Hills and the brilliance of beads: myths and the interpretation of Iron Age sites in southern Africa

Authors

  • E. N. Wilmsen Edinburgh University; University of Texas-Austin; University of the Witwatersrand

Abstract

I consider origin mythology centred on Polombwe hill in Ulungu at the southern tip of Lake Tanganyika in Zambia and parallel myths concerning the Tsodilo Hills in north-western Botswana. The temporality of life marked by birth and death in these myths introduces the concept of time, and the founding of a country introduces the concept of history into the cosmology of southern African societies. In both myths, female associates of autochthonous males become vitalizing elements of the landscape, hence incorporating history with geographic space. We thus see in these myths both the establishment of a proper social order with a legitimate leader at its apex and the association of that order with the land in which it exists. These myths narrate the instituting of social legitimacy in those societies based on a complex and potentially unstable resolution of the inherent contradiction between the two concepts of authority and power: lineage and land.

Published

2009-12-31

How to Cite

Wilmsen, E. N. (2009). Hills and the brilliance of beads: myths and the interpretation of Iron Age sites in southern Africa. Southern African Humanities, 21, 263–274. Retrieved from https://sahumanities.org/index.php/sah/article/view/352