Precolonial era from around A.D. 500 found in Mpumalanga Archeological sites in the Mpumalanga region indicate settlement by humans and their
ancestors dating back 1.7 million years. The Lion Cavern, in
Ngwenya on the
Eswatini border, shows evidence of people mining iron ore in the Mpumalanga region and surrounding areas from at least 28,000 years ago. Evidence from mine shafts and trade goods shows that there was notable industry in tin, copper, gold, iron, ochre, and bronze. The
Lydenburg Heads, from around 500 CE, are Africa's oldest Iron Age artworks south of the equator and were found in Mpumalanga. Evidence from a site near
Mbombela shows evidence of agricultural societies from between the 6th to 17th century.
Mbayi stone-walled sites on the Mpumalanga highveld are indicative of a large precolonial agropastoral society between ~1500 and 1820 CE. These societies became centers of trade, with increasingly large and centralised populations This pattern increased as they connected to the Portuguese trading post in
Maputo Bay. The well established Pedi, Swazi and Zulu kingdoms put up significant resistance against the settlers. The
Pedi fought wars with the
Boers in 1876 (see
Sekhukhune Wars) and the
Zulu fought with
British settlers in 1879 (see
Anglo-Zulu War). These interconnected conflicts played a role in shifting the balance of power in southern Africa to colonial control. During the
South African War, the region was the site of notable battles.
Apartheid When the
National Party came to power in 1948, their policy of
apartheid intensified the segregation that had defined communities in the
Transvaal. Under a policy of forced removals, Black South Africans were evicted from areas reserved for white people and moved into homelands, including
KaNgwane,
KwaNdebele,
Lebowa and
Gazankulu. As the apartheid regime implemented oppressive
policies that defined almost every aspect of life, activists responded with resistance. In 1959, the small town of
Bethal on what is now the Mpumalanga highveld was the center of the
anti-apartheid consumer potato boycott in response to the working conditions Black South African labourers faced on farms in the area. The region was influenced by dynamics in exile and elsewhere in the country, for instance
Black Consciousness, the
Sharpeville Massacre and the
1976 Soweto Uprisings. In the 1980s, under intense repression, youth and labour organizations moblized against the government and townships and Bantustans erupted in political unrest and violence. In 2001, 1,270 hectares of the Boomplaats farm near
Mashishing was the first farm in South Africa to be expropriated. == Geography ==