will never stay here, while they try to hang you."
Laurence bowed his head, and felt the justice of it; he did
not think Temeraire ought to stay, but only wished that he
would, and be happy. "You will promise me not to stay
forever in the breeding grounds," he said, low. "Not past
the New Year, unless they let me visit you in the flesh."
He was very certain they would execute him by Michaelmas.
Extracts from
The Tswana Kingdom
By
Sipho Tsuluka Dlamini
[1838]
LONDON, CHAPMAN & HALL
Being a history of the Tswana Kingdom from its origins to
the present day, and a complete geographical survey of its
territories, with particular reference to the capital at
Mosi oa Tunya, and several interesting remarks on the
native customs.
THE GRADUAL PROCESS of consolidation of the Tswana and
Sotho peoples brought together a loose confederation of
tribal kingdoms, founded originally, according to tribal
historians, throughout the southern part of the continent
towards the end of the first millennium, by a general but
undeliberate southerly and eastern migration, whose impetus
has been lost to us: perhaps a search for fresh hunting
grounds, and new territory, by an expanding population both
human and dragon.
The first vague beginnings of elephant-farming are believed
to have developed shortly after this vast migration was
mostly complete, and the pressures of hunger might no
longer be relieved by further nomadic progress; a study of
the art of the ivory-carvers gives testament to the success
of the breeding project that rendered the domesticated
beasts more bovine-docile, and considerably larger than
their wild counterparts: a succession of tusks held at the
capital, each pair the largest harvested within a
generation, carved elaborately and presented to the (then
largely ceremonial) king....
These tribes, previously united only by distant ties of
blood, mutually intelligible dialect, and certain shared
customs and religious observances, most notable among these
of course the practice of dragon-rebirth, first began to
collaborate more closely for the joint administration of
the elephant herds, which demanded more labour than could
be organised by a single tribe.... [A] centralisation
further encouraged from the seventeenth century onwards by
the increasing demand for ivory and gold, which penetrated
to the African interior for several decades before the
hunger for slaves was risen to a sufficient pitch to
overcome the reluctance of the more aggressive slave-taking
tribes to venture into dragon-territory; and spurring, from
the middle of the eighteenth century, the rapid development
of gold-mining (a venture that the Tswana authorities
indicate is most productively pursued through the cooperation of at least ten dragons, more than belong to
nearly any individual tribe), and of the ivory trade, which
by the open of the present century was sending some sixty
thousand pounds a year to the coast without any suspicion
on the part of the European traders, who carried the
elephant teeth away, that these were obtained by, and not
in despite of, the dragons who barred any further entry to
the interior....
On Mosi oa Tunya
THE FALLS AT Mosi oa Tunya, so justly celebrated by all who
have beheld them, were, despite their beauty, as a
settlement inconvenient to men alone, who could not easily
navigate the gorges, and in their natural state offered no
real haven to feral dragons; admired and occasionally
visited, either for mere scenic pleasure or religious
observation, they were yet undeveloped and uninhabited when
the first Sotho-Tswana peoples moved into the region, and
quickly made them their ceremonial capital, a further
centralising tie among the tribes.... [T]he desire of the
dragon-ancestors for more comfortable shelter impelled the
first attempts at cave-drilling, the relics of which may
yet be seen at the falls, in the holiest and roughest
chambers, low in the cliff-side...and which later were to
prove the foundation of the efficient gold-mining
operations....
The practice of rebirth here requires a few words, to
expand upon the treatment it has received in the British
press, at the hands of well-meaning missionary reporters,
who in their zeal have too easily disposed of it as a
matter of pure pagan superstition, urgently to be
eradicated in favor of Christianity.... It will not be
found that anyone of the Tswana imagines that the human is
naturally reborn, in the manner espoused, for instance, by
the Buddhist or the Hindu, and if one should propose
leaving a selected dragon egg alone in the wilderness, in
accordance with the suggestion of Mr. Dennis, to snatch
such an egg "to demonstrate to the heathen the wild fancy
of their custom," by proving that the resulting hatchling
would have no recollection of its former life, no tribesman
would dispute this as the natural consequence, but merely
abuse the bad husbandry and irreligiosity united, which
should so waste a dragon-egg, and insult the spirit of the
dead ancestor.
That the feral dragon in the wilderness is no more a reborn
human than is a cow is perfectly understood by them, and
viewed as no contradiction to their practice. Careful
coaxing and ritual are necessary, besides a suitable
housing, to induce an ancestral spirit to take up residence
again in material form; the article of faith is to believe,
once this has been achieved, that the dragon is certainly
the human reborn, a belief much harder to dislodge, by its
being firmly held not only by the men but the dragons, and
of so much practical importance within the tribe.
The dragon-ancestors at once serve as a substantial source
of labor and military power, and as repositories of tribal
history and legend, compensating for the neglect of the
written word. Furthermore, each tribe will consider
carefully the disposal of the eggs of their own dragonancestors, common tribal property, which may be used to
reincarnate one of their own, should there be one of
sufficient standing to merit the honor, or, far more
commonly, traded to a remote tribe in more urgent need,
through a complex network of communications sure to bring
the news of a suitable egg to those seeking the same, this
network serving to knit together tribes that might
otherwise have grown more distinct, left to act in
isolation. Nor are these dragon bloodlines ignored, as
might be expected by one who imagines a sort of simplistic
literal belief; rather, such an exchange of eggs is held to
establish a kind of distant familial relation between the
receiving tribe and the donor, much like state marriages,
further strengthening ties....
Mokhachane I (h), a Sotho chieftain, carved out a
relatively minor territory that proved notable for its
position on the extremes of the Sotho-Tswana tribal
regions, touching upon Xhosa territory to the south, and
thus indirectly receiving at least vague intelligence of
the growing Dutch settlements at the Cape, and having some
communication with the beleaguered Monomotapa kingdoms on
the East African coast, the descendants of the zimbabwebuilders.
Broader relations were established with this latter power
near the turn of the century under the urging of his son,
Moshueshue I (h), demonstrating from his youth that wisdom
for which his name was to become a byword, which relations
were to have great significance after Mokhachane's (h)
death in raiding during the year 1798, when Moshueshue was
able to negotiate the acquisition of a large dragon egg of
the Monomotapa royal lines, for his father's rebirth; the
Monomotapa government by this time fracturing under
increasing pressure from the Portuguese gold-hunters along
the eastern coast, and in need of the gold and the military
reinforcements that Moshueshue could provide, as a result
of negotiations with neighboring Tswana tribes....
The acquisition of so powerful a dragon, in conjunction
with Moshueshue's coming of age, which eliminated the last
barriers to his being received as an equal by other tribal
chieftains, very shortly vaulted the tribe to pre-eminence
in the southernmost regions of the Tswana lands. Mokhachane
I (d) easily established dominance over the dragonancestors of neighboring tribes, in joint raiding that
Moshueshue organized, and together they were soon able to
establish several new mines, both of gold and of precious
stones, in the formerly unexploited region; and with the
steady increase in wealth and respect soon acquired a
primacy that enabled them, in the year 1804, to claim the
central seat, at Mosi oa Tunya, and the title of king.
The depredations of the slave-takers had by this time for
several years been making systematic inroads into the
Tswana territories, as more than isolated incidents, and
were a not inconsiderable factor in the willingness of the
smaller kingdoms to submit formally to central leadership,
in hopes of making a united answer to those raids, and
repulsing them decisively, an argument that Moshueshue did
not fail of making, in his careful solicitations of fealty
from his fellow tribal chieftains, who might otherwise have
resisted from pride. The practical as well as ceremonial
reign of Mokhachane I was confirmed by the conquest of
Capetown and the Slave Coast raids of 1807, and the Tswana
themselves date the founding of their kingdom from this
year....
Acknowledgements
AMONG MANY WORKS, Basil Davidson's survey of primary
sources, African Civilization Revisited, stands out as a
priceless resource, as does UNESCO's General History of
Africa, for illuminating the history of the continent
outside colonization. I am also deeply indebted to the
guides at the Ker & Downey camps in the Okovango Delta of
Botswana for sharing their expertise and tolerating endless
questions, with particular thanks to our brilliant camp
manager at Okuti, Paul Moloseng.
Empire of Ivory has been in some ways the most difficult of
the Temeraire books to write so far, and I have to give
deep and heartfelt thanks to all my beta readers for heroic
work under the gun, as I hardly gave them a weekend for
comment on the draft before I was tearing onward into
revisions: Holly Benton, Sara Booth, Alison Feeney, Shelley
Mitchell, Georgina Paterson, Meredith Rosser, L. Salom,
Kellie Takenaka, and Rebecca Tushnet. And much gratitude to
Betsy Mitchell, Emma Coode, and Jane Johnson, my wonderful
editors, and to my agent, Cynthia Manson.
And always, always, both gratitude and love to Charles, my
first and best and most beloved reader.
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