Zimbabwe

Ziwa National Monument

WHS Score 0.77
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  • Thomas van der Walt
  • Wojciech Fedoruk
Ziwa National Monument contains the remains of a late Iron Age agricultural settlement dating to the 15th century, and includes archaeological evidence of human occupation from all major periods in Zimbabwe’s archaeological sequence, starting from the Stone Age. This approximately 3300 hectare site consists of a landscape marked by stone terraces and fields, hill forts, pit structures, stone enclosures, and iron smelting and forging furnaces. The settlement at Ziwa remained occupied until the early 18th century.

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Official Information
Full Name
Ziwa National Monument (ID: 903)
Country
Zimbabwe
Status
On tentative list 1997 Site history
History of Ziwa National Monument
1997: Added to Tentative List
Added to tentative list
Criteria
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UNESCO
whc.unesco.org
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UNESCO.org

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First published: 11/05/24.

Wojciech Fedoruk

Ziwa National Monument

Ziwa National Monument (On tentative list)

Ziwa National Monument by Wojciech Fedoruk

Site visited in April 2024. Ziwa is not a place often visited by tourists – when we came the last entry in the visitors' book was from 12 days ago, and there were only a dozen or so entries from 2024. The place is located a bit off the tourist trails, although you can get here from Harare in about 4.5 - 5 hours (the last 30-40 minutes on a dirt road, 4x4 is at least recommended, if not mandatory).

Despite the relative inaccessibility of the place, when I got there I was surprised to find a museum of decent quality and a competent guide who showed us around the complex. As the State Party describes, Ziwa is a late Iron Age agricultural settlement dating to the 15th century (there is also evidence of its inhabitance much earlier), which remained occupied until around 1800 AD. Ziwa was characterized by terraces reinforced with stone walls, significantly increasing the potential of agriculture in the mountainous terrain. The stone was also used to fence houses, the central point of which was a stone pen for farm animals. People lived in huts made of clay and reeds. According to the guide, there were 10,000 people at the peak in Ziwa. such houses (I doubt it a bit, it would mean that the Ziwa area was inhabited by at least 100,000 people).

While it is not the most spectacular place in Zimbabwe, it has the potential to be included on the World Heritage …

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