Sangu (people)
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The Sangu people (or Rori) are an
ethnic An ethnicity or ethnic group is a group of people with shared attributes, which they collectively believe to have, and long-term endogamy. Ethnicities share attributes like language, culture, common sets of ancestry, traditions, society, re ...
group based in the
Usangu Plain The Usangu Plain is a lowland in south-central Tanzania. It is named for the Sangu people. Geography The Usangu Plain covers an area of 15,500 km2. It extends northeast-southwest, bounded on the south by the Udzungwa Mountains, and the Kipengere ...
of
Chunya District Chunya District is one of the seven Districts of Tanzania, districts of Mbeya Region, Tanzania. It is bordered to the north by Tabora Region, to the northeast by Singida Region, to the east by Mbarali District, to the south by Mbeya Rural District ...
of
Mbeya Region Mbeya Region (''Mkoa wa Mbeya'' in Swahili language, Swahili) is one of Tanzania's 31 administrative Regions of Tanzania, regions. The region covers an area of . The region is comparable in size to the combined land area of the nation state of G ...
,
Tanzania Tanzania, officially the United Republic of Tanzania, is a country in East Africa within the African Great Lakes region. It is bordered by Uganda to the northwest; Kenya to the northeast; the Indian Ocean to the east; Mozambique and Malawi to t ...
.They speak Sangu (or Kisangu), which belongs to the Bantu language family. The Sangu community has a rich cultural heritage and is known for traditional practices, music, and art. Society is organized around clans and relies on both farming and livestock, such as cattle. Sangu people are also recognized for their historical role in local conflicts and alliances during the colonial era in East Africa. By 1907, their numbers were thought to be about 30,000. By 1987, their population had risen to an estimated 75,000. Before the arrival of the Ngoni ethic group, the coastal regions, the Southern Highlands had no political unit larger than clans and
chiefdom A chiefdom is a political organization of people representation (politics), represented or government, governed by a tribal chief, chief. Chiefdoms have been discussed, depending on their scope, as a stateless society, stateless, state (polity) ...
s. The Sangu clans were thought to have organized into a military force in the 1830's after being attacked. The Sangu sent slaves and ivory to representatives of the coastal regions and were the first to adopt the weapons, tactics, and followed the organization of the Ngoni who dominated the highlands until civil war broke out .


Hehe wars

Other African groups, including the Hehe (the second to imitate the Ngoni), they took Sangu regimental names and language forms. The father of
Chief Mkwawa Chief Mkwavinyika Munyigumba Mwamuyinga (c. 1855 – 19 July 1898), more commonly known as Chief Mkwawa or Sultan Mkwawa, was a Hehe tribal leader in German East Africa, based in Kalenga, Iringa region, who opposed the German colonization. The ...
of the Muyinga family of the Hehe people began to form a unified state to be called Uhehe. The Hehe people attacked the Sangu in 1857 and forced them to abandon their capital Utengule at least three times. The Sangu repeatedly attempted to return to Utengule but failed. They retreated westwards to build a new Utengule near present-day
Mbeya Mbeya is a city located in south west Tanzania, Africa, with an urban population of 649,000 in 2023. Mbeya is the capital of the surrounding rural Mbeya Region, Mbeya region (population, with Mbeya, totals approx. 2 million). Mbeya is situated a ...
. This location which was to become one of East Africa's most elaborate Bomas (a massive stone fortress, supposedly the largest in East Africa, later deliberately destroyed by the Germans). The Hehe, recovering from their own civil war in 1879, continued their aggressive expansion and showed themselves to be more than a match for Merere II, the Sangu leader, despite the fact that the Sangu had reportedly begun using guns as early as 1893, had great experience in war and were noted for 'throwing their dead away' mostly into ravines. All Sangu chiefs carried the title of Merere, whose personal name was Mwahavange, the title-holder. Sangu, Bena and Kinga are part of the Niger-Congo-Bantu people who lived in Iringa province before ivory and slave hunters Ngazija (Shia Iranian) from Comoro came. The Ngazija Iranian people are part of the family of Mnyigumba Muyinga, the father of Chief Mkwawa. Their hunters used Hamitic People from Ethiopia as their guide to hunt and kill elephants and the Bantu people were used to carry ivory to the ocean by Zanzibar. Now referred to as Sangu, many ran away and hid in areas such as Usangu Basin to avoid being enslaved. Others went to the Ukinga Maountan, and are now known as the Kinga Peoples. The people who hid in the Bena Caves now are known as Wabena Manga, and those who went to Pangwa Mountain are called the Wapangwa people, etc. Mnyigumba forced the Bantu people (now Hehe) to adopt their culture and religion. The scarves and turbans they wear are similar to Iranian dress.


German involvement

Merere II, having lost his homeland to the Hehe, wrote to the German Governor
Julius von Soden Julius Freiherr von Soden (5 February 1846 – 2 February 1921) was a German colonial administrator and politician. He was the Governor of the colonies of Kamerun and German East Africa, and later became ''Chef de Cabinet'' and Foreign Ministe ...
in January 1892: "I ask you to come quickly. I will show you the way...and stand by you in the war....The Hehe are gathering their men to defeat me. I beg not to leave me alone this year." German officers were ordered to help enemies of the Wahehe and encircle Mkwawa. Lieutenant
Tom von Prince Tom von Prince (9 January 1866 – 4 November 1914) was a Germans, German military officer and plantation owner in German East Africa. He most notably, as a captain in the Schutztruppe, led the first action by German forces in East Africa during ...
, in early 1893, with Bauer and Wynecken, was able to offer the help requested by Merere II, promising to restore Merere to his homeland if he guarded Uhehe's western border against Mkwawa. Mkwawa was defeated in his capital, Iringa in 1896 and declared an 'outlaw'. He was reduced to waging
guerrilla war Guerrilla warfare is a form of unconventional warfare in which small groups of irregular military, such as rebels, partisans, paramilitary personnel or armed civilians, which may include recruited children, use ambushes, sabotage, terrorism ...
, and finally fled south and died years later (Mkwawa did not commit suicide as many scholars report. Elders from the tribe provided evidence that his death was faked by Germans to glorify their years of loss and a skull sent to Germany was not Mkwawa's.) It took until December 10, 1896, to re-install Merere III of Usangu, back in his capital of Utengule, which his father had lost 22 years earlier to the Wahehe. Merere II died in 1893, having been declared by his people as being mentally incompetent and His son becoming successor but was never considered truly sovereign. By 1907 the Wasangu numbers were thought to be about 30,000.


References

*Bauer Andreus, (Raising the Flag of War) - ('Raising the Flag of War'', is the journal of this slow encirclement of Mkwawa and his Wahehe in cooperation with the Wasangu). *Iliffe, John, (Modern History of Tamganyika) *Kotz-Kretschmer, Elise (Die Safwa) (Zweiter Band) *Willis, R., (Fipa and Related People) *Norm {{authority control Ethnic groups in Tanzania