Zimbabwe Bird

National emblem of Zimbabwe


title: "Zimbabwe Bird" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["birds-in-art", "national-symbols-of-rhodesia", "national-symbols-of-zimbabwe", "stone-sculptures", "culture-of-zimbabwe", "african-art", "heraldic-birds", "heraldic-eagles", "great-zimbabwe"] description: "National emblem of Zimbabwe" topic_path: "arts" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zimbabwe_Bird" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary National emblem of Zimbabwe ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/16/Zimbabwe_Bird.svg" caption="The Zimbabwe Bird"] ::

The stone-carved Zimbabwe Bird is the national emblem of Zimbabwe, appearing on the national flags and coats of arms of both Zimbabwe and former Rhodesia, as well as on banknotes and coins (first on the Rhodesian pound and then on the Rhodesian dollar). It probably represents the bateleur eagle (Terathopius ecaudatus) or the African fish eagle (Haliaeetus vocifer). The bird's design is derived from a number of soapstone sculptures found in the ruins of the medieval city of Great Zimbabwe.

It is now the definitive icon of independent Zimbabwe, with archaeologist Edward Matenga listing over 100 organizations which now incorporate the bird in their logo.

Origins

The original carved birds are from the ruined city of Great Zimbabwe, which was built by the ancestors of the Shona, starting in the 11th century and inhabited for over 300 years. The ruins, after which modern Zimbabwe was named, cover some 730 ha and are the largest ancient stone construction in sub-Saharan Africa. Among its notable elements are the soapstone bird sculptures, about 40 cm tall and standing on columns more than 90 cm tall, which were originally installed on walls and monoliths within the city. They are unique to Great Zimbabwe; nothing like them has been discovered elsewhere.

Various explanations have been advanced to explain the symbolic meaning of the birds. One suggestion is that each bird was erected in turn to represent a new king, but this would have required improbably long reigns. More probably, the Zimbabwe birds represent sacred or totemic animals of the Shona – the bateleur eagle (Shona: chapungu), which was held to be a messenger from Mwari (God) and the ancestors, or the fish eagle (hungwe) which it has been suggested was the original totem of the Shona.

Colonial acquisition and return to Zimbabwe

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cb/Soapstone_birds_on_pedestals.jpg" caption="Three of the Zimbabwe Birds, photographed around 1891"] ::

In 1889 a European hunter, Willi Posselt, travelled to Great Zimbabwe after hearing about it from another European explorer, Karl Mauch. He climbed to the highest point of the ruins despite being told that it was a sacred site where he should not trespass, and found the birds positioned in the centre of an enclosure around an apparent altar. He later wrote:

I selected the best specimen of the bird stones, the beaks of the remainder being damaged, and decided to dig it out. But while doing so, Andizibi [a local tribesman] and his followers became very excited and rushed around with their guns and assegais. I fully expected them to attack us. However, I went on with my work but told Klass, who had loaded two rifles, to shoot the first man he saw aiming at either of us.}}

Posselt compensated Andizibi with a payment of blankets and "some other articles". As the bird on its pedestal was too heavy for him to carry, he hacked it off and hid the pedestal with the intention of returning later to retrieve it. He subsequently sold his bird to Cecil Rhodes, who mounted it in the library of his Cape Town house, Groote Schuur, and decorated the house's stairway with wooden replicas. Rhodes also had stone replicas made, three times the size of the original, to decorate the gates of his house in England near Cambridge. A German missionary came to own the pedestal of one bird, which he sold to the Ethnological Museum in Berlin in 1907.

Rhodes' acquisition of Posselt's bird prompted him to commission an investigation of the Great Zimbabwe ruins by James Theodore Bent, which took place in 1891 following the British South Africa Company's invasion of Mashonaland. Bent recorded that there were eight birds, six large and two small, and that there had probably originally been more as there were several additional stone pedestals of which the tops had been broken off.

The colonists erroneously attributed Great Zimbabwe to ancient Mediterranean builders, believing native Africans to be incapable of constructing such a complex structure; thus in Rhodes' mind, as a 1932 guidebook put it, it was "a favourite symbol of the link between the order civilisation derived from the North or the East and the savage barbarism of Southern and Central Africa before the advent of the European." Bent attributed the birds, wholly erroneously, to the Phoenicians.

In 1981, a year after the attainment of independence in Zimbabwe, the South African government returned four of the sculptures to the country in exchange for a world-renowned collection of Hymenoptera (bees, wasps and ants) housed in Harare; the fifth remains at Groote Schuur.

The pedestal kept in Berlin was reunited with the upper part of the statue for an exhibition, Legacies of Stone, in Belgium in 1997. On account of pressure following this, the German museum returned this portion of the bird's pedestal to Zimbabwe in 2003. The birds were displayed for a while in the Natural History Museum in Bulawayo and the Museum of Human Sciences in Harare, but are now housed in a small museum on the Great Zimbabwe site.

Cultural depictions

The Zimbabwe bird has been a symbol of Zimbabwe and its predecessor states since 1924. The crest of Southern Rhodesia's coat of arms incorporated the Zimbabwe bird, and over time the bird became a widespread symbol of the colony. The paper money and coins of the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, issued by the Bank of Rhodesia and Nyasaland also displayed the bird, as did the Flag of Rhodesia. The flag and state symbols of modern Zimbabwe continue to feature the Zimbabwe Bird. It is now the definitive icon of independent Zimbabwe with Matenga (2001) listing over 100 state, corporate and sporting organisations which incorporate the Bird in their emblems and logos.

File:Flag of Zimbabwe.svg|National flag of Zimbabwe containing the Zimbabwe Bird File:Flag of Zimbabwe Rhodesia.svg|Flag of Zimbabwe Rhodesia (1979–1980) File:Flag of Rhodesia (1968–1979).svg|Flag of Rhodesia (1968–1979) File:Coat of arms of Rhodesia.svg|Coat of Arms of Rhodesia (1924–1981) File:Rhodesia - Signal Corps emblem.jpg|Emblem used by the Rhodesia Corps of Signals (1970–1980) File:Rhodesia Parliament logo.jpg|Logo used by the Parliament of Rhodesia File:GCLM.jpg|Rhodesian Grand Commander of the Legion of Merit (GCLM) medal (Civil and Military) File:Rhodesia 20c obverse.jpg|Obverse of a Rhodesian 20c coin File:Monnaie Zimbabwe.jpg|Reverse side of a Zimbabwean one dollar coin File:Zimbabwe fifty dollars.jpg|Reverse side of a Zimbabwe fifty dollar note (2nd series) illustrating the Great Zimbabwe Ruins and Zimbabwe Bird in the bottom right hand corner File:$100 Zimbabwe revenue stamps in block of four.jpg|Revenue stamps of Zimbabwe File:Coat of arms of Zimbabwe.svg|Coat of Arms of Zimbabwe (1981–) File:Zim Passport.jpg|Zimbabwe Passport Cover (1st version) (1980) File:Flag of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces.svg|Flag of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces File:Flag of the Zimbabwe National Army.svg|Flag of the Zimbabwe National Army File:Zimbabwe - Prison Service badge image.jpg|Emblem of the Zimbabwe Prison Service File:Air Force Ensign of Zimbabwe.svg|Flag of the Air Force of Zimbabwe File:Zimbabwe - Air Force Chief of Staff car flag.jpg|Air Force of Zimbabwe Chief of Staff Car and Aircraft car flag File:Flag of Harare.svg|Flag of Harare, capital of Zimbabwe File:Heroes Acre, Harare, Zimbabwe (1).jpg|Relief at National Heroes' Acre, Harare

References and sources

References

  1. Thomas N. Huffman. (1985). "The Soapstone Birds from Great Zimbabwe". African Arts.
  2. Paul Sinclair. (2001). "Review: The Soapstone Birds of Great Zimbabwe Symbols of a Nation by Edward Matenga". The South African Archaeological Bulletin.
  3. Edward Matenga. (2001). "The Soapstone Birds of Great Zimbabwe". Studies in Global Archaeology.
  4. [http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/zimb/hd_zimb.htm Great Zimbabwe (11th–15th century). Thematic Essay. Timeline of Art History. The Metropolitan Museum of Art]
  5. (2006). "Great Zimbabwe". Oxford University Press, USA.
  6. (2016). "Zimbabwe". Bradt Travel Guides.
  7. Fontein, Joost. (2016). "The Silence of Great Zimbabwe: Contested Landscapes and the Power of Heritage". Routledge.
  8. Brown-Lowe, Robin. (2003). "The Lost City of Solomon and Sheba: An African Mystery". History Press.
  9. Kuklick, Henrika. (1991). "Colonial Situations: Essays on the Contextualization of Ethnographic Knowledge". University of Wisconsin Press.
  10. Lhote, Henri. (1963). "Vanished Civilizations of the Ancient World". McGraw-Hill.
  11. Bent, James Theodore. (1895). "The Ruined Cities of Mashonaland". Longmans & Company.
  12. Maylam, Paul. (2005). "The Cult of Rhodes: Remembering an Imperialist in Africa". New Africa Books.
  13. Bent, p. 185
  14. Munjeri, Dawson. "The reunification of a national symbol". Museum International.
  15. (4 May 2003). "Zimbabwe bird 'flies' home". BBC News.
  16. (2015). "African Museums in the Making: Reflections on the Politics of Material and Public Culture in Zimbabwe". Langaa RPCIG.
  17. Kuklick, p. 137

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