The Archaeology of Nyanga, Eastern Zimbabwe

Plan Shenjere-Nyabezi
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Abstract

The Nyanga district of eastern Zimbabwe shows a cultural history that is similar to the rest of Zimbabwe and the southern African region. Although largely undated, the Stone Age—from the Early Stone Age, the Middle Stone Age, through to the Later Stone Age hunter-gatherers—is represented at a number of open sites and rock shelters. Later Stone Age rock art, some of which exhibits rather unique artistic attributes and characteristics such as the stripped images, has been recorded in this area. The advent of settled iron-using farming communities is also evident, as elsewhere in southern Africa dating from the 2nd to the 3rd century ce. The well-known Early Farming Communities Ziwa ceramic tradition of southern Africa is in fact named after the type site in this district. The Nyanga district is however particularly famous for its stone constructions that come in a variety of forms, consisting of stone terraced hillsides, which extend for almost sixty-five miles from north to south and cover some twenty-three hundred square miles, as well as stone-lined pit structures, hilltop forts, stone-walled enclosures, and trackways. Dating from the 14th to the early 19th century, the culture is one of the Later Farming Community cultures of Zimbabwe. The stone architecture and several other cultural aspects differ from those of the more famous Zimbabwe Culture, such that, although the two entities partly overlapped chronologically, Nyanga represents a separate cultural development in Zimbabwe’s history. The purpose of the stone structures has been a subject of archaeological debate for some time. The majority of scholars generally agree that the terracing and pit structures were constructed for agricultural and animal herding practices. However, since the early 2010s, some scholars have somewhat unconvincingly argued that gold-mining and processing were the primary motivation for the Nyanga architectural remains. The traditional view of the communities associated with the Nyanga stone architecture has largely seen them as representing basic peasant agricultural people lacking complex sociopolitical organization. However, examination of the scale and extent of the architecture, including consideration of the size of the enclosures and their spatial distribution, strongly suggests that the Nyanga people were organized as fairly complex sociopolitical formations that are archaeologically consistent with the chiefdom level, at the very least.
津巴布韦东部的尼扬加考古
津巴布韦东部的尼扬加地区的文化历史与津巴布韦其他地区和南部非洲地区相似。石器时代——从早期石器时代到中期石器时代,一直到晚期石器时代的狩猎采集者——在许多开放的遗址和岩石避难所中都有体现。该地区记录了石器时代后期的岩石艺术,其中一些表现出相当独特的艺术属性和特征,如剥离图像。使用铁的定居农业社区的出现也很明显,就像非洲南部的其他地方可以追溯到公元2世纪到3世纪。南部非洲著名的早期农业社区Ziwa陶瓷传统实际上是以该地区的类型遗址命名的。然而,尼扬加地区以其各种形式的石头建筑而闻名,包括石头梯田山坡,从北向南延伸近65英里,占地约2300平方英里,以及石头衬砌的坑结构,山顶堡垒,石墙围墙和轨道。这种文化可以追溯到14世纪到19世纪初,是津巴布韦后来的农业社区文化之一。石头建筑和其他一些文化方面不同于那些更著名的津巴布韦文化,因此,尽管这两个实体在时间上部分重叠,但尼扬加代表了津巴布韦历史上一个独立的文化发展。这些石头结构的用途一直是考古学争论的话题。大多数学者普遍认为梯田和坑结构是为了农牧活动而建造的。然而,自2010年代初以来,一些学者认为黄金开采和加工是Nyanga建筑遗迹的主要动机。传统观点认为,与Nyanga石制建筑相关的社区在很大程度上代表了缺乏复杂社会政治组织的基本农民农业人口。然而,对建筑规模和范围的考察,包括围墙的大小和它们的空间分布,强烈地表明,尼扬加人被组织成相当复杂的社会政治形态,至少在考古学上与酋长阶层是一致的。
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