The history of the Kings and Queens of Luchazi people
Luchazi Kingdom.
By 14th century the Luchazi people were centrally settled in the present day Angola. Before the period of colonial rule, clans were
powerful and often functioned as Kingdoms because of their deep loyalties and
tight organisation; the Luchazi territories were marked as kingdoms and
chiefdoms. The Muangana is the royal ruler of the tribal grouping and lives at a
palace called Nganda in which his/her house is fenced off in a well-trimmed
pole and grass palisade called Citungu ca Muangana. Muangana means royal ruler (male or female) or king in
Luchazi language and Mueni is the title used before the name of a Luchazi king,
Queen, Prince or Princess.
Between 16th century and 18th century, the Luchazi royal family grew bigger,
several princes and princesses left the nucleus of the royal establishment and
moved out to other territories to establish their own kingdoms. The Luchazi kingdom was founded at Ndakavala-Nakato which is a tributary
of the Luena River in Angola. From there, the palace was shifted to
Ndakavala-Musimoyi south of Luena River. It is here that the largest capital of
the Luchazi Kingdom was founded. It is from this centre that other royal family members were given
authority to go and establish their own palaces in various areas of Lungevungu
River.
One of the major reason for leaving the capital was the mode of succession. The Luchazi monarchical system is derived from the progeny of the King's sister which means that only the King's nephews and nieces or grandnephews or grandnieces can succeed the throne. The main reason for this mode of succession is, in olden times they believed that one cannot be sure if the King's children were sired by the king himself, and to ensure that the monarch does not shift to the relatives of the King's wife. This mode of succession forced many princes and princesses to ask for permission to go and establish their own chiefdoms. As the royal family grew bigger, more and more members of the royal family become eligible for allocation of areas to rule, but could not be appointed because of the limitations of the territory. As it was in the past, these royalty had to wait for their turns.
Reasons for Luchazi migration or movements.
1. From 1830 to 1930, there were periods of droughts which were accompanied by plagues of locusts causing famines. This forced people to move in search of food. When Emil Pearson contacted them in 1920, the Ngangela people were still in state of flux, not because they were nomadic but because they were searching for food during those challenging years (Ntsimbu ya ndzala na Ntsimbu ya vambimba).
2. Conflicts with other ethnic groups over resources and land, followed by attacks from interlopers who were eager to control trade in slaves and ivory forced Luchazi people to move to areas of relative peace. The songs like "Lungevungu-e, vanamuala cavu" and "Cavu ca ndengandenga" are some of the songs that are sung in remembrance of the battle between the Luchazi and Mbunda people that took place on the northern banks of Lungevungu River. According to folklore, as the fighting intensified, in the night the Mbunda built a narrow footbridge across the deep downstream side of the cataract and retreated over to the southern banks of the river. The Luchazi also managed to cross and pushed the Mbunda people in the territories of the San people commonly known by the Luchazi as vasekele because of their light-brown or copper-coloured complexion. Having established food security in these new territories, the Luchazi gradually began to own property through the Portuguese-Luchazi trade. The property included a whole spectrum of European manufactured goods ranging from muzzle-loading guns and ammunition to clothes etc.
4. The reasons for the movement from the Congo basin have been discussed in the earlier article, but once more here is the popular reason which is a myth; Queen Lueji or Niakapamba's love affair with Chibinda: although the story of Lueji or Niakapamba's love affair with Chibinda is generally accepted as the cause of exodus from the Congo, many aspects of it remain in doubt and are highly contested. The time Chibinda, the Luba hunter, was establishing his authority over the Lunda in 1664 CE, the Luchazi people were already well established in eastern, central and southern areas in what is now known Angola where they were already trading with the Portuguese through the Mbundu people commonly known as "Vimbali" meaning the lackeys of the Portuguese. It is believed that from the marriage of Lueji and Chibinda Ilunga, if rather indirectly, came the Mwata Yamvo rulers of the Lunda, to whom the surrounding chiefdoms paid tributes.
One school of thought says that to ensure effective control of this empire, Luba invaders and European merchants assigned a representative to each chiefdoms surrounding the empire to administer or carry out trade (just like the Barotse leadership sent representatives in its vast territory of Barotse land), and some of these male representatives married the local women of that particular tribe and eventually become rulers. This explains why some royal houses trace their chieftainship to Luba-Lunda states.
And according to Britannica encyclopedia and historical records, it was the incursions of the armed Chokwe into the Lunda territories that led to the eventual collapse of Lunda kingdom in 19th century. The Luchazi people have lived side by side with Chokwe and other related tribes from time immemorial but have all along maintained their own identity and personality as a tribe. No question arises therefore of the Luchazi chiefs, and their people having been under the authority of the Lunda kingdom or any other tribal chief. The Luchazi chiefs were part of the chieftaincies that surrounded the ancient Lunda Empire. Daniel Musole (a Luchazi elder in the book entitled 'The Luchazi people: Their history and chieftaincy) clearly stated, "Never at any time in their history did the Luchazi people become subjects to any tribal chief other than their own. Neither did they ever succumb to the power of any other tribal chief nor did they at any time compromise their supreme and absolute authority over their people with any other chief".
It is a known fact that the Luchazi people never passed through the territory so called Kola (Luba territory), and were not part of the Luba-Lunda kingdom. Care must be taken not to mix the origins of the Luchazi people and the origins of Luchazi Chieftaincy; one needs to approach these subjects with an open mind. According to Britannica encyclopedia (history of Angola), it states that "most of the modern population of Angola developed from the agricultural cultures that appeared there from about 1000 to 500BCE, which by CE were working iron. These people probably spoke the ancestral versions of Angola's present languages. Complex societies also may have been established at that time, and by 1500 several large kingdoms occupied the territory of the present day Angola."
Luchazi Traditional leadership.
In Luchazi society, there are traditionally three levels of leadership. The hierarchy of traditional authority begins at the level of the core family (headed by the father/mother), then lineage or stem family (headed by lineage elder) and the clan (headed by a chief or clan leader). It must be noted that the family is the seedbed out of which wider responsibilities grow. During prehistoric period, small homesteads were organized and grouped into village communities and these communities of related people formed chiefdoms and kingdoms.
According to Britannica encyclopedia, from the 15th to 17th century there were several important governance systems in the southern savannah region (which includes Angola). The most notable were the Ndongo kingdom, the Kongo kingdom in the west and the Luba-Lunda states in the east. These kingdoms, with the help of the European merchants, developed elaborate governance systems, buttressed by symbolic kingship and military force (who used firearms acquired from their trade with Europeans to greater effect). Power emanated from the capital to outlaying areas through appointed chiefs or local clan leaders.
The competition to control trade in slaves and ivory often led to wars, and the formation of Lunda federation in 1664 brought huge changes to the governance systems in the region. Those who refused to pay tributes were decapitated or enslaved.
As the Portuguese colonialist and European missionaries gained authority, clan power started fading away. Today clan power has declined because governments have taken over all the roles of the clans. The clan roles in security, economic and social have all been taken over by the state and the church. Clans have remained as part of ethnic identity.
Luchazi kingship and Chieftaincy.
Luchazi kingship or Chieftaincy is the traditional governance system that is based on customary authority such as lineage or descent. The Luchazi royal leadership is inherited through kinship ties. The Luchazi kingship or Chieftaincy is regarded as divine, and put in place by their supreme deity called Kalunga who is the creator of all things. Luchazi kingship or Chieftaincy represents the unity and sovereignty of the Luchazi tribe. And go along with the responsibility of serving Luchazi communities with integrity.
The royal leader of the tribal grouping is called Muangana who has authority over the people who live in that area. The royal leader derive his authority from allegiance of his subjects. In old days, the traditional authority also stemmed from the patronage system, and refusing to pay tributes resulted in decapitation or enslavement.
Before the advent of the Portuguese colonialists, the Luchazi royal leadership was responsible for the daily administration of their chiefdoms. These royal leadership positions came with privileges and prerogatives. However, the traditional governance system lacked accountability, and the royal leaders had ill-defined authority over the villages in their chiefdoms. Muangana Mueni Ngonga is a good example, he is remembered for his cruelty and his practice of selling his subjects into slavery. Luchazi people regarded this act of selling his subjects into slavery as a violation and abuse of royal privileges.
According to oral history, the Luchazi kingship or Chieftaincy can be traced back to the birth of the Luba-Lunda states in the 1600s. (NB: Many people confuse the origins of the Luchazi people and the origins of the Luchazi kingship or Chieftaincy. These are two different subjects and should be treated as such). Like most of the kingship or Chieftaincy of the related tribes, it is said the Luchazi traditional governance system is founded on the political model of the Luba-Lunda states. Those who left the Lunda federation adopted its style of administration and this is evident in their symbols of kingship or Chieftaincy which includes the mikupele, cilongo, mufuka and cimbuyu.
Lueji who was the daughter of Mwata Iyala Mwaku ruled the Lunda federation in the 1650s. According to oral narrations, it was during her reign that the Luchazi and other related chieftainships left the Lunda empire or federation. As earlier stated, this narration is generally accepted, but many aspects of it remain in doubt and are highly questionable. It is not known when did the Luchazi join the Lunda federation, and under whose leadership did they do that. Further, there are various versions of the story. According to oral narrations, Lueji is ethnically connected to the Chokwe people than the Luchazi. No wonder Chokwe people paid tributes to the federation.
One school of thought says that the individuals who left the Lunda federation adopted the model of political governance of the Lunda federation into the territories they migrated to. Just like the story of Muangana Mueni Kangombe ka Yambi who is said to have been a Luchazi chief who went and settled in the Viye territory of the Mbundu, and today the chieftainship is Mbundu. Therefore, someone cannot say the Mbundu people of Viye originated from the Luchazi people. It is the chieftainship of Muangana Mueni Kangombe ka Yambi that has links with the Luchazi. The Luchazi tribe is a big tribe, and it must not be considered as a breakaway tribe from some other tribe.
Being a royal leader or Chief during colonial times was precarious, royal leaders or chiefs were reduced to the status of social leaders. During the era of colonialism in the Portuguese colony of Angola, many traditional governance systems were abolished. In the last quarter of the 19th century, the colonial expansion and slave trade in the Portuguese colony of Angola were the major factors that played a role in the rise and fall of the region’s kingdoms. After the Luchazi revolt of February 1919, the Portuguese colonialists obliterated the authority of Luchazi Kings and Queens whom they reduced and classified as chiefs.
In Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia), some of the Luchazi chiefs were degazetted; the colonial administration introduced new hierarchical titles into the traditional leadership system such as Paramount Chief, Senior Chief, Chief, Sub-Chief, and headmen. These new titles were introduced to elevate and reward those who collaborated with the colonial government or to demote and depose those who resisted the colonial rule. It is from these happenings that lead the Luchazi to compose a song entitled, " Vuangana vua Chivueka ka vua puile vua kulanda".
Today, modern Chieftaincy has been constitutionally transformed into units of local government. In Zambia, the House of Chiefs was constitutionally created in 1965 to be an advisory body to the government on matters pertaining to traditions and customs. The constitution in Article 131 provides for the functions of the House of Chiefs. The main function is merely to discuss bills sent to it for consideration and any other matters that the president refers to the House. These functions are inadequate to enable the traditional leaders fully participate in national development. Chiefs are paid salaries and other incentives. As earlier discussed, these days no chief or headman is allowed to decide any criminal case anymore, and in civil cases their role is merely that of arbitration. They have no power to enforce their decisions, and if the person is not satisfied with their decision, he can take the case to the courts of law.
Luchazi Royal Houses.
Historically, Luchazi ruling royal families usually consists of a senior and subordinate branches which are related, but may have split in descent from one common ancestry many generations ago. According to oral traditions, the earliest known Luchazi Chief was Muangana Mueni Nkalanga, and today the Chivueka royal line is the main royal house of many Luchazi chieftaincies.
The question is: "What is a Luchazi royal house?" A Luchazi royal house is a royal dynasty whose family members rule or reign while bearing the title of Muangana (Chief or Chieftain). The members of these dynasties exercise authority by hereditary rights as a royal family or royals.
Traditionally, the name used to refer to a Luchazi royal house may not be used by its members as a surname. Rather, members of royal dynasties are required to use the names of their parents which may or may not be hereditary. By custom, a prince or princess does not succeed his/her father after his death. Only the chief's nephews, nieces, grandnephews and grandnieces should ascend or succeed to the throne.
In the past, a reigning chief, often did allocate a territory of his realm to his son or daughter to rule on his behalf as prince or princess only. When the prince or princess died, the position would be taken over only by a patrilineal close relative.
A Luchazi royal dynasty consists of at least one, but usually more royal rulers who are related to one another, as well as their non-ruling descendants and their spouses. Luchazi royal rulers of the same realm who are not related to one another are regarded to belong to a different Luchazi royal house and each royal house is designated by a name which distinguishes it from other Luchazi royal houses.
There are several Luchazi royal houses which are found in Central and South-eastern parts of Angola including North-Western parts of Zambia. Some of these royal houses are offshoots of Chivueka, Mutunda, Ngongola, Vunonge, Kantiamba, Lukungu, Lufunda, Kambuela, Mundongo, Kwenye, Mutemba, Kanyumbu, Lumbongo Kambindumioko, Chikoka, Chitimba, just to name a few.
As a matrilineal tribe, these Luchazi royal dynasties are offsprings of female royals who were sisters to Muangana Chivueka namely Ngambo, Chisengo, Mununga, Kalumbu and Kambuende. According to oral narrations, some of these female royals are:
1. Mueni Ngambo who married a mukuetunga (consort) named Mungil of the Cimona clan.
2. Mueni Ngelenge who married a mukuetunga named Chilongo of the Kamba clan.
3. Mueni Vuime who married a mukuetunga of the Kamba clan.
4. Mueni Kanunga who married a mukuetunga named Wanda of the Cimona clan.
5. Mueni Nkenga who married a mukuetunga named Mbonga of the Cihombo clan.
6. Mueni Sali who married a mukuetunga of the Ciuano lineage.
7. Others are Mueni Likumbi, Mueni Chindamba, Mueni Wayenga, Mueni Chisengo, Mueni Chindele, Mueni Senda, Mueni Mutango and Mueni Funda just to name a few.
The Luchazi avoid installing women on royal thrones because they believe that the mukuetunga actually runs the day-to-day affairs. They only installed women on the throne when there were only females in the line of succession. Sometimes, when a dynasty experienced a series of sudden or unexpected deaths of male rulers, then a female would be installed.
Luchazi royal members of the same matrilineage may come to rule entirely different territory in different countries and espouse cultural ties to a Chiefdom other than the one ruled by the first royal ruler in the family. Yet they may still acknowledge bonds based on membership in the same royal dynasty, and may inherit thrones based upon that kinship. For example, the Samuzimu and Kalunga dynasties in Zambia have royal bonds with the Chivueka and Mutunda royal houses in Angola.
Apparently, there are confusing similarities in names between some Luchazi royal houses and other related tribes. According to some oral narrations, the connecting link between the Mutunda royal house and a Luvale royal house is the name Ngambo. This criss-crossing of the usage of the royal names has resulted in some people believing that these royal houses originated from one ancestry. Others mix up also the name of Muangana Mueni Ngonga ya Ngambo of the Luchazi people with Mwene Ngonga ya Kayonga of the Mbunda people.
In conclusion, the notion that all Luchazi royal houses are linked with Luvale royal house is a distortion of facts. As stated above, there are several Luchazi royal houses - not one.
Muangana Mueni Nkalanga
Muangana Mueni Chivueka.
According to oral history obtained from Luchazi elders in Angola, they say the Chivueka dynasty can be traced from Niakapamba Musompa, Kahiata Mungomba and Muti. The name Chivueka was given to Kahiata Mungomba at a place called Musumba. "Chivueka ua vuekele tuhia mungongo." His name is taken from kuvueka, which means to make fire. Hence, the Luchazi saying and song, Chivueka na vaLuchazi va fuma "Ku ntambantamba kua livangele ku-uema." Niakapamba Musompa had two children, unfortunately one child died and the remaining child was a daughter named Ngelenge.
When Ngelenge got married, she gave birth to children namely Kahiata Mungomba II (who is considered to be Mueni Chivueka II), Ngambo, Ngelenge, Chisengo, Mununga, Kamana, Kambuende and Kalumbu who functioned as royal councilors that advised the king on all matters pertaining to Luchazi traditions and customs. His sisters also performed the duties of royal retainers known as Vakua manda, and were the King's emissaries who used to visit the capital of the Luba-Lunda states on behalf of the monarch.
Muangana Mueni Chivueka II: When Muangana Mueni Chivueka Kahiata Mungomba died, he was succeed by his nephew, Kahiata Mungomba II. Muangana Mueni Chivueka appointed subordinate chiefs to assist in the governance of the expanding kingdom: Mueni Kantiamba, Mueni Luhunda, Mueni Ngombo and Mueni Lukungu. At a place around the Ndakavala-Musimoyi-Luchazi, they ate the the hearts of dogs as a symbol and confirmation of their chieftainship. They were appointed as the royal advisory board members who performed the duties of choosing a successor as per Luchazi traditions and customs, and they also carried out duties or made decisions on behalf of the Muangana.
He improved the capital and expanded the Luchazi Kingdom which covered the vast Jurisdiction from the Luantamba-Luchazi-Kanazi area in the north of Angola through to Lunguè-bungo River and its tributaries westwards upstream to the Cuando- Cubango-Bie plateau and across it to the Chimbandi, Nyemba, Lwimbi and Ngondzelo territories.
His goal was to see the population of his tribe grow big as fast as possible. He himself had many wives. He ordered that captured women and children from the raids were not to be sold into slavery, but incorporated into the Luchazi communities.
He made rules and regulations to guide his people in the art of parenting and the mode of bringing up children. His policy yielded results because the Luchazi population increased during his reign.
Muangana Chivueka was also keen on ensuring that his people become self-sufficient and attained a high standard of living by urging them to work hard at the production of food crops, beeswax and rubber. He ensured that many of his people were wealthy as his standards. The Chivueka dynasty include the following kings:
Muangana Mueni Chivueka III: When Mueni Kahiata Mungomba II died, he was succeeded by his nephew named Mukuma ua Ngambo. Ngambo (the eldest of the sisters to Kahiata Mungomba) had six children namely Mukuma, Chingi, Mutunda, Ngonga, Kamana and Machalo. According to oral narrations, it was Mueni Chivueka Kahiata Mungomba II who initiated his nephew, Ngonga, at the mukanda.
After succeeding his uncle, Mueni Chivueka Mukuma established the following palaces Chiteke, Ntoka, Mukuzu and Kakupa. Muangana Mueni Chivueka Mukuma fought fierce battles with the Ovimbundu people in the area around Kukema near Chief Kangombe ka Yambi. He was killed during the battle and he was buried at a place around Minjili river.
Muangana Mueni Chivueka IV: After the death of Mueni Chivueka III, Mueni Chingi was crowned Chivueka IV. He ruled during the period of Portuguese arrival in the inland territories of Angola.
Muangana Mueni Chivueka V: After the death of Mueni Chingi, Mueni Machalo ascended to the throne and was crowned Chivueka V. Following years of civil disturbances as well as several decades of armed conflicts, the Luchazi kingdom was obliterated.
Muangana Mueni Mutunda ua Ngambo.
Muangana Mueni Chiwisa ca Vuime.
The Luchazi Kingdom reached its greatest power and size under his reign. According to oral narrations, Mueni Chiwisa was the first chief to hold the traditional ceremony to commemorate the making of fire by the Luchazi people. During the ceremony, he made fire by rubbing vigorously the dried stick into a hole drilled in a kind of wood called muntenlenge. As his subjects saw the fire ignite, they celebrated. It is from these acts that others mistakenly called him Muangana Chivueka.
Muangana Mueni Mbangu: After the death of Mueni Chiwisa, Mueni Mbangu was crowned as chief at Senu palace. He was fair and just in handling cases among his subjects. He was a very skilled craftsman in the manufacture of implements of combat tools such as arrows, spears, knives, axes, and swords.
Mueni Mbangu had five wives and one of whom was called Chivingo who was beautiful but unassuming woman in the palace. His grandnephew, Mueni Ndemba coveted her so much that he poisoned Mueni Mbangu so that he could marry her after Mueni Mbangu's death. When Mueni Mbangu died, it sparked off a fight between the inevitable two factions of the palace, but the matter was amicably resolved by Muangana Mueni Mutemba, Muangana Mueni Chikenya and Muangana Mueni Kambueli.
The muted fight was instigated by Mueni Kasanga who was the younger brother of Mueni Ndemba. However, it was eventually agreed that Mueni Ndemba succeed Mueni Mbangu.
Muangana Mueni Muzaza: He moved the capital from Chilondo to Lusiyi, a tributary of Lungevungu River. It was this chief whom the Vindele va Kaluvambi (Portuguese administrators) found when they established an administrative post at Mwangayi which was set up under the supervision of Kapitua Chizimo, a Luchazi man in the service of the colonial officials. Mueni Muzaza was the first Luchazi chief who served with the Portuguese in the new system of managing native affairs. When he died, he was succeeded by Mueni Kawina.
Muangana Mueni Ngongola.
According to an oral account by Kapokola Chimbau recorded in 1979 (The Luchazi People: Their History & Chieftaincy), Mueni Ngongola ya Kanunga obtained permission from Muangana Mueni Ngonga to go and establish a palace at Chizilili, an area which was within the jurisdiction of Muangana Mueni Kavulembi and Muangana Mueni Malenga. He was advised by Muangana Mueni Kavulembi and Muangana Mueni Vitete that the area was under Muangana Chihami ca Kapenda son of Muangana Mueni Mutunda who had gone to settle there earlier and cautioned him that his going there might invite opposition, but he ignored the advice, saying that Muangana Mueni Chihami ca Kapenda was his cousin and so he did not expect any trouble from that quarter. As soon as Mueni Ngongola arrived in the area, however, Muangana Mueni Chihami ca Kapenda fought him and the former retreated to Muangana Mueni Ngonga 's area. The following year Mueni Ngongola went back better prepared. On this expedition he defeated Muangana Mueni Chihami ca Kapenda and settled at Kanyumbu. Even to this day, the territory is usually referred to as mu Kueve lia Ngongola by the Luchazi people. At about the same time, Muangana Mueni Lyuma went and established his palace at Chihemba, a tributary of Ndakavala River.
Other Luchazi royal rulers in Kueve area today are:
- Muangana Mueni Musili ua Ngambo who has the palace at Luasinga.
- Muangana Mueni NiaMatindi who has the palace at ku-ueyo.
- Muangana Mueni Liuhia who has the palace at Ntento.
- Muangana Mueni Chikongo.
- Muangana Mueni Kazaka.
Muangana Mueni Mutemba
Muangana Mueni Katolo ka Chindamba.
According to legend, Muangana Mueni Katolo ka Chindamba liked touring villages in his area and sometimes took adventurous tours beyond his chiefdom especially an area known Civanda (in present Namibia). In his entourage, he always included a son of his indentured worker and this triggered a rivalry. This inclusion of a son of an indentured worker (muana ua hembo) did not go well with his children. They began to suspect that these children of an indentured worker (vana va hembo) were plotting to take over the throne; this belief was reinforced when members of their family started dying mysteriously.
While the Chief was away on his tours, his children decided to consult a diviner to help them solve the cause of mysterious deaths in their father's palace. The diviner agreed to help and brought his Ngombo ya cilambu (skin) for divination. That evening he danced throughout the night and then the following morning he ordered everyone to line-up to touch the skin (cilambu). He said, "Whoever the skin got stuck to, is the person responsible for the deaths in the palace." It so happened that one of the son of the indentured worker refused to touch the skin and decided to run away. When the sons of the chief discovered that he had run away, they pursed him and captured him in the forest. They killed him and burned his body. They returned to the village and lied that they had failed to apprehend him.
When the Chief returned from his tours, he was told that one of the sons of the indentured worker had run away. As time went by, one of the villagers decided to reveal the matter to the elder brother of the murdered son of the indentured worker and took him to the site where his brother was burnt. Upon seeing the remains of his brother, the elder brother refused to return to the village and he went to report the matter to the Portuguese officials at a nearby administrative post. The officials sent a team to the site and collected the remains which were sent to Lobito.
The Portuguese forces went to the palace and arrested the chief together with his sons and locked them in a jail cell. While in the jail cell, in the night the king performed black magic (mahesi) and told his sons including all who were in the jail cell to touch his waist and the next thing that happened was that they all found themselves out of the jail cell; that is how they all escaped. The following morning the guards discovered that the cells were empty. How the prisoners escaped baffled them because the locks to cells were intact! A team of Portuguese and African forces was immediately dispatched to the palace of Mueni Katolo ka Chindamba, but as they were approaching the village, the entire village vanished and all they could see was a lake! They could not believe their eyes.
Then the African troops told their masters that it was black magic (mahesi) of the Luchazi people and to counter it they required a native doctor. So they went and got a native doctor who performed some rituals and then the village reappeared. They went into the palace and found Mueni Katolo ka Chindamba seated on his throne. As they were coming near him, he stood up and walked away and then disappeared. They called in the native doctor who performed the rituals again and told them that the king was heading toward the forest.
Quickly, the troops gave chase and saw him. They ordered him to stop or they will shoot him. But he kept going and the troops opened fire. To their horror, water came out of barrels instead of bullets. He then disappeared into the thick forest. The troops called upon the native doctor again who performed another ritual. Finally he surrendered and was arrested. His children escaped to Njenje (Northern Rhodesia) and one of his son, Kwikwi SaNgelenge, and other relatives went on to settled in Kaoma district, western province of Zambia.
He set up his palace at Civalangonde, a tributary of the Nkokayi River which pours it waters into Lwanjinga River. He was the son of Mueni Nkenga (daughter of Chilongo). After his death, Mueni Chitimba was crowned chief.
Muangana Mueni Lumbongo Kambindumioko.
Muangana Mueni Samuzimu ua Ngambo.
He left the Portuguese colony of Angola in 1801 and went to establish a large
capital at Lupwepwe, a tributary of the Zambezi River in the Balovale District
(now Zambezi district). His traditional capital was called Mizeze. When he
died, he was succeeded by his grandnephew Mueni Samuzimu Lievela who gave very
enlightened leadership to the Luchazi people in the Balovale district. Most
people in the then Balovale District popularly referred to the Zambezi east
bank under Senior Chief Samuzimu and Chief Katali as kuLuchazi because of the
high population of Luchazi people in that area. The Luchazi settlements were in
Kanyange, Chivombo, Lunkuni, Lunyiwe, Lutali, Chozo, Kalombo, Makondo,
Kambanda, Chiwezi, Musekelembwa, Lwampungu, and Lwatembwe in the Balovale
District. The Luchazi and the Chokwe were first people to establish linear groups of large, well-planned villages in the area. These were known as ndandanda. The Luchazi established a well ordered, regulated society in these territories. When the then Balovale
district was set up in 1908, Mueni Samuzimu Lievela of the Luchazi people was
already well established there. At the official inauguration of the Boma, the
traditional rulers who were officially invited to attend were three namely
Senior Chief Samuzimu of the Luchazi people, Senior Chief Ndungu of the Luvale,
and Senior Chief Ishinde of the Lunda people.
When Mueni
Samuzimu Lievela died in 1932, he was succeeded by Mueni Samuzimu Mbangu.
Tribal and Cultural conflicts in Zambezi district
For many years there were differences and quarrels among the tribes in the region. The Luvale and the Lunda claimed that Luchazi chiefs and their subjects who had migrated from Angola had settled in their territories on both banks of the Zambezi River in the Balovale District. The Luchazi, Chokwe and the Mbunda were regarded as
foreigners or so-called newcomers from Angola by the Luvale and the Lunda.
Since the fall of the Lunda kingdom in the Congo which was as a result of the
incursions of armed Chokwe people, the Lunda people did not accept the
settlement of the armed Luchazi and Chokwe in the territories they considered
to be theirs. The difference in traditions, customs and culture was (and still
is today) the major source of conflict.
When tribal fights become more frequent between the
Lunda and the Luvale, this resulted in Paramount Chief Lewanika claiming
authority over the Balovale territory. In matters of traditional rule, the Luyi
(Lozi) originally claimed that the chiefs of the Balovale owed allegiance to
their Paramount Chief at Lealui. With the help of the British colonial
government, Paramount Chief Lewanika assigned a representative to each chief's
jurisdiction to administer the traditional function of Balovale District and
Kabompo District. This resulted in resentment amongst the local chiefs and
their subjects towards Barotse representatives. Open protests against Barotse
representatives became the order of the day when the son of the Paramount Chief
Lewanika, Daniel Akufuna, found himself in open confrontation with the son of
Senior Chief Ishinde, Prince Muhongo.
It must be noted that when the Kololo and their leader
Sebetwane conquered the Luyi in 1838, they imposed their authority and language
over the Luyi. But after Sebetwane's death, the Luyi recovered and took over
control of their territory. It was their ruler, Lewnika, who in 1890 negotiated
with Cecil Rhodes and reached an agreement. Chief Lewnika acquired British
protection and the territory become a British protectorate. In 1924 Cecil
Rhodes and his British South Africa Company handed the administration of
Northern Rhodesia to British government.
The resentment for Barotse representatives turned into
hatred. With the help of missionaries at Chitokoloki and Chavuma, the local
people were made aware of their rights of self-determination and independence
of the Paramount Chief's rule from Lealui. The protests intensified and became
more frequent. The British colonial officials at Balovale Boma lent a
sympathetic ear to the protests and took up the matter with the colonial
government. In the due course, a commission of enquiry, headed by McDonnel, was
appointed by His Majesty's colonial office to look into the matter and
recommend a solution to the problem. The Luvale and Lunda submitted to
commission of inquiry that the Luchazi, Chokwe and Mbunda people were newcomers
from Angola and demanded that they leave their territories. But the Luchazi
claimed that when the British and Portuguese colonial authorities marked the
Northern Rhodesia - Angola border, the Luchazi chiefs were already in Balovale
District which was set up in 1908. Therefore, the Luchazi felt that the claim
by the Luyi, Luvale and the Lunda that classified the Luchazi as newcomers were
unfounded. The commission of inquiry handed its findings and recommendations to
the colonial government in November 1939.
In 1941, the British colonial government implemented the recommendations of the McDonnel report which decried Lozi claims that all chiefs in Balovale and Kabompo owed allegiance to their Chief in Lealui and re-established the chiefs as independent. The Barotse representatives were removed and repatriated to Barotse. In government matters however, each of the chiefs had to report to the District Commission at the Balovale Boma. Then came the complex task of partitioning and redefining the boundaries of the Balovale District and Manyinga area into specific territories to be placed under the authority of each of the traditional Luchazi, Luvale and Lunda rulers. The colonial government decided that:
- Senior Chief Samuzimu, his subordinate chiefs and their subjects be moved to and settled in the Manyinga area to take up the vacancy left by the Barotse representative, Sasa Imasiku.
- Senior Chief Ishinde and his subordinate chiefs have authority over the area between Zambezi east bank and Kalwilo west bank; and
- Senior Chief Ndungu and his subordinate chiefs have authority over the area between Zambezi west bank and the Northern Rhodesia -Angola border.
- The local people (Luchazi, Luvale, Lunda, Chokwe, Mbunda and any other tribe) who wanted to remain in the affected areas in which they were living, were free to do so. However, such people would have to shift their allegiance to the chief in whose jurisdiction the area now fell. Also, those local people who did not want to change their allegiance to a different chief were free to move to the area allocated to the chief of their choice.
In 1949, Mueni Samuzimu Mbangu III moved to Kasempa
(now Mufumbwe) district, in the present day North Western province of Zambia. He died in 1990
and was succeeded by Mueni Samuzimu IV who was Masovi Chizau. Mueni Samuzimu V
ruled for a short period and died. In 2006, he was succeeded by Mueni Mukimba
Mbangu who is the current Senior Chief Samuzimu VI.
- Muangana Mueni Katali at Chozo, now living in Mufumbwe district.
- Muangana Mueni Kasaka at Kambanda, Zambezi District.
- Muangana Mueni Liuema also at Kambanda on the West bank of Zambezi River.
- Muangana Mueni Kambinga at Chivombo.
- Muangana Mueni Chindumba at Lutali.
- Muangana Mueni Chikololo moved to Chiteve.
- Muangana Mueni Kakupa in Baroste now Western province.
- Muangana Mueni Njimbu in Baroste now Western Province.
Muangana Mueni Kalunga Mutunda.
Election of a Senior Chief for Manyinga
- He must de-link his chieftaincy from the Barotse Royal Establishment.
- He would rule only on the sufferance of the Luchazi, Lunda, Chokwe, Mbunda, Mbwela (Nkoya) and other related tribes.
- His failure to strictly adhere to the above conditions would result in his being deposed from rulership.
Muangana Mueni Kalunga, Loni Livingi, died and joined his ancestors on 3 December 2022. He died at his palace at the age of 73. On 17 June 2023, Mueni Mwila Mututo (former Chief Ngongola) was appointed as the successor. He was officially crowned Muangana Mueni Kalunga on 1st October 2023.
Muangana Mueni Mutunda Chikololo
He established his palace on the eastern bank of Manyinga River. After his death, he was succeeded by his younger brother Mueni Liveve Chikololo Mutunda who moved the his traditional capital to Musokosi and later to Chiteve. He died in 1970 and the was succeeded by Mueni Chivumbu Mutunda.
Names of past Luchazi Chiefs in Angola.
- Muangana Mueni Kantiamba.
- Muangana Mueni Lukungu.
- Muangana Mueni Lufunda.
- Muangana Mueni Mutunda.
- Muangana Mueni Muwema ua Ngambo.
- Muangana Mueni Chitali established his capital in the Mulangelo area.
- Muangana Mueni Mbuezo son of Kamana had his palace in the Kwanza area.
- Muangana Mueni Ndundu established his capital south-west of Songo territory.
- Muangana Mueni Vunonge established he capital in Nyemba territory.
- Muangana Mueni Lyuma lia Kavanga established his capital in Kwitu area.
- Muangana Mueni Mundongo established palace in kwitu area.
- Muangana Mueni Kwenye kua Ngungu established his palace at Ndindi.
- Muangana Mueni Kavangu.
- Muangana Mueni Chinonge ca Kazika Mazila.
- Muangana Mueni Mukovoto Chiliva ca Ngongola.
- Muangana Mueni Kayangula.
- Muangana Mueni Chinyundu.
- Muangana Mueni Chikololo.
- Muangana Mueni Kayuma.
- Muangana Mueni Lyambula.
- Muangana Mueni Nkomba.
- Muangana Mueni Chikoka Chiyaka established his capital at Chivalangonde, a tributary of Nkokayi River.
- Muangana Mueni Linyuka lia Mbuela.
- Muangana Mueni katutu.
- Muangana Mueni Chingenge.
- Muangana Mueni Mbangu.
- Muangana Mueni kayuma.
- Muangana Mueni Kangwengwe.
- Muangana Mueni Chitimba.
- Muangana Mueni Njombi.
- Muangana Mueni Kasaka at Kambanda.
Names of past Chieftaineses in Angola.
- Muangana Mueni Ngambo got married to Mukuetunga Mungili of the Cimona clan.
- Muangana Mueni Vuime got married to a mukuetunga of the Kamba clan who sired Mueni Mbandwa, Mueni Chipipa. She was the daughter of Mueni Ngongola.
- Muangana Mueni Nkenga established her palace at Kanazi River. She married Mbonga of the Cihombo clan.
- Muangana Mueni Likumbi had her capital in the Luchazi River area. She married a mukuetunga of the Kavili clan.
- Muangana Mueni Ngelenge had her capital in the Luchazi River area. She married a mukuetunga Chilongo of the Kamba clan.
- Muangana Mueni Kakuhu ka Kalemba est her palace in the Lukumbi River.
- Muangana Mueni Vumba established her capital along the Likumbi river. She married a mukuetunga Kacholo.
- Muangana Mueni Kanunga her capital at Mwangayi River near the mouth of the Lutwai. She married a mukuetunga Wanda of the Cimona clan. She was mother of Mueni Ngongola.
- Muangana Mueni Funda established her palace at Lwandu. She married a mukuetunga of the Cihombo clan.
- Muangana Mueni Fukungu had her capital at Lutumi.
- Muangana Mueni Sali established her capital in Kandzongolo area. She married a mukuetunga of the Ciuano lineage, and was the mother of Mueni Chitimba ca Sali.
- Muangana Mueni Chisengo.
- Muangana Mueni Yemba.
- Muangana Mueni Chindele.
- Muangana Mueni Wanda.
- Muangana Mueni Nyaviso.
- Muangana Mueni Senda.
- Muangana Mueni Chipango.
- Muangana Mueni Chinika.
- Muangana Mueni Mbaka.
- Muangana Mueni Mutango.
Names of present Luchazi chiefs in Angola.
Names of present Luchazi chieftaineses in Angola.
Chiefs Killed by the Portuguese
- Muangana Mueni Matindi: He had his palace at Vihunga, a tributary of Kueve River. He was shot dead by Portuguese colonial forces during the uprisings of 1916. He was succeeded by Mueni Kalenga.
- Muangana Mueni Kayangula: He had his palace at Kunjovue. He was shot by Portuguese forces during the uprising of 1916.
- Muangana Katolo ka Chindamba.
Luchazi royal funerals and burials
Whenever a king/chiefs dies, his death is personified by the breaking of the royal drum heads, meaning that the owner of the royal drums is no more. So the royal drums are not played. There is usually one special village headman, selected by virtue of his close, and long association with the chief or royal family, who attends to the royal funeral, burial and rites of coronation of chiefs. When a Luchazi chief is dead, a team of selected burial attendants called vitapa. These burial attendants are into two categories:
Vitapa va nkula: these are the royal morticians or undertakers who paint their bodies with red ochre (nkula) during the royal funeral. These are the fearless men who are brave enough to work on the corpse of the chief and prepare it for burial. During the mourning period, these men do not mingle with other mourners, they cook and eat in isolation of the rest of the mourners. They are feared by the villagers. They are tasked with the responsibility of twisting the dead chief's head until it is severed from the neck. By custom, the chief's head is buried separately. To do this the vitapa obtain a bark of a huge tree in which they place the body, then they start twisting the head each day until, as the body is decomposing, the neck column disintegrates and the head is severed from the neck.
Vitapa va mpemba: they paint their bodies white and these go from village to village throughout the chief's territory, announcing the chief's death and collecting tributes towards burial expenses. They also organise the funeral dance.
Va yaya Ngonga neza-e
Suekenu vana venu civala
Ngonga!
This is one of the songs sung during the funeral of a chief, which lasts many days. In olden days, villagers believed that the vitapa or the ritual pall-bears of the chief's corpse sneak into the villages and snatch small children to be killed at the royal funeral rites.
When a Luchazi chief is dead and the body is lying in state, it is a taboo for anyone to travel about in the countryside within the chief's jurisdiction until the body is buried. In Luchazi tradition, all the fires of the palace are put out after the death of the chief. All mourners are required to camp outside the palace according to their respective localities. Fellow chiefs and members of the royal family are prohibited by custom from going near the house containing the royal corpse. Each respective group of mourners are required to offer for slaughter a bull or a goat as ritual of sacrifice to the departed chief.
Burial ceremony
When at last it is time to lay the deceased chief to rest, a bull is slaughtered and its skin is used to wrap the chief's body; the bull's stomach is cleared of its contents and put around the stump of the chief's neck, representing the severed head. The body is buried in a separate place from the head whose burial is known as "interring the pillow of the chief”. Fellow chiefs and other members of the royal family are also not allowed to attend the burial ceremony. They are prohibited by tradition to go anywhere near the graveyard or cemetery.
Rites of cleansing of the king/chief's widows
Some days after the burial of the chief, consultations known as matumbe are held among the chief's advisors and other village headmen regarding cleansing of the chief's widows. Whereas the usual cleansing of the widow of an ordinary man involved, among other things, having sexual intercourse with a selected man during the night before dispersal, that aspect of the ritual is not allowed in the case of a king/chief's widows.
The rite of funeral dispersal
This is followed a few days afterwards by communal hunting called likanzo. Any number of game may be killed during the communal hunt and the meat is brought back to the palace. The liver and heart are offered to the ancestors at the miyombo shrine. Millet beer brewed the previous day is also offered at the miyombo.
The making of Cingina
The Cingina (Chingina) is a shrine that is specifically erected in the memory of the deceased chief at the verge of the village. When the beer brewed for this occasion is ready, the shrine is cleared and well-trimmed poles of hard wood which are sharpened at the top are stuck into the cleared ground in a semi-circle. A bull is slaughtered and pieces of the liver, lungs and heart are quickly boiled in the pot on a fire made at the shrine and offered to the spirits of the deceased chiefs. The upper portion of the bull's skull is cut out with the horns on it and stuck onto one of the poles. Other items of the departed chief's property like beddings, clothes, pots, plates, etc. are stuck onto the rest of the poles of the shrine.
Succession and coronation
Soon after the last funeral rite is performed, the chief's advisors and village headmen select the successor who is appointed as an acting chief called as Muangana ua makunga. Then arrangement are made to initiate preparations for the coronation of the successor. When making these preparations, the mikupele are revamped in readiness for playing during the forthcoming coronation ceremony and shortly, the acting chief is installed on the throne. It then the new chief's responsibility to make a new fire using the muntelenge method, and it is from this fire all new fires of the village are distributed. This tradition symbolizes a new era in the history of the chieftaincy.
Traditionally, Luchazi people avoided installing women on the throne because they believed that her husband (mukuetunga) would ran the day to day affairs in the background. However, when there are only women heirs, then there was no way they could avoid a woman ascending on the throne. Sometimes, when a chieftaincy experienced a series of male chiefs who died suddenly or unexpectedly, a woman was installed as an alternative in an effort to avoid the occurrence of frequent deaths.
Funeral of a king/chief's wife (Lisano)
The wife of a Luchazi chief is not, by custom, left to die inside the palisade of the chief. When those nursing her during her illness see that she is about to die, she is taken out of the palisade without the chief's knowledge to a small house where she spends the last hours of her life. It is a taboo for the chief to see her at this stage, and also for him to see her corpse.
Ritual of cleansing
At the time of the lisano's passing away, the state of uncleanliness due to the spouse's death (visako) is transferred from the chief to another man hired from a different village. The ritual of transfer is done as follows: the hired man is told to lie down and the chief bathes his body while standing over him and the water from the chief's body falls on the hired man, thus transferring the visako to the hired man who then assumes the status of ntuluwe (widower). The night before the dispersal of the funeral, the hired man is coupled with a woman, usually a relative of the deceased lisano, with whom he performs the ritual of cleansing of the palace by having sexual intercourse. The hired man is usually appropriately paid for his services.
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For human development,and cultural preservation,there is need to make things right.
ReplyDeleteChief Sikufele should be relocated to Western province or better still he must identify himself with his ethnic group in manyinga whom he should rule.
It is unethical for a chief of a different ethic group with different culture to rule over a people of a different ethnic group. Our custom does not such this! This is a serious error and it must be corrected now or never!!!!!!
Luchazi's let us stand and defend our land, if we don't get rid of this mistake, posterity will judge us
ReplyDeleteSikufele is aware that he is so naked. To clothe himself he has started bringing in those lozi chiefs in kabompo as his sub chiefs. This should not be tolerated. Zwa zwa zwa Sikufele zwa
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteGood piece of history. With all this rich history yet we still don't have a senior chief
ReplyDeleteÉ de louvar esta publicação pois, sei que sou LUCHAZI, orgulho-me disso mas, nada mais sei da minha história. Acredito que muitos como eu, que saímos do seio dos nossos antepassados muito cedo, encontraremos aqui o conhecimento sobre nossas raízes e a inspiração em conhecer dia-trás-dia, quem é afinal o calucazi.
ReplyDeletebem haja senhor Kalenga. Obrigado