-
chiefs of the
Lunda and
Lovale people.
Until about 1966 it was
called Balovale after the
dominant chief (and his
village within the town is
still known...
-
history of the
Barotse was
carried out in 1939 in
connection with the
Balovale Dispute, see below. In 1845
Barotseland had been
conquered by the Makololo...
- The
Luvale people, also
spelled Lovale,
Balovale, Lubale, as well as
Lwena or
Luena in Angola, are a
Bantu ethnic group found in
northwestern Zambia and...
-
Zambia 15 99% 15 L, M, N Nyanja-Chewa, Bemba, Tonga, Tumbuka, BaLunda,
Balovale, Kaonde,
Nkoya and Lozi,
about 70
groups total.
Zimbabwe 14 99% 14 S Shona...
- PMC 3182497. PMID 21427751. Beet, EA (1946). "Sickle cell
disease in the
Balovale District of
Northern Rhodesia". East
African Medical Journal. 23: 75–86...
- name was
derived from the
Zambezi river. Fife →
Nakonde pre-independence
Balovale →
Zambezi Bancroft →
Chililabombwe (1967) Fort
Jameson →
Chipata (1967)...
-
English orthithologist Charles M.N.
White based on a
specimen collected near
Balovale (now the town of Zambezi) in
northwest Zambia near the
border with Angola...
- again. On his return, he was
posted to
Balovale in the
northwest province, and
acted as
Secretary on the
Balovale Commission under MacDonell.
Jones was...
-
administrative capital of Barotseland, and
northwards to the
settlement of
Balovale (now Zambezi) in the
North West of Zambia, at 13°33′04″S 23°06′54″E /...
-
voters Eastern Fort Jameson, Lundazi,
Petauke 116
Livingstone and
Western Balovale, Kalabo, Lealui, Livingstone, Mankoya, Nalolo,
Sesheke 587
Midland Feira...