National Archives of Zimbabwe
The National Archives of Zimbabwe are the national archives of Zimbabwe. They are located in Harare.
The National Archives were established by an Act of Parliament in 1935, now known as the National Archives Act 1986. The Archives are the storehouse of the nation's documented history. They include the archives of the former Southern Rhodesia, and are formed of a network of five regional archives divided into eight provinces. From 1953-1963, they were the central repository of the National Archives of Rhodesia and Nyasaland.
Its Audiovisual Unit was established in 1988. Its collect encompasses 15,000 audiovisual materials about Zimbabwe. Its Oral History Programme collects and preserves oral interviews of people whose contribution to Zimbabwean history has been considerable but under-documented.
The first Director at National Archives of Zimbabwe at independence was . Angeline Kamba is the only female Director to head this Department up to 2021. The latest Director was Ivan Munhamu Murambiwa who passed on 2021. In 2018 National Archives of Zimbabwe started Community Archives Project. The following were done Arcturus High School, Harare Girls High School, Mbungo Zion Christian Centre, Bikita, Zvishavane and currently Kariba.
Web accessibility
In September 2025, the website of the was tested for conformance with Web Content Accessibility Guidelines, in its version, using as evaluation platform, which, in turn, uses as automated web accessibility evaluation tool.The website of obtained a score of out of 10. This is known as provided by, which, in turn, uses. The test was taken on as part of a research on web accessibility of national libraries around the world.
This result means that the website of cannot be considered accessible, if the threshold is stabilised as 8 out of 10. Therefore, efforts still need to be made to achieve full compliance with web accessibility directives.
This section is added to this page in order to raise awareness about the web accessibility barriers faced by persons with disabilities that limit them to equally enjoying the Web. Web accessibility is considered basic human right by the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities from the United Nations.