Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gvvz8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T14:27:45.306Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Economic and ideological roles of copper ingots in prehistoric Zimbabwe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Lorraine M. Swan*
Affiliation:
*African and Comparative Archaeology, Department of Archaeology and Ancient History, Uppsala University, Box 626, 751 26 Uppsala, Sweden (Email: swans01@bigpond.net.au)

Extract

As well as being modes of supplying metal, cross-shaped copper ingots in Zimbabwe are shown to be emblems of currency and status. The author dates them to the first half of the second millennium AD and connects the appearance of ingots to increased social stratification.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 2007

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bent, J. 1892. The ruined cities of Mashonaland. London: Longmans, Green & Co 1896.Google Scholar
Bisson, M. S. 1975. Copper currency in central Africa: the archaeological evidence. World Archaeology 6: 276–92.Google Scholar
Bisson, M. S. 1976. The prehistoric coppermines of Zambia. Unpublished PhD dissertation, University of California, Santa Barbara.Google Scholar
Bisson, M. S. 2000. Precolonial copper metallurgy: sociopolitical context, in Vogel, J. O. (ed.) Ancient African metallurgy: the sociocultural context: 83276. Walnut Creek (CA): AltaMira.Google Scholar
Calabrese, J. A. 2000. Metals, ideology and power: the manufacture and control of materialised ideology in the area of the Limpopo-Shashe confluence, c. AD 900 to 1300. South African Archaeological Society Goodwin Series 8: 100–11.Google Scholar
Caton-Thompson, G. 1931. The Zimbabwe Culture: ruins and reactions. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Childs, S. T. & Killick, D.. 1993. Indigenous African metallurgy: nature and culture. Annual Review of Anthropology 22: 317–37.Google Scholar
Collett, D. P. 1993. Metaphors and representations associated with precolonial iron-smelting in eastern and southern Africa, in Shaw, Thurstan (ed.) The archaeology of Africa: food, metals and towns: 499511. London & New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
De Maret, P. 1977. Sanga, new excavations, more data, and some related problems. Journal of African History 18: 321–37.Google Scholar
De Maret, P. 1982. New survey of archaeological research and dates for west-central and north-central Africa. Journal of African History 23: 115.Google Scholar
De Maret, P. 1995. Croisette histories, in de Heusch, L. (ed.) Objects: signs of Africa: 133–45. Tervuren: Musée Royal de l'Afrique Centrale.Google Scholar
De Maret, P. 1999. The power of symbols and the symbols of power through time: probing the Luba past, in McIntosh, S. Keech (ed.) Beyond Chiefdoms: pathways to complexity in Africa: 151–65. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Denbow, J. 1990. Congo to Kalahari: data and hypotheses about the political economy of the western stream of the Early Iron Age. African Archaeological Review 8: 139–76.Google Scholar
Fagan, B. M., Phillipson, D. W. & Daniels, S.G.H.. 1969. Iron Age cultures in Zambia 2. London: Chatto & Windus.Google Scholar
Garlake, P. S. 1970. Iron Age sites in the Urungwe District of Rhodesia. South African Archaeological Bulletin 25: 2544.Google Scholar
Garlake, P. S. 1978. Pastoralism and Zimbabwe. Journal of African History 19: 479–93.Google Scholar
Gill, J. W. & Hole, H. M.. 1903. Report of ordinary meeting held on 31 October 1900. Proceedings of the Rhodesian Scientific Association 1: 2931.Google Scholar
Hall, M. 1987. The changing past: farmers, kings and traders in southern Africa, 200-1860. Cape Town: David Philip.Google Scholar
Hall, R. N. 1905. Great Zimbabwe. London: Methuen.Google Scholar
Hall, R. N. & Neal, W. G.. 1902. The ancient ruins of Rhodesia. London: Methuen.Google Scholar
Hanisch, E. M. O. 1974. Copper working in the Messina district. Journal of the South African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy 74: 250–53.Google Scholar
Herbert, E. W. 1984. Red gold of Africa: copper in precolonial history and culture. Madison (WI): University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Huffman, T. N. 1972. The rise and fall of Zimbabwe. Journal of African History 13: 353–66.Google Scholar
Huffman, T. N. 1986. Iron Age settlement patterns and the origins of class distinction in southern Africa. Advances in World Archaeology 5: 291338.Google Scholar
Huffman, T. N. 1996. Snakes and crocodiles: power and symbolism in ancient Zimbabwe. Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University Press.Google Scholar
Kiyaga-Mulindwa, D. 1992. Iron-working at Makodu in eastern Botswana, in Sinclair, P.J.J. & Juma, A. (ed.) Urban Origins in eastern Africa: Proceedings of the 1991 workshop in Zanzibar: 162–66. Uppsala: Swedish Central Board of National Antiquities.Google Scholar
Maggs, T. M.O'C. & Whitelaw, G.. 1991. A review of recent archaeological research on food producing communities in southern Africa. Journal of African History 21: 324.Google Scholar
Miller, D. 2002. Smelter and smith: Iron Age metal fabrication technology in southern Africa. Journal of Archaeological Science 29: 10831131.Google Scholar
Miller, D. & Whitelaw, G.. 1994. Early Iron Age metal working from the site of Kwagandaganda, Natal, South Africa. South African Archaeological Bulletin 49: 7989.Google Scholar
More, C. E. 1974. Some observations on ‘ancient’ mining at Phalaborwa. Journal of the South African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy 74: 227–32.Google Scholar
Pwiti, G. 1996. Continuity and Change: an archaeological study of farming communities in northern Zimbabwe AD 500-1700 (Studies in African Archaeology 13). Uppsala: Societas Archaeologica Upsaliensis, Department of Archaeology, Uppsala University.Google Scholar
Pwiti, G. 2004. Economic change, ideology and the development of cultural complexity in northern Zimbabwe. Azania 39: 265–82.Google Scholar
Reid, A. & Segobye, A.. 2000. Politics, society and trade on the eastern margins of the Kalahari. South African Archaeological Society Goodwin Series 8: 5868.Google Scholar
Robinson, K. R. 1961. An Early Iron-Age site from the Chibi District, Southern Rhodesia. South African Archaeological Bulletin 16(63): 75102.Google Scholar
Robinson, K. R. 1963. Further excavations in the Iron Age deposits at the Tunnel site, Gokomere Hill, Southern Rhodesia. South African Archaeological Bulletin 18: 155–71.Google Scholar
Robinson, K. R. 1966. The Sinoia Caves, Lomagundi District, Rhodesia. Proceedings and Transactions of the Rhodesia Scientific Association 51: 131–55.Google Scholar
Robinson, K. R. 1967. Further work on Iron Age sites in the Chibi District, Southern Rhodesia, 1961-1963. Arnoldia 1: 17.Google Scholar
Schmidt, P. R. 1997. Iron technology in East Africa: symbolism, science, and archaeology. Oxford: James Currey.Google Scholar
Stagman, J. G. 1959. The geology of the country around Mhangula Mine, Lomagundi and Urungwe Districts. Southern Rhodesia Geological Survey Bulletin 46.Google Scholar
Summers, R. 1957. Letter to the Curator, Queen Victoria Museum, 26 July 1957. Archaeological Survey files QMSR 696.Google Scholar
Summers, R. 1969. Ancient mining in Rhodesia and adjacent areas. Salisbury: Trustees of the National Museums of Rhodesia.Google Scholar
Swan, L. 1994. Early gold mining on the Zimbabwean plateau: changing patterns of gold production in the first and second millennia AD (Studies in African Archaeology 9). Uppsala: Societas Archaeologica Upsaliensis, Department of Archaeology, Uppsala University.Google Scholar
Swan, L. 2002. Excavations at Copper Queen Mine, northwestern Zimbabwe. South African Archaeological Bulletin 57: 6479.Google Scholar
Thompson, L. C. 1949. Ingots of native manufacture. Native Affairs Department Annual 26: 719.Google Scholar
VanDer Merwe, N. J. & Scully, R.T.K.. 1971. The Phalaborwa story: archaeological and ethnographic investigation of a South African Iron Age group. World Archaeology 3: 178–96.Google Scholar
VanDer Merwe, N. J. & Avery, D. H.. 1987. Science and magic in African technology: traditional iron smelting in Malawi. Africa 57: 143–72.Google Scholar
Vansina, J. 1969. The bells of kings. Journal of African History 10: 187–97.Google Scholar
Vogel, J. 1972. Kumadzulo: an Early Iron Age Site in Southern Zambia. London & Lusaka: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
White, J. D. 1971. Some notes on the history and customs of the Urungwe district. Native Affairs Department Annual 10: 3372.Google Scholar
Whitelaw, G. 19941995. Towards an Early Iron Age worldview: some ideas from KwaZulu-Natal. Azania 29-30: 3750.Google Scholar