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‘Kingdom’ on BBC Earth: A throne, 4 Families, 1 relentless fight for survival.

Follow four predator families fighting for survival in Zambia. ‘Kingdom’ premieres tonight.

In the wild, there are no crowns, no treaties and no mercy. There is only territory, lineage and the instinct to survive.

Kingdom is a bold new six-part wildlife series from the world-renowned BBC Studios Natural History Unit. Filmed in Zambia, premieres tonight at 20:00 on BBC Earth, DStv Channel 184. Continuing BBC Earth’s legacy of landmark natural history storytelling, the series combines rigorous science with cinematic filmmaking to reveal the natural world in unprecedented detail.

Narrated by Sir David Attenborough and filmed over five extraordinary years in Zambia’s South Luangwa National Park, Kingdom focuses on a single, fiercely contested region known as Nsefu. Here, four apex predator families navigate shifting alliances and escalating conflict, offering an intimate perspective on resilience, leadership and adaptation in one of Africa’s last great wildernesses.

Lions
Rita’s Lion Pride

At the heart of the series are four powerful female leaders, each fighting to secure the future of her bloodline:

  • Olimba: A solitary leopard mother, raising her cubs in hostile territory
  • Storm: A determined wild dog queen whose arrival destabilises the existing order
  • Rita: A lioness rebuilding her pride after devastating losses
  • Tenta: A formidable hyena matriarch defending her clan’s position in the hierarchy

“I want audiences to witness the determination of these animals to do what it takes to survive and to protect their families,” says executive producer Mike Gunton. “In many ways, their lives reflect our own, marked by challenge, resilience and constant decision-making. Every day, they face intense life-or-death choices, and there is something profoundly uplifting in that.”

Filmed over more than 1 400 days, Kingdom represents the longest continuous single-location shoot in the history of the BBC Studios Natural History Unit. The production involved more than 170 contributors, including over 90 local Zambian crew members and wildlife experts, reinforcing the importance of African voices in telling African wildlife stories.

Set within one of Africa’s most biodiverse ecosystems, Kingdom also highlights the fragile balance between predator populations, territory and environmental change, a dynamic that underpins every encounter captured on screen.

Using advanced long-lens systems, drones, thermal imaging and remote camera traps, the team captured behaviour never previously documented, from wild dogs attempting to rescue a pack member from a crocodile to intimate shifts in power among individually identified lions, leopards, hyenas and wild dogs.

This is natural history filmed with the tension of a primetime drama, but every moment is real.

Kingdom will also be available on DStv Catch Up.

Leopards
Olimba’s Leapord Family

Experience Zambia on BBC:

Separately on the BBC News channel, two Zambia specials of flagship travel programme The Travel Show will air on March 21 and 28, looking at how the country has become one of the fastest emerging tourism destinations in the world.

Presenter Dwayne Fields heads into the country’s wild heart, not to meet just the animals, but also their custodians who are keen to share and preserve their country’s most precious asset. At Kafue National Park, he joins the rangers taking their canine units out to track poachers, takes part in a lion monitoring expedition and meets the orphaned elephants being prepared for release back into the wild.

He also visits Victoria Falls before heading to the country’s lively capital Lusaka and ends his adventure watching the world’s largest mammal migration, as 10 million fruit bats arrive in Kasanka National Park to feast on the area’s fruit trees.

At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

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