Ndwandwe chieftaincies were part of the
Northern Nguni migration and settled in the area between the
Pongola River and the
Black Umfolozi River during the eighteenth century. Over time, the Ndwandwe subjugated and incorporated the surrounding groups. By the later part of the eighteenth century, under the leadership of their king, Yaka, they had established themselves in a dominant position. North of the Ndwandwe lived the
Ngwane people, while to the south were the
Mthethwa,
Zulu, and other groups. The Ndwandwe, with the Mthethwa, were a significant power in present-day
Zululand at the turn of the nineteenth century, while the Ngwane (who would later become known as the
Swazi) were the dominant group to the north.
Zwide kaLanga (c. 1758–1820/1825), the king of the Ndwandwe from about 1805 to 1820, had several royal settlements, with his main capital on Magudu Mountain south of present-day
Pongola. Under the leadership of Zwide kaLanga, the Ndwandwe destroyed the Mthethwa under their king
Dingiswayo, in 1817/1818 when their armies met at Mbuzi Hill south of Magudu. This left Zwide as the most powerful leader in this region. The power vacuum created by the destruction of the Mthethwa was subsequently filled by a lieutenant of Dingiswayo,
Shaka Zulu of the Zulu tribe. In a common front against the Ndwandwe, Shaka gathered the remnants of the Mthethwa and other surrounding tribes to wage war against them. In the first encounter of the
Zulu Civil War (also known as the Zulu-Ndwandwe War) Shaka’s forces survived the
Battle of Gqokli Hill in 1818. In 1819, Zwide launched a second expedition against the Zulu, but Shaka changed his strategy by allowing the Ndwandwe army to enter his territory and then engaging in
guerrilla warfare. A shortage of supplies forced the Ndandwe to decide to return home. During this retreat in early 1820, while they were crossing the
Mhlatuze River, the Ndwandwe forces were divided and decisively defeated in the
Battle of Mhlatuze River. This defeat of the Ndwandwe forces, along with the subsequent retaliatory campaigns in which the Zulu destroyed all settlements and killed anyone they encountered, led to the fragmentation of the Ndwandwe nation over the next five years. There are different accounts regarding the fate of King Zwide. According to the
oral traditions of Ndwandwe descendants from the Pongola Valley, Zwide was killed not long after the Battle of Mhlatuze River by Shaka's soldiers on the mountain that now bears his name, Zwide, located south of present-day Pongola. This site is not far from where his royal capital was on Magudu Mountain. Shortly afterward, he was buried on the southern slopes of Magudu Mountain in a forest considered sacred by the AmaNdwandwe, where other Ndwandwe leaders are also buried. Another version states that he fled northwards with some of his followers to the upper reaches of the
Komati River, where he died in 1825. Zwide's generals and sons, in an effort to survive, led segments of the Ndwandwe people northwards in the aftermath of their defeat and persecution by Shaka. One of these groups, under
Soshangane, established the
Gaza Empire in present-day central
Mozambique, while another, under
Zwangendaba, settled in present-day
Malawi as the
waNgoni. Others established themselves as chiefs of note in present-day
Eswatini and
Zambia. The remaining majority of the Ndwandwe was absorbed into the
Zulu Kingdom. Thus, the
Mfecane contributed to the creation and spread of a lasting Ndwandwe legacy across Southern Africa. ==Languages==