Raising the dead: The Xhosa Cattle-Killing and the Mhlakaza-Goliat Delusion

Raising the dead: The Xhosa Cattle-Killing and the Mhlakaza-Goliat Delusion

Author: 
Davies, Sheila Boniface
Publisher: 
Taylor & Francis
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
Journal of Southern African Studies (JSAS)
Source: 
Journal of Southern African Studies, Vol. 33 - No. 1 - March 2007, pp.19 - 42
Abstract: 

Jeff Peires' seminal monograph, The Dead Will Arise: Nongqawuse and the Great Xhosa Cattle-Killing Movement of 1856-7, was published in 1989. One of his most remarkable findings was that Mhlakaza, uncle and spokesperson of the prophetess Nongawuse, was in fact Wilhelm Goliat - one-time servant and companion of Archdeacon Lerriman Grahamstow,. The discovery was significat not only because it supplied intriguing biographical details for one of the central characters in the story, but also as it explained the Christian content in the prophecies. Pereis' Mhalakaza-Goliat thesis was subsquently taken up in a number or academic and popular works and has become part of the official narrative of the Cattle-Killing. Although a few hisorians have questioned the validity of this claim, it has not been disproved - until now. This article sets out the evidence, exploring why the rumour took hold in 1856, and how it came to be revived more thant 130 years later. Furthermore, il includes a number of observations about the construction of this event and suggests that, rather than creating a new 'more truthful' historical explanation, a more revealing project might be to examine the numerous versions of ther Cattle-Killing in the light of the causes they have been made to espouse.

Language: 

CITATION: Davies, Sheila Boniface. Raising the dead: The Xhosa Cattle-Killing and the Mhlakaza-Goliat Delusion . : Taylor & Francis , . Journal of Southern African Studies, Vol. 33 - No. 1 - March 2007, pp.19 - 42 - Available at: https://library.au.int/raising-dead-xhosa-cattle-killing-and-mhlakaza-goliat-delusion-3