Bukunzi
Bukunzi, also known as Mbirizi,[1] was a small kingdom located in the extreme southwest of what is now Rwanda. The kings of Bukunzi were renowned throughout the region for the legendary control of the rain.[2] Located east of the Ruzizi River, Bukunzi was apparently founded by members of the Shi royal family, who fled into political exile following a family dispute. Luhwinja, another small polity, is thought to have emerged from Bukunzi.[3] Located southeast of Lake Kivu, its historical ties were to the west with Bushi.[4] Through the eighteenth and nineteenth century, it had close ties to Ngweshe, one of the most powerful of the Shi states.[5] Bukunzi remained apart from the central Rwandan court until the military campaign led by colonial Belgium merged it into the central court in 1925, along with other small kingdoms located west of the Rwandan kingdom, such as Kingogo, Bushiru, and Busozo.[6] The area of the former Bukunzi kingdom is now part of Rusizi District in Rwanda.[4]
Footnotes
- ^ Footnote 29 Archived November 18, 2009, at the Wayback Machine of Newbury, David; Newbury, Catherine (June 2000). "Bringing the Peasants Back In: Agrarian Themes in the Construction and Corrosion of Statist Historiography in Rwanda". The American Historical Review. 105 (3): 832–877. doi:10.1086/ahr/105.3.832. JSTOR 2651812.
- ^ Newbury 106
- ^ Newbury 150
- ^ a b Newbury 325
- ^ Newbury 327
- ^ Newbury 239 & 270
References
- Newbury, David (1992). Kings and clans: Ijwi Island and the Lake Kivu Rift, 1780-1840. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0-299-12894-4. Retrieved 10 December 2009.
Further reading
- Ntezimana, Emmanuel (April 1980). "Coutumes et traditions des royaumes du Bukunzi et du Busozo". Études Rwandaises (in French): 15–39.
- Ntezimana, Emmanuel (June 1980). "L'arrivée des Européens au Kinyaga et la fin des royaumes hutu du Bukunzi et du Busozo". Études Rwandaises (in French). XII (3): 1–29.
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