History of Bulawayo City, Zimbabwe
Bulawayo: From Town to International Destination City
Bulawayo is the second largest city in Zimbabwe after the capital city,
Harare. Bulawayo is a city rich in cultural history and a must visit
for anyone coming to Zimbabwe. It is one of the oldest and historically
most important of Zimbabwe's towns. Certainly one cannot say that they
have experienced the full range of Zimbabwe's diversity if they have
not been to this bustling city in the southern western part of the
country of Zimbabwe. Bulawayo is one of the country's most attractive
cities and a major transport hub for Southern Africa.
Bulawayo was the capital of the Ndebele
State when Lobengula, son of the King Mzilikazi, ascended to the
throne. Lobengula’s initial royal town, established in 1872, was
located about 14 miles of the present day city, on a ridge dominated by
the Thabas Inyoka - “hill of serpents”. This town has been rebuilt and
is known as “old Bulawayo”. Lobengula eventually moved his royal town,
and the locality of the modern Bulawayo city was chosen by King
Lobengula and he also named his royal town Bulawayo, which is the
Ndebele word for “the place of slaughter”, in recognition of an armed
struggle that Lobengula was involved in when he ascended to the throne,
i.e. “He was being opposed and persecuted by his opponents- and he came
out victorious”.
On 4 November 1893, a tattered Union Jack
flag in whose centre was emblazoned the lion emblem of the British
South Africa Company was tied one of the tree's branches on the side of
Bulawayo drive. In the distance, the huts of Lobengula’s capital were
burning on the further side of the stream. The flag was raised to
signify the capture of Bulawayo and the successful conclusion of the
Matabele War. Dr Leander Starr Jameson was among those who watched the
flag being raised above the Bulawayo Drive that day, and he
congratulated himself on having conquered Matabeleland in a remarkable
cavalry blitzkrieg. Annually, on the 4th of November Bulawayo remembers
the flag raising ceremony by the British South Africa Company, as this
represents the official founding of Bulawayo as a town.
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But by one of those coincidences in which
history rejoices, on that same day the City also commemorates the death
and funeral of Mzilikazi, the founder of the Matabele nation. This is
wholly fitting, since Bulawayo is a city belonging to Africans and to
Europeans alike, and its history cannot be divorced from that of the
province of Matabeleland. Mzilikazi led the Matabele nation to the high
veld around Bulawayo in 1840, and he ruled it until his death in late
September of 1868. After prolonged ritual ceremonies his interment
began on 2 November 1868 at Entumbane in the Matopo Hills and was
concluded two days later, exactly twenty-five years before Jameson's
frontiersmen nailed their flag to a tree.
Like a phoenix, the present day multi-ethnic
City of Bulawayo rose on the remains of King Lobengula's capital, with
its wide tree-lined roads (the original streets of Bulawayo were
constructed so as to allow a team of sixteen oxen to make a full turn),
and a distribution of skyscrapers. Present day Bulawayo, is clearly
unrecognizable from King Lobengula's capital, as it bares no
resemblance. In 1894 a town of a gridiron pattern was taking shape and
In 1897 Bulawayo acquired a municipal status.
Bulawayo is essentially a military town: few
places of its size can have seen so many battles fought around it. It
was born in battle after Lobengula had defeated the Zwangendaba
regiment and it was resurrected following the vital battle of Bembesi.
The town is strategically placed on the apex of the great Zimbabwean
plateau and commands access to it from the south, so that in a military
sense whoever holds Bulawayo holds Zimbabwe. In 1896 when the Matabele
found their temper again after the defeats of Jameson's war, Bulawayo
became a symbol rather than a place, a symbol of the white men's
determination to withstand the greatest challenge ever presented to
them in southern African. The Matabele uprising has come to be known as
the 1896-7 Rebellion, or “the
Matabele war” or “the First Chimurenga”.
Geographically, Bulawayo city is located in Matabeleland, and is west
of Harare. It is strategically located as a link between South Africa,
Botswana, Zambia and the rest of the country. It thus has the dual role
of being the regional capital for Southern Zimbabwe and is also a link
to the interim of Southern Africa, with its proximity to South Africa
it was natural for Bulawayo to develop as the industrial hub of
Zimbabwe. The city has well established rail and road links to the
whole country and its infrastructure is amongst the best in Zimbabwe.
Bulawayo's situation is interesting from the
geological as well as from a geographical point of view. The city
stands on some of the most ancient rock ever laid down on earth. About
3,000 million years ago when the world was very young, a resilient belt
of predominantly volcanic lavas, some thirty miles thick, which
extruded there over the earth crust, and although granite intrusions,
Karoo sediments, and finally" Kalahari sand later obscured much of this
basement greenstone (as It is now called), a triangle of the archaic
rock still remained exposed and today bears the buildings of the modem
city. The northern apex of this triangular slab of greenstone lies
beyond Queensdale and from that point reaches down to a granite base
line running along the fringe of the Matopo Hills.
Located at a vantage point in the Sub-Saharan Region, Bulawayo forms
the axis of a well planned road and rail network to the north, south,
east and west of Zimbabwe. The first train arrived in Bulawayo in 1897,
early colonial settlers using the region's immense natural wealth
turned Bulawayo into a boom town, and Bulawayo grew to become an
important industrial hub of Southern Rhodesia (now called Zimbabwe).
The arrival of railways in 1897 made it the country's major centre for
mining, ranching and industrial activity. Many heavy industrials were
located in the town. The town was a gateway to Southern Africa -
linking the north and south through a rail and road network. For a long
time Bulawayo was to remain the country's commercial capital while
Harare was the seat of government.
Bulawayo attained the status of being a city in 1943. The Bulawayo City
Council was the first in Southern Rhodesia to establish a viable
African Advisor Board and went further to establish home ownership
schemes for Africans, being the first local authority to do so. It was
the first to embark on a planned programme of water supply; the first
to provide educational facilities before there was any national policy
or the subject; and led in having a progressive low-cost housing
programme and a comprehensive social development blueprint.
Before the collapse of Zimbabwe's rail
infrastructure, Bulawayo was an important transport hub providing rail
links between Botswana, South Africa and Zambia, and promoting the
city's development as a major industrial centre. The city still
contains much of what remains of Zimbabwe's heavy industry and food
processing capability.
Today Bulawayo is one of the country's most attractive cities, with a
pleasing mixture of Victorian and modern architecture, which gives it a
unique character. From a tourist point of view, Bulawayo has a lot to
offer, either from within itself or around it. Bulawayo is located
within the vicinity of Hwange National Park, The Victoria Falls (one of
the wonders of the world), Khami Ruins, The Matobo Hills (where Cecil
John Rhodes and as well as King Mzilikazi are buried) and Matobo
National Park.
Much closer to the city there is the
National Art Gallery in Bulawayo, an attraction of great interest, is
housed in a Victorian era building. The complex also houses a craft
shop, restaurant and several artists' studios. There is also the
Zimbabwe's International Trade Fair (ZITF), Old Bulawayo, etc. Most of
the tourist points worth visiting are highlighted here. It has been
said that visitors to the city describe Bulawayo as the "Jewel Beneath
the Zimbabwe Sun ", well worth visiting due to its vast array of
treasures located in a truly unique setting. |