Archelaus Tsoebebe
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Archelaus Tsoebebe
Archelaus Moleleki Tsoebebe (29 January 1904 – 1986) was a Motswana politician of Sotho people, Sotho descent. He was a co-founder of the Botswana Democratic Party, which he represented in the National Assembly of Botswana from 1965 to 1969. He served in the Cabinet of Botswana as the Ministry of Labour and Social Services (Botswana), Minister of Labour and Social Services. Biography Archelaus Moleleki Tsoebebe was born to a Sotho people, Sotho family on 29 January 1904 at the Mafube Mission in the Matatiele Local Municipality, Matatiele District of the Cape Colony. He graduated from school in 1920 and trained as a teacher at the Mvenyane Institution from 1922 to 1924 and at Lovedale (South Africa), Lovedale from 1925 to 1926. He then taught at Lovedale from 1927 to 1928 before attending Fort Hare from 1929 to 1931. He then moved to the Bechuanaland Protectorate, where he worked as a principal from 1932 to 1938. He founded the African Teachers' Association in 1937, and he fou ...
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Matatiele Local Municipality
Matatiele Local Municipality is a Category B municipality located in the Alfred Nzo District Municipality, Alfred Nzo District of Eastern Cape in South Africa. It adjoins Lesotho to the north, Elundini Local Municipality, Elundini to the south-west, and Greater Kokstad Local Municipality, Greater Kokstad to the east and its 4,352 km² makes the Matatiele Local Municipality largest of four municipalities in the district at almost half of its geographical area. [1] According to the South African National Census of 2011, its 203,483 (46.84 per km²) residents and 49,527 (11.38 per km²) households makes Matatiele Local Municipality the second largest populated place (Main Place 295) in the Alfred Nzo District behind Mbizana Local Municipality, Mbizana.[2] Once dominated by dinosaurs, wetlands and marshes, Matatiele derives its name from a portmanteau word of the Sotho language words “matata”, meaning wild ducks, and “ile”, meaning gone and the Phuthi language words "mati" me ...
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