Michael Mosoeu Moerane (1904–1980) was a
choral
A choir ( ; also known as a chorale or chorus) is a musical ensemble of singers. Choral music, in turn, is the music written specifically for such an ensemble to perform. Choirs may perform music from the classical music repertoire, which ...
music composer and the first
black South African
Racial groups in South Africa have a variety of origins. The Race (classification of human beings), racial categories introduced by Apartheid remain ingrained in South African society with South Africans and the South African government contin ...
to write a
symphonic poem
A symphonic poem or tone poem is a piece of orchestral music, usually in a single continuous movement, which illustrates or evokes the content of a poem, short story, novel, painting, landscape, or other (non-musical) source. The German term ''T ...
, in 1941.
Early life
Moerane was a member of the
Bafokeng
The Royal Bafokeng is the ethnic homeland of the Bafokeng people, a Setswana-speaking traditional community. The monarchy covers in the North West Province of South Africa. The capital is Phokeng, near Rustenburg. "Bafokeng" is used to refer ...
, specifically the Mahoona clan – traditional healers whose longer history can be traced back several centuries through the lineage of the
Bakwena
The Bakoena or Bakwena ("those who venerate the crocodile") are a large clan in Southern Africa. They form part of the Sotho-Tswana Bantu people and can be found in different countries such as Lesotho, Botswana, South Africa, Zimbabwe and Eswatini ...
royal family.
He was born on 20 September 1904 in Mongoloaneng, a village in the
Mount Fletcher
Mount Fletcher (officially Tlokoeng) is a town in Joe Gqabi District Municipality in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa, 69 km north-north-east of Maclear.
Founded in 1882, it takes its name from the mountain nearby. This was probabl ...
district of South Africa close to the border with
Lesotho
Lesotho ( ), officially the Kingdom of Lesotho, is a country landlocked country, landlocked as an Enclave and exclave, enclave in South Africa. It is situated in the Maloti Mountains and contains the Thabana Ntlenyana, highest mountains in Sou ...
.
He was one of seven children born to Eleazar Jakane Moerane and his wife Sofi Majara, whose grandparents were disciples of
Moshoeshoe I
Moshoeshoe I () ( – 11 March 1870) was the first king of Lesotho. He was the first son of Mokhachane, a minor chief of the Bamokoteli lineage, a branch of the Koena (crocodile) clan. In his youth, he helped his father gain power over som ...
and were among the first
Basotho converts to Christianity.
Moerane's parents were African landowners and members of the
Paris Evangelical Missionary Society Church. Most of their abundant arable land and livestock, however, had disappeared by the 1990s, owing largely to the
apartheid
Apartheid (, especially South African English: , ; , "aparthood") was a system of institutionalised racial segregation that existed in South Africa and South West Africa (now Namibia) from 1948 to the early 1990s. Apartheid was ...
government's
Homelands policy.
The family home contained a
harmonium, which was probably the first instrument that Moerane learnt to play, and his siblings all became professionals, like himself.
The two most celebrated are his younger brother, Manasseh Tebatso Moerane, the educationist, cultural activist and journalist who became an Editor of ''
The World
In its most general sense, the term "world" refers to the totality of entities, to the whole of reality or to everything that is. The nature of the world has been conceptualized differently in different fields. Some conceptions see the worl ...
'' newspaper, and his younger sister,
Epainette Mbeki
Nomaka Epainette Mbeki ( Moerane; 16 February 1916 – 7 June 2014), commonly known as "MaMbeki", a stalwart community activist and promoter of women's development, mother of former President of South Africa, Dr. Thabo Mbeki. and widow of polit ...
, one of the first women to join the Communist Party of South Africa, a stalwart community activist and promoter of women's development, and mother to a future President of South Africa, Dr.
Thabo Mbeki.
Education
His father's primary school provided Moerane's first elementary schooling, after which he attended Mariazell Mission School in
Matatiele
Matatiele is a town located in the northern part of the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa. According to the South African National Census of 2011, its 12,466 residents (1,113.44 per km²) and 4,107 households (366.83 per km²) make Matatiel ...
and then
Morija Training Institute in Lesotho.
In 1924, Moerane completed Standard VIII at
Lovedale Mission High School in Alice, South Africa, and by 1926 he had obtained a certificate of
Matriculation at the South African Native College (later called the
University of Fort Hare
The University of Fort Hare is a public university in Alice, Eastern Cape, South Africa.
It was a key institution of higher education for Africans from 1916 to 1959 when it offered a Western-style academic education to students from across sub ...
) while simultaneously completing a high school teaching diploma at Lovedale Training School.
Moerane registered for a
Bachelor of Music
Bachelor of Music (BM or BMus) is an academic degree awarded by a college, university, or conservatory upon completion of a program of study in music. In the United States, it is a professional degree, and the majority of work consists of prescr ...
degree part-time in 1930 through
Rhodes University College, which was at that time a satellite campus of the
University of South Africa
The University of South Africa (UNISA), known colloquially as Unisa, is the largest university system in South Africa by enrollment. It attracts a third of all higher education students in South Africa. Through various colleges and affiliates, U ...
(Unisa).
He completed the B.Mus. in 1941, a degree still modelled in those days on the Oxbridge & London B.Mus. degree courses.
According to his Student Record, which was obtained by Professor Percival Kirby from Unisa in 1962, Moerane passed the 1st-year subjects "History of Music, Harmony & Counterpoint and Elements of Sound" in 1930, the 2nd-year subjects "Counterpoint, Score Reading and Composition" in 1931, the 3rd-year subjects "Orchestration and Instrumentation", "Double Counterpoint and Fugue", "Advanced Composition"" in 1933, and "Composition III", "Exercise".
The Rhodes University ''Calendars'' for these years add more detail to the subjects that Moerane was expected to study, by himself, at home, which include aural training, dictation, writing in open score, melody harmonization, phrasing and form, analysis, history of western music from 1700 to 1900 and elements of acoustics.
Family life
In 1931, the year in which Moerane obtained a permanent post at Lovedale High School, he married Beatrice Betty Msweli, who had been a fellow student at Lovedale. Their first child, Mofelehetsi, was born at the end of 1931, followed by a daughter, Mathabo. A second son, Thuso, was born in
Kroonstad, where Mrs Moerane was teaching, in 1935. The couple had two more daughters, Hadieo and Sophie, and their last child, a son, Thabo, was born in 1947.
By that time, they were living in
Queenstown, South Africa
Queenstown, officially Komani, is a town in the middle of the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa, roughly halfway between the smaller towns of Cathcart and Sterkstroom on the N6 National Route. The town was established in 1853 and is curr ...
(now called Komani). Mrs. Moerane was known in the extended family for her domestic skills, and indeed she wrote the lyrics to one of Moerane's songs which is set for three female voices and appropriately called, "Ma-Homemakers" (Homemakers) and, because one of the verses is in isiXhosa, .
The Queenstown years, when the Moeranes' children were growing up, were evidently characterised by his strict discipline, his insistence on their speaking
Sesotho
Sotho () or Sesotho () or Southern Sotho is a Southern Bantu language of the Sotho–Tswana ("S.30") group, spoken primarily by the Basotho in Lesotho, where it is the national and official language; South Africa (particularly the Free Sta ...
at home rather than his wife's home language,
isiXhosa, which is also the local language, and his dislike of the influence of jazz culture on his children.
The Moeranes' next-door neighbours in Scanlen Street were
Todd Matshikiza, the jazz composer and pianist, and beyond that another jazz musician. In addition to jazz and choral music, the Eastern Cape was also known for its
anti-apartheid activities and leaders, and Moerane himself was actively involved through his membership of the Cape African Teachers Association (CATA).
It is also well known that he sympathised with the policies of the
Pan-African Congress
The Pan-African Congress was a series of eight meetings, held in 1919 in Paris (1st Pan-African Congress), 1921 in London, Brussels and Paris (2nd Pan-African Congress), 1923 in London (3rd Pan-African Congress), 1927 in New York City (4th Pan-Afr ...
(PAC) rather than the
African National Congress
The African National Congress (ANC) is a Social democracy, social-democratic political party in Republic of South Africa, South Africa. A liberation movement known for its opposition to apartheid, it has governed the country since 1994, when ...
(ANC), and that he supported the
Non-European Unity Movement (NEUM).
After he had left Queenstown, Moerane's son, Thuso, was served with a banning order on 15 February 1966, under which he was "prohibited under the
Suppression of Communism Act
The Suppression of Communism Act, 1950 (Act No. 44 of 1950), renamed the Internal Security Act in 1976, was legislation of the national government in apartheid South Africa which formally banned the Communist Party of South Africa and proscribed ...
from attending gatherings for five years",
and the family home, 10 Scanlen Street, was bulldozed down under apartheid's
Group Areas Act. Mr. and Mrs. Moerane became somewhat estranged from each other during the 1960s and Mrs. Moerane returned to live in Queenstown, where she died a few months after her husband, in 1980.
Teaching
Moerane officially taught History, Latin, Mathematics, Sesotho, Commercial Arithmetic or English, depending on the position he held, since Music was not a subject in most African schools. He held posts at St. John's College Mthatha (1922), Lovedale's High School, Training School and Practising Schools (1920s–1930s), Basutoland High School (1939–1940), Queenstown Secondary School (1942–1957), Mfundisweni Teacher Training Institute Mpondoland (1958–1959), and Peka High School Lesotho from 1961 until his retirement in the late 1960s. After he retired, Moerane helped with the establishment of the Department of Music at the new National Teachers Training College in
Maseru
Maseru is the capital and largest city of Lesotho. It is also the capital of the Maseru District. Located on the Caledon River, Maseru lies directly on the Lesotho–South Africa border. Maseru had a population of 330,760 in the 2016 census. The ...
, capital of the (then) newly independent sovereign state of Lesotho. Moerane's position in Queenstown was jeopardised by his "deep non-racialist" beliefs and his involvement with CATA, so that he became "a thorn in the flesh of the Education Department who decided to force him to retire prematurely".
He was thus forced to leave South Africa. Peka High School was situated in the
Leribe district of northern Lesotho, known for its strong support of the left-wing
Basutoland Congress Party (BCP), which was directly opposed to the policies of the
Basutoland National Party
The Basotho National Party is a political party in Lesotho, founded in 1959 in colonial Basutoland as the Basutoland National Party by Leabua Jonathan. He was Prime Minister from the 1965 general election until the 1986 coup d'état.
In the ...
(BCP), led by
Leabua Jonathan, who seized power in a coup in 1970 until he himself was removed in a coup in 1986.
In other words, Moerane moved from one turbulent political climate to another. At Peka, where Moerane "talked openly about his support for the BCP", he left an indelible impression on his students, among whom was the novelist
Zakes Mda
Zakes Mda ( ), legally Zanemvula Kizito Gatyeni Mda (born 1948) is a South African novelist, poet and playwright and he is the son of politician A. P. Mda. He has won major South African and British literary awards for his novels and plays. He i ...
. In both Peka and Queenstown, Moerane conducted a small family (later school) orchestra, because he had received a donation of instruments in the early 1950s; he arranged and wrote music for them and taught all the instruments himself; the group was known as the "African Springtime Orchestra".
He provided music education at home throughout his life to students and members of his community, he conducted and adjudicated choirs, put on concerts and musical theatre productions, and all in all, as his brother M.T. Moerane put it when the family raised Moerane's tombstone in 1988, despite the lack of formal music education for Africans, Moerane "trained thousands of music teachers-to-be", above all through his own compositions, which thousands of choristers knew and loved.
Compositions
Moerane composed more than 80 works, the majority of them fairly short pieces for ''a cappella'' choir, of which 50 choral works and the symphonic poem have survived. During his lifetime he was known by only a handful of choral pieces; the remainder (of the 50) were brought to light long after his death.
The manuscript score of his symphonic poem, ''Fatše La Heso (My Country)'', survived largely because of the efforts by Percival Kirby to have it donated to
Rhodes University Library
The Rhodes University Library is a library located in Makhanda, South Africa, Makhanda, under the Makana Local Municipality, Makana municipality. It was initially established in 1937 in the Clock Tower building of Rhodes University College.
...
. Many other works in manuscript or typescript (written in tonic solfa notation) survived thanks to their careful curation by Moerane's sons: first Thabo, and then after his death in 2006, Thuso, after whose death in 2021 they passed into the hands of his grandson, Tsepo. Like thousands of other works written by hundreds of composers in southern African in tonic solfa notation, Moerane's choral works were composed for school or church choirs and choral competitions, their performance history going largely unrecorded with music copied and distributed informally. This, together with the fragility of the manuscripts, the
tonic sol-fa notation, and the fact that Moerane used indigenous African languages,
Sesotho
Sotho () or Sesotho () or Southern Sotho is a Southern Bantu language of the Sotho–Tswana ("S.30") group, spoken primarily by the Basotho in Lesotho, where it is the national and official language; South Africa (particularly the Free Sta ...
and
isiXhosa for most of his lyrics, prompted the publication in 2020 of a complete edition of his music under the auspices of the
Africa Open Institute for Music, Research and Innovation at
Stellenbosch University, with lyrics translated and choral scores transcribed into staff notation. The choral works are grouped here according to voicing – SATB, SAA, SA – but in reality, many of them have subdivided voices; moreover, Moerane's music reflects his command of a range of melodic, harmonic and
contrapuntal
In music, counterpoint is the relationship between two or more musical lines (or voices) which are harmonically interdependent yet independent in rhythm and melodic contour. It has been most commonly identified in the European classical tradi ...
textures and styles. He registered for royalty purposes with the
Southern African Music Rights Organisation
SAMRO, the Southern African Music Rights Organisation, is a copyright asset management society. It was established by the South African Copyright Act, and aims to protect the intellectual property of music creators by licensing music users, col ...
(SAMRO) in 1973, and his music is still (2022) in copyright. A complete ''Catalogue of Works by M.M. Moerane'' was published by African Composers Edition in 2020.
Very few of Moerane's manuscripts and typescripts were dated, and so it is only through circumstantial evidence (when a work was prescribed for a competition, for example) that assigning dates to his works becomes possible. Details about individual works and approximate dates ascertained through interviews, are available on individual scores in the critical edition online.
Sacred choruses
Approximately eight works are written in the style of church hymns, anthems or sacred songs: these include''Tsatsi La Pallo'' (Judgement Day), ''Ruri!'' (Truly!), and ''Ngokuba Sizalelwe Umtwana'' (For Unto Us a Child is Born), which uses the same text from ''Isaiah'' Chapter 9 Verse 6 as Handel’s "For Unto Us a Child is Born" from ''Messiah'', and which opens with a unison quotation from the old Xhosa melody by
Ntsikana
Ntsikana (born 1780-1821) was a Christian Xhosa prophet, evangelist and hymn writer who is regarded as one of the first Christians to translate Christian ideas and concepts into terms understandable to a Xhosa audience.
Personal life
Ntsikana ...
Gaba, "Ntsikana's Bell". Moerane's other religious works are his eight arrangements of
spirituals in English, among which is a rousing eight-part setting of ''Go Tell It on the Mountains''.
Songs about traditional life
Moerane wrote about 18 songs in which traditional and community life feature strongly, and which sometimes include aspects of Sotho traditional music in their rhetorical style,
pentatonicism, or bi-chordal harmonies. One of them, ''Morena Tlake'' (King Vulture), quotes from
Enoch Sontonga
Enoch Mankayi Sontonga ( – 18 April 1905) was a South African composer, who is best known for writing the Xhosa hymn "Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika" (), which, in abbreviated version, has been sung as the first half of the national anthem of South ...
's anthem ''Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika'' at the end. Like most other southern African choral music composers Moerane wrote his own lyrics, but unlike most, he also drew heavily on literary texts, especially from Sesotho writers Bennett Makalo Khaketla,
Caroline Ntseliseng Khaketla, ’Mabasiea Jeannette Mahalefele, and Kemuel Edward Ntsane. Songs based on the latter's poems – ''Mohokare'' (The Caledon River), ''Ngeloi La Me'' (My Angel), ''Paka-Mahlomola'' (Creator of Sorrow), and ''Satane A Tšeha'' (The Devil Laughed) – are full of references to the hardship of migrant labour. In ''Paka-Mahlomola'', for example, written for female voices in a sombre homophonic style, almost like a lament, the river symbolises the damage people suffered as a result of crossing it to seek work on the mines, far from family and community. The river sings a different tune, is the song's message, depending on which side of it you live.
Love songs
Perhaps Moerane's greatest achievements, musically, are his "love songs", of which the two best known are ''Della'' and ''Sylvia'', which are also among only five that have isiXhosa texts while all his other extant songs are in English or Sesotho. ''Barali ba Jerusalema'' (Daughters of Jerusalem), based on an extract from the
Song of Songs and containing the phrase (here translated into English), "do not stare at me because I am black", is difficult to classify, since it has a biblical text, racial undertones, and yet is decidedly about love; and as in so much of Moerane's writing, its musical style is Afro-modern.
The lyrics of ''Della'' are adapted from an isiXhosa poem by Sampson Mputa for which Moerane provides some of his richest and most stately contrapuntal writing. ''Sylvias long lyric poem by Moerane speaks fervently of love for a young woman who is about to depart (which in real life, she was); and to express such profound feelings, Moerane writes harmonies in the opening and closing sections that are almost
Mahlerian, while the middle section is gently reminiscent of ragtime. One of the newly-discovered love songs, ''Mahakoe'' (Jewels), is Moerane's most experimental work, its harmonies so
chromatic
Diatonic and chromatic are terms in music theory that are most often used to characterize scales, and are also applied to musical instruments, intervals, chords, notes, musical styles, and kinds of harmony. They are very often used as a pair, ...
that they are at times atonal. This suggests that the work may have been written during the period when Moerane was studying advanced chromatic harmony. The poem in Sesotho, written by Moerane, is clearly based on
W.B. Yeats
William Butler Yeats (13 June 186528 January 1939) was an Irish poet, dramatist, writer and one of the foremost figures of 20th-century literature. He was a driving force behind the Irish Literary Revival and became a pillar of the Irish liter ...
's "
Aedh Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven
"Aedh Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven" is a poem by William Butler Yeats. It was published in 1899 in his third volume of poetry, ''The Wind Among the Reeds''.
Commentary
The speaker of the poem is the character Aedh, who appears in Yeats's w ...
", although it is darker in tone:
If only I had gold,
And other precious metals,
high quality stones!
But I am destitute,
I am poor, I have no possessions,
I am in dire trouble, I am embarrassed,
A destitute among destitutes,
A poor indigent.
And so I will lay at your feet
all the dreams and nightmares of my soul.[Translation by Mpho Ndebele.]
''Fatše La Heso (My Country)''
Moerane's choral music is predominantly western in its phrasing and harmony: his son Thabo once commented in an interview that his father was Mozartean in melody and Wagnerian in harmony.
At the same time, he was capable of using traditional sources, and he knew the folk music of what he called his country, Lesotho, very well.
Although not
Mosotho
The Sotho () people, also known as the Basuto or Basotho (), are a Bantu nation native to southern Africa. They split into different ethnic groups over time, due to regional conflicts and colonialism, which resulted in the modern Basotho, who ...
by birth, he was by culture and upbringing, and nowhere is this demonstrated more clearly than in his symphonic poem, ''Fatše La Heso (My Country)''. About 10 minutes long, it is scored for strings, wind, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones, tuba, bass drum, timpani, cymbals, triangle, piano and harp, and is based on what Moerane calls "thematic material derived from genuine African songs".
Moerane writes out these four main themes in a short Preface to the score: "a transfiguration of a warrior song of my country"; a theme that “in its original form (which is quite pentatonic)" is "used by the reapers as they thresh the corn with their
knob-kerries"; a "very free transformation of a cradle-song"; and a "hymn-tune used in this work to supply the harmonic structure" which "appears throughout the work and undergoes many changes".
Moerane successfully maintains the diatonic African character of the first three themes within an overarching tonal and orchestral texture whose chromaticism and shifting key centres bespeak a decidedly late Romantic style, owing no doubt to the influence of his teacher, Friedrich Hartmann, who had been a student in Vienna of
Alexander von Zemlinsky, brother-in-law of
Arnold Schoenberg
Arnold Schoenberg or Schönberg (, ; ; 13 September 187413 July 1951) was an Austrian-American composer, music theorist, teacher, writer, and painter. He is widely considered one of the most influential composers of the 20th century. He was as ...
.
The work was premiered by the
BBC Symphony Orchestra in Bedford, north of London, in November 1944 with live radio broadcasts on the
BBC Home Service
The BBC Home Service was a national and regional radio station that broadcast from 1939 until 1967, when it was replaced by BBC Radio 4.
History
1922–1939: Interwar period
Between the early 1920s and the outbreak of World War II, the BBC ...
and (in South Africa) on the (then) BBC African Service. An anonymous reviewer of the latter said that it "proved to be a work of warm vitality, strong in its rhythm and markedly African in its inspiration. It was not merely imitative of European music, and its melodic line seemed to derive directly from Bantu folk music, though refined by Western forms. The orchestration made particularly good use of the wind instruments".
''Fatše La Heso'' was performed live the following year, 1945, in
Manchester
Manchester () is a city in Greater Manchester, England. It had a population of 552,000 in 2021. It is bordered by the Cheshire Plain to the south, the Pennines to the north and east, and the neighbouring city of Salford to the west. The t ...
at the opening of the Fifth (international) Pan African Conference, apparently at the request of the conference organiser,
W.E.B. Du Bois
William Edward Burghardt Du Bois ( ; February 23, 1868 – August 27, 1963) was an American-Ghanaian sociologist, socialist, historian, and Pan-Africanist civil rights activist. Born in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, Du Bois grew up in ...
.
Through the
Council on African Affairs The Council on African Affairs (CAA), until 1941 called the International Committee on African Affairs (ICAA), was a volunteer organization founded in 1937 in the United States. It emerged as the leading voice of anti-colonialism and Pan-Africanism ...
, it was performed in New York in 1950, at a concert conducted by
Dean Dixon
Charles Dean Dixon (January 10, 1915November 3, 1976) was an American conductor.
Career
Dixon was born in the upper-Manhattan neighborhood of Harlem in New York City to parents who had earlier migrated from the Caribbean. He studied conducting ...
that also included works by
Fela Sowande,
Amadeo Roldán,
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor,
Ulysses Kay, Ingram Fox, and
William Grant Still
William Grant Still Jr. (May 11, 1895 – December 3, 1978) was an American composer of nearly two hundred works, including five symphonies, four ballets, nine operas, over thirty choral works, plus art songs, chamber music and works fo ...
. Proceeds of the concert were "used primarily to support a health clinic directed by an African physician in the poverty-ridden
Ciskei
Ciskei (, or ) was a Bantustan for the Xhosa people-located in the southeast of South Africa. It covered an area of , almost entirely surrounded by what was then the Cape Province, and possessed a small coastline along the shore of the Indian O ...
Province in South Africa and to aid in promoting the work among African youth being carried on by Mr Moerane, in the same country, who sent the score of his tone poem to the Committee specifically for this concert".
The work was performed and broadcast in 1973 by the National Symphony Orchestra of the
SABC conducted by Edgar Cree, a recording released on CD in 1991.
Publications
Very little of Moerane's music was published during his lifetime, not even the symphonic poem, which he tried (but failed) to get published. Lovedale Mission Press published two songs in tonic solfa in 1938: ''Liphala'' (Whistles) and ''Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen''.
SAMRO published ''Barali ba Jerusalema'' in 1998,
and a version of ''Della'' in 2008.
The African Composers Edition publication online presents each work separately as well as all 51 works in four volumes.
Awards and honours
in 1937, Moerane was awarded £20 for the "May Esther Bedford Prize for musical composition", for a set of 10 piano pieces entitled ''Album for the Young'', now lost; and on 14 December 2004, the Eastern Cape Department of Sport, Recreation, Arts and Culture presented a trophy posthumously, in honour of Moerane's "contribution to Xhosa culture".
Death
Moerane experienced health problems some time in late 1979 or early 1980 and was admitted to Queen Elizabeth Hospital Maseru. From there he was transferred to Pelonomi Hospital Bloemfontein, where he died on 27 January 1980. He is buried in the graveyard near his former home in Tsifalimali, northern Lesotho.
Notes
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Moerane, Michael Mosoeu
1904 births
1980 deaths
Choral composers
Lesotho musicians
Lesotho schoolteachers
People from Elundini Local Municipality
People from Maseru
People from Queenstown, South Africa
Rhodes University alumni
Sotho-language writers
South African composers
South African conductors (music)
South African expatriates in Lesotho
South African male composers
South African schoolteachers
20th-century classical composers
University of Fort Hare alumni
University of South Africa alumni
Xhosa-language writers