Mamochisane

This article will address the topic of Mamochisane, which has been the subject of interest and debate in different areas and contexts over time. Mamochisane has been the subject of study by various experts and has aroused the interest of a wide public. Throughout this writing, various perspectives and approaches regarding Mamochisane will be analyzed, with the aim of offering a comprehensive and comprehensive vision on this topic. Likewise, the implications and repercussions that Mamochisane has had in different areas will be explored, as well as its relevance today.

Mamochisane
Born
Mamochisane
TitleQueen of the Makololo tribe
PredecessorSebetwane
SuccessorSekeletu
SpouseKing Sipopa Lutangu
Parent(s)King Sebetwane and one of his wives
RelativesSekeletu and Mpepe (brothers)
Litali (nephew)

Mamochisane (fl. 1851) was a Makololo Queen who ruled over many people, but especially the Lozi in Barotseland, today's Western Zambia, in 1851. She was later a wife of King Sipopa Lutangu.

Biography

Mamochisane was a daughter of the King Sebetwane, half-sister of Prince Sekeletu and sister or half-sister of Prince Mpepe. She was the niece of king Mbololo.

She succeeded her father on his death in 1851, as he had intended long before his death, even if she had brothers. She maintained the friendship with the traveller David Livingstone, which had been initiated by her father, giving him permission to visit all her kingdom.

When Livingstone returned in 1853 to the Makololo's capital, Linyati, he found out that only shortly after her father's death she had stepped down in favour of her brother Sekeletu, who became a new king. In Livingstone's account the reason was her desire to have a stable husband and a family that was firmly hers, while as a ruler she was forced to alternate many husbands so that none got too much power.

Mamochisane had a nephew called Litali; he was a Sekeletu's son. She married Sipopa Lutangu.

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