John Robert Dunn
John Robert Dunn (1834–1895) was a South African settler, hunter, and diplomat of Scottish descent. Born in either Port Elizabeth or Port Natal in 1834, he spent his childhood in Port Natal/Durban.[1]:24
Early life
John Dunn's birth place is in dispute, born either in Port Elizabeth or Port Natal in 1833 or 1834.[2]:59 He was the son of Robert Dunn, a Scotsman and resident of Port Elizabeth who was one of the early settlers at Port Natal, worked as a trader with land at Sea View.[2]:59 Robert Dunn became wealthy trading hides and ivory.[3]:77 When Dunn was 14, his father was trampled to death by an elephant and his mother died three years later.[2]:59 He started to earn a living by working for transport riders and hunters. His love of hunting and his skill with a rifle took him across the Tugela River into Zululand on a regular basis, where he became fluent in the language and was befriended by local chiefs. In 1853 after a failure of payment for a transport contract to the Transvaal, due to being not of age and the lack of contract, disillusioned he wandered around Zululand eventually meeting the Natal agent Captain Joshua Walmsley and returning to Natal with him, became his interpreter until 1856.[2]:59
Cetshwayo
In 1856, Zulu prince Mbuyasi, outnumbered by his brother Cetshwayo's forces, had requested help from Walmsley, which was refused.[2]:60 Dunn was sent instead to negotiate peace terms between the two warring Zulu brothers, which failed.[2]:60 With a small force of Native Police, Dunn supported the Zulu king Mpande's son Mbuyasi in the bloody battle of succession fought between him and the king's oldest son Cetshwayo.[2]:60 On 2 December 1856, at the Battle of Ndondakusuka, Mbuyazi's forces lost and he was killed, forcing Dunn and other white settlers to flee back to Natal.[2]:60 After the battle, Cetshwayo then clashed with two English traders and took a 1000 head of cattle.[3]:76 His involvement in the battle led to resentment towards Dunn by the white settlers of Natal so on his own account he re-crossed the Tugela to ask the winner, Cetshwayo, to return the cattle that had belonged to the traders.[2]:60-1 Cetshwayo agreed, and also requested that Dunn become his advisor in matters related to the British.[3]:76 The cattle were returned and he resigned his position in Natal and settled in Zululand in June/July 1857 and was allocated land on the coast of southern Zululand at Ungoya.[3]:76-7
With use of his land, Zulu marriages and the loaning of cattle, Dunn built a network of clients and contacts along the Zululand coast that allowed him to exploit the regions wealth.[3]:86 During the 1860s he was involved in the trade of firearms into Zululand with the exchange of cattle for rifles via Lourenço Marques along the Zululand coast as well as the flow of Tsonga workers to Natal for the agricultural industry from the former.[3]:78[3]:82 He would later be appointed as Protector of Immigrants for Zululand in 1874 by Theophilus Shepstone.[3]:78 Another important business income for Dunn was hunting.[3]:86 Organising his Zulu subjects as hunters, guides and porters, they successfully hunted for ivory, hides and skins but by 1880 game became scarce in Zululand.[3]:86
On 18 October 1872, King Mpande died at the age of 74 and Cetshwayo became king. Dunn's power and influence rose; he handled nearly all of Cetshwayo's foreign correspondence. Though Mpande and Cetshwayo had successfully resisted attempts by the Boers and the British to encroach on their territory, the Anglo-Zulu War of 1879 forced John Dunn to pick sides, and he sided with the British.
Anglo-Zulu War and its aftermath
On 11 January 1879, British troops crossed the Tugela, near Fort Pearson, to presented Cetshwayo with an ultimatum that amongst other things included the disbandment of the Zulu Army and the age-group system within twenty days, which he could not and would not accept.[4]:185 Dunn accompanied the Zulu Indunas to Fort Pearson to receive Bulwer's ultimatum for Cetshwayo.[2]:62 Fearing for his life he did not deliver the ultimatum to Cetewayo and retired to Emangete, wanting to remain neutral in the conflict between the British and the Zulu.[2]:62 So began the Anglo-Zulu War. He was persuaded to take part on the British side by Lord Chelmsford and was in charge of the Intelligence Department.[2]:64 He and his scouts provided excellent service to the British forces and took part in the Battle of Gingindlovu and in the relief of Eshowe.[2]:62 After the Zulu's early success at the Battle of Isandlwana where they would soundly defeated the British, they themselves would be defeated at the Battle of Ulundi and result in the eventual capture of Cetewayo.[2]:64
On 1 September 1879, Zululand was annexed and incorporated in Natal. In the Ulundi Settlement of 1879, Dunn was given the largest piece of land of all thirteen rulers in the subdivision of Zululand, and closest to Durban, where he served as a buffer zone between the British and the less-trusted rulers.[2]:62 These subdivisions would last until Cetshwayo returned from exile January 1883 when the thirteen chiefs were disposed and Dunn's who would lose his power and income and became part of a large native reserve under the control of the British Commander Sir Garnet Wolseley.[2]:64[4]:188
Marriage
Though he was already married to Catherine Pierce - daughter of a white settler father and mother of Cape Malay ancestry - he accepted a total of 48 Zulu wives during his lifetime, much to Catherine's disapproval.[1] Apart from two wives presented to him by Cetshwayo after a gift of two firearms, he followed Zulu custom and paid lobola of nine to fifteen cattle for each of the other forty six wives.[3]:78 The Zulu wives came from twenty-three different clans mostly from the southern and central coastal regions.[3]:79 All were married in the native custom, though some were baptised converting as Roman Catholics or Anglicans with all his children brought up as Christians and given some schooling.[2]:63
Dunn's residences were constructed in the form of traditional Zulu kraals. His western style house stood at its centre, with separate beehive huts for his wives, soldiers, servants and Zulu visitors, cattle kraals, stables, and food storage pits, all surrounded by a hedge of thorns.[3]:83 He maintained kraals at Mangete, Emoyeni and Ngoya with wives at each place.[2]:63 He would banish several wives for breaching his household rules and executed at least two for adultery.[3]:84 His wives and children were not allowed to interact socially with his whites guests and his coloured children were discouraged from any serious interaction with their black siblings.[3]:83
Later years
John Dunn died on 5 August 1895 of dropsy and heart disease and was buried at Emoyeni in KwaZulu-Natal.[2]:64 Having married 48 wives and fathered 117 children. All of Dunn's dependents were settled on a 40 km² reserve near the Tugela River.
See also
- Alexander Biggar, his grandfather
References
- 1 2 Ballard, Charles (1985). John Dunn: The White Chief of Zululand. Ad. Donker. ISBN 9780868520063.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 Hurwitz, N. (1947). "The Life Of John Dunn, The White Zulu Chief". Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory 1: 58–64. Retrieved 4 December 2015 – via JSTOR. (registration required (help)).
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Ballard, Charles (1980). "John Dunn and Cetshwayo: The Material Foundations of Political Power in the Zulu Kingdom, 1857-1878". The Journal of African History 21 (1): 75–91. Retrieved 4 December 2015 – via JSTOR. (registration required (help)).
- 1 2 Oakes, Dougie (1992). Illustrated History of South Africa – The Real Story. South Africa: Reader's Digest. ISBN 9781874912279.
External links
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