Perched on a windswept plateau in southern Africa, Great Zimbabwe stands as the continent’s most monumental pre-colonial stone city — a testament to the ingenuity of the Shona civilization that built it between the 11th and 15th centuries. This show, hosted by Lucas and Luna, delves into the rise of the Kingdom of Zimbabwe, from its origins as a modest ironworking settlement to its zenith as a trading power whose gold and ivory reached as far as China and Persia. We explore the architectural marvel of the Great Enclosure, with its dry-stone walls rising 11 meters high, and the enigmatic soapstone birds that have become the nation’s emblem. We confront the colonial erasure of African civilization: how Portuguese explorers and later Cecil Rhodes’ British South Africa Company dismissed Great Zimbabwe as the work of Phoenicians or Arabs, a racist fiction that persisted into the 20th century. Through archaeology, oral traditions, and recent DNA studies, we piece together the kingdom’s court life, its control of Indian Ocean trade routes through Sofala, and its eventual decline due to environmental pressure and shifting trade networks. The show examines Great Zimbabwe’s legacy in modern Zimbabwe’s identity — why the nation took its name from this ruin, and how Robert Mugabe’s government used its imagery to craft a post-colonial narrative. We also touch on the looting of its artifacts and the ongoing repatriation debates. Join us as we unearth the stones of a kingdom that challenges every assumption about pre-colonial African achievement.