 1875Google Scholar, ‘Report of the Expedition to Install Cetywayo as King of the Zulus’. Theophilus Shepstone noted that Hamu professed his allegiance to Cetshwayo at the coronation and he considered this event to be of major importance in legitimizing the new king's authority.
68 Gibson, , Story of the Zulus, 123.Google Scholar
69 Guy, , ‘Note on Firearms’, 559.Google Scholar
70 C.O. 879/16/204, enclosure in no. III, 5Google Scholar, Bulwer, to Hicks-Beach, , 3 April 1879.Google Scholar
71 Guy, , ‘Note on Firearms’, 559.Google Scholar
72 Moodie, , Three Generals, 14, 71.Google Scholar
73 Theophilus Shepstone Papers (Pietermaritzburg: Natal Archives), Shepstone, to Wolseley, , 24 October 1876.Google Scholar
74 Moodie, , Three Generals, 127–31.Google Scholar
75 Ballard, C., ‘The role of tributary labour in the Zulu political economy, 1865–1879’, in Moss, G. and Maré, G. (eds.), Conference on the History of Opposition in Southern Africa (Johannesburg, 1978), 68.Google Scholar
76 Ballard, C., ‘Migrant Labour’, 35–8.Google Scholar
77 Ibid. 34.
78 Brookes, and Webb, , History of Natal, 99.Google Scholar
- 3
- Cited by