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Kingdom of Great Zimbabwe

The Kingdom of Great Zimbabwe was a Shona kingdom located in modern-day Zimbabwe. Its capital was Great Zimbabwe, the largest stone structure in precolonial Southern Africa, which had a population of 10,000. Around 1300, Great Zimbabwe replaced Mapungubwe as the most important trading centre in the interior, exporting gold via Swahili city-states into the Indian Ocean trade. At Great Zimbabwe's centre was the Great Enclosure which is thought to have housed royalty and had demarcated spaces for rituals, while commoners surrounded them within the second perimeter wall. The Zimbabwe state was composed of over 150 smaller zimbabwes and likely covered 50,000 km2 (19,000 sq mi).

Etymology
The Kingdom of Great Zimbabwe derives its name from its capital, Great Zimbabwe. The name "" is Shona for "great house of stone", from the nouns - meaning "great house" and meaning "-stone". "Zimbabwe" derives from or , translated from the Karanga dialect of Shona as "houses of stones" ( = augmentative noun of , "house"; = plural of , "stone"; /'' = preposition for "of"). == History ==
History
Origins and rise The region had been inhabited by the San dating back over 100,000 years, and was inhabited by Bantu-speaking peoples from 150 BC, who from the 4th century AD formed various agricultural chiefdoms. An early settlement and predecessor was Gumanye. The site of what would become Great Zimbabwe had been occupied since 1000 by speakers of proto-Karanga (south-central Shona). The settlement lay on the margins of mainstream developments occurring to its south from the 10th century in the Limpopo-Shashe Basin, where states and chiefdoms competed over gold and other goods for the Indian Ocean trade. In the 13th century Great Zimbabwe was on the fringe of the Mapungubwe state. From the 12th century, Great Zimbabwe wrestled with other settlements, such as Chivowa, for economic and political dominance in the Southern Zambezi Escarpment. Agriculture and cattle played a key role in developing a vital social network, and served to "enfranchise management of goods and services distributed as benefits within traditional political and social institutions", while long distance trade was crucial for the transformation of localised organisations into regional ones. The aforementioned process advanced rapidly in the 13th century, and saw the construction of large dry-stone walls. By 1250 Great Zimbabwe had become an important trade centre. Gold production increased rapidly during this time. Apogee At its peak Great Zimbabwe covered and became a centre for industry and political power. At Great Zimbabwe's centre was the Great Enclosure which housed royalty and had demarcated spaces for rituals. Commoners surrounded them within the second perimeter wall, and its population was around 10,000. The state was composed of over 150 smaller zimbabwes, and likely covered . Stone structures were built around the north-eastern plateau, likely provincial outposts controlling areas of gold production. The institutionalisation of Great Zimbabwe's politico-religious ideology served to legitimise the position of the king (), with a link between leaders, their ancestors, and God. According to Ken Mufuka the shrine in the Hill Complex was the home of spirit mediums () who were tasked with acting as the conscience of the state, and preserving the traditions of the founders, which he says were Chigwagu Rusvingo (the first ''''), Chaminuka, Chimurenga, Tovera, and Soro-rezhou among others (see ). The community incorporated dhaka pits into a complex water management system. It is unclear to what extent coercion and conflict played in Great Zimbabwe's growth and dominance due to this being challenging to recognise archaeologically. While the Great Enclosure served to display prestige and status, and to reinforce inequalities between elites and commoners, it likely also served to deter contestation for political power amid the close linkage between wealth accumulation and political authority, with rivals for power, such as district chiefs and regional governors, located outside the settlement in prestige enclosures. It is plausible the aquifer Great Zimbabwe sat on top of ran out of water, or the growing population contaminated the water. According to oral tradition, Nyatsimba Mutota, a member of Great Zimbabwe's royal family, led part of the population north in search for salt to found the Mutapa Empire. By the 16th century, political and economic power had shifted away from Great Zimbabwe to the north and west. The site likely continued to be inhabited into the 17th century, before it was eventually abandoned. == Government ==
Government
The state had a as its sacred leader, aided by a designated brother or sister, along with an increasingly rigid three-tiered class structure. The kingdom taxed other rulers throughout the region, and was composed of over 150 tributaries headquartered in their own minor zimbabwes. == Society and culture ==
Society and culture
Great Zimbabwe was likely a centre for crafts and a place of great religious significance, Nobles resolved disputes in a private court, while commoners resolved them in public. == Economy ==
Economy
The Kingdom of Great Zimbabwe had a mosaic political economy which embedded production and circulation to address needs at individual, household, village, district, capital, and state levels within a multidimensional environment dependent on local qualities. This system later incorporated global trade, however imports were relatively minimal, and it was not solely responsible for the region's economic development. Great Zimbabwe's wealth was derived from cattle rearing, agriculture, and the domination of trade routes from the goldfields of the Zimbabwean Plateau to the Swahili coast. Cattle was important to the elites in the kingdom since their wealth came from the management of cattle. The large cattle herd that supplied the city moved seasonally and was managed by the court. Salt, cattle, grain, and copper were traded as far north as the Kundelungu Plateau in present-day DR Congo. They had extensive regional and long-distance trading networks with central Africa, the Swahili coast, the Persian Gulf, India, and the Far East. Trade routes shifting north from the Save River, which linked Great Zimbabwe to Sofala, to the Zambezi, which linked Khami to Ingombe Ilede, Mutapa, Angoche, and Quelimane, likely contributed to Great Zimbabwe's demise. == Stone masonry ==
Stone masonry
The rulers of the Zimbabwe Kingdom (known as ) cultivated and expanded dry-stone masonry traditions that developed across the Zambezi and Limpopo basins and are also evidenced at sites such as Mapungubwe. Skilled builders used locally available granite, which naturally fractures into regular blocks when heated and cooled, to construct terraces, enclosures, platforms, and free-standing walls without mortar. These techniques evolved from earlier Iron Age settlements in the region and reached their highest architectural expression at Great Zimbabwe during the 13th–15th centuries. Dry-stone structures in the Zimbabwe tradition were built using a combination of coursed granite blocks, careful interlocking, and gravity-based stability. Distinct regional styles emerged, including coursed masonry, polygonal masonry, and chequered or herringbone motifs, which were both decorative and functional. Large walls such as the Great Enclosure and the Hill Complex demonstrate advanced understanding of load distribution, battering angles, and the thermal properties of granite. Stone-building was closely connected to political authority, ritual landscapes, and long-distance trade. Platforms and walled enclosures served as elite residences, administrative spaces, and ritual areas, while the distribution of stone sites across the plateau reflects patterns of political control and economic networks within the Zimbabwe Kingdom. Knowledge of dry-stone construction continued in the later capitals of Khami and Danamombe, incorporating new styles such as decorated retaining walls and terraced platforms. However, by the 19th century, the practice had largely declined as political centers shifted and new building materials were adopted. Despite its importance, traditional knowledge of stone masonry was not systematically documented until the late-20th and early-21st centuries. Efforts by researchers, heritage authorities, and universities in Zimbabwe, including the National University of Science and Technology (NUST), the University of Zimbabwe, and Great Zimbabwe University, are now working to record indigenous building techniques and conservation knowledge to support heritage preservation. == Historiography and the site ==
Historiography and the site
European antiquarians looted and pillaged Great Zimbabwe and similar structures from the 1890s to 1920s, greatly inhibiting the work of future archaeologists. Mired in racial prejudice, Rhodesians found it inconceivable that the structures could have been built be indigenous Africans, stipulating that archaeological discoveries of Persian bowls and Chinese celadon were the result of pre-Bantu settlement. The colonial government pressured archaeologists to deny that the structure was built by indigenous Africans, and the refutation of various fantastical and dehumanising theories ascribing the construction to Jews, Arabs, Phoenicians, and anyone but the Shona, along with other activities of the antiquarians, dominated the historiography of Great Zimbabwe throughout the 20th century. Its African origin only became consensus by the 1950s. Local narratives, despite each clan claiming the site of Great Zimbabwe, are very similar in lamenting both the European antiquarians and the professional archaeologists for desecrating and appropriating a sacred site. They hold the government responsible for the "silence" and "closure" of Great Zimbabwe due to their refusal to "acknowledge the ownership and control of the site by the ancestors and Mwari". ==See also==
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