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Great Zimbabwe's Mambo Gara and the Gold Dust Standard of 1293
Description
In 1293, Great Zimbabwe's Mambo Gara faced a crisis: newly processed gold from the Tugwi River fields was arriving with inconsistent purity, threatening the kingdom's reputation in the Indian Ocean trade. This episode follows Gara's decision to impose a gold dust standard — a controlled system of weights and purity checks overseen by the muraya court officials. We explore how the standard was enforced through the dhlandhlo council, the role of the nganga priests in certifying purity with sacred oaths, and the impact on relations with Swahili merchants in Sofala and Kilwa. The episode also examines the technical aspects of gold processing, including cupellation and the use of soapstone crucibles, and the social tensions that arose when some vaShona smiths resisted the new regulations. Lucas and Luna discuss how this early attempt at quality control helped consolidate Mambo Gara's authority but also sowed seeds of discontent that would surface in later reigns.