late 1970s, it was interpreted as a lesser order settlement under Great Zimbabwe. From the discovery of Mapungubwe in 1931 until the. Separated as the sites were by just over 300 kilometres, archaeologists have always sought to establish cultural connections between them. This paper engages with the historiography of the relationship between Mapungubwe (AD 1220-1290) and Great Zimbabwe (AD 1000-1700), two examples of prominent centres of power in precolonial southern Africa. It highlights how the traces of different pasts intertwine in contemporary politics through the active, enduring yet emergent, forms and substances of landscape. Through lenses focused on the political materialities of water and land, this book reveals how the remaking of Mutirikwi's landscapes has always been deeply entangled with changing strategies of colonial and postcolonial statecraft. The 2000s may have heralded a long-delayed re-Africanisation of Lake Mutirikwi, but just as African presence had survived the dam, so white presence remains active and affective through Rhodesian-era discourses, place-names and the materialities of ruined farms, contour ridging and old irrigation schemes. This book explores those reoccupations and the complex contests over landscape, water and belonging they provoked. Many returned to the graves and ruins of past lives forged in the very substance of the soil, and even incoming war veterans and new farmers appealed to autochthonous knowledge to make safe their resettlements. Amid fast-track land reform in the 2000s, the same people returned again to reclaim the land. They were soon evicted as the new government asserted control over the remaking of Mutirikwi's landscapes. At independence in 1980, local clans reasserted ancestral land claims in a wave of squatting around Lake Mutirikwi. But African landscapes were not obliterated by the dam. This was a key moment in the Europeanisation of Mutirikwi's landscapes, which had begun with colonial land appropriations in the 1890s. The Mutirikwi river was dammed in the early 1960s to make Zimbabwe's second largest lake.
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