Zvishavane District

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Midlands Districts
Shava means Eland in ChiShona. The eland colour is called shava in ChiShona.
Reddish Hills of Mashava at King Mine
Shava is the name of the eland in ChiShona. The colour of these common elands is lighter than that of the giant elend above; so the colour is shavane or Shavani hence Zvishavane.

Zvishavane District is one of the eight districts in Midlands Province of Zimbabwe.

It has Mberengwa District to the south and Shurugwi District to the north.

Its capital is Zvishavane town.

Background[]

Zvishavane derives its name from its sister town Mashava. Mashava is a ChiShona word describing the hills in that place as reddish. The name Mashava formerly Mashaba origins is stated in the Rhodesian Lore and Legend: SOUTHERN RHODESIA PLACE NAMES published by The Chief Information Officer, Information Services Branch. Division of Native Affairs, Salisbury September, 1960[1]

Shona
word
English
meaning
Explanation
Shava Reddish Shava is the Shona name of an Eland derived from the colour of the animal.
Chishava Something reddish it is a description of a single thing reddish in colour.
Mashava Reddish it describes particular reddish things. Here it describes reddish hills.
Zvishava reddish things it describes many things reddish in colour.
Zvishavane semi reddish it describes things not as reddish as the earlier. Here it describes the many surrounding low hills that are characterised by lighter red soil than those hills in Mashava

Some claim that the name Shabanie derives from the isiNdebele Shavani which means "finger millet", or "trading together.[2] This is very unlikely for the matter that the English pronounced it as Shabanie.

  • "va" in ChiShona is pronounced as the isiNdebele "ba".
  • The word baba in isiNdebele rhymes with Vava in ChiShona and they are pronounced the same.

However the isiNdebele syllable va rhymes with vha in ChiShona.

  • If Shavani was an isiNdebele word the ChiShona would have pronounced it as Shavhani. The English men would pronounce it as Sharvanie not Shabanie.
  • If Shavani was a ChiShona word the isiNdebele would pronounce it Shabani, and so the English would pronounce it as Shabanie.

For this fact Shabanie derives from the ChiShona word Shavane or Shavani.

All the same finger millet colour is off-reddish, maybe tan in colour. That's Zviyo zvishavani or zvipfunde zvishavani (tan corn or tan millet) in ChiShona. Either way, the name derives from tan hills or tan coloured millet.

Finger millet
Finger millet "the colour is Shava in ChiShona but lighter just like the common elands above. That's off-shava in colour_"Zviyo zvishavani"

Economy[]

Zvishavane District is home of Zvishavane Town which developed from an abestos mine compound into a town.[3] See Shabanie Mashaba Mine.

It is also home to Murowa Diamond Mine located in Mazvihwa, 40 km from Zvishavane Town.

Local government[]

Zvishavane District is run by two local government organs, the rural district council and the urban council.

For the rural district authority see Runde Rural District Council.

The Zvishavane Town Council, established in terms of the Zimbabwe Urban Councils Act, Chapter 29.15,[4] administers the urban district.

2013 - 2018 Council

Source: Zimbabwe Electoral Commission[5]

Ward Councillor Party Constituency
01 Phiri Arusah ZANU-PF
02 Mudekwa Isaiah ZANU-PF
03 Phiri Fatuma MDC-T
03 Utonga Andrew ZANU-PF
04 Majama Charity MDC-T
05 Mago Tinashe ZANU-PF
06 Ferreira Jose Manuel ZANU-PF
06 Chitototo Josiphati MDC-T
07 Dube Esau Gwatipedza MDC-T
08 Pasira Itai MDC-T
09 Chikandiwa Andrew MDC-T
10 Gadziwa Samuel MDC-T

2008 - 2013 Town Council

Source: Kubatana Aechive[6]

Ward Councillor IParty Remarks
01 Chimedza Sam MDC-T
02 Taruvinga Patson MDC-T
03 Murombedzi Francis MDC-T
04 Muvenge Francis Mashoko MDC-T
05 Dube Nyika Jastin Berebende MDC-T
06 Matondo London MDC-T
07 Pamire Godfrey MDC-T
08 Zhou Alluwis MDC-T Chairman
09 Moyo Mordikai Masocha MDC-T
10 Mushipe Pardon MDC-T

Coordinates: 20°19′S 30°03′E / 20.31°S 30.05°E / -20.31; 30.05

See also[]

References[]

Retrieved from ""