Forgotten World
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
If you are not affiliated with a college or university, and are interested in watching this film, please register as an individual and login to rent this film. Already registered? Login to rent this film. This film is also available on our home streaming platform, OVID.tv.
The Bokoni are a historic maze of stone circles, terraces and engravings linked by stone passages located in South Africa around the Mpumalanga escarpment between Ohrigstad and Carolina. They index successive stages of homesteads built by the Koni people over many centuries and provide significant insight into the migration, settlement and agricultural patterns in pre-colonial Africa. At this time, they have not yet been declared 'world heritage' sites; most are found on privately owned land and many have been destroyed.
'With vivid immediacy, this film brings the excitement of investigating a long-lost society to the screen... To present scholarly precision and evidence-based argument in such a striking manner, but without sensationalism, is a rare skill. This is ethnographic/historical archaeological filmmaking at its best.' - Deborah James, Professor of Social Anthropology at the London School of Economics
'A powerful film about people, place and the past... [The Bakoni's] presence survives in an extraordinary physical record, beautifully filmed and instructively explored.' - Colin Bundy, Professor and former Director of the School of Oriental and African Studies London University at Oxford University
'Vividly illustrates a lost African civilization in Southern Africa, [telling] the fascinating story of the Bokoni people... The film explores Koni society with stunning visual images from the air and the ground. ' - William Beinart, Rhodes Professor of African Studies at Oxford University
'This wonderful documentary uses aerial and ground photography so we can see what has hitherto been largely ignored... Watch this documentary and you will want to read [Peter Delius's] book-and you will want to go and see it all for yourself. - Graham Furniss, Professor and former Director of the African Studies Department at the University of London
Citation
Main credits
Ella, Terri (film director)
Ella, Terri (screenwriter)
Delius, Peter (screenwriter)
Masebe, Florence (narrator)
Other credits
Director of photography, Brendan Barnes; editor, Jo Gibbon; music composition, Murray Anderson.
Distributor subjects
Archaeology; Environment; Geology; History (World); South Africa; Urban Planning and DesignKeywords
WEBVTT
00:00:03.083 --> 00:00:05.750
Mpumalanga, South Africa.
00:00:05.750 --> 00:00:09.041
A place of infinite
and diverse beauty.
00:00:09.041 --> 00:00:11.999
Of abundant
natural resources.
00:00:11.999 --> 00:00:14.999
From the vast expanses
of the Highveld,
00:00:14.999 --> 00:00:18.500
down into the rolling hills
and open valleys
00:00:18.500 --> 00:00:19.999
of the majestic
escarpment
00:00:19.999 --> 00:00:23.959
it is no surprise
that many over time
00:00:23.959 --> 00:00:27.625
have settled here
and called it home.
00:00:27.625 --> 00:00:29.917
But beyond its
immediate beauty
00:00:29.917 --> 00:00:34.417
there is something even more
remarkable about this place.
00:00:34.417 --> 00:00:36.834
Look closely
and you will notice
00:00:36.834 --> 00:00:38.542
bits of building
and stone,
00:00:38.542 --> 00:00:42.917
sections of stonewalling
amongst clusters of trees
00:00:42.917 --> 00:00:45.250
and long lines
of stone ridging
00:00:45.250 --> 00:00:47.125
along the hillsides.
00:00:47.125 --> 00:00:48.999
Take a walk through
the space
00:00:48.999 --> 00:00:52.166
and you may come across
mysterious engravings
00:00:52.166 --> 00:00:53.250
in the stone.
00:00:53.250 --> 00:00:56.875
And then if you fly over
these rolling hills
00:00:56.875 --> 00:00:59.166
you will see
the same engravings
00:00:59.166 --> 00:01:02.166
mirrored in endless
stone circles
00:01:02.166 --> 00:01:04.291
set in mystifying mazes,
00:01:04.291 --> 00:01:07.375
linked by long,
stone passages.
00:01:07.375 --> 00:01:10.375
A ghostly web
of intricate patterns
00:01:10.375 --> 00:01:15.583
that blanket the Mpumalanga
Escarpment and beyond.
00:01:15.583 --> 00:01:24.417
♪
00:01:24.417 --> 00:01:27.417
As a teenager
I grew up around uh,
00:01:27.417 --> 00:01:32.999
these stone walls
of this mission station here.
00:01:32.999 --> 00:01:37.291
That is something which
I thought was unique
00:01:37.291 --> 00:01:38.667
of *.
00:01:38.667 --> 00:01:40.166
But lo and behold,
00:01:40.166 --> 00:01:42.999
my attention was drawn
to the existence
00:01:42.999 --> 00:01:46.667
of these stone walls
on the escarpment.
00:01:46.667 --> 00:01:50.500
And I was taken on
a helicopter,
00:01:50.500 --> 00:01:55.500
bird\'\'s eye view
of those stone walls.
00:01:55.500 --> 00:01:58.500
♪
00:01:58.500 --> 00:02:01.333
It was a
mystic discovery
00:02:01.333 --> 00:02:05.000
that I was eager
00:02:05.000 --> 00:02:07.792
to know and understand.
00:02:07.792 --> 00:02:11.542
Those who were responsible
for those structures
00:02:11.542 --> 00:02:17.999
that lavishly string over
the entire escarpment
00:02:17.999 --> 00:02:20.917
of Mpumalanga.
00:02:20.917 --> 00:02:22.625
And the way it
presents itself,
00:02:22.625 --> 00:02:25.999
you can see that here
there was quite
00:02:25.999 --> 00:02:30.291
a civilization
that we do not know about.
00:02:30.291 --> 00:03:14.667
♪
00:03:14.667 --> 00:03:18.166
Historian Peter Delius
has spent the better part
00:03:18.166 --> 00:03:20.458
of his academic career
making sense
00:03:20.458 --> 00:03:23.917
of the history of Mpumalanga
and its people.
00:03:23.917 --> 00:03:25.917
When I started
asking people
00:03:25.917 --> 00:03:27.959
what they were about
and what they were
00:03:27.959 --> 00:03:30.458
I discovered that there
was an enormously powerful
00:03:30.458 --> 00:03:32.625
popular narrative
in the area
00:03:32.625 --> 00:03:34.166
which started from
the assumption
00:03:34.166 --> 00:03:36.709
that because these were
stone structures
00:03:36.709 --> 00:03:39.458
they couldn\'\'t possibly be
built by Africans because,
00:03:39.458 --> 00:03:40.999
of course, Africans,
I was assured,
00:03:40.999 --> 00:03:44.583
never built in stone which is,
of course, complete nonsense.
00:03:44.583 --> 00:03:47.166
And that therefore
they could only be explained
00:03:47.166 --> 00:03:51.125
as a result of the work
of people who came from afar.
00:03:51.125 --> 00:03:53.917
And there were a variety
of candidates for that,
00:03:53.917 --> 00:03:55.709
one of the most dominant
is the suggestion
00:03:55.709 --> 00:03:57.999
that ancient Indians
had settled here,
00:03:57.999 --> 00:04:01.041
colonized the area and that
these were their temples.
00:04:01.041 --> 00:04:04.834
But there\'\'d been a variety
of variations on that
00:04:04.834 --> 00:04:06.999
including,
at the more exotic end,
00:04:06.999 --> 00:04:09.667
the idea that these were
sites constructed
00:04:09.667 --> 00:04:11.875
by people from
outer space
00:04:11.875 --> 00:04:14.083
or that they are portals
where people move
00:04:14.083 --> 00:04:16.000
between spiritual zones.
00:04:16.000 --> 00:04:17.166
So there\'\'s this
extraordinary
00:04:17.166 --> 00:04:21.375
vibrant literature out there
which has books and websites
00:04:21.375 --> 00:04:23.166
and lots of adherence.
00:04:23.166 --> 00:04:26.959
which is firmly wedded to
what we\'\'ve come to describe
00:04:26.959 --> 00:04:28.999
as the exotic theory.
00:04:28.999 --> 00:04:31.792
There is an underlying notion
that links
00:04:31.792 --> 00:04:33.458
these exotic theories.
00:04:33.458 --> 00:04:36.500
That because these sites
represent change
00:04:36.500 --> 00:04:38.291
and that they are built
in stone
00:04:38.291 --> 00:04:40.999
they certainly cannot be
the work of Africans.
00:04:40.999 --> 00:04:44.000
Because they see African
culture aesthetic
00:04:44.000 --> 00:04:47.542
they assume that change
or development in Africa
00:04:47.542 --> 00:04:49.291
must have come from
outside.
00:04:49.291 --> 00:04:53.500
Now, of course, that\'\'s
a deeply racist perception
00:04:53.500 --> 00:04:55.999
and it\'\'s one which is
strongly associated
00:04:55.999 --> 00:04:56.917
with colonial rule.
00:04:56.917 --> 00:04:59.625
And it\'\'s been trotted out
over and over again
00:04:59.625 --> 00:05:02.083
to explain everything
from the Benin Bronzes,
00:05:02.083 --> 00:05:04.458
to great Zimbabwe,
to the Pyramids.
00:05:04.458 --> 00:05:06.375
This perception often
goes hand in hand
00:05:06.375 --> 00:05:11.083
with a belief that Africans
practiced rudimentary farming
00:05:11.083 --> 00:05:13.041
and lived semi nomadic lives.
00:05:13.041 --> 00:05:14.792
An idea at odds
with the prolific
00:05:14.792 --> 00:05:19.999
and enduring stone structures
that blanket this landscape.
00:05:19.999 --> 00:05:23.000
The exotic narrative
has almost drowned out
00:05:23.000 --> 00:05:24.917
other explanatory voices,
00:05:24.917 --> 00:05:27.667
voices rooted in almost
a century\'\'s worth
00:05:27.667 --> 00:05:31.834
of academic research
and work in the area.
00:05:31.834 --> 00:05:35.750
Over the last decade
important new discoveries
00:05:35.750 --> 00:05:36.709
have been made.
00:05:36.709 --> 00:05:39.667
New understandings
that are reshaping thought
00:05:39.667 --> 00:05:45.166
about the past and future
of African societies.
00:05:45.166 --> 00:05:48.333
I first got interested
or aware of these sites
00:05:48.333 --> 00:05:51.458
in about 2005 when I was
first asked
00:05:51.458 --> 00:05:54.208
by the Mpumalanga government
to do a major project
00:05:54.208 --> 00:05:56.000
on the history and heritage
of the area.
00:05:56.000 --> 00:05:58.834
Started traveling throughout
and looking at sites.
00:05:58.834 --> 00:06:00.999
So I started asking
more broadly about it
00:06:00.999 --> 00:06:03.375
and got in contact
with archaeologists
00:06:03.375 --> 00:06:06.417
who put me in contact
with a longstanding
00:06:06.417 --> 00:06:08.750
archeological record
of these sites
00:06:08.750 --> 00:06:09.792
and archeological research,
00:06:09.792 --> 00:06:11.959
but also expressed the view
that these sites
00:06:11.959 --> 00:06:15.458
had been much neglected in
recent years by archaeology.
00:06:15.458 --> 00:06:17.625
Certainly historians
had neglected them.
00:06:17.625 --> 00:06:20.875
So we put together
a project which would involve
00:06:20.875 --> 00:06:22.125
historians and
archaeologists
00:06:22.125 --> 00:06:24.417
and a much wider group
of academics
00:06:24.417 --> 00:06:27.208
to try and better understand
the nature of these sites.
00:06:27.208 --> 00:06:30.875
And really, ever since then
we\'\'ve been working together
00:06:30.875 --> 00:06:32.417
trying to create
a more substantial,
00:06:32.417 --> 00:06:36.999
credible view of what
these sites are all about.
00:06:36.999 --> 00:06:38.999
The pieces of this
astonishing puzzle
00:06:38.999 --> 00:06:41.417
are finally
coming into view,
00:06:41.417 --> 00:06:43.959
thanks to a team
of investigators
00:06:43.959 --> 00:06:47.999
and their work.
00:06:47.999 --> 00:06:51.375
Written evidence collected
about this stonework
00:06:51.375 --> 00:06:53.750
dates back to the 1860s
00:06:53.750 --> 00:06:56.000
when German missionaries
began to collect
00:06:56.000 --> 00:06:59.500
oral traditions from the people
living in the area.
00:06:59.500 --> 00:07:03.125
Academics were first
drawn to the region in 1918
00:07:03.125 --> 00:07:07.208
by these curious engravings
on the farm, Boomplaats,
00:07:07.208 --> 00:07:08.999
just outside Lydenburg.
00:07:08.999 --> 00:07:12.000
In 1936 a young
linguistic student,
00:07:12.000 --> 00:07:15.625
CW Prinsloo,
recorded local oral histories
00:07:15.625 --> 00:07:18.583
and produced a map
to illustrate the movement
00:07:18.583 --> 00:07:19.667
of people from the south.
00:07:19.667 --> 00:07:23.208
But it was only in 1939
that the first comprehensive
00:07:23.208 --> 00:07:26.917
archaeological investigation
was undertaken
00:07:26.917 --> 00:07:27.875
by EC von Hoepen.
00:07:27.875 --> 00:07:30.917
Who, after mapping ruins
and recording engravings,
00:07:30.917 --> 00:07:34.917
concluded that they were built
by black Africans.
00:07:34.917 --> 00:07:36.834
Fast forward to the 1960s
00:07:36.834 --> 00:07:39.166
and the next substantial
research program
00:07:39.166 --> 00:07:43.500
where archaeologists plotted
the distribution of sites
00:07:43.500 --> 00:07:44.999
using aerial photographs.
00:07:44.999 --> 00:07:48.999
This offered a first overview
of the distribution
00:07:48.999 --> 00:07:50.500
of stone ruins.
00:07:50.500 --> 00:07:55.542
The first excavations produced
pottery, iron implements,
00:07:55.542 --> 00:07:58.999
sorghum seeds, and bones
of cattle and sheep.
00:07:58.999 --> 00:08:02.000
Helpful to get a sense of who
might have occupied
00:08:02.000 --> 00:08:03.667
these settlements.
00:08:03.667 --> 00:08:05.999
So there was a history
of archaeological work
00:08:05.999 --> 00:08:07.583
which could be gone back to.
00:08:07.583 --> 00:08:09.500
But there was also
a massive collection
00:08:09.500 --> 00:08:12.625
of archival
and oral material
00:08:12.625 --> 00:08:14.291
which I\'\'d been through
over the years,
00:08:14.291 --> 00:08:17.375
but with a primary focus
on the Pedi kingdom.
00:08:17.375 --> 00:08:20.875
So I went back to that
and reworked my way
00:08:20.875 --> 00:08:22.583
through all of that
material
00:08:22.583 --> 00:08:24.917
and found,
to my consternation,
00:08:24.917 --> 00:08:26.417
that actually if you were
reading it
00:08:26.417 --> 00:08:28.625
with a different
question in mind
00:08:28.625 --> 00:08:30.333
there was a huge amount
of material
00:08:30.333 --> 00:08:32.750
on these societies
to the south
00:08:32.750 --> 00:08:35.709
and they were clearly
enormously significant
00:08:35.709 --> 00:08:36.917
because they keep
cropping up
00:08:36.917 --> 00:08:39.999
at critical moments
in the history of this region.
00:08:39.999 --> 00:08:42.999
But as so often with
the losers in history,
00:08:42.999 --> 00:08:44.667
the people that get defeated,
00:08:44.667 --> 00:08:46.917
the people who don\'\'t are not
in a position
00:08:46.917 --> 00:08:49.417
to tell their stories
in the present.
00:08:49.417 --> 00:08:50.917
That history gets lost.
00:08:50.917 --> 00:08:53.999
So part of what we\'\'ve been
in the process of doing
00:08:53.999 --> 00:08:55.709
is by bringing historical
evidence
00:08:55.709 --> 00:08:57.750
and archaeological
evidence together
00:08:57.750 --> 00:09:00.875
recovering this
extraordinary history
00:09:00.875 --> 00:09:05.041
of this extraordinary world
which has been lost
00:09:05.041 --> 00:09:11.041
for so long to a contemporary
understanding about the past.
00:09:11.041 --> 00:09:12.417
♪
00:09:12.417 --> 00:09:14.999
So now what exactly
are we looking at?
00:09:14.999 --> 00:09:17.208
Well, this beautiful
stone walled world
00:09:17.208 --> 00:09:20.999
is a vivid reminder
of extraordinary achievement.
00:09:20.999 --> 00:09:22.999
It is the visible legacy
of a period
00:09:22.999 --> 00:09:24.999
of innovation
in farming methods
00:09:24.999 --> 00:09:27.999
based on a massive
and ongoing investment
00:09:27.999 --> 00:09:31.375
in infrastructure
fashioned from stone.
00:09:31.375 --> 00:09:34.291
The use of extensive
terracing and fertilizer
00:09:34.291 --> 00:09:35.959
by these farmers
and herders
00:09:35.959 --> 00:09:37.458
is unique
in South Africa
00:09:37.458 --> 00:09:40.166
and allowed them to create
the largest system
00:09:40.166 --> 00:09:43.417
of intensive farming
in pre-colonial Southern
00:09:43.417 --> 00:09:44.999
and Eastern Africa.
00:09:44.999 --> 00:09:47.166
The world they crafted
from a pioneering use
00:09:47.166 --> 00:09:50.917
of local resources lasted
for hundreds of years
00:09:50.917 --> 00:09:53.333
and left this indelible
mark on the land
00:09:53.333 --> 00:09:56.250
which has at long last
started to attract
00:09:56.250 --> 00:09:58.999
the attention
it deserves.
00:09:58.999 --> 00:10:02.041
All evidence to date
points to the stone circles
00:10:02.041 --> 00:10:05.583
as homesteads where people
actually lived
00:10:05.583 --> 00:10:07.667
and where they kept
their cattle.
00:10:07.667 --> 00:10:09.999
Some homesteads
are small and simple.
00:10:09.999 --> 00:10:12.875
Others are elaborate
and complicated.
00:10:12.875 --> 00:10:13.917
Some are isolated.
00:10:13.917 --> 00:10:16.709
But many are set among
an intricate network
00:10:16.709 --> 00:10:19.999
of terraces where land
was cultivated
00:10:19.999 --> 00:10:22.999
and the walled pathways
that link the homesteads
00:10:22.999 --> 00:10:25.291
are roads
running between them.
00:10:25.291 --> 00:10:30.417
Ways of moving cattle
in and out.
00:10:30.417 --> 00:10:32.625
Having pioneered research
on pre-colonial
00:10:32.625 --> 00:10:35.417
black farming communities
throughout Southern Africa
00:10:35.417 --> 00:10:38.999
since the 1960s,
archaeologist Tim Maggs
00:10:38.999 --> 00:10:41.208
has spent many hours
in Mpumalanga
00:10:41.208 --> 00:10:43.999
making sense of
settlement patterns.
00:10:43.999 --> 00:10:46.250
What we\'\'re looking at
down here, of course,
00:10:46.250 --> 00:10:50.250
is one of the typical
cattle road systems.
00:10:50.250 --> 00:10:52.999
You don\'\'t bother to build
stone walls like that
00:10:52.999 --> 00:10:54.208
unless you\'\'re protecting
something.
00:10:54.208 --> 00:10:56.999
If it was open felt
you wouldn\'\'t build a road there.
00:10:56.999 --> 00:11:01.000
So we can be quite sure that
on both sides of this road
00:11:01.000 --> 00:11:03.583
it was cultivated.
00:11:03.583 --> 00:11:06.667
This is about uh,
100, 150 meters long
00:11:06.667 --> 00:11:11.959
of cattle road coming through
cultivated areas and uh,
00:11:11.959 --> 00:11:14.959
around here you can see
one of the little stone lines,
00:11:14.959 --> 00:11:19.625
not really a terrace, but
the same effect as a terrace,
00:11:19.625 --> 00:11:22.125
to catch the soil
and prevent erosion.
00:11:22.125 --> 00:11:23.750
And there\'\'s a whole string
of them
00:11:23.750 --> 00:11:25.625
running up this hill here.
00:11:25.625 --> 00:11:27.333
In pre-colonial
Southern Africa
00:11:27.333 --> 00:11:28.999
straight lines
and right angles
00:11:28.999 --> 00:11:31.208
were not the way in which
people arranged
00:11:31.208 --> 00:11:33.000
the spaces
they lived in.
00:11:33.000 --> 00:11:36.999
Instead circular shapes
dominated the arrangement
00:11:36.999 --> 00:11:38.333
of domestic space.
00:11:38.333 --> 00:11:41.125
The individual house,
the cattle pen,
00:11:41.125 --> 00:11:42.917
and the homestead as a whole.
00:11:42.917 --> 00:11:45.417
While the layout of parks,
roads and fields
00:11:45.417 --> 00:11:48.291
followed the contours
and other natural features
00:11:48.291 --> 00:11:50.417
of the landscape.
00:11:50.417 --> 00:11:54.917
So the road carries on
right into the homestead.
00:11:54.917 --> 00:11:57.999
Road is still here
because on both sides,
00:11:57.999 --> 00:11:58.999
now we\'\'re inside
the homestead,
00:11:58.999 --> 00:12:00.999
but we\'\'re in the outer ring
of the homestead
00:12:00.999 --> 00:12:03.999
and this is where the domestic
areas would have been.
00:12:03.999 --> 00:12:06.999
The houses and the grain stores,
et cetera.
00:12:06.999 --> 00:12:11.458
And then the road
carries on through.
00:12:11.458 --> 00:12:14.999
And it ends up
in this central cattle pen.
00:12:14.999 --> 00:12:17.667
This was right in
the center of the homestead.
00:12:17.667 --> 00:12:19.999
Every homestead has
a central pen.
00:12:19.999 --> 00:12:23.999
This one has, in addition,
a series of uh,
00:12:23.999 --> 00:12:25.999
surrounding attached pens
00:12:25.999 --> 00:12:28.208
attached to the outside
of this ring uh,
00:12:28.208 --> 00:12:31.999
forming four or five,
one, two, three, four,
00:12:31.999 --> 00:12:36.917
five additional enclosures
attached to the outside of the,
00:12:36.917 --> 00:12:39.291
of the central one.
00:12:39.291 --> 00:12:41.999
Connecting over
10,000 square kilometers
00:12:41.999 --> 00:12:45.250
of the Mpumalanga Escarpment
from Carolina
00:12:45.250 --> 00:12:46.999
to Ohrigstad and beyond
00:12:46.999 --> 00:12:51.333
these settlements were inhabited
between around 1500
00:12:51.333 --> 00:12:52.291
and 1820.
00:12:52.291 --> 00:12:54.999
A period which has not
previously attracted
00:12:54.999 --> 00:12:57.166
the attention it deserves.
00:12:57.166 --> 00:12:59.417
Recent research suggests
that the story
00:12:59.417 --> 00:13:02.667
of these times and settlements
played an important part
00:13:02.667 --> 00:13:04.875
in setting the scene
for the emergence
00:13:04.875 --> 00:13:06.625
of powerful
African states
00:13:06.625 --> 00:13:09.917
as well as new labor
and farming systems.
00:13:09.917 --> 00:13:12.999
So now, who were
these innovative farmers?
00:13:12.999 --> 00:13:17.959
There\'\'s a word that\'\'s
embedded in some language,
00:13:17.959 --> 00:13:20.792
in Northern and Southern
language
00:13:20.792 --> 00:13:23.875
which is Bokoni.
00:13:23.875 --> 00:13:25.917
Fed into a group of people.
00:13:25.917 --> 00:13:30.041
But it is also used
in its singular,
00:13:30.041 --> 00:13:30.999
Bokoni.
00:13:30.999 --> 00:13:32.542
Bokoni,
Bokoni.
00:13:32.542 --> 00:13:34.583
It is very much there.
00:13:34.583 --> 00:13:37.583
When I inquired
someone said to me,
00:13:37.583 --> 00:13:43.375
no, Bokoni is from Bokoni,
Bokoni means south.
00:13:43.375 --> 00:13:47.625
So Bokoni means
people of the south.
00:13:47.625 --> 00:13:50.000
But south of where?
00:13:50.000 --> 00:13:51.999
And where is
that south?
00:13:51.999 --> 00:13:54.041
It\'\'s never been clear
to me.
00:13:54.041 --> 00:13:56.542
And I wish
somebody could come
00:13:56.542 --> 00:13:59.959
with a more
00:13:59.959 --> 00:14:04.709
plausible explanation
of where
00:14:04.709 --> 00:14:08.417
Bokoni is,
who Bokoni are,
00:14:08.417 --> 00:14:10.959
and what it means to be
a Bokoni.
00:14:10.959 --> 00:14:15.291
♪
00:14:15.291 --> 00:14:19.750
By the time we\'\'ve come to
describe this area as Bokoni
00:14:19.750 --> 00:14:21.999
because what we\'\'re
describing is an area,
00:14:21.999 --> 00:14:26.792
we\'\'re talking about
the area of the settlements.
00:14:26.792 --> 00:14:29.999
So African history tends to be
seen in terms of tribes
00:14:29.999 --> 00:14:32.709
moving to and fro
with fixed cultures,
00:14:32.709 --> 00:14:35.583
static, unchanging over
long periods of time.
00:14:35.583 --> 00:14:39.083
What we\'\'re seeing here is
groups moving into this area,
00:14:39.083 --> 00:14:41.834
probably from a variety
of different regions,
00:14:41.834 --> 00:14:45.166
adjusting to this environment
and this lifestyle,
00:14:45.166 --> 00:14:47.999
becoming part
of this farming world,
00:14:47.999 --> 00:14:49.667
and developing,
to some extent,
00:14:49.667 --> 00:14:52.875
a common culture
in the process.
00:14:52.875 --> 00:14:55.542
We have evidence of forms
of chieftainship in this area,
00:14:55.542 --> 00:14:58.333
we\'\'re pretty sure that
the societies were organized
00:14:58.333 --> 00:14:59.166
in those terms,
00:14:59.166 --> 00:15:01.875
but there\'\'s very little evidence
of a highly centralized
00:15:01.875 --> 00:15:06.375
political system of a king
that dominated the whole area.
00:15:06.375 --> 00:15:10.417
And part of what\'\'s remarkable
about Bokoni area
00:15:10.417 --> 00:15:12.458
is this combination of,
in fact,
00:15:12.458 --> 00:15:15.166
a relatively uncentralized,
00:15:15.166 --> 00:15:17.999
not highly politically
centralized area
00:15:17.999 --> 00:15:20.999
with an area of enormous
economic innovation.
00:15:20.999 --> 00:15:22.166
I mean, these people are
doing really
00:15:22.166 --> 00:15:24.125
very interestingly
different things
00:15:24.125 --> 00:15:28.083
with the kind of farming
that they\'\'re practicing.
00:15:28.083 --> 00:15:31.709
Many black farming communities
of the last five, six,
00:15:31.709 --> 00:15:36.917
700 years expanded from
lower lying countryside,
00:15:36.917 --> 00:15:37.875
savannah, essentially.
00:15:37.875 --> 00:15:39.999
Gradually moved into
the grassland areas
00:15:39.999 --> 00:15:41.291
which presented problems
for them
00:15:41.291 --> 00:15:43.959
because from a structural
point of view
00:15:43.959 --> 00:15:45.583
there\'\'s very little
timber.
00:15:45.583 --> 00:15:47.999
And one of the things they had
to do in these areas
00:15:47.999 --> 00:15:50.208
was to find alternative
building materials
00:15:50.208 --> 00:15:52.583
and hence,
all the stone walls.
00:15:52.583 --> 00:15:55.041
Building in stone,
as one might imagine,
00:15:55.041 --> 00:15:56.291
is labor intensive.
00:15:56.291 --> 00:15:59.999
It suggests permanence
and investment in the land.
00:15:59.999 --> 00:16:02.333
It makes sense then that
the people of Bokoni
00:16:02.333 --> 00:16:05.834
were aiming not to have to go
anywhere in a hurry.
00:16:05.834 --> 00:16:07.625
The availability of stone,
perhaps,
00:16:07.625 --> 00:16:11.999
also ultimately contributed
to successful farming.
00:16:11.999 --> 00:16:15.208
The reason why this is such
a densely built up area
00:16:15.208 --> 00:16:17.041
is because of
these rocks.
00:16:17.041 --> 00:16:18.250
These are volcanic rocks
00:16:18.250 --> 00:16:20.750
and when they break down
into soil
00:16:20.750 --> 00:16:24.750
they produce the richest soils
in this part of the world.
00:16:24.750 --> 00:16:27.625
Mats Widgren
is a professor of geography
00:16:27.625 --> 00:16:28.999
at Stockholm University.
00:16:28.999 --> 00:16:31.959
Since the mid 1970s he has
researched
00:16:31.959 --> 00:16:34.667
agricultural landscapes
from the Iron Age
00:16:34.667 --> 00:16:36.709
to the present
in Scandinavia
00:16:36.709 --> 00:16:39.792
and in Eastern
and Southern Africa.
00:16:39.792 --> 00:16:42.917
Their farming system
is unique in the way
00:16:42.917 --> 00:16:46.083
that they have combined
arable agriculture
00:16:46.083 --> 00:16:46.750
with livestock.
00:16:46.750 --> 00:16:49.999
Everything points to
the direction that the arable
00:16:49.999 --> 00:16:52.959
and the livestock
is integrated.
00:16:52.959 --> 00:16:54.041
These cattle roads.
00:16:54.041 --> 00:16:57.000
They indicated that there must
have been a daily movement
00:16:57.000 --> 00:17:00.166
of cattle in and out,
back to the homestead,
00:17:00.166 --> 00:17:01.999
out on the common
grazings.
00:17:01.999 --> 00:17:04.999
This shows that they\'\'re
invested
00:17:04.999 --> 00:17:07.917
in this process
of bringing cattle
00:17:07.917 --> 00:17:09.458
in and out,
in and out, in and out.
00:17:09.458 --> 00:17:13.333
And that\'\'s why we think
that there was manuring.
00:17:13.333 --> 00:17:16.750
Because uh, why did they
bring these cattle in
00:17:16.750 --> 00:17:17.583
every time
all the time?
00:17:17.583 --> 00:17:20.709
Why didn\'\'t they just keep them
out on the common grazing?
00:17:20.709 --> 00:17:24.542
And we also do not find
any manure remnants
00:17:24.542 --> 00:17:25.250
or anything like that.
00:17:25.250 --> 00:17:25.917
So they must be,
00:17:25.917 --> 00:17:28.709
assume they must have
used it on their fields.
00:17:28.709 --> 00:17:32.792
And that is real unique
for Southern Africa.
00:17:32.792 --> 00:17:34.041
The Bokoni settlements
are the remains
00:17:34.041 --> 00:17:38.000
of just one of many farming
communities in this region.
00:17:38.000 --> 00:17:40.250
What sets them apart
are the vast amounts
00:17:40.250 --> 00:17:41.709
of walling,
terracing,
00:17:41.709 --> 00:17:44.000
and modification
to the landscape
00:17:44.000 --> 00:17:45.583
to make it
more productive
00:17:45.583 --> 00:17:48.000
that the people
of Bokoni initiated.
00:17:48.000 --> 00:17:49.417
It\'\'s one of
the very biggest,
00:17:49.417 --> 00:17:52.291
it\'\'s a very large
farming community
00:17:52.291 --> 00:17:54.458
that has disappeared.
00:17:54.458 --> 00:17:55.999
They eventually left
this land,
00:17:55.999 --> 00:17:58.917
but not without leaving
clues about their world.
00:17:58.917 --> 00:18:03.166
Just beyond Lydenburg you will
find evocative expressions
00:18:03.166 --> 00:18:04.542
of this society.
00:18:04.542 --> 00:18:08.166
These prolific engravings
have prompted wild speculation,
00:18:08.166 --> 00:18:11.583
but they have been much
more credibly interpreted
00:18:11.583 --> 00:18:15.125
as representing the way
some people of Bokoni thought
00:18:15.125 --> 00:18:16.999
about how and where
they lived.
00:18:16.999 --> 00:18:21.000
This is one of the larger rocks
engraved here in Boomplaats.
00:18:21.000 --> 00:18:23.959
There are hundreds of
engravings
00:18:23.959 --> 00:18:24.667
on different boulders.
00:18:24.667 --> 00:18:28.667
The site is very extensive,
probably a couple of kilometers
00:18:28.667 --> 00:18:29.208
in that direction,
00:18:29.208 --> 00:18:33.999
and maybe even more extensive
than we\'\'ve yet explored.
00:18:33.999 --> 00:18:34.999
When van Hoepen was here
00:18:34.999 --> 00:18:37.458
and the community hadn\'\'t been
disturbed yet,
00:18:37.458 --> 00:18:38.667
they were still
living here,
00:18:38.667 --> 00:18:41.999
they were quite ready
to explain to van Hoepen
00:18:41.999 --> 00:18:43.999
what these engravings
were all about.
00:18:43.999 --> 00:18:46.250
So they told him that
these circular,
00:18:46.250 --> 00:18:48.375
concentric patterns
were homesteads.
00:18:48.375 --> 00:18:51.458
And they told him that
these lines going down
00:18:51.458 --> 00:18:52.083
were the cattle tracks
00:18:52.083 --> 00:18:54.999
going down to watering places
in the valleys.
00:18:54.999 --> 00:18:56.583
So they,
they\'\'re not mysterious,
00:18:56.583 --> 00:18:59.542
they are perfectly
comprehensible.
00:18:59.542 --> 00:19:02.999
One of the things in general
about these engravings
00:19:02.999 --> 00:19:05.667
is that there seems to be
a masculine emphasis.
00:19:05.667 --> 00:19:08.999
It\'\'s the homesteads,
but often just a circle
00:19:08.999 --> 00:19:11.542
which may just be
the central cattle pen.
00:19:11.542 --> 00:19:15.417
This was a kind of pastime
that boys and young men did
00:19:15.417 --> 00:19:17.166
when they were out
in the landscape.
00:19:17.166 --> 00:19:19.999
Their duties would have been
looking after the herds,
00:19:19.999 --> 00:19:21.999
but herds don\'\'t move
very rapidly
00:19:21.999 --> 00:19:25.250
so you were sitting,
whiling away your time
00:19:25.250 --> 00:19:28.500
and it\'\'s very frequent
in child art, generally,
00:19:28.500 --> 00:19:32.125
that at a certain
developmental stage
00:19:32.125 --> 00:19:36.999
you illustrate the kind of
built environment
00:19:36.999 --> 00:19:38.875
that controls your life.
00:19:38.875 --> 00:19:42.999
And so modern children draw
pictures of houses
00:19:42.999 --> 00:19:44.709
and the typical thing
is a house
00:19:44.709 --> 00:19:45.792
with a front door
in the middle
00:19:45.792 --> 00:19:47.208
and window each side
and the chimney
00:19:47.208 --> 00:19:48.125
with smoke
coming out of it.
00:19:48.125 --> 00:19:51.458
Now, that isn\'\'t really
a photographic representative
00:19:51.458 --> 00:19:52.208
of their own house.
00:19:52.208 --> 00:19:54.417
But it is a house
as they understand it.
00:19:54.417 --> 00:19:56.625
And that\'\'s the same
sort of thing here.
00:19:56.625 --> 00:19:58.250
These are not accurate maps,
00:19:58.250 --> 00:20:02.750
they are conceptual ideas
of how those,
00:20:02.750 --> 00:20:04.333
probably younger people,
younger men,
00:20:04.333 --> 00:20:07.999
conceived the space
that they lived in.
00:20:07.999 --> 00:20:12.041
♪
00:20:12.041 --> 00:20:14.999
Alex Schoeman\'\'s
archeological work in Bokoni
00:20:14.999 --> 00:20:16.667
is focused on how
people lived
00:20:16.667 --> 00:20:19.000
and making sense of their
agricultural adaptation
00:20:19.000 --> 00:20:22.792
of communities living in
the central region of Mpumalanga
00:20:22.792 --> 00:20:25.959
from the 16th century
into the colonial era.
00:20:25.959 --> 00:20:29.083
The specific site is on
the edge of this village.
00:20:29.083 --> 00:20:31.709
It is probably in
the worst location
00:20:31.709 --> 00:20:33.333
that it could be
archaeologically.
00:20:33.333 --> 00:20:35.083
They\'\'re sitting right
on the quartzites.
00:20:35.083 --> 00:20:36.999
And it\'\'s just the quartzites
and the die base,
00:20:36.999 --> 00:20:39.083
they have the worst role,
this poor person.
00:20:39.083 --> 00:20:40.375
And that\'\'s why we\'\'re
looking at it.
00:20:40.375 --> 00:20:42.500
So we\'\'ve looked at homesteads
that are
00:20:42.500 --> 00:20:43.999
in really prime positions.
00:20:43.999 --> 00:20:45.999
Very near homesteads that are
being set up
00:20:45.999 --> 00:20:47.166
at the edge of
the village,
00:20:47.166 --> 00:20:48.999
and it\'\'s all those things
together
00:20:48.999 --> 00:20:50.834
that help us understand
how everybody lived.
00:20:50.834 --> 00:20:53.458
So we don\'\'t just go and dig
the biggest, nicest one
00:20:53.458 --> 00:20:54.792
that\'\'s the easiest
to map.
00:20:54.792 --> 00:20:57.792
It is the worst, the best,
the newest, the oldest
00:20:57.792 --> 00:20:59.999
and it\'\'s those things together
that make the village.
00:20:59.999 --> 00:21:02.999
So in this specific village
we\'\'ve been able to establish
00:21:02.999 --> 00:21:06.667
that there\'\'s seven
occupation phases or layers
00:21:06.667 --> 00:21:07.125
that overlie.
00:21:07.125 --> 00:21:09.375
So it\'\'s not necessarily
that we get each layer
00:21:09.375 --> 00:21:11.417
in the excavations
we do,
00:21:11.417 --> 00:21:13.417
but the stone walls articulate.
00:21:13.417 --> 00:21:16.166
And so this homestead
is resting on another,
00:21:16.166 --> 00:21:18.041
older homestead
that we\'\'re standing on,
00:21:18.041 --> 00:21:20.583
which is again resting
on another, older homestead.
00:21:20.583 --> 00:21:24.083
And so it\'\'s those layers
and how people reuse space
00:21:24.083 --> 00:21:27.291
that also makes the excavations
quite interesting.
00:21:27.291 --> 00:21:27.999
It\'\'s a mess.
00:21:27.999 --> 00:21:30.625
Because these settlements are
sitting on top of each other
00:21:30.625 --> 00:21:32.625
and the roads are sitting
on top of each other
00:21:32.625 --> 00:21:35.291
and one road is closed
and the other is open.
00:21:35.291 --> 00:21:35.999
What does that tell us?
00:21:35.999 --> 00:21:38.792
It tells us that they\'\'ve
been here for quite a while
00:21:38.792 --> 00:21:41.208
and that period has been
dynamic.
00:21:41.208 --> 00:21:41.875
People die,
00:21:41.875 --> 00:21:44.999
some families will have
lack of labor power,
00:21:44.999 --> 00:21:46.458
another will take over,
et cetera.
00:21:46.458 --> 00:21:50.834
So we see this very,
very dynamic picture
00:21:50.834 --> 00:21:52.250
when we see
these overlays.
00:21:52.250 --> 00:21:54.667
It\'\'s problematic because
you would like,
00:21:54.667 --> 00:21:56.999
as an archaeologist
and historical geographer
00:21:56.999 --> 00:22:00.208
to see one,
this is how it worked.
00:22:00.208 --> 00:22:09.166
♪
00:22:09.166 --> 00:22:13.375
No, no, that\'\'s the bush here.
00:22:13.375 --> 00:22:14.250
Okay.
00:22:14.250 --> 00:22:16.000
Let\'\'s check this out.
00:22:16.000 --> 00:22:18.458
The team is working in
the Rietvlei area
00:22:18.458 --> 00:22:22.208
to better understand how
the settlements were laid out,
00:22:22.208 --> 00:22:23.834
how the land was used,
00:22:23.834 --> 00:22:29.083
and how the people of
Bokoni might have lived.
00:22:29.083 --> 00:22:32.625
We have this stone wall,
this massive stone wall
00:22:32.625 --> 00:22:35.458
that is one leg or one arm
of the funnel
00:22:35.458 --> 00:22:40.125
that funnels the livestock
into the rest of the settlement.
00:22:40.125 --> 00:22:42.999
That\'\'s why we have
this funnel.
00:22:42.999 --> 00:22:45.417
Which opens up to the lands
in that direction.
00:22:45.417 --> 00:22:48.083
So we have the wall
which are drawn in blue.
00:22:48.083 --> 00:22:52.792
But then on the other side
is also walling.
00:22:52.792 --> 00:22:54.041
But if you look
carefully at them
00:22:54.041 --> 00:22:56.333
they are the,
they are terracing
00:22:56.333 --> 00:22:59.625
and they have agricultural land
in between them.
00:22:59.625 --> 00:23:02.709
But then we have another thing
also, down there,
00:23:02.709 --> 00:23:03.709
we can\'\'t see it here.
00:23:03.709 --> 00:23:06.333
We have some faint
terracing.
00:23:06.333 --> 00:23:08.291
It\'\'s almost like this.
00:23:08.291 --> 00:23:11.041
The interpretation then
is that from the beginning
00:23:11.041 --> 00:23:13.542
there was faint terracing
all over
00:23:13.542 --> 00:23:16.999
and later on they decided
to build this funnel
00:23:16.999 --> 00:23:17.792
or enlarge it, perhaps,
00:23:17.792 --> 00:23:22.458
and they built that on top
of those agriculture terraces.
00:23:22.458 --> 00:23:23.667
So this is just one
of the spots
00:23:23.667 --> 00:23:27.250
where we have this kind of
very clear over layering.
00:23:27.250 --> 00:23:29.999
One structure sitting
on top of another,
00:23:29.999 --> 00:23:32.250
we can understand
the historical sequence.
00:23:32.250 --> 00:23:34.667
And that\'\'s just
a very simple one,
00:23:34.667 --> 00:23:36.834
but most of the other
that you will find
00:23:36.834 --> 00:23:38.750
in the interior of
this settlement
00:23:38.750 --> 00:23:40.208
are much more complicated.
00:23:40.208 --> 00:23:41.959
Because of the long use
of the settlement
00:23:41.959 --> 00:23:45.375
and the constant reworking
that they\'\'ve been doing there.
00:23:45.375 --> 00:23:48.999
But this shows that it\'\'s
possible to find out
00:23:48.999 --> 00:23:50.583
the order of things.
00:23:50.583 --> 00:23:55.208
This was a real challenge
to do a good map of this area
00:23:55.208 --> 00:23:57.999
because, because
it\'\'s very large.
00:23:57.999 --> 00:24:01.999
And on the other hand
we wanted to have the detail
00:24:01.999 --> 00:24:03.417
because the devil
is in the detail,
00:24:03.417 --> 00:24:04.750
you have to understand
the details
00:24:04.750 --> 00:24:06.959
and you can\'\'t just do it
from aerial photography.
00:24:06.959 --> 00:24:11.000
What I did was that I used
printouts from Google Earth,
00:24:11.000 --> 00:24:13.166
images,
the best images.
00:24:13.166 --> 00:24:17.375
And then marked,
made field notes on them.
00:24:17.375 --> 00:24:20.500
And in that way
I came back to camp
00:24:20.500 --> 00:24:25.458
with a good field notes
for every small area.
00:24:25.458 --> 00:24:28.917
From this picture I think
I have a good base
00:24:28.917 --> 00:24:33.083
for trying to reconstruct
the three different
00:24:33.083 --> 00:24:34.792
land geos in the area.
00:24:34.792 --> 00:24:38.999
So many people would think
this is just a mess,
00:24:38.999 --> 00:24:40.625
and I\'\'ve put it like this,
00:24:40.625 --> 00:24:43.875
it starts to get
a little bit more clear.
00:24:43.875 --> 00:24:44.500
Right.
00:24:44.500 --> 00:24:46.999
Mats specializes in
the reconstruction
00:24:46.999 --> 00:24:50.250
of settlement, land use,
and how societies
00:24:50.250 --> 00:24:50.917
were organized.
00:24:50.917 --> 00:24:53.750
After carefully recording
settlements, terraces,
00:24:53.750 --> 00:24:56.166
and road networks
Mets understands
00:24:56.166 --> 00:24:58.999
how the people of Bokoni
used their land.
00:24:58.999 --> 00:25:02.041
The orange areas indicate
residential space
00:25:02.041 --> 00:25:05.542
and enclosures where cattle
were kept overnight.
00:25:05.542 --> 00:25:08.542
Next the arable land in yellow
based on the occurrence
00:25:08.542 --> 00:25:11.291
of terracing with roads
to protect the farmland
00:25:11.291 --> 00:25:13.999
from grazing cattle,
lead them to water,
00:25:13.999 --> 00:25:17.500
and funnel them into outerlying
grazing land.
00:25:17.500 --> 00:25:19.999
From this reconstruction
we get a sense
00:25:19.999 --> 00:25:20.999
that there were
many people
00:25:20.999 --> 00:25:22.917
living in this concentrated
area.
00:25:22.917 --> 00:25:28.999
That every piece of land had
its specific use.
00:25:28.999 --> 00:25:30.417
We can only get
that far
00:25:30.417 --> 00:25:34.375
with historical and special
sources of archaeologists
00:25:34.375 --> 00:25:35.166
very often.
00:25:35.166 --> 00:25:37.667
The way we really start
to grapple
00:25:37.667 --> 00:25:39.667
with how people lived,
what they did
00:25:39.667 --> 00:25:42.417
and how households functioned
because, ultimately,
00:25:42.417 --> 00:25:45.417
your household is
your core unit of any world.
00:25:45.417 --> 00:25:48.125
And it\'\'s in that household
that the world is shaped.
00:25:48.125 --> 00:25:51.000
It\'\'s in that household
that choices are made
00:25:51.000 --> 00:25:51.875
that shapes the world.
00:25:51.875 --> 00:25:54.792
So whether one decides
to put her terraces
00:25:54.792 --> 00:25:56.041
below the house because
she believes
00:25:56.041 --> 00:25:58.417
that\'\'s the best place
to put them or, in fact,
00:25:58.417 --> 00:26:00.959
that\'\'s the best place
where things grow.
00:26:00.959 --> 00:26:03.083
All those things are done
very locally.
00:26:03.083 --> 00:26:05.458
So as archaeologists
we excavate the homesteads
00:26:05.458 --> 00:26:08.333
to see specifically where
people did what
00:26:08.333 --> 00:26:10.208
and how those things
occurred.
00:26:10.208 --> 00:26:12.250
So we\'\'ve excavated the terraces
on this side
00:26:12.250 --> 00:26:15.458
and a number of homesteads
starting grapple
00:26:15.458 --> 00:26:19.125
with how normal people
in this world lived.
00:26:19.125 --> 00:26:21.000
So you\'\'ve got the big
Bokoni but, in fact,
00:26:21.000 --> 00:26:25.000
it\'\'s the everyday actions
of people living on this site
00:26:25.000 --> 00:26:28.875
that is making that site
and it\'\'s making that world.
00:26:28.875 --> 00:26:31.083
I wanted to turn this
into um,
00:26:31.083 --> 00:26:36.166
sort of an artist\'\'s impression
of how it uh,
00:26:36.166 --> 00:26:37.917
might have looked.
00:26:37.917 --> 00:26:41.792
So from that to that
giving it a perspective
00:26:41.792 --> 00:26:44.667
as if it\'\'s
a bird\'\'s eye view.
00:26:44.667 --> 00:26:48.125
Then I start to make
my additions.
00:26:48.125 --> 00:26:49.999
We don\'\'t know the exact
position of the houses,
00:26:49.999 --> 00:26:52.333
but we do know the houses
would have been
00:26:52.333 --> 00:26:54.999
in this outer
domestic zone.
00:26:54.999 --> 00:26:58.333
But, of course, the actual
sizes and shapes and positions
00:26:58.333 --> 00:27:00.834
we don\'\'t know exactly.
00:27:00.834 --> 00:27:03.667
And so from there
00:27:03.667 --> 00:27:05.834
to the finished project.
00:27:05.834 --> 00:27:07.999
In this way you can see
this is the way the cattle
00:27:07.999 --> 00:27:09.999
would come in and out
through this cattle road.
00:27:09.999 --> 00:27:13.999
We have a couple of chaps
building the stone wall.
00:27:13.999 --> 00:27:16.208
Agriculture being
essentially women\'\'s work,
00:27:16.208 --> 00:27:18.500
men tend to build
the stone walls.
00:27:18.500 --> 00:27:19.999
That tends to be their job
and, of course,
00:27:19.999 --> 00:27:23.999
looking after the cattle
and other livestock.
00:27:23.999 --> 00:27:26.750
In this homestead we\'\'ve got
a series of divisions
00:27:26.750 --> 00:27:29.999
that demarcate the different
areas in this homestead
00:27:29.999 --> 00:27:32.417
including this terrace
at the back.
00:27:32.417 --> 00:27:34.375
And we\'\'re finding a lot
of pottery.
00:27:34.375 --> 00:27:37.792
The potter style in Bokoni
is known as Marateng.
00:27:37.792 --> 00:27:39.250
Pots found in the area
have a row
00:27:39.250 --> 00:27:42.417
of diagonal impressions
just below the rim.
00:27:42.417 --> 00:27:45.625
Some are plain while others
are beautifully decorated
00:27:45.625 --> 00:27:47.208
in contrasting colors.
00:27:47.208 --> 00:27:49.291
The simpler pots were
everyday vessels
00:27:49.291 --> 00:27:51.999
for fetching water, cooking,
or storage
00:27:51.999 --> 00:27:53.959
more than likely made
by the women
00:27:53.959 --> 00:27:57.417
and closely associated
with work done by them.
00:27:57.417 --> 00:27:59.875
But Marateng pottery
is not unique
00:27:59.875 --> 00:28:00.917
to Bokoni alone.
00:28:00.917 --> 00:28:03.709
This world did not exist
in a vacuum.
00:28:03.709 --> 00:28:05.500
And so this is a massive
regional style,
00:28:05.500 --> 00:28:08.917
it\'\'s not about ethnicity,
it\'\'s about other networks.
00:28:08.917 --> 00:28:09.999
Probably women\'\'s networks
00:28:09.999 --> 00:28:12.999
or networks that they were
establishing
00:28:12.999 --> 00:28:13.750
between communities
00:28:13.750 --> 00:28:16.250
and it talks about that
integration of economy
00:28:16.250 --> 00:28:20.667
and the very intense interaction
between these communities.
00:28:20.667 --> 00:28:23.000
So this specific shard, well,
00:28:23.000 --> 00:28:24.792
reconstructed areas from
an excavation
00:28:24.792 --> 00:28:27.999
that had come out
of the gorge earlier
00:28:27.999 --> 00:28:32.834
as is this very large um,
pot that we found.
00:28:32.834 --> 00:28:36.333
And in this excavation
we started finding
00:28:36.333 --> 00:28:37.667
very similar pottery.
00:28:37.667 --> 00:28:38.999
So this one is
from a wall.
00:28:38.999 --> 00:28:40.667
It\'\'s, again,
that very red,
00:28:40.667 --> 00:28:43.417
round little tummy pot
with an incised arc
00:28:43.417 --> 00:28:46.250
on the shoulder within
the planar section there.
00:28:46.250 --> 00:28:48.834
So it\'\'s that continuity
in pottery making.
00:28:48.834 --> 00:28:54.083
And this site, obviously, it\'\'s
relatively early in the period
00:28:54.083 --> 00:28:57.750
so it\'\'s brilliant that we\'\'re
finding the same pottery.
00:28:57.750 --> 00:29:00.417
These communities
are about change,
00:29:00.417 --> 00:29:02.000
not about static
tribal systems.
00:29:02.000 --> 00:29:05.999
They\'\'re about merging,
mixing into acting cultures,
00:29:05.999 --> 00:29:09.375
not about separate,
static cultures.
00:29:09.375 --> 00:29:12.291
Along with the image
of tribal Africa
00:29:12.291 --> 00:29:15.999
goes an image of an Africa
in which farming
00:29:15.999 --> 00:29:19.542
was rudimentary, mobile,
slash and burn.
00:29:19.542 --> 00:29:23.792
These were underdeveloped
or undeveloped systems.
00:29:23.792 --> 00:29:26.250
And I think very often when
people have thought about
00:29:26.250 --> 00:29:28.458
issues of transformation
and development
00:29:28.458 --> 00:29:31.375
and how we build different
kinds of societies
00:29:31.375 --> 00:29:33.875
they tended to operate
from that assumption
00:29:33.875 --> 00:29:36.125
of a tribal,
static past.
00:29:36.125 --> 00:29:37.458
In fact, of course,
if we look at
00:29:37.458 --> 00:29:39.250
the history of Bokoni
what we see
00:29:39.250 --> 00:29:43.083
is a fascinating example
of agricultural innovation,
00:29:43.083 --> 00:29:45.792
of societies using
local resources,
00:29:45.792 --> 00:29:49.125
local possibilities in new
and different ways,
00:29:49.125 --> 00:29:51.875
and of dynamic processes
of change.
00:29:51.875 --> 00:29:55.542
Later Bokoni becomes
probably a group
00:29:55.542 --> 00:29:56.999
with some coherence.
00:29:56.999 --> 00:29:58.999
And archaeologically
we can see it
00:29:58.999 --> 00:30:01.166
through the very specific
settlement pattern,
00:30:01.166 --> 00:30:02.999
little flower with
the petals on
00:30:02.999 --> 00:30:05.083
and the stem going up
which is the road
00:30:05.083 --> 00:30:07.500
and then the terraces
around that.
00:30:07.500 --> 00:30:10.417
In the early period
it\'\'s not as coherent.
00:30:10.417 --> 00:30:13.750
The internal arrangement
of the homestead
00:30:13.750 --> 00:30:16.083
where people are staying
is much,
00:30:16.083 --> 00:30:18.375
much more variable than it is
in the later phase.
00:30:18.375 --> 00:30:22.417
So we have a couple of sites
in the southern part
00:30:22.417 --> 00:30:24.959
where the settlement pattern
is reminiscent
00:30:24.959 --> 00:30:27.999
of stonewalling in other parts
of South Africa.
00:30:27.999 --> 00:30:30.208
So you had people
from all over
00:30:30.208 --> 00:30:32.792
joining people in
the southern region
00:30:32.792 --> 00:30:33.999
and together they shaped
this thing
00:30:33.999 --> 00:30:37.999
that eventually becomes
the pattern of occupation
00:30:37.999 --> 00:30:38.834
in Bokoni as a whole.
00:30:38.834 --> 00:30:41.959
We can see that
it developed over time.
00:30:41.959 --> 00:30:44.999
They did not decide to build
terraces from the beginning,
00:30:44.999 --> 00:30:46.999
they decided to
farm the land.
00:30:46.999 --> 00:30:49.083
And as they were
farming the land
00:30:49.083 --> 00:30:50.999
they made farmland.
00:30:50.999 --> 00:30:58.542
♪
00:30:58.542 --> 00:30:59.999
The terracing at
Verlorenkloof
00:30:59.999 --> 00:31:02.999
is a beautiful example
of how the people of Bokoni
00:31:02.999 --> 00:31:07.333
adapted and farmed
their land.
00:31:07.333 --> 00:31:09.959
Terracing serves
several purposes.
00:31:09.959 --> 00:31:13.834
One thing is to create
flat land on sloping ground.
00:31:13.834 --> 00:31:16.792
And once you have done that
the water will be
00:31:16.792 --> 00:31:17.333
better preserved.
00:31:17.333 --> 00:31:20.875
When the rain comes the water
will stay on the ground.
00:31:20.875 --> 00:31:23.458
On the other hand
if much water comes,
00:31:23.458 --> 00:31:25.999
if the much rain comes
you will not get
00:31:25.999 --> 00:31:29.333
erosion gulleys because
the water will be preserved
00:31:29.333 --> 00:31:30.625
on the farmland.
00:31:30.625 --> 00:31:34.041
So this is a very natural way
to make
00:31:34.041 --> 00:31:38.000
and to preserve farmland
for long term use.
00:31:38.000 --> 00:31:40.999
And in colonial times
it was often thought
00:31:40.999 --> 00:31:43.999
that this was something
that had to be learned.
00:31:43.999 --> 00:31:45.458
So in many other
African countries
00:31:45.458 --> 00:31:48.083
the colonial officers,
the agriculture officers,
00:31:48.083 --> 00:31:52.250
they wanted the local farmers,
the black farmers to be taught
00:31:52.250 --> 00:31:53.291
to preserve their land.
00:31:53.291 --> 00:31:56.625
And what\'\'s so unique
about Bokoni is that it shows
00:31:56.625 --> 00:32:00.792
that this was something
the people invented themselves,
00:32:00.792 --> 00:32:02.041
developed by themselves.
00:32:02.041 --> 00:32:03.792
There was no need
for agriculture officers
00:32:03.792 --> 00:32:07.542
or extension officers
to, to make people understand
00:32:07.542 --> 00:32:09.792
such a rather
simple measure.
00:32:09.792 --> 00:32:10.999
But once they started
to do it
00:32:10.999 --> 00:32:13.750
they became more
and more skilled.
00:32:13.750 --> 00:32:16.750
For many it would be
natural to assume
00:32:16.750 --> 00:32:18.583
that they had to put in
a building process
00:32:18.583 --> 00:32:19.999
before they can build
a cultivation.
00:32:19.999 --> 00:32:23.083
So there would be
terrace builders coming first
00:32:23.083 --> 00:32:25.166
and then they would start
cultivate.
00:32:25.166 --> 00:32:27.375
I\'\'ve always been
skeptical against that
00:32:27.375 --> 00:32:29.417
because we have so many
examples
00:32:29.417 --> 00:32:34.208
of these kind of systems
being built incrementally.
00:32:34.208 --> 00:32:37.417
But it took me some time
to understand
00:32:37.417 --> 00:32:39.834
that this was the case here,
also.
00:32:39.834 --> 00:32:41.500
And I did that by
walking around
00:32:41.500 --> 00:32:44.417
looking at the different
sorts of terracing
00:32:44.417 --> 00:32:45.750
that we find here.
00:32:45.750 --> 00:32:47.999
And the first one,
first, most simple one
00:32:47.999 --> 00:32:51.000
is just a simple line
of stones like this.
00:32:51.000 --> 00:32:55.166
Very often it\'\'s like
upright slabs.
00:32:55.166 --> 00:32:55.999
Here.
00:32:55.999 --> 00:32:56.999
Shoulder to shoulder.
00:32:56.999 --> 00:32:59.208
And you can see that it serves
as a terrace
00:32:59.208 --> 00:33:03.834
in the sense that soil erosion
from that end
00:33:03.834 --> 00:33:06.291
is stopped by this line
of stones.
00:33:06.291 --> 00:33:12.709
And if we move on
to this end of terrace
00:33:12.709 --> 00:33:15.750
we can see that, yes,
00:33:15.750 --> 00:33:17.709
they have these
upright slabs,
00:33:17.709 --> 00:33:22.750
they may even have two rows
of upright slabs here.
00:33:22.750 --> 00:33:26.542
Which are put in place
to prevent erosion from there.
00:33:26.542 --> 00:33:31.000
But if you just move
a little bit in this direction
00:33:31.000 --> 00:33:35.999
we can see the terrace
is slightly higher.
00:33:35.999 --> 00:33:38.999
It\'\'s slightly higher
than the other,
00:33:38.999 --> 00:33:43.625
but they have made
a nice uh,
00:33:43.625 --> 00:33:44.999
facing of it.
00:33:44.999 --> 00:33:47.999
To keep all the smaller stones
inside there.
00:33:47.999 --> 00:33:51.250
And now we have almost
reached the final staged
00:33:51.250 --> 00:33:53.834
so that the terrace
that we see up there,
00:33:53.834 --> 00:33:56.458
they are of this kind.
00:33:56.458 --> 00:33:57.333
I think this is
the first time
00:33:57.333 --> 00:34:01.125
that anyone had ever excavated
right through a wall,
00:34:01.125 --> 00:34:03.417
actually chopped a whole wall.
00:34:03.417 --> 00:34:04.875
Of course, we restored it
again afterwards,
00:34:04.875 --> 00:34:07.166
we didn\'\'t want to leave
a gaping hollow there.
00:34:07.166 --> 00:34:11.792
And um, we showed that
your hypothesis was correct
00:34:11.792 --> 00:34:13.999
because here\'\'s the section.
00:34:13.999 --> 00:34:16.417
And you can see the um,
well,
00:34:16.417 --> 00:34:18.999
you can\'\'t see the lower
upright slabs
00:34:18.999 --> 00:34:19.875
because they\'\'re buried.
00:34:19.875 --> 00:34:23.999
But there\'\'s the line of
upright slabs, the upper one.
00:34:23.999 --> 00:34:25.834
So the two rows there.
00:34:25.834 --> 00:34:28.625
And then a very nice face
of wall with one, two,
00:34:28.625 --> 00:34:30.375
three, four, five,
six, seven,
00:34:30.375 --> 00:34:32.667
about eight stones high.
00:34:32.667 --> 00:34:35.999
Obviously at a late stage
of the whole process.
00:34:35.999 --> 00:34:39.375
To practice this intensive
farming and grow these crops
00:34:39.375 --> 00:34:42.625
the people of Bokoni would have
needed iron tools.
00:34:42.625 --> 00:34:44.999
The hoe is the basic
agricultural implement
00:34:44.999 --> 00:34:47.709
throughout sub Saharan Africa.
00:34:47.709 --> 00:34:50.417
The normal African hoe
has a wooden handle
00:34:50.417 --> 00:34:51.500
and a steel blade.
00:34:51.500 --> 00:34:55.999
The tang is rather narrow
and broadens out into the blade
00:34:55.999 --> 00:34:57.999
which does the actual digging.
00:34:57.999 --> 00:35:01.834
The difference
and the uniqueness in Bokoni
00:35:01.834 --> 00:35:03.834
is that often these giant
bored stones
00:35:03.834 --> 00:35:09.083
which were made locally
were added on as extra weight.
00:35:09.083 --> 00:35:12.458
Although there are certain
areas where iron was made,
00:35:12.458 --> 00:35:15.834
there are no large iron smelting
sites in the area,
00:35:15.834 --> 00:35:18.999
which suggests that
the people of Bokoni traded
00:35:18.999 --> 00:35:21.917
with other groups.
00:35:21.917 --> 00:35:24.709
This area of Bokoni had
a long history
00:35:24.709 --> 00:35:27.999
of being part of wider
regional trading systems.
00:35:27.999 --> 00:35:31.291
We think that particularly
significant for Bokoni
00:35:31.291 --> 00:35:33.375
would have been the trade
to the north
00:35:33.375 --> 00:35:35.166
with the areas
around Phalaborwa
00:35:35.166 --> 00:35:37.250
which were major
iron producing areas
00:35:37.250 --> 00:35:39.375
and could, in the environment,
produce very little
00:35:39.375 --> 00:35:40.792
in the way of cattle
and crops.
00:35:40.792 --> 00:35:43.417
So their lifestyle was
based around iron.
00:35:43.417 --> 00:35:45.625
To the south we have
the Bokoni
00:35:45.625 --> 00:35:47.625
whose lifestyle is based
on agriculture,
00:35:47.625 --> 00:35:49.875
but if you needed huge amounts
of iron goods
00:35:49.875 --> 00:35:52.625
to work the particularly
difficult soils.
00:35:52.625 --> 00:35:55.291
So it seems probable
that in fact
00:35:55.291 --> 00:35:58.999
there was an ongoing system
of exchange between them.
00:35:58.999 --> 00:36:00.875
From the ninth century
Southern Africa
00:36:00.875 --> 00:36:03.083
became a vital source of
the world\'\'s supply of gold
00:36:03.083 --> 00:36:05.542
which underpinned
money and trade.
00:36:05.542 --> 00:36:08.458
From the 16th century
a much wider part of the region
00:36:08.458 --> 00:36:11.834
was drawn into an expanding
ivory trade with the coast
00:36:11.834 --> 00:36:15.041
fueled by increasing demand
for elephant tusks
00:36:15.041 --> 00:36:16.500
in the Indian Ocean world.
00:36:16.500 --> 00:36:21.500
This whole area of what is now
the Lowveld and the escarpment
00:36:21.500 --> 00:36:23.999
was enormously rich
in elephants.
00:36:23.999 --> 00:36:28.542
And became a critical source
of an ivory trade which,
00:36:28.542 --> 00:36:30.417
from the 1600s onwards,
00:36:30.417 --> 00:36:33.999
becomes an increasingly
dominant trade connection
00:36:33.999 --> 00:36:35.375
to the coast.
00:36:35.375 --> 00:36:38.208
For ivory good art Africans
mainly received
00:36:38.208 --> 00:36:39.999
imported cloth and beads.
00:36:39.999 --> 00:36:41.999
Seemingly
an unfair exchange.
00:36:41.999 --> 00:36:44.375
But with cloth and beads
in short supply
00:36:44.375 --> 00:36:47.375
and with little practical use
for gold and ivory
00:36:47.375 --> 00:36:49.999
they became symbols
of power and wealth
00:36:49.999 --> 00:36:52.417
and means of exchange
and currency.
00:36:52.417 --> 00:36:55.583
In the context of escalating
trade to the coast
00:36:55.583 --> 00:37:00.166
competition emerged between
different African chiefdoms.
00:37:00.166 --> 00:37:09.250
♪
00:37:09.250 --> 00:37:11.750
One of the things we know
quite a lot about
00:37:11.750 --> 00:37:14.041
from Bokoni traditions
we\'\'ve collected
00:37:14.041 --> 00:37:17.500
is the political history
of the Bokoni from about
00:37:17.500 --> 00:37:19.625
the late 17th century onwards.
00:37:19.625 --> 00:37:23.375
Now we know that the Bokoni
settled in the Machadodorp area
00:37:23.375 --> 00:37:24.208
and probably south of there,
00:37:24.208 --> 00:37:27.500
started to find themselves
increasingly under attack
00:37:27.500 --> 00:37:30.291
from groups that they described
as Mapono.
00:37:30.291 --> 00:37:32.125
Which, if you look at it
in context,
00:37:32.125 --> 00:37:34.458
seems to mean Nguni
speaking groups
00:37:34.458 --> 00:37:35.999
coming from the south.
00:37:35.999 --> 00:37:38.250
And those attacks became
so severe
00:37:38.250 --> 00:37:41.750
that the major settlements
of the Bokoni are moved
00:37:41.750 --> 00:37:42.208
to the north.
00:37:42.208 --> 00:37:45.709
And they move over
the escarpment into this valley.
00:37:45.709 --> 00:37:48.250
Once settled further north
the people of Bokoni
00:37:48.250 --> 00:37:50.792
created sheltered sites
in the deep gorges
00:37:50.792 --> 00:37:52.500
found along
the escarpment.
00:37:52.500 --> 00:37:55.792
The most formidable and
famous of these was Khutwaneng.
00:37:55.792 --> 00:37:59.834
At times of heightened danger
communities could retreat
00:37:59.834 --> 00:38:00.375
into them.
00:38:00.375 --> 00:38:01.999
But security came
at a price.
00:38:01.999 --> 00:38:04.999
For the longer groups spent
in these places of refuge
00:38:04.999 --> 00:38:07.417
the less time they had
out in the fields
00:38:07.417 --> 00:38:08.959
to look after crops
and cattle.
00:38:08.959 --> 00:38:12.709
And limited sunlight made
cultivating in the gorges
00:38:12.709 --> 00:38:13.834
extremely difficult.
00:38:13.834 --> 00:38:17.500
From the 1650s the expansion
of the powerful Pedi kingdom
00:38:17.500 --> 00:38:19.625
in the north created
new pressures
00:38:19.625 --> 00:38:21.375
for the people of Bokoni.
00:38:21.375 --> 00:38:22.792
The Pedi kings were
more interested
00:38:22.792 --> 00:38:25.333
in bringing Bokoni resources
within their sphere
00:38:25.333 --> 00:38:27.709
of economic
and political control
00:38:27.709 --> 00:38:29.999
rather than in
plundering them.
00:38:29.999 --> 00:38:33.125
By the late 1700s competition
and conflict
00:38:33.125 --> 00:38:35.375
in the wider region
intensified
00:38:35.375 --> 00:38:38.291
and new raiding groups
became more militarized
00:38:38.291 --> 00:38:39.291
and predatory.
00:38:39.291 --> 00:38:42.917
The Ndwandwe, the Swazi,
the Mthethwa and, ultimately,
00:38:42.917 --> 00:38:45.375
the Zulu kingdom vied
for control,
00:38:45.375 --> 00:38:49.625
raiding into and settling near
the escarpment.
00:38:49.625 --> 00:38:50.667
Bokoni communities
00:38:50.667 --> 00:38:53.375
organized around farming
rather than fighting,
00:38:53.375 --> 00:38:56.375
found themselves subject
to mounting attack.
00:38:56.375 --> 00:38:59.959
Their large fields and
easily accessible livestock
00:38:59.959 --> 00:39:01.583
made them easy
and tempting targets
00:39:01.583 --> 00:39:04.999
for the drilled regiments
of the Ndwandwe, Ndebele
00:39:04.999 --> 00:39:06.458
and others.
00:39:06.458 --> 00:39:07.875
And that mounting attack
is of
00:39:07.875 --> 00:39:09.208
a particularly
devastating kind
00:39:09.208 --> 00:39:12.041
because these raiding groups
are not simply prepared
00:39:12.041 --> 00:39:15.792
to take some cattle,
to take some grain and move on.
00:39:15.792 --> 00:39:17.917
They literally devastate
whole communities.
00:39:17.917 --> 00:39:20.000
They move in,
they take the cattle,
00:39:20.000 --> 00:39:20.999
they take the grain,
00:39:20.999 --> 00:39:23.834
they take large numbers
of women and children
00:39:23.834 --> 00:39:27.291
who are press ganged into
these new societies.
00:39:27.291 --> 00:39:30.959
The people of Bokoni
were ill equipped to withstand
00:39:30.959 --> 00:39:32.917
such a formidable onslaught.
00:39:32.917 --> 00:39:35.041
And the dwindling groups
of survivors
00:39:35.041 --> 00:39:37.875
eventually abandoned
the area.
00:39:37.875 --> 00:39:42.917
By the 1830s the stone walls
of Bokoni stood empty,
00:39:42.917 --> 00:39:46.750
never to be
settled again.
00:39:46.750 --> 00:39:48.208
One of the most
telling symptoms
00:39:48.208 --> 00:39:50.999
of the extent of
dislocation in this area
00:39:50.999 --> 00:39:52.959
is we have detailed
oral traditions
00:39:52.959 --> 00:39:56.000
and many of them talking about
widespread cannibalism
00:39:56.000 --> 00:39:59.999
taking place in this area
in this period of the 1820s.
00:39:59.999 --> 00:40:03.375
And the stories of cannibalism
were, of course,
00:40:03.375 --> 00:40:05.333
much beloved by the missionaries
and others
00:40:05.333 --> 00:40:08.250
because it proved to them
just how barbarous
00:40:08.250 --> 00:40:10.750
African people were when
left alone.
00:40:10.750 --> 00:40:12.542
But, in fact, the more
you look at them
00:40:12.542 --> 00:40:14.000
there probably wasn\'\'t
a huge amount
00:40:14.000 --> 00:40:17.834
of actual consumption
of human flesh going on.
00:40:17.834 --> 00:40:19.709
But when you look at
the traditions what you see
00:40:19.709 --> 00:40:22.583
is that people are remembering
a time when societies
00:40:22.583 --> 00:40:24.083
lived off other societies.
00:40:24.083 --> 00:40:26.166
They actually consumed
other societies
00:40:26.166 --> 00:40:28.999
and they consumed the people
of those other societies
00:40:28.999 --> 00:40:31.333
and drew them into
their own societies
00:40:31.333 --> 00:40:31.999
and carried them away.
00:40:31.999 --> 00:40:35.917
And in the traditions we have
both Pedi and colony traditions.
00:40:35.917 --> 00:40:37.500
This area is remembered
as being an area
00:40:37.500 --> 00:40:41.500
which particularly suffered
from these kind of cannibal,
00:40:41.500 --> 00:40:43.166
emergence of
these cannibal groups
00:40:43.166 --> 00:40:45.625
which we now think were
primarily raiding groups,
00:40:45.625 --> 00:40:48.750
groups that lived by
raiding off other people.
00:40:48.750 --> 00:40:51.208
The heavily forested gorges
we can see today
00:40:51.208 --> 00:40:54.999
are a consequence of
this abandonment and, perhaps,
00:40:54.999 --> 00:40:57.999
a beautiful testament
to the dynamism
00:40:57.999 --> 00:41:03.458
and innovation
of Bokoni.
00:41:03.458 --> 00:41:07.999
Botanist John Burrows manages
this beautiful nature reserve,
00:41:07.999 --> 00:41:10.333
the largest patch of
privately owned
00:41:10.333 --> 00:41:12.583
indigenous forest
in the area.
00:41:12.583 --> 00:41:15.999
As a center for research
it is an exquisite
00:41:15.999 --> 00:41:17.291
open air laboratory.
00:41:17.291 --> 00:41:21.083
What we can see here
is a lovely example of forest
00:41:21.083 --> 00:41:22.999
which clothes both sides
of the cliff.
00:41:22.999 --> 00:41:25.417
You\'\'d be forgiven for thinking
that these forests
00:41:25.417 --> 00:41:26.875
have been here for
hundreds of years,
00:41:26.875 --> 00:41:29.417
but in reality when we go
into these forests
00:41:29.417 --> 00:41:33.250
it\'\'s terraced on both sides
from the river up to the cliffs.
00:41:33.250 --> 00:41:36.250
So everywhere where we see
forest here
00:41:36.250 --> 00:41:39.999
was once upon a time covered
in terracing.
00:41:39.999 --> 00:41:42.625
And we know that the crops
that would be grown
00:41:42.625 --> 00:41:45.999
on the terraces couldn\'\'t
have grown in shade.
00:41:45.999 --> 00:41:49.208
So therefore these slopes
were in full sun
00:41:49.208 --> 00:41:51.834
a relatively short
period ago.
00:41:51.834 --> 00:41:53.166
This little bush
we\'\'ve got here
00:41:53.166 --> 00:41:55.000
is the glossy karir.
00:41:55.000 --> 00:41:57.999
And this is one of the main
indicator species
00:41:57.999 --> 00:42:02.500
that we\'\'re using to
identify areas in the forest
00:42:02.500 --> 00:42:04.458
which were once
in sunshine.
00:42:04.458 --> 00:42:06.291
Most forest species
need shade.
00:42:06.291 --> 00:42:10.667
This species always grows
and germinates in full sun.
00:42:10.667 --> 00:42:15.125
♪
00:42:15.125 --> 00:42:18.166
Here we\'\'ve got a growing
in deep shade
00:42:18.166 --> 00:42:21.333
and the tree is now dying
because it is being shaded out.
00:42:21.333 --> 00:42:23.542
And here we\'\'ve actually got
a fine example
00:42:23.542 --> 00:42:25.999
of a terraced wall here.
00:42:25.999 --> 00:42:28.999
And this would have provided
a shelter from fire.
00:42:28.999 --> 00:42:32.333
The fires here would have
always crept down the hillside
00:42:32.333 --> 00:42:33.999
and when they got
to the terraces
00:42:33.999 --> 00:42:34.999
they would have stopped.
00:42:34.999 --> 00:42:37.417
That allowed this tree
to grow
00:42:37.417 --> 00:42:38.083
and it would have grown,
00:42:38.083 --> 00:42:41.667
for the first hundred years it
would have been very vigorous.
00:42:41.667 --> 00:42:45.709
And now it\'\'s been overtopped
by the forest trees
00:42:45.709 --> 00:42:48.917
for which it provided
that initial shade.
00:42:48.917 --> 00:42:51.542
And where I\'\'m standing is
the route
00:42:51.542 --> 00:42:54.834
on which the cattle
and the goats and the sheep
00:42:54.834 --> 00:42:56.333
would have been taken
every day
00:42:56.333 --> 00:42:57.542
up to the top
for grazing
00:42:57.542 --> 00:42:58.291
and brought back
every night.
00:42:58.291 --> 00:43:03.125
So when the Bokoni moved out
we had the perfect situation
00:43:03.125 --> 00:43:03.999
for these trees
to grow well.
00:43:03.999 --> 00:43:07.250
We had protection from fire
created by the terrace,
00:43:07.250 --> 00:43:11.291
we had nutrient rich soil
from the old cattle track.
00:43:11.291 --> 00:43:15.875
These trees would have grown
very, very quickly.
00:43:15.875 --> 00:43:17.458
Here we\'\'re looking at
a situation
00:43:17.458 --> 00:43:20.208
that the whole ground surface
in this cliff
00:43:20.208 --> 00:43:22.250
was disturbed
to grow crops.
00:43:22.250 --> 00:43:26.333
When the people left
we suddenly saw the emergence
00:43:26.333 --> 00:43:26.999
of this forest.
00:43:26.999 --> 00:43:32.834
Which is a lovely example
of how nature can heal itself.
00:43:32.834 --> 00:43:34.999
It\'\'s a nice, heartwarming
example
00:43:34.999 --> 00:43:37.917
of what can actually happen
if the earth is allowed
00:43:37.917 --> 00:43:39.999
to heal itself
without the wounds
00:43:39.999 --> 00:43:45.875
on the surface of the earth
being too big.
00:43:45.875 --> 00:43:50.083
Now you may wonder what happened
to the people of Bokoni.
00:43:50.083 --> 00:43:53.999
How is it possible
that such a dynamic world
00:43:53.999 --> 00:43:56.083
could just disappear?
00:43:56.083 --> 00:43:59.999
As a result of the deadly
onslaughts in the 1820s
00:43:59.999 --> 00:44:02.999
Bokoni groups scattered
throughout the region
00:44:02.999 --> 00:44:06.041
looking for new possibilities
and security
00:44:06.041 --> 00:44:08.500
in a dangerous
and changing world.
00:44:08.500 --> 00:44:12.417
Some groups eventually found
refuge at mission stations.
00:44:12.417 --> 00:44:16.208
The most prominent of these
in the area was Botshabelo.
00:44:16.208 --> 00:44:20.542
Established in 1865
by German missionaries.
00:44:20.542 --> 00:44:23.750
Once again the people of Bokoni
had to adapt,
00:44:23.750 --> 00:44:26.999
but elements of their
way of life lived on.
00:44:26.999 --> 00:44:29.999
It is perhaps no coincidence
that within two years
00:44:29.999 --> 00:44:34.250
of its establishment Botshabelo
became a major center
00:44:34.250 --> 00:44:39.999
of agricultural production
and innovation.
00:44:39.999 --> 00:44:44.999
I was born here in Botshabelo
some 57 years ago.
00:44:44.999 --> 00:44:48.999
I was born into a family
that were descendents
00:44:48.999 --> 00:44:54.583
of people who came here
in 1865.
00:44:54.583 --> 00:44:58.709
This whole place here,
this was an orchard.
00:44:58.709 --> 00:44:59.709
Pears, apples.
00:44:59.709 --> 00:45:02.917
The community was very much
self sufficient.
00:45:02.917 --> 00:45:06.458
They had cattle,
they were plowing fields,
00:45:06.458 --> 00:45:07.417
they had everything.
00:45:07.417 --> 00:45:10.792
My father had a few cattle,
I think I remember,
00:45:10.792 --> 00:45:14.166
three or four which forced me
to be looking after cattle.
00:45:14.166 --> 00:45:17.166
And out there
and across the river
00:45:17.166 --> 00:45:20.333
where it was
grazing land
00:45:20.333 --> 00:45:23.875
you find stone walls.
00:45:23.875 --> 00:45:26.750
That technique of building
a stone wall,
00:45:26.750 --> 00:45:31.291
I learned to do it myself
as a youngster.
00:45:31.291 --> 00:45:34.291
Now and again, you know, the
cattle will jump over the thing,
00:45:34.291 --> 00:45:38.542
the old part, I must go there,
like you know, build it.
00:45:38.542 --> 00:45:41.999
So I knew exactly the technique
of playing around
00:45:41.999 --> 00:45:44.792
with the ordering
of these bricks
00:45:44.792 --> 00:45:48.333
such that the structure
remains intact.
00:45:48.333 --> 00:45:50.999
Botshabelo prospered
thanks to the hard work
00:45:50.999 --> 00:45:51.999
of the residents.
00:45:51.999 --> 00:45:56.959
But over time deep conflict
began to surface.
00:45:56.959 --> 00:46:00.750
Johannes Dinkwanyane,
brother of Pedi king Sekhukhune,
00:46:00.750 --> 00:46:02.500
one of the first Pedi converts,
00:46:02.500 --> 00:46:04.667
was the leader of the group
who rejected
00:46:04.667 --> 00:46:08.208
the missionary domination
of their lives.
00:46:08.208 --> 00:46:12.208
Over time those conflicts
bubbled to the surface
00:46:12.208 --> 00:46:15.375
and Dinkwanyane
and others around him
00:46:15.375 --> 00:46:16.166
said to the missionaries,
00:46:16.166 --> 00:46:17.999
\"We want to continue
to be Christian,
00:46:17.999 --> 00:46:20.417
but we don\'\'t want to live
under mission control.
00:46:20.417 --> 00:46:23.999
We want to go somewhere
where we can have our own land.\"
00:46:23.999 --> 00:46:24.750
The missionaries,
00:46:24.750 --> 00:46:27.542
horrified at the mere suggestion
of an independent
00:46:27.542 --> 00:46:31.500
African Christian society
refused to give in
00:46:31.500 --> 00:46:32.583
to these demands.
00:46:32.583 --> 00:46:35.625
And so Dinkwanyane
and his followers,
00:46:35.625 --> 00:46:36.959
including some Koni,
00:46:36.959 --> 00:46:40.750
left Botshabelo
in search of a new home.
00:46:40.750 --> 00:46:42.000
The assimilation
of Koni groups
00:46:42.000 --> 00:46:45.500
into new societies contributed
to the transformation
00:46:45.500 --> 00:46:46.750
of stonewalling.
00:46:46.750 --> 00:46:49.000
In the 19th century
it took on a new form
00:46:49.000 --> 00:46:51.999
in the context of pressure
from Boer settlers
00:46:51.999 --> 00:46:55.000
and increasing importance
of firearms.
00:46:55.000 --> 00:46:57.500
New fortified strongholds
emerged
00:46:57.500 --> 00:46:59.291
making use of
natural features,
00:46:59.291 --> 00:47:02.458
elaborated with stonewalling
and shooting holes
00:47:02.458 --> 00:47:05.250
to accommodate
these anxious times.
00:47:05.250 --> 00:47:07.250
After their exodus from
Botshabelo
00:47:07.250 --> 00:47:10.999
Dinkwanyane, along with his
Pedi and Koni followers,
00:47:10.999 --> 00:47:14.625
eventually established
Mafolofolo.
00:47:14.625 --> 00:47:16.999
♪
00:47:16.999 --> 00:47:19.291
What we\'\'re looking at here
is one section
00:47:19.291 --> 00:47:21.999
of the much bigger settlement
of Mafolofolo.
00:47:21.999 --> 00:47:23.792
And you can see
the stonewalling,
00:47:23.792 --> 00:47:25.542
you can see the shooting holes.
00:47:25.542 --> 00:47:27.709
Behind the walls is also
a cave system
00:47:27.709 --> 00:47:30.709
and within the cave system
is a set of tunnels
00:47:30.709 --> 00:47:32.750
which seem to be both
an escape route
00:47:32.750 --> 00:47:36.041
and perhaps lead to
the other settlements.
00:47:36.041 --> 00:47:38.125
Behind us is a steep drop
into
00:47:38.125 --> 00:47:39.834
the Spectrum Valley Gorge.
00:47:39.834 --> 00:47:42.542
Around us is extraordinary
rugged terrain.
00:47:42.542 --> 00:47:48.792
So this was an enormously
difficult place to penetrate.
00:47:48.792 --> 00:47:51.208
We are standing in
the main cattle corral
00:47:51.208 --> 00:47:51.999
at Mafolofolo.
00:47:51.999 --> 00:47:55.709
And behind me is the grave
of Johannes Dinkwanyane,
00:47:55.709 --> 00:47:56.542
a quite extraordinary figure.
00:47:56.542 --> 00:47:59.208
A man who looked forwards
and backwards in his life,
00:47:59.208 --> 00:48:01.999
and yet is hardly remembered
to the present.
00:48:01.999 --> 00:48:04.417
In fact so little remembered
that his grave
00:48:04.417 --> 00:48:07.166
is no more than
a jumble of stones.
00:48:07.166 --> 00:48:09.999
Mafolofolo represented
a remarkable attempt
00:48:09.999 --> 00:48:13.458
to bind together the traditions
of Koni communities
00:48:13.458 --> 00:48:15.250
of the world of
the mission stations
00:48:15.250 --> 00:48:17.125
and of the world
of the Pedi kingdom.
00:48:17.125 --> 00:48:20.166
It was an attempt to take
the best of that world,
00:48:20.166 --> 00:48:21.834
it was an attempt that failed,
00:48:21.834 --> 00:48:24.417
but it was an attempt that has
enormous meaning
00:48:24.417 --> 00:48:26.750
for the way in which
our societies developed
00:48:26.750 --> 00:48:27.834
in the longer term.
00:48:27.834 --> 00:48:29.999
Because in a sense what
Dinkwanyane
00:48:29.999 --> 00:48:31.999
and what this community
were trying to do
00:48:31.999 --> 00:48:33.875
is a great deal of what
we\'\'re trying to do
00:48:33.875 --> 00:48:34.542
in the new South Africa.
00:48:34.542 --> 00:48:38.583
Take the best from the old
and build us into the new.
00:48:38.583 --> 00:48:42.000
♪
00:48:42.000 --> 00:48:44.999
And so the work of our team
continues
00:48:44.999 --> 00:48:47.999
to make sense of this
remarkable world.
00:48:47.999 --> 00:48:52.208
A world that without
protection and preservation
00:48:52.208 --> 00:48:55.041
will be lost forever.
00:48:55.041 --> 00:48:58.959
There are a small number
of local landowners and farmers
00:48:58.959 --> 00:49:02.999
who are committed to protecting
and preserving the site,
00:49:02.999 --> 00:49:05.125
but as they remain unrecognized
00:49:05.125 --> 00:49:07.458
by the South African Heritage
System
00:49:07.458 --> 00:49:11.999
most of them lie behind
locked gates on private farms.
00:49:11.999 --> 00:49:13.208
They are not signposted
00:49:13.208 --> 00:49:17.542
and no information is publically
available about them.
00:49:17.542 --> 00:49:20.667
Such a critical part
of South African history
00:49:20.667 --> 00:49:26.250
left to vandals and litter.
00:49:26.250 --> 00:49:27.917
It\'\'s a sad story.
00:49:27.917 --> 00:49:29.709
What you see here
00:49:29.709 --> 00:49:33.999
are the ruins of what
was indeed
00:49:33.999 --> 00:49:38.542
a very vibrant
community.
00:49:38.542 --> 00:49:42.333
As government
much must be done
00:49:42.333 --> 00:49:44.166
to provide
the necessary support
00:49:44.166 --> 00:49:46.917
to bring this place
back to life.
00:49:46.917 --> 00:49:49.458
None of these sites
are declared
00:49:49.458 --> 00:49:50.375
National Heritage Sites.
00:49:50.375 --> 00:49:54.709
So they don\'\'t have the most
rudimentary legal protection.
00:49:54.709 --> 00:49:58.959
A number of them are
in a serious state of disarray,
00:49:58.959 --> 00:50:00.125
dereliction, collapse.
00:50:00.125 --> 00:50:04.750
All of that needs to be
stabilized at the very least,
00:50:04.750 --> 00:50:06.166
reversed where possible.
00:50:06.166 --> 00:50:08.166
So we need an emergency plan,
really,
00:50:08.166 --> 00:50:12.041
to try and insure that we don\'\'t
lose more of these sites.
00:50:12.041 --> 00:50:14.208
But we need to find ways
of making these sites
00:50:14.208 --> 00:50:16.999
accessible to
a much wider audience.
00:50:16.999 --> 00:50:18.834
And we need, therefore,
I think to develop
00:50:18.834 --> 00:50:23.917
sections of these sites
as areas where people can go,
00:50:23.917 --> 00:50:24.792
they can walk the sites.
00:50:24.792 --> 00:50:26.999
They\'\'re, as we know,
in beautiful areas,
00:50:26.999 --> 00:50:27.999
beautiful locations.
00:50:27.999 --> 00:50:30.792
They\'\'re on the route from
Johannesburg to the Kruger Park.
00:50:30.792 --> 00:50:34.041
Thousands and thousands
of tourists and South Africans
00:50:34.041 --> 00:50:35.999
every year
travel this area.
00:50:35.999 --> 00:50:38.999
If only we could make them
stop their cars,
00:50:38.999 --> 00:50:39.834
pause for a bit.
00:50:39.834 --> 00:50:42.041
The whole world could
open up in front of them
00:50:42.041 --> 00:50:44.375
which otherwise
would be lost.
00:50:44.375 --> 00:50:54.500
♪
00:50:54.500 --> 00:50:57.999
This is the story
of a dynamic people.
00:50:57.999 --> 00:51:01.999
A forgotten world of innovation
and resourcefulness.
00:51:01.999 --> 00:51:05.709
A community of people
who respected the land
00:51:05.709 --> 00:51:08.417
and harnessed all it offered.
00:51:08.417 --> 00:51:11.333
It is a story about
African society,
00:51:11.333 --> 00:51:15.999
not limited to racist ideas
about tribal Africa.
00:51:15.999 --> 00:51:19.375
And holds powerful lessons
for us all.
00:51:19.375 --> 00:51:22.999
The people of Bokoni lived
gently on the land.
00:51:22.999 --> 00:51:26.999
How many of us can say
we do the same?
00:51:26.999 --> 00:51:56.417
♪
00:51:56.417 --> 00:52:01.834
Captioned by
Video Caption Corporation
www.vicaps.com