Nunquawuse: Difference between revisions
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After this was carried out, Nunquawuse's visions did not come true. Instead, the Xhosa king's order led to [[40000 (number)|forty-thousand]] people starving to [[death]], and those remaining being absorbed into the [[Great Britain|British]] [[colony]] of [[Rhodesia]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Wages of Sin (novel)}}) | After this was carried out, Nunquawuse's visions did not come true. Instead, the Xhosa king's order led to [[40000 (number)|forty-thousand]] people starving to [[death]], and those remaining being absorbed into the [[Great Britain|British]] [[colony]] of [[Rhodesia]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Wages of Sin (novel)}}) | ||
= | === Legacy === | ||
The [[Third Doctor]] recounted her story to [[Jo Grant]] when explaining the concept of [[precognition]]. He compared Nunquawuse's visions to those of [[Grigori Rasputin]]'s, and explained that precognitive visions, "whether accurate or not", were relatively common among [[human]]s. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Wages of Sin (novel)}}) | The [[Third Doctor]] recounted her story to [[Jo Grant]] when explaining the concept of [[precognition]]. He compared Nunquawuse's visions to those of [[Grigori Rasputin]]'s, and explained that precognitive visions, "whether accurate or not", were relatively common among [[human]]s. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Wages of Sin (novel)}}) | ||
[[Category:People from the real world]] | [[Category:People from the real world]] | ||
[[Category:19th century individuals]] | [[Category:19th century individuals]] |
Revision as of 15:10, 23 January 2024
Nunquawuse was a Xhosa girl who claimed to experience visions.
Biography
Nunquawuse lived in South Africa during the 19th century. Over the course of seven days, she experienced visions in her garden. These visions told her that if the Xhosa, her tribe, were to be great once more, then they should slaughter their cattle and burn their crops.
Initially, people were doubtful, however, she soon received the backing of the Xhosa king, who gave the order for the slaughter of the cattle and the burning of the crops.
After this was carried out, Nunquawuse's visions did not come true. Instead, the Xhosa king's order led to forty-thousand people starving to death, and those remaining being absorbed into the British colony of Rhodesia. (PROSE: The Wages of Sin [+]Loading...["The Wages of Sin (novel)"])
Legacy
The Third Doctor recounted her story to Jo Grant when explaining the concept of precognition. He compared Nunquawuse's visions to those of Grigori Rasputin's, and explained that precognitive visions, "whether accurate or not", were relatively common among humans. (PROSE: The Wages of Sin [+]Loading...["The Wages of Sin (novel)"])