The Vidunda believe they are closely related to the Hehe and
Sagara and claim to be from the Hehe. They had previously successfully repulsed southern attacks by both
Hehe and
Mbunga. They were severely retaliated against by the Germans for their involvement in the
Maji-maji Rebellion in 1905. There are many minor exogamous matri-clans (
kungugo or
lukolo) among the Vidunda. Numerous of these share names with clans in other matrilineal peoples in northeastern Tanzania. Additionally, the Vidunda have identified patrilineal groupings whose sole apparent purpose is to control food bans. Membership in these two categories frequently determines a person's name. Membership in one's own matrilineage (
kungugo or
lukolo) and relationship to one's father's matrilineage dictate the majority of social and economic obligations. While many Vidunda by the 1950s lived in single homesteads, some still live in small hamlets (
kaya) of two or three to more than a dozen dwellings. According to some reports, members of the same matrilineage used to frequently live together under the supervision of a single elder member. Although Schaegelen's findings are contradictory, it appears likely that younger and poorer men settled with their wives' relatives, even though the ideal pattern for successful men was for a man to form a settlement of his offspring and their spouses. These days, most people live locally, and there are reportedly fewer and fewer major hamlets. In pre-colonial times, the Vidunda, Zigula, and Shambala were among the few peoples in eastern Tanzania to have some sort of paramount leader. This chief, known as Mtwa or Mndewa, led warriors in the fight against raiders and was rewarded every year with food, free labour for building houses and cultivating land, and the ivory of all elephants killed within the chiefdom. In addition, he oversaw the area's fertility, cleansing, and rainmaking ceremonies. Men from the Vidunda tribe wore skins that hung over one shoulder and grass kilts. In pre-colonial times, the Vidunda,
Zigula, and
Shambala were among the few peoples in eastern Tanzania to have some sort of larger kingdom. This King, known as
Mtwa or
Mndewa, led warriors in the fight against raiders and was rewarded every year with food, free labour for building houses and cultivating land, and the
ivory of all
elephants killed within the kingdom. In addition, he oversaw the area's fertility, cleansing, and rainmaking ceremonies. In the
Temekwila matri-clan, the kingship is supposed to descend; nevertheless, this law seems to have been regularly disregarded in favour of a chief's son. Elders known as
wasanyila or
wasangira, who were selected from different clans, used to support the king. Some claim that the king nominated them, while others assert that their own people chose them. The Kinship was abolished in 1962 by
Nyerere's government. ==Religion==