The Great Zimbabwe State
The Great Zimbabwe State
The Great Zimbabwe State
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The Great Zimbabwe Economy
1. Livestock Keeping
- Livestock keeping was the major economic activity at
the Great Zimbabwe State.
- The king had the largest herd of cattle
- Cattle were a symbol of wealth and status. Socially
those who owned large herds of cattle were respected
and could marry many wives.
- Great Zimbabwe people obtained meat, milk and hides
from livestock keeping.
- Cattle was also used as an item for trade and to pay
bride price.
2. Cultivation
- They cultivated crops like finger millet and sorghum.
- Grain was mainly used to brew beer.
- Beer was used at religious rituals to appease ancestral
spirits.
- The grain was also used for making thick porridge
(sadza)
- In addition to using the grain as food, Great Zimbabwe
people used their grain for local trade and tribute
payment
3. Mining
- They mined gold, copper and iron.
- Iron was used to make tools such as hoes and spear
heads.
- Gold was used to make jewellery for the ruling class.
- It was also an item for trade externally with merchants
from the Eastern Coast who were either Arab-Swahili
traders or Portuguese traders.
- Copper was used to make jewellery too.
- Mining also promoted other economic activities like
cultivation and hunting
Tribute Payment
1. List any six items that were used to pay tribute
in the Great Zimbabwe State.
2. Explain how tribute payment united people in
the Great Zimbabwe State.
3. What was the social importance of tribute
payment?
Tribute Payment
- The people in the Great Zimbabwe State showed their loyalty to the
king through tribute payment.
- Vassal chiefs also showed their allegiance by paying tribute.
- It was paid yearly as a sign of loyalty
- People paid tribute according to what they produced. Different
items such as gold, iron tools, cloth, cattle, grain, animal skins, clay
pots, ivory etc
- Tribute was of political importance because it united the people and
was a check against rebellion for quick action to be taken in order to
keep the state intact.
- Socially it also united the people and distinguished the rulers from
ordinary people through dressing. Rulers dressed differently in items
they got through tribute from hunting and long distance trading.
Trade
- The Great Zimbabwe people traded locally and
externally.
- Externally they traded with Arab-Swahili
merchants or Portuguese from the Eastern
Coast.
- They mainly traded gold and ivory for cloth,
chinaware and other foreign goods.
Hunting
- The Great Zimbabwe people hunted to obtain
meat, ivory and hides.
- Animal skins of importance like the leopard,
cheetah and lion’s were items for tribute
payment.
- Ivory was used for long distance trade and
tribute payment.
Political Organisation
- The king held the highest position in the state. He ruled with
the help of advisors most of whom came from the royal family.
- The outlying area around the Great Zimbabwe were under
chiefs who paid tribute to the king and helped in the
administration of the state.
- The state had an army that could be called for military duty
when need arose. The army defended the state from invaders
and conducted warfare to obtain cattle and to conquer and
incorporate chiefdoms.
- Kingship in the Great Zimbabwe State was hereditary. It was
inherited through the paternal line, thus the state was
patrilineal.
Political Factors
- Succession disputes which caused disunity in the state.
Princes would fight over who was to be the next king
following the death of the king. This divided people as
they would support different individuals.
- Civil wars in the Great Zimbabwe state weakened it and
contributed to its decline.
- Ambitious leaders who wanted to break away from the
state which led to formation of other states such as Torwa
and Mutapa.
- Rebellious tributary chiefs who stopped paying tribute
which weakened the state.
Social Factors
- It is believed that the Great Zimbabwe State
suffered outbreak of diseases due to poor
sanitary conditions which led to high death rate
and forced survivors to abandon the site .
- Due to unfavourable conditions at the Great
Zimbabwe State, people migrated in large
numbers to other areas better for settlement.
Droughts Scarcity of
resources
Succession
Competition disputes
for resources
The Great
Zimbabwe State
Disease and
superstition Shortage of
salt