Under the distinguished patronage of Alderman Geordin Hill-Lewis, Mayor of the City of Cape Town
Ancient Greek and Roman coins from Pondoland, South Africa (Part 1)
Pierre H. Nortje (September 2023)
Pondoland (Mpondoland) is a geographical area on the mid-east coast of South Africa (Indian Ocean side) and is part of what was previously known as the Transkei. It borders Thembuland, the area from which our former president, Nelson Mandela, hails. His second wife, Winnie Madikizela, was actually born in Pondoland.

Originally, the hunter-gatherer San and Khoihoi people inhabited the region in scattered nomadic groups for thousands of years. Around 500 AD, Xhosa-speaking Ngunis settled in the area as a consequence of the indigenous population’s expansion to the south.
Contact with Europeans occurred when sailing ships from Europe began to circumnavigate Southern Africa. From the 1500s onwards, ships were wrecked on the Pondoland coast, resulting in some castaways permanently settling there and later being absorbed into Mpondo communities. For instance, when the Grosvenor, an East Indiaman, ran ashore on 4 August 1782, the survivors met up with a European girl named Bessie. She was the wife of Tshomane, the paramount chief of the Mpondo, who herself had been shipwrecked there 40 years earlier.

Two old paintings of the sinking of the Grosvenor on the Pondoland coast.
Sources: Wikimedia and the Scuba Shop S.A.
