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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DinganeDingane - Wikipedia

    Dingane ka Senzangakhona Zulu (c. 1795 –29 January 1840), commonly referred to as Dingane or Dingaan, was a Zulu prince who became king of the Zulu ...

  2. Dingane kaSenzangakhona, comúnmente conocido como Dingane o Dingaan (ca. 1795 - 1840), fue un rey zulú. [1] Estableció tanto su capital real, uMgungundlovu, como uno de los numerosos campamentos militares (kraal) en el valle eMakhosini, justo al sur del río Umfolozi Blanco, en la ladera de la Colina del León (en zulú, Singonyama).

  3. But Dingane had burned down his whole kraal and the Zulus launched an attack on the command at the White Umfolozi River. In the meantime, the British occupied Port Natal (now Durban). From there, they advanced on Dingane, but were defeated at the Tugela River. Dingane's warriors also attacked the settlement at Port Natal.

  4. Senzangakhona' sixth wife, Mpikase kaMlilela Ngobese, bore Dingane, who took over the Zulu kingdom after assassinating his half-brother Shaka in 1828 at present-day Stanger. The official name for this place is KwaDukuza. Senzangakhona's ninth wife, Songiya kaNgotsha Hlabisa, bore Mpande, who became

    • c. 1762, Zululand
    • Jama kaNdaba (father), Mthaniya Sibiya (mother)
  5. Dingane (born c. 1795—died 1840) was a Zulu king (1828–40) who assumed power after taking part in the murder of his half brother Shaka in 1828. Very little is known of Zulu politics prior to 1828, but by 1827 the kingdom was rife with factional rivalries that centred on some of Shaka’s brothers and white mercenary traders.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Dingane kaSenzangakhona, comúnmente conocido como Dingane o Dingaan, fue un rey zulú.

  7. “This book makes a considered response to fields that reify the colonial master narratives of Empire today. Over a spread of deftly argued chapters, each with its own lens that draws from disparate sources of the oral tradition and journalism, it provides a compelling case for an alternative historiography of King Dingane, with a locus that is at once in the south and indigenous.