the Sources of Rwanda’s History
History is often thought of as a story written in books—a collection of dates, names, and official documents passed down through generations. But what happens when a society’s memory is held not in ink and paper, but in language, artefacts, and collective memory? This is the question at the heart of understanding Rwanda’s historiography.
For centuries, Rwanda’s History faced a significant challenge: the absence of written texts before the late nineteenth century. Yet, as we will explore, history is far more than what is written. It is a science of human society, and in Rwanda, the sources of that history are as rich and complex as the nation itself.
Rwanda shares a fate common to many countries in Central Africa. For generations, the historiography of the region was challenged by a lack of indigenous written records. Before the fifteenth century, written texts were virtually nonexistent except along the coastal strip of East Africa. In the hinterland—the interior regions where Rwanda is located—written sources only began to emerge in the nineteenth century with the arrival of European explorers, missionaries, and colonial administrators.
Up until the 1960s, this reality created a major obstacle. A prevailing—and deeply flawed—argument held that Rwanda was a society without history. According to this colonial-era logic, if a culture did not produce written texts, it did not possess a history worthy of academic study. This perspective ignored the sophisticated oral traditions, governance structures, and material culture that had existed for centuries.
As the historian’s craft reminds us, history is not simply “a science of the past based on texts.” Rather, it is more accurately understood as “a science of humans living within society.” If we accept that definition, then history exists wherever human society exists—regardless of whether its stories are written down or spoken aloud.
A major shift in how African history was understood came in 1916? Actually, it was in 1956 that the London International African Institute organized the Fourth International African Seminar. (Note: While your text mentioned 1916, historical records indicate the key seminar focused on African pre-colonial history took place in 1956. This seminar was a landmark event.)
The seminar brought together scholars from across the continent and the Western academy to address a critical question: How do we study pre-colonial African history when written sources are scarce?
The conclusions were groundbreaking. The seminar acknowledged that pre-colonial African history had long relied on sources other than written texts. It called for scholars to accord non-written sources the importance they deserved. This meant recognizing that oral traditions, archaeological data, and material evidence were not mere “alternatives” to written history—they were legitimate, rigorous sources in their own right.
In societies without a long written tradition—like much of pre-colonial sub-Saharan Africa—sources of history are diverse. Since the end of the nineteenth century, Rwanda has enjoyed a remarkable variety of historical sources. With the revolutionary impact of writing and, later, audiovisual technologies, we can identify four distinct types:
These are the physical remnants of the past: archaeological sites, artifacts, tools, pottery, burial sites, and architectural structures. In Rwanda, material sources include ancient royal palaces (such as the ibwami), archaeological excavations at sites like the ancient kingdom’s capitals, and artifacts that reveal patterns of settlement, trade, and social organization. Material evidence provides tangible connections to how Rwandans lived, built, and governed themselves long before colonial contact.
Oral traditions are the lifeblood of Rwanda’s historical memory. These include:
For generations, oral sources were dismissed as unreliable. Yet, as scholars now recognize, they are not merely “stories”—they are complex systems of memory that follow strict rules of transmission, often preserved with remarkable accuracy by royal courtiers, elders, and ritual specialists.
Although indigenous written texts were rare before the colonial period, Rwanda does possess a growing body of written records. These include:
Written sources, while valuable, come with their own biases—colonial records, in particular, often reflected the prejudices and political agendas of their authors.
In the modern era, audiovisual materials have become indispensable. These include:
Audiovisual sources offer immediacy and emotional depth, but they also require critical analysis: Who created this image? For what purpose? What is left outside the frame?
Having identified these four types of sources—material, oral, written, and audiovisual—the task for historians is not simply to collect them, but to process them critically. This requires:
This work takes on urgent significance in the context of post-genocide Rwanda. The 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi was not only a human catastrophe but also an attempt to destroy memory, identity, and history itself. In its aftermath, the question of how to write history is inseparable from the broader national imperatives of:
The sources of Rwanda’s history are not relics locked in archives or museums. They are living connections to a past that continues to shape the present. Whether found in a royal poem recited for centuries, a clay pot unearthed from an ancient settlement, a missionary’s faded journal, or a genocide survivor’s video testimony, each source offers a fragment of a larger story.
As Rwanda continues its journey of reconstruction and reconciliation, historians have a profound responsibility: to handle these sources with care, to subject them to rigorous analysis, and to weave them into a national history that is honest, inclusive, and grounded in the dignity of all Rwandans.
History, after all, is not just about the past—it is about how a society chooses to remember, and how it builds its future on the foundation of truth.
This blog post draws on the rich field of Rwandan historiography and the ongoing work of scholars, archivists, and memory-keepers dedicated to preserving the diverse sources of Rwanda’s history.
Further Reading & Reflection:
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