Mandela

AmaHala

18th century

Inkosana Mandela KaNgubengcuka

List

Swazi royal family
Machel family

Mvezo Great Place

History[edit]

The Mandelas are direct descendants of the AmaHala ruling dynasty of the Thembu people;[1] as a result, their leader has traditionally had a hereditary claim to both membership of the Thembu king's privy council and the chieftaincy of the town of Mvezo that is subject to his authority.


The family was started in the 18th century, when King Ngubengcuka of the Thembus married and left a son named Mandela, the first of the direct line to bear the name.[2][3] Prince Mandela was a son of a woman that belonged to the Ixhiba clan, a ritually inferior family when compared to his father's AmaHalas, and therefore his cadet branch of the dynasty was deemed to be morganatic.[4] Due to this, in lieu of having a place in the line of succession, he and his heirs were recognized as privy councillors thereafter.[5][6][7]


The prince's own son, Gadla Henry Mphakanyiswa Mandela, was later also given the title of the chief of Mvezo by his relative, the king of Thembuland, as a further marker of the family's eminence. After being lost in the Apartheid era, this chieftaincy has since been restored to the Mandelas.


During the title's abeyance, the claim to it passed to Chief Mandela's son Nelson, who would never inherit it. Following his renunciation of it in order to become active in the anti-Apartheid movement, it would later pass to his sons Thembekile and Makgatho, and following their own early deaths, to Makgatho's son Mandla. Chief Mandla Mandela would ultimately succeed to the title in 2007 following its restoration.[8]

President , anti-Apartheid activist, humanitarian and head of state

Nelson Mandela

Dr. D.B.E., politician and humanitarian, widow of Nelson Mandela

Graça Machel

Dr. M.P., anti-Apartheid activist and politician, ex-wife of Nelson Mandela

Winnie Madikizela-Mandela

Princess of eSwatini, diplomat and Swazi princess, daughter of Nelson Mandela

Zenani Mandela-Dlamini

Ambassador , diplomat, daughter of Nelson Mandela

Zindzi Mandela-Hlongwane

Chief M.P., politician and traditional aristocrat, grandson of Nelson Mandela (through Makgatho)

Mandla Mandela

Prince , Swazi prince and humanitarian, step-grandson of Nelson Mandela (through Zenani)

Cedza Dlamini

nurse, ex-wife of Nelson Mandela

Evelyn Mase

activist and humanitarian, step-daughter of Nelson Mandela (through Graça)

Josina Z. Machel

businesswoman, daughter of Nelson Mandela

Makaziwe Mandela

lawyer, son of Nelson Mandela

Makgatho Mandela

humanitarian, grandson of Nelson Mandela (through Makgatho)

Ndaba Mandela

activist, granddaughter of Nelson Mandela (through Thembekile)

Ndileka Mandela

Thembekile Mandela, son of Nelson Mandela. Thembekile died in a car crash in 1969 while Mandela was in prison. His father was not permitted by the Apartheid authorities to attend his funeral.

[9]

writer and activist, granddaughter of Nelson Mandela (through Zindzi)

Zoleka Mandela

Guiloineau, Jean; Rowe, Joseph (2002). Nelson Mandela: The Early Life of Rolihlahla Madiba. Berkeley: North Atlantic Books. pp. 9–26. ISBN 978-1-55643-417-4.

Lodge, Tom (2006). Mandela: A Critical Life. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-921935-3.