Kolobeng Mission, Missionsruinen aus dem 19. Jahrhundert nahe Kumakwane, Botswana
Kolobeng Mission is a stone structure with remains of buildings and waterworks located west of Gaborone along a main road. The site shows the layout of a working settlement with channels dug to manage water from a nearby source.
Scottish explorer David Livingstone established this mission station in 1847 to serve the Bakwena tribe and combat the regional slave trade. The settlement operated as a base for missionary work across southern Africa during the mid-1800s.
The mission became a center for education where Livingstone taught agricultural methods and irrigation techniques to the local Batswana population.
A protective fence surrounds the site to safeguard the remains and make walking around safe. The area is open to visitors who want to walk through and see the old foundations on their own.
Chief Sechele I of the Bakwena was baptized at this location, marking the first major religious conversion outcome of the early missionary efforts. His acceptance helped establish the mission's influence in the region at that time.
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