Yeta III

Yeta III was a King of Barotseland, one of the greatest High Chiefs of the Lozi people in Zambia.

Yeta III
Litunga of Barotseland
Reign1916–1945
SpouseQueen Kumayo
Issue
among others
Ilute
FatherKing Lewanika
MotherQueen Ma-Litia
For other kings, see Yeta I and Yeta II Nalute. There is also an island Yeta.

Family

The parents of Yeta were King Lewanika and Queen Ma-Litia.[1]

Yeta married a woman called Kumayo who became his consort at Sefula Church in 1892. They were baptized together.

Later Yeta married another woman.

His children were:

  • Son
  • Prince Daniel Akafuna Yeta — named after king Akafuna Tatila
  • Prince Edward Kaluwe Yeta — father of Prince Godwin Mando Kaluwe Yeta
  • Prince Richard Nganga Yeta
  • Princess Mareta Mulima
  • Princess Elizabeth Inonge Yeta III
  • Princess
  • Princess Nakatindi
  • King Ilute

Reign

Yeta was a great ruler. He was enthroned at Lealui on March 13, 1916 and abolished the traditional system of corvee, the last vestige of slavery on 1 April 1925.

Yeta attended the coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth at Westminster Abbey in London, but suffered a severe stroke which caused partial paralysis and loss of speech in early 1939.[2] Yeta's secretary wrote: "The Coronation was the greatest event we ever saw or will ever see in our lives again. Nobody could think that he is really on earth when seeing the Coronation Procession, but that he is either dreaming or is in Paradise."[3]

He abdicated in favour of his younger brother Imwiko.

gollark: ++search !crate serenity
gollark: Oops. Bad idea.
gollark: ++search serenity
gollark: Er, of course.
gollark: Okay, Coliru is down, blame me not.

See also

References

  1. Howard, Dr. J. Keir (2005). "Arnot, Frederick Stanley". Dictionary of African Christian Biography. Retrieved 14 December 2011.
  2. Caplan, Gerald L. (1970). The Elites of Barotseland, 1878-1969. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-52001-758-0.
  3. Hobsbawm, Eric; Ranger, Terence (26 March 2012). The Invention of Tradition. Cambridge University Press. p. 241. ISBN 978-1-107-60467-4.
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