Chief of Batlokwa
Sekonyela was born in 1804 in Harrismith next to the Wilge River. He
was born in the royal family and later became the Chief of the Batlokwa
people. His father was Mantatisi, who was expelled by King Shaka
Zulu from the area he had conquered. In 1821 his father attacked a small
Hlubi tribe and killed their headman and retaliation followed by the
Amahlubi from Natal. The Batlokwa people fled taking along small tribes
to Barolong in Kuruman, where they were stopped by the Griquas under
Waterboer in 1823. In the early 1830s Sekonyela became the Chief of
Batlokwa people and settled along the Caledon River.
In 1834 Andrew Smith visited
Sekonyela in order to solve the growing fighting between his people
and the Batlokwa. In 1837 the Voortrekkers
under Piet Refief made a treaty of friendship with Sekonyela, but in
the same year was forced to return cattle stolen from Dingaan. Between
1846 and 1852 there were raiding from the Basotho people under Moshoeshoe and Batlokwa. In 1853 Sekonyela’s eldest son, Makitikiti was slain
and he himself escaped with sixty men to Winburg. Sir George Clerk allowed
him to live in the Wittebergen Reserve, in the Herschel district, where
he died on 20 July 1856
Sources:
Joyce, P. (1999). A Concise Dictionary of South African Biography, Cape
Town: Francolin, pp. 233 - 234.
Potgieter, D.J. (ed)(1973). Standard Encyclopaedia of Southern Africa
Vol. 9 , Cape Town: Nasou, p. 576.