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Land Tenure and Ownership (ZIM) Position1 #12057 During colonial era, blacks were forced off ancestral land with less than 5000 whites taking over 30% of Zimbabwe's agricultural land while 1 million blacks peasant families farmed 38%, resulting in the guerilla war of independence of 1980. | |
+Citations (2) - CitationsAdd new citationList by: CiterankMapLink[1] History of Zimbabwe's land reform
Author: Ayinde Publication info: August 12, 2002 Cited by: Earl Burrowes, Sr. 10:25 PM 12 February 2009 GMT URL:
| Excerpt / Summary Before the Settlers
When the first whites arrived in 1890, the land between the Limpopo and Zambezi rivers was populated by the Shona and the Ndebele people, who claimed sovereignty.
It is thought the Shona had been there for about 1,000 years. The Ndebele arrived in the 1830s, having migrated north from Natal after falling out with the Zulu King.
In 1889, the imperialist Cecil Rhodes, who had made a fortune in diamond mining in the Cape, set up the British South Africa Company to explore north of the Limpopo.
He had already obtained exclusive mining rights from the Ndebele king, Lobengula, in return for £100 a month, 1,000 rifles, 10,000 rounds of ammunition, and a riverboat. As far as Lobengula was concerned he had not conferred land rights.
The first 200 settlers were each promised a 3,000-acre farm and gold claims in return for carving a path through Mashonaland.
The Shona were too fragmented to resist and the British flag was raised at Fort Salisbury on 13 September 1890. The name Rhodesia was adopted in 1895. It became the British colony of Southern Rhodesia in 1923.
Colonisation
Three years after the pioneers arrived in Mashonaland, they conquered King Lobengula and his people in neighbouring Matabeleland.
Each volunteer in the war was granted 6,000 acres of captured land. Within a year 10,000 square miles around Lobengula’s capital Bulawayo had been marked out.
Ndebele villagers who returned were treated as tenants. Most of their cattle were seized and they were forced to work on the white farms.
In Mashonaland, the settlers imposed a ‘hut tax’ of 10 shillings (50p). Those who could not pay were told to work to earn the money. When the Ndebele and Shona rebelled in 1896, they were put down and their leaders hanged.
As the settlers developed commercial farming, some lands were reserved for African occupation amid fears total dispossession could lead to uprisings.
But the Land Apportionment Act of 1930 barred African land ownership outside the reserves, except in a special freehold purchase area. Africans not needed for labour on white farms were removed to the reserves, which became increasingly congested. |
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