Brief Description
Mapungubwe is set hard against the northern border of South Africa,
joining Zimbabwe and Botswana. It is an open, expansive savannah
landscape at the confluence of the Limpopo and Shashe rivers.
Mapungubwe developed into the largest kingdom in the sub-continent
before it was abandoned in the 14th century. What survives are the
almost untouched remains of the palace sites and also the entire
settlement area dependent upon them, as well as two earlier capital
sites, the whole presenting an unrivalled picture of the development of
social and political structures over some 400 years.
Justification for Inscription
Criterion (ii):
The Mapungubwe Cultural Landscape contains evidence for an important
interchange of human values that led to far-reaching cultural and
social changes in Southern Africa between AD 900 and 1300.
Criterion (iii):
The remains in the Mapungubwe cultural landscape are a remarkably
complete testimony to the growth and subsequent decline of the
Mapungubwe state which at its height was the largest kingdom in the
African sub-continent.
Criterion (iv): The establishment
of Mapungubwe as a powerful state trading through the East African
ports with Arabia and India was a significant stage in the history of
the African sub-continent.
Criterion (v): The remains in
the Mapungubwe cultural landscape graphically illustrate the impact of
climate change and record the growth and then decline of the kingdom of
Mapungubwe as a clear record of a culture that became vulnerable to
irreversible change.
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