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South Africa History-2
A
1595 engraving of Khoikhoi pastoralists
© SA National Library
South
Africa History - Colonial expansion
As
the colonists began moving east, they encountered the Xhosa-speaking
people living in the region that is today's Eastern Cape. A situation
of uneasy trading and more or less continuous warfare began to develop.
By
this time, the second half of the 18th century, the colonists - mainly
of Dutch, German and French Huguenot stock - had begun to lose their
sense of identification with Europe. The Afrikaner nation was coming
into being.
As a
result of developments in Europe, the British took the Cape over from
the Dutch in 1795. Seven years later, the colony was returned to the
Dutch government, only to come under British rule again in 1806,
recaptured because of the alliance between Holland and Napoleon.
The
initially somewhat cautious regulations aimed at ameliorating the
conditions under which, for instance, Khoi servants were employed,
caused discontent and even open rebellion among the colony's white
inhabitants.
South
Africa History - The
Cape frontier wars
At
the same time, British military strength began to tell in the conflict
with the Xhosa. In 1820, some 5 000 newly arrived British settlers were
placed on the eastern frontier as a supposed defensive buffer against
the Xhosa - a strategy that failed when many of them gave up the
struggle with uncooperative land and turned to other occupations in
Port Elizabeth and Grahamstown.
The
Xhosa reacted with heroic defiance at the additional pressure on their
land and independence. But this ended tragically with the mass
starvation that followed an 1857 prophecy that the whites would return
to the sea if the Xhosa slaughtered their cattle and destroyed their
crops.
After
1806, philanthropist missionaries had begun arriving, their
liberalising influence reaching its high point in the activities of
John Philip, friend of the British abolitionist William Wilberforce and
local superintendent of the London Missionary Society.
South
Africa History - The
Great Trek
This
development and, in particular, the emancipation of slaves in 1834, had
dramatic effects on the colony, precipitating the Great Trek, an
emigration north and east of about 12 000 discontented Afrikaner
farmers, or Boers. These people were determined to live independently
of colonial rule and what they saw as unacceptable racial
egalitarianism.
The
early decades of the century had seen another event of huge
significance: the rise to power of the great Zulu king, Shaka. His wars
of conquest and those of Mzilikazi - a general who broke away from
Shaka on a northern path of conquest - caused a calamitous disruption
of the interior known as the mfecane.
Ironically,
it was this that denuded much of the area into which Trekkers now
moved, enabling them to settle there with a belief that they were
occupying vacant territory. But this belief was by no means accompanied
by an absence of conflict with the Zulu armies and others.
Initially,
many Trekkers moved east into the Natal area, today the province of
KwaZulu-Natal, under the leadership of Piet Retief. Intending to
negotiate for land, Retief was murdered with a party of followers and
servants at the kraal of Dingane, Shaka's successor.
South
Africa History - The
Battle of Blood River
In
the war that followed, the Boers won victory at the Battle of Blood
River. They began to settle in Natal, but smaller conflicts followed
and the British - fearing repercussions in the Cape Colony - annexed
Natal, where a small British settlement called Port Natal (later
Durban) had already been established.
On
the highveld, however, two Boer republics were formed: the central
Orange Free State and South African Republic (Transvaal or ZAR -
Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek) to its north.
By
the mid-1800s, the tiny refreshment post at the Cape of Good Hope had
grown into an area of white settlement that stretched over virtually
all of what is today South Africa.
In
some areas the indigenous Bantu-speakers maintained their independence,
most notably in the northern Natal territories, which were still
unmistakably the kingdom of the Zulu. Almost all were eventually to
lose the struggle against white overlordship - British or Boer.
South
Africa History
One
territory that was to retain independence was the mountain fastness
where King Moshoeshoe had forged the Basotho nation by offering refuge
to tribes fleeing the mfecane. Clashing with the Free Staters,
Moshoeshoe asked Britain to annex Basotholand, which was done in 1868.
Known today as Lesotho, this country is entirely surrounded by South
Africa, but has never been a part of it.
South Africa History continued: The Discovery of Diamonds
Back to: South Africa History - The Earliest People
Source: SouthAfrica.info
The
official guide and
web portal to South Africa.
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