HI Vanessa Have you seen this: http://www.gutenberg.org/files/36419/36419-h/36419-h.htm Scroll to chapter three "the white waif" Gquma lived only for about eighteen years after her marriage. She bore to her husband two sons, the eldest of whom was called Begela, and a daughter, who was called Bessie. Begela inherited the chieftainship after the death of his father. During the lifetime of Gquma, ’Ndepa did not take another wife. http://www.theguardian.com/media/2004/mar/22/pressandpublishing.southafrica Piecing together other fragments, Taylor concluded that Ms Logie had been adopted by a sub-group know as the ama-Tshomane whose matriarch, by coincidence, was an Englishwoman named Gquma who had been shipwrecked as a child in Pondoland about 40 years earlier. By the time a rescue party from the Cape arrived in 1791, nine years after the Grosvenor sank, Ms Logie was dead, her spirit and strength probably worn down from the grind of tanning hides, planting crops and collecting firewood. cheri --- This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus protection is active. http://www.avast.com