Amajuba region

E613466

The Amajuba region is an administrative and historical area in northern KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, known for its coal mining, industrial centers, and significant Anglo-Boer War battle sites.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Amajuba region canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (44)

Predicate Object
instanceOf administrative region
historical region
administrativeCenter Newcastle, KwaZulu-Natal NERFINISHED
borderWith Eswatini (historically Swaziland) regionally nearby
Free State province NERFINISHED
Mpumalanga province NERFINISHED
contains Amajuba District Municipality NERFINISHED
Dannhauser NERFINISHED
Newcastle, KwaZulu-Natal NERFINISHED
Utrecht, KwaZulu-Natal NERFINISHED
country South Africa
economicSector industrial manufacturing sector
mining sector
governedBy Amajuba District Municipality NERFINISHED
hasHeritage Anglo-Boer War memorials
battlefield tourism sites
hasHistoricalEvent Battle of Amajuba Hill NERFINISHED
hasTransport national and regional roads
rail links to coalfields
historicalPeriod First Anglo-Boer War era NERFINISHED
Second Anglo-Boer War era NERFINISHED
knownFor Anglo-Boer War battle sites
coal mining
industrial centers
language English
Zulu NERFINISHED
locatedIn KwaZulu-Natal
northern Drakensberg foothills NERFINISHED
northern KwaZulu-Natal
namedAfter Amajuba Mountain NERFINISHED
partOf KwaZulu-Natal province NERFINISHED
northern KwaZulu-Natal economic corridor NERFINISHED
northern Natal coalfields
primaryEconomicActivity coal mining
manufacturing industry
power generation-related industry
terrainFeature coal-bearing strata
grasslands
hills
timeZone Central Africa Time
surface form: South African Standard Time
tourismType battlefield tourism
heritage tourism
usedFor military operations during Anglo-Boer conflicts
UTCOffset +2

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Newcastle partOf Amajuba region
subject surface form: Newcastle (KwaZulu-Natal)