Sioma

Sioma is a town on the west bank of the Zambezi River in the Western Province of Zambia. Since 2012 it has been the capital of the Sioma District.

Geography
Sioma is located on the west bank of the Zambezi River 130 km north of Sesheke and 150 km south of the provincial capital Mongu. The town is situated approximately 60 km south of the town of Senanga which marks the southern extent of the Barotse Floodplain.

Vegetation in the area is predominantly Dry Kalahari woodland.

Weather
Annually, the town gets an average of 737 mm of rain.

History
An Early Iron Age site was excavated at Sioma which has been dated to the mid centuries of the first millennium. Some of the pottery at the site resembles that which is found in Nqoma, Angola.

In the 1880s the Portuguese explorer Alexandre Alberto da Rocha de Serpa Pinto and American James Dabney McCabe both described the settlement as a hamlet. Pinto also described how the Lui government forced local residents to act as porters for canoes attempting to get around the nearby Ngonye Falls.

Expansion of the town started in 1957 when the catholic Irish Capuchin Franciscans established the Saint Anthony  mission station on the Zambezi river at the town.

In 2012 the town was made the capital of the newly created Sioma District.