When the wagons of the Voortrekkers - the Boers, those hardy descendants
of the Dutch - moved into the southern African interior in 1836, on the
Great Trek, their epic journey to escape British control at the Cape,
the wheels of their wagons crunched over carpets of skeletons of those
slain in the Mfecane.
The years 1815 to 1840 were probably the most devastating and violent
period of South Africa's turbulent history. The Mfecane (Zulu) or
Difaqane (Sotho) was a result of many factors including internecine
conflict among the Zulu tribes themselves. Faced with the wrath of the
great King Shaka, Mzilikazi (The Road) fled with his followers, who
became the Matabele, cutting a swathe of destruction, pillage and
genocide across southern Africa from the land of the Zulu (KwaZulu-Natal
today) to the Highveld in the north.
New alliances and allegiances were forged as refugees fled from the path
of the rampaging Mzilikazi, leading to the creation of new nations and
alliances between the arriving Voortrekkers and the enemies of the
Matabele. Finally defeated in 1836 by the Voortrekkers in a nine-day
battle, Mzilikazi crossed the Limpopo River and founded the kingdom of
the Matabele in what is now Zimbabwe.