The intersection of archaeology, oral tradition and history in the South African interior.
Abstract
The historical entanglement of indigenous and colonial societies in South
Africa created not only multiple points of social and cultural interaction, but
also a repository of interconnected material, oral and documentary records.
A multi-source, comparative approach across disciplinary boundaries is,
therefore, essential to achieve a full and seamless account of late precolonial and
early colonial African history. Oral tradition could serve as a bridge between
archaeology and text-based history, thereby enabling historically known
political lineages to be connected with the archaeological ruins of specific
precolonial African towns. Similarly, documentary sources on African societies
of the interior are often very limited in scope even deep into the nineteenth
century, as a result of which the complementary use of archaeological
methods and data becomes a methodological imperative. Three case studies
from the South African interior, Marothodi, Kaditshwene and Magoro Hill,
are presented to illustrate the explanatory potential of an interdisciplinary
approach to the study of the more recent African past.