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Swaziland's Culture

The Incwala Or Kingship Ceremony

By Richard M. Patricks, SNTC. July 2000.

No announcement is made for the date of the public holiday for the main day of the Incwala. It is the fourth day after the full moon nearest the longest day, December 21. Incwala is often given in English as 'first fruits ceremony', but the King's tasting of the new harvest is only one aspect among many in this long pageant. Incwala is best translated as 'Kingship Ceremony' : when there is no king, there is no Incwala. It is high treason for any other person to hold an Incwala.

Every Swazi may take part in the public parts of the Incwala, especially the climax, the fourth day of the Big Incwala. The key figures are the King, Queen Mother, royal wives and children, the royal governors (indunas), the chiefs, the regiments, and the "bemanti" or 'water people'.

At full moon in November, the "bemanti" set off from the Queen Mothers home, in 2 groups:
1. the big group goes to kaTembe (Catembe, south of Maputo), to collect sea-water,
2. the small group goes north, collecting water from rivers.
The "bemanti" return to the royal capital with the new moon in December.
Then the Little Incwala takes place: two days of dance, song and ritual.

14 days later
The Big Incwala begins.

Day 1: Fetching the Lusekwane (sickle bush/Dichrostachys cinerea)
unmarried male youths set off from the Queen Mothers village and march 50 kilometres to cut branches of the "lusekwane" under the light of the full moon.

Day 2: Dropping the Lusekwane
The boys place their "lusekwane" branches in the national cattle byre/kraal. The elders weave these branches in between the poles of the "inhlambelo" - the king's private sanctuary.

Day 3: Day of the Bull
morning: young boys cut branches of the "black imbondvo" (red bushwillow/Combretum apiculatum) and these are added to-the "inhlambelo".
afternoon: while the king is receiving traditional medicines in his sanctuary, a black "bull" charges out. The "lusekwane" boys catch and overpower the beast and return it to the sanctuary. It is slaughtered and provides ritual ingredients for the doctoring of the king.

Day 4: Eating the First Fruits and Throwing the Gourd
The main day: all the key players perform in a spectacular pageant inside the cattle byre; the king and regiments appear in full war-dress. The king bites and spits out certain plants of the first harvest in his "inhlambelo". Then he emerges to throw the sacred gourd "luselwa", which is caught on a black shield by one of the "lusekwane" boys.

Succession In Swazi Kingship
The Incwala Or Kingship Ceremony
The Umhlanga Or Reed Dance

More information on Swazi culture can be found on the Swaziland National Trust Commission website:

Swazi Culture

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