AmaSwati are native to Southern Africa. The term
bakaNgwane ("Ngwane's people") is still used as an alternative to
emaSwati, to refer to the Swati people. AmaSwati are people who are predominantly descended from Nguni-language speakers. However some of the Swati people originate from
Sotho clans who were also inhabitants of Eswatini. Under the leadership of
Dlamini III who took over from the Maseko and settlement took place in 1750, along the
Pongola River where it cuts through the
Lubombo mountains. Later on, they moved into a region on the
Pongola River, which was in close proximity to the
Ndwandwe people. Dlamini III's successor was
Ngwane III, who is considered the first King of modern Eswatini. He ruled from around 1745 until 1780 at the
Shiselweni region of Eswatini. In 1815,
Sobhuza I became the
king of Eswatini and was responsible for the establishment of Swati power in central Eswatini. Here the Swati people continued the process of expansion by conquering numerous small Sotho and Nguni-speaking tribes to build up a large composite state today called Eswatini.
Sobhuza I's rule occurred during the
Mfecane. Under Sobhuza's leadership, the Nguni and Sotho peoples as well as remnant San groups were integrated into the Swati nation. It was during his rule that the present boundaries of Eswatini were fully under the rule of the Dlamini kings. In the late 1830s, initial contact occurred with the
Boers, who were settling in the territory that would become the
South African Republic. A substantial portion of Swati territory was ceded to the
Transvaal Boers who settled around the
Lydenburg area in the 1840s. The territory of Eswatini, and their king,
Mswati II, were recognized by both the Transvaal and Britain. It was during the rule of Mswati II that the Swati nation was unified. Thereafter, the label "Swati" eventually was applied to all the peoples who gave allegiance to the
Ingwenyama. Later under
Mbandzeni, many commercial, land, and mining concessions were granted to British and Boer settlers. This move led to further loss of land to the South African Republic. The result was that a substantial Swati population ended up residing outside Eswatini in South Africa. The
Pretoria Convention for the Settlement of the Transvaal in 1881 recognized the independence of Eswatini and defined its boundaries. The Ngwenyama was not a signatory, and the Swazi claim that their territory extends in all directions from the present state. Britain claimed authority over Eswatini in 1903, and
independence was regained in 1968. Today, Swati people reside in both Eswatini and South Africa. People of Swati descent in South Africa are typically identifiable by speaking
siSwati, or a dialect of that language. There are also many Swati migrants in South Africa and the United Kingdom. The number of emaSwati in South Africa is slightly larger than that of emaSwati in Eswatini, which is approximately 1.2 million people. In modern-day Eswatini, Swati people include all Eswatini citizens regardless of their ethnicity. ==Identity==