Swaziland Oral History Project

Swaziland Oral History Project
AbbreviationSOHP
Formation1985
TypeArchival oral-history research project
PurposeCollection and preservation of oral histories, clan genealogies and precolonial history of Swaziland (Eswatini)
HeadquartersEswatini National Archives in Lobamba, Eswatini, University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa
Region served
Swaziland ( now Eswatini)
Official language
Lead Researcher
Philip Bonner, Carolyn Hamilton (historian)[1]

The Swaziland Oral History Project (SOHP) is a research and archival initiative established in 1985 at the National Archives in Lobamba, Eswatini.[2] It was established to collect, preserve, transcribe and translate oral histories, clan genealogies and testimonies of Swazi elders, with particular attention to the precolonial history of the Swazi kingdom.[1] It was developed through cooperation between Swazi archivists and elders and professional historians, notably Carolyn Hamilton and Philip Bonner. [3]

The SOHP materials were also transferred to the Historical Papers Research Archive at the University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa where Bonner was head.[4][5] Swazi archivists and researchers, including Isaac Dlamini and Dumisa Dlamini, played a central role in the fieldwork and collection of testimonies and the establishment of the SOHP. [6]

Background

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The history of Swaziland stretches back thousands of years, but it was only in the mid-1800s, with the arrival of the first European traders, that events began to be recorded in writing.[2]

Little is known about the earlier periods because written evidence is scarce, however, historians have uncovered a wealth of information about these earlier times by drawing on other forms of evidence, particularly oral traditions and physical artifacts.[7] The SOHP was established to systematically collect, transcribe, translate and archive oral testimonies from elders.[2]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Swaziland Oral History Project and associated items". EMANDULO. Retrieved 17 December 2025.
  2. ^ a b c Hamilton CA. The Swaziland Oral History Project. History in Africa. 1987;14:383-387. doi:10.2307/3171851
  3. ^ Hamilton, C.A. (1987)
  4. ^ Bonner, Philip (1994). New Nation, New History: The History Workshop in South Africa, 1977–1994, The Journal of American History 81 (3): 977–985.
  5. ^ "Fonds A2760: Swaziland Oral History Project". Historical Papers Research Archive. Retrieved 17 December 2025.
  6. ^ Hamilton, C.A. (1987).
  7. ^ Westcott, Michael (1992); Carolyn A. Hamilton (editor). In the Tracks of the Swazi Past: A Historical Tour of the Ngwane and Ndwandwe Kingdoms (PDF), Macmillan Boleswa Publishers