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Order of Mapungubwe | |
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Awarded by President of South Africa | |
Type | Civilian national order |
Established | 6 December 2002 |
Status | Currently constituted |
Grades |
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![]() Ribbon |
The Order of Mapungubwe is a South African civilian honour awarded by the President of South Africa. It recognises South African citizens whose achievements have international impact and serve the interests of South Africa.[1] It is South Africa's highest honour.[citation needed]
The order is named after the ancient civilisation of Mapungubwe, which was located in modern-day South Africa.[1] It was instituted on 6 December 2002, and its first recipient (in the highest class) was former president Nelson Mandela.
The order originally had three classes, and was enlarged to four in 2004:
The badge is a horizontal oval above an inverted trapezium. Inside the oval frame is depicted a golden rhinoceros with the sun rising above Mapungubwe Hill in the background. The convex upper edge of the trapezium is decorated with a beadwork pattern and the sides are edged with sceptres. In the centre is an ornate crucible from which molten gold flows down to a red furnace. The South African coat of arms is displayed on the reverse.
The ribbon is gold, edged with a line of cream-coloured bead-like dots along each edge, and recurring cream-coloured rhinoceros silhouettes down the centre. All four classes are worn around the neck.
Recipient | Class | Year | Field of achievement | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nelson Mandela | Platinum | 2002 | Liberation struggle, national reconciliation and nation-building, and global peace and justice | |
F. W. de Klerk | Gold | 2002 | Peace, national reconciliation and nation-building | |
Allan McLeod Cormack † | Gold | 2002 | Science and CT scanning | |
Basil Schonland † | Gold | 2002 | Physics and foundation of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research | |
Peter Beighton | Bronze | 2002 | Science and research into inherited skeleton disorders | |
Hamilton Naki | Bronze | 2002 | Medical science | |
Sydney Brenner | Gold | 2004 | Medicine, especially research in genetics | |
Tshilidzi Marwala | Bronze | 2004 | Engineering science | |
Daya Reddy | Bronze | 2004 | Mathematics and science | |
J. M. Coetzee | Gold | 2005 | Literature | |
Aaron Klug | Gold | 2005 | Medicine | |
Frank Nabarro | Gold | 2005 | Science | |
Tebello Nyokong | Bronze | 2005 | Science | |
Himladevi Soodyall | Bronze | 2005 | Science | |
Selig Percy Amoils | Silver | 2006 | Ophthalmology | |
George Ellis | Silver | 2006 | Science | |
Lionel Opie | Silver | 2006 | Cardiology | |
Patricia Berjak | Silver | 2006 | Seed science | |
Claire Penn | Silver | 2007 | Speech and language pathology, especially research into sign language, child language, aphasia and head injuries | |
Sibusiso Sibisi | Silver | 2007 | Information technology, research and development and business technology | |
Valerie Mizrahi | Silver | 2007 | Biochemistry and molecular biology, including tuberculosis drug validation | |
Doris Lessing | Gold | 2008 | Literature and the elimination of colonialism and apartheid | |
Wieland Gevers | Silver | 2008 | Higher education and medicine | |
Phuti Ngoepe | Silver | 2008 | Natural sciences and computer modelling research | |
Tim Noakes | Silver | 2008 | Sport and the science of physical exercise | |
Pragasen Pillay | Silver | 2008 | Energy conservation | |
Mangena Maake Mokone † | Gold | 2009 | African Ethiopian Movement | [2] |
Hendrik J. Koornhof | Silver | 2009 | Biomedical science | [2] |
Bongani Mayosi | Silver | 2009 | Medical science | [2] |
Johann Lutjeharms | Silver | 2009/10 | Oceanographic science | [2] |
Douglas Butterworth | Silver | 2010 | Betterment of the environment and sustainability of fisheries | |
Monique Zaahl | Bronze | 2010 | Genetics and research into iron overload disorders | |
Pieter Steyn | Silver | 2011 | Chemistry and biosynthesis of mycotoxins | |
Oliver Tambo † | Platinum | 2012 | Exceptional leadership during the anti-apartheid struggle | |
Albert Luthuli † | Platinum | 2012 | Exceptional leadership during the anti-apartheid struggle | |
Barry Schoub | Silver | 2012 | Virology | |
Patience Mthunzi-Kufa | Bronze | 2012 | Biophotonics | |
Bernie Fanaroff | Silver | 2013 | Astronomy and the Square Kilometre Array | |
George Ekama | Silver | 2013 | Research into wastewater treatment | |
Glenda Gray | Silver | 2013 | Research into mother-to-child transmission of HIV/AIDS | |
Malegapuru William Makgoba | Silver | 2013 | Transformation of higher education | |
Quarraisha Abdool Karim | Bronze | 2013 | Research into HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis | |
Ismail Mohamed † | Silver | 2014 | Mathematics and political liberation | |
Hendrik Simon Schaaf | Silver | 2014 | Medical science | |
William Soga † | Silver | 2014 | Medicine and anthropology | |
Namrita Lall | Bronze | 2014 | Medical science | |
Zwelakhe Sisulu † | Gold | 2016 | Journalism | [3] |
Fulufhelo Nelwamondo | Silver | 2017 | Science, especially electrical engineering | [4] |
Siyabulela Xuza | Silver | 2017 | Scientific innovation | [4] |
Edna Molewa † | Gold | 2019 | Environmental justice | |
Malik Maaza | Silver | 2019 | Nano-science | |
Ari Sitas | Silver | 2019 | Social science | |
Thokozani Majozi | Bronze | 2019 | Science, especially a novel mathematical technique for near-zero-effluent batch chemical facilities which enables the reuse of wastewater | |
Aboubaker Ebrahim Dangor | Silver | 2023 | Physics | [5] |
Vhahangwele Masindi | Silver | 2023 | Environmental sciences and water | [5] |
Mulalo Doyoyo | Silver | 2024 | applied mechanics, ultralight materials, green building, renewable energy, and other fields of engineering | [6] |