The Livingstone Memorial, built in 1899, marks the spot where missionary explorer David Livingstone died on 1 May 1873, in Chief Chitambo's village at Ilala, near the edge of the Bangweulu Swamps in Zambia. His heart was buried there under a mpundu tree by his loyal attendants Chuma, Suza Mniasere and Vchopere, before they departed for the coast carrying his body. In their party was an Indian-educated African man named Jacob Wainwright who carved the inscription "LIVINGSTONE MAY 4 1873" and the names of the attendants on the tree.
The fate of the memorial tree
By 1899, Chitambo's village had dispersed to another site after the death of the chief, and the tree was decaying. It was cut down by Robert Codrington who had been sent by the British Commissioner Alfred Sharpe to prepare the way for a permanent memorial. He made a clearing in the forest and had the carving removed and sent to the Royal Geographical Society's museum in London.
Construction of the memorial
The memorial was constructed in 1902 by Owen Stroud and some African artisans who travelled from Fort Jameson to do the job. The site was still marked by the clearing made by Codrington. Stroud built an obelisk around 6 m high from burnt brick plastered with smooth cement, and attached two brass plaques sent from London.. Four brick and wooden posts with iron and wooden rails were set up around the base, replaced in the early 1950s by iron chains. When the top of the obelisk was damaged, after repairs a bronze cross was placed on top.
Location of the memorial
The Memorial is reached from the tarred Serenje-Samfya highway via a turn-off to the north which is 10 km northeast from the turn-off south to Kasanka National Park. A gravel road of about 30 km reaches the memorial in woodland. David Livingstone did not die "on the shores of Lake Bangweulu", as stated in some publications, but 100 km south-east of the lake, near the edge of the floodplain which borders the Bangweulu Swamps. The area was not in Barotseland as stated in other sources. Livingstone had been trying to discover the rivers flowing in and out of the swamps, but did so at the end of the rainy season when the annual flood carried his party's boats at his crib across the floodplain to the Lulimala River. The memorial is 5 km south of the Lulimala, 10 km south of the edge of the floodplain, and 40 km from the edge of the permanent swamps. There is a visitors book in the nearby village health centre.
Additions
There are now four bronze plaques on the monument, the most recent of which was added in 1973 and reads: "After 100 years David Livingstone's spirit and the love of God so animated his friends of all races that they gathered here in thanksgiving on 1st May 1973 led by Dr Kenneth David KaundaPresident of the Republic of Zambia."