Pictures from Google Image Search

Xhosa

Encyclopedia of World Cultures | 1996 | Copyright 1996 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Xhosa

ETHNONYMS: Caffre, Cafre, Isixhosa, Kaffer, Kaffir, Koosa, Southern Nguni, Xosa


"Xhosa" is the generic name used for a number of related cultural groups in South Africa. Xhosa groups include the Mpondo, Bomvana, Bhaca, Thembu, Mpondomise, Xesibe, Mfengu, Hlubi, and the Xhosa proper. These Southern Nguni peoples, as they are sometimes called, share a common language, Isixhosa, and are culturally similar to one another. Because of their contact with other peoples in the area over the centuries and the strong influence of colonial powers, as well as missionary contact, it is difficult speak of the traditional culture of the Xhosa. Rather, Xhosa culture today is a blend that has resulted from these influences and others. The Xhosa today are much involved in South African political affaire and play a major role in the postapartheid government.

The traditional homeland of the Xhosa was located on the southeastern seaboard of the Republic of South Africa in an area that is currently divided politically into two independent states, Transkei and Ciskei. In 1989 the estimated number of Xhosa living in Transkei was 3,500,000 and in Ciskei, 1,000,000. Xhosa also live in South African citiesespecially Cape Town, Port Elizabeth, and East Londonand on farms outside Transkei and Ciskei. In 1986 the total population of Xhosa in South Africa was estimated at approximately six million.

The Xhosa-speaking peoples originally consisted of three main groups: the Pondo, the Tembu, and the Xhosa proper. They all spoke the same language and shared the same belief that their culture originated at the headwaters of the Dedesi River. Their customs and beliefs were similar, generally centering around the herding of cattle. They were linked to one another through intermarriage as well as by the diplomatic, military, and political alliances they formed. Through the centuries, internal dissension and further subdivision, contact with San and Khoi-speaking peoples whose territories they overran and conquered, and the arrival of refugees from wars in Natal broke the original Xhosa-speaking nations into diversified chiefdoms and peoples. Nevertheless, the basic division of the Xhosa speakers into Pondo, Tembu, and Xhosa still remains.

In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the Nguni herded cattle, hunted game, and cultivated sorghum. They lived in beehive-shaped huts in scattered homesteads and were ruled by chiefs. One of the main reasons for Xhosa expansion was the splitting off of the sons of reigning chiefs to found new chiefdoms of their own, which relieved the political pressure at the center of the kingdom. Movement was also precipitated by the need to find new hunting grounds and fresh pastures. This was a slow process because of the need to burn down the forest to provide grazing prior to occupation.

The Xhosa traditionally were not a nomadic people, although the need for large pastures to accommodate expanding herds of cattle encouraged steady movement. Xhosa kraals, or cattle enclosures, were surrounded by huts. The kraals formed family clusters tied by allegiance to the Great Place, the principle kraal, that of the chief. The Great Place was usually only a modest grouping of huts.

A Xhosa family homestead was known as an umzi (pl. imizi ), and several adjoining imizi formed a village. An umzi generally housed an extended family, including the head of the family; his wives, children, and aging parents; his married sons and their families; and his unmarried daughters. The huts faced east, toward the sun, and stood in a semicircle around the main focus of their communal existence, the kraal. In the case of a man rich in cattle, who had more than than one wife, each wife had a household of perhaps three huts: a main hut for living and cooking, a second hut for children and visitors, and a third as a storeroom. Close to these huts and never too far from the stream from which they were watered were the gardens in which were cultivated the limited number of crops the Xhosa raised seasonally: cereals such as sorghum, as well as maize, pumpkins, and melons.

Apart from its gardens, a village or group of villages would be surrounded by a substantial territory that represented the hunting grounds and pastures that were common to all.

Villages could contain from fifteen to fifty huts and could be as close as 0.4 kilometers from one another or as far as four to five hours' away by footpath. The inhabitants of a village, or group of villages, could be members of a chiefdom, the many and complex lineages of which could be traced back to a common ancestor. There was generally a local chief, or headman, who ruled over the kraals and who was subordinate to a great chief of a whole district.

Cattle were the focal point of Xhosa existence. Life literally circled around them. Cattle intricately bound together the material realm with the sacred. They were the medium of sacrifice to the ancestral spirits, linking the living with the dead. They represented the future, because they sealed the marriage bond. They also represented wealth and stability. In ordinary daily life, they supplied the principal item of the diet, milk, as well as meat for occassional feasting and leather for clothing. Cattle were viewed as individually as the members of the family itself. The Xhosa language was profuse with varieties of descriptive terms for cattle, mainly based on color combinations and the shapes of the horns.

The Xhosa were bound in their daily lives and actions by reverence for and fear of their ancestors, whose spirits were believed to be omnipresent. If these spirits were offended, they would express their displeasure by inflicting illness, accident, or some other disorder. They were appeased through sacrifice. The sacrificial beasts had to be the best of the herd. During the sacrifice, the slaughterer cut open the belly, thrust his arm up to the heart, and wrenched out the arteries. These ceremonies took place in the cattle kraal and the skulls of the sacrificial animals were placed at the gate posts.

An important traditional value of Xhosa culture is ubuntu, or humanness. At the core of ubuntu is the preservation and stability of the whole. An example of its application is that, in times of war, women and children were never killed. During their anticolonial wars, Xhosa were known to kill White men and their grown sons ruthlessly, at the feet of their wives and sisters; they spared women and children, however, despite the fact that the same kindness was not reciprocated by their enemies.


Bibliography

Costello, Dawn (1990). Not Only for Its Beauty: Beadwork and Its Cultural Significnce among the Xhosa-Speaking Peoples. Pretoria: University of South Africa.


Hodgson, Janet (1982). The God of the Xhosa. Cape Town: Oxford University Press.


Mostert, Noel (1992). Frontiers: The Epic of South Africa's Creation and the Tragedy of the Xhosa People. New York: Albert A. Knopf.

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Xhosa." Encyclopedia of World Cultures. The Gale Group, Inc. 1996. Encyclopedia.com. 20 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Xhosa." Encyclopedia of World Cultures. The Gale Group, Inc. 1996. Encyclopedia.com. (December 20, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3458001587.html

"Xhosa." Encyclopedia of World Cultures. The Gale Group, Inc. 1996. Retrieved December 20, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3458001587.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Chinese Markets for Methyl Ethyl Ketone Report Reveals that Demand has grown at a Fast Pace in the Past Decade for Methyl Ethyl Ketone.
M2 Presswire; 6/11/2009; 700+ words ; ...Markets: Chinese Markets for Methyl Ethyl Ketone Report Reveals that Demand has grown at...Pace in the Past Decade for Methyl Ethyl Ketone(C)1994-2009 M2 COMMUNICATIONS RDATE...the "Chinese Markets for Methyl Ethyl Ketone" report to their offering. Chinas demand...
Cu(I)-catalyzed asymmetric allylation of ketones and ketimines *.(Report)
Magazine article from: Pure and Applied Chemistry; 5/1/2008; ; 700+ words ; ...catalyzed asymmetric allylation of ketones and ketimines is described...tetrasubstituted carbon; ketones; ketimines. INTRODUCTION...addition step of allylcopper to ketones). Results of kinetic studies...allylboronate], and 0th order to [ketone]) indicate that transmetallation...
Homoallylic ketones and pyrroles by way of copper-catalyzed cascade additions of alkyl-substituted vinyl Grignard reagents to esters.(Report)
Magazine article from: Canadian Journal of Chemistry; 11/1/2007; ; 700+ words ; ...from the homoallylic ketones by a sequence featuring...addition, homoallylic ketone, alkyl-substituted...alcohols and alkenyl ketones, have limited the utility...diones and homoallylic ketones in 6%-47% yields...yields of homoallylic ketone were achieved in the...
Feasibility of sigmatropic rearrangement on electron-deficient coumarinyl ketones.(Report)
Magazine article from: Canadian Journal of Chemistry; 5/1/2008; ; 700+ words ; ...alkyl/aryl 7-hydroxy-8-coumarinyl ketones were converted to 7-O-allyl and 7...cyclohex-2'-ene-1'-ylcoumarinyl ketones prepared is accounted herein. The rearrangement...allyl-7-hydroxy-8-coumarinyl ketones 3 and alkyl/aryl 6-cyclohex-2...
One in Three Parents Surveyed Unaware of Easy Ketone Test That May Help Prevent the Onset of Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA).
PR Newswire; 9/13/2006; 700+ words ; ...deficiency and high blood ketone levels result in...Frequent testing for ketones during times of...levels and blood ketones at home, readily detecting elevated ketone levels," Dr...deficiency and high blood ketone levels. Ketones are substances formed...
Increasing Demand of Methyl Ethyl Ketone
Magazine article from: China Chemical Reporter; 4/16/1997; 700+ words ; Table 1 Consumption of Methyl Ethyl Ketone in China in Recent Years (t) Sector...76 300 Table 2 Import of Methyl Ethyl Ketone in China in Recent Years Import amount...33 481 1996 57 592 38 820 Methyl ethyl ketone is an excellent organic solvent and organic...
Photochemistry of 9-methylbicyclo[3.3.1]nonyl aryl ketones--a novel 1,5-disproportionation of 1,4-hydroxy biradicals and asymmetric induction using the solid-state ionic chiral auxiliary method (1).
Magazine article from: Canadian Journal of Chemistry; 9/1/2005; ; 700+ words ; ...photochemistry of adamantyl phenyl ketones and norbornyl phenyl ketones (2 and 3) (Scheme 1) (2...bicyclo[3.3.1]nonyl phenyl ketone system hydrogen abstraction...methylbicyclo[3.3.1]nonyl phenyl ketones (1) are achiral molecules...
Bimolecular Hydrogen Abstraction from Phenols by Aromatic Ketone Triplets[dagger]
Magazine article from: Photochemistry and Photobiology; 1/1/2006; ; 700+ words ; ...the π,π* ketone triplets. Ketones with lowest charge-transfer...transfer. Rate constants for ketone triplet quenching via this...reduction potential of the ketone (10). Aromatic ketones abstract hydrogen from phenols...
KetoCare Ketone Test Strips launched for diabetics, low-carb dieters.
Newspaper article from: Biotech Business Week; 7/19/2004; 700+ words ; ...introduced KetoCare Ketone Test Strips, which...to monitor their ketones, according to the...Everyday, people use Ketone tests to help them monitor the level of ketones in the body. However...carb diets encourage Ketone testing due to the...that the presence of ketones lets the ...
Home Diagnostics, Inc. Introduces KetoCare Ketone Test Strips; Offers Low Carb Dieters and People with Diabetes National Brand Performance at an Affordable Price.
Business Wire; 6/22/2004; 700+ words ; ...to monitor their ketones. Branching out beyond...new KetoCare(TM) Ketone Test Strips for urinalysis...Everyday, people use Ketone tests to help them monitor the level of ketones in the body. However...carb diets encourage Ketone testing due to the...that the presence of ketones lets ...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

ketone
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition ketone , any of a class of organic...The general formula for a ketone is RCOR′, where R...aryl groups. The simplest ketone, where R and R′ are...is one of the most important ketones used in industry. Low-molecular...
ketone bodies
Book article from: A Dictionary of Food and Nutrition ketone bodies Acetoacetate, β‐...acetoacetate and acetone are chemically ketones ; although β‐hydroxybutyrate is not, it is included in the term ketone bodies because of its metabolic relationship...
ketone body
Book article from: A Dictionary of Biology ketone body Any of three compounds, acetoacetic...of the metabolism of body fat deposits. Ketone bodies are normally used as energy sources...starvation or in diabetics), the blood level of ketone bodies rises and they may be present in...
ketones
Book article from: A Dictionary of Food and Nutrition ketones Chemical compounds containing a carbonyl group (C=O), with two alkyl groups attached to the same carbon; the simplest ketone is acetone (dimethylketone, (CH 3 ) 2 −C=O).
dimethyl ketone
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition dimethyl ketone see acetone .

Find thousands of answers for hundreds of subjects at Smart QandA .

All answers verified by trusted sources at Encyclopedia.com

Try Smart QandA now!

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: