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Godfrey Mzamane


Godfrey Isaac Malunga Mzamane (7 March 1909 - 1977) was a novelist, literary historian, academic and intellectual pioneer of African studies in South Africa.

Godfrey was born in Fobane in the Mt. Fletcher district, near Matatiele in the Transkei, his father Seplani Isaac Mzamane was an Anglican church lay preacher. Godfrey attended primary school at Umzimkhulu, at the French Evangelical Missionary School there; he also attended Bethesda Moravian Mission School at Lupindo. He graduated standard six in 1921.

In 1926, he studied at St John's College, Mthatha, then at Adam's Teacher Training College in Natal. He also went to Fort Hare for a time.

From 1936 to 1939, he taught at the training school in Mariazell, Matatiele. He also taught at St. Peter's Secondary School in Johannesburg. Godfrey then went to Cape Town to learn museum techniques. In 1942, he was appointed the assistant curator of the F.S. Malan Museum at Fort Hare University College.

He replaced A.C. Jordan as Lecturer in Bantu Languages at Fort Hare University College when Jordan resigned his position in the Department of African Languages in 1946. In 1947, he obtained a BA Degree in African languages, followed by a Masters thesis (or "dissertation"), submitted to the University of South Africa (Unisa) in 1948, entitled A concise treatise on Phuthi with special reference to its relationship with Nguni and Sotho, which was published in 1949 and was an important early contribution to the study of Phuthi language. Godfrey was later a Professor and Head of the Department of African Languages at the University College of Fort Hare


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