Jump to content

History of South Africa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The first modern humans are believed to have inhabited South Africa more than 100,000 years ago.[1] In 1999, UNESCO designated the region the Cradle of Humankind World Heritage site.[2] South Africa's first known inhabitants have been referred to as the Khoisan, the Khwe and the San. Starting in about 1,000 BC, these groups were then joined by the Bantu ethnic groups who migrated from Western and Central Africa during what is known as the Bantu expansion.

European exploration of the African coast began in the 13th century when Portugal sought an alternative route to the Silk Road to China. In the 14th and 15th century, Portuguese explorers traveled down the west African Coast, detailing and mapping the coastline and in 1488 they rounded the Cape of Good Hope.[3] The Dutch East India Company established a trading post in Cape Town under the command of Jan van Riebeeck in 1652,[4] European workers who settled at the Cape became known as the Free Burghers and gradually established farms in the Dutch Cape Colony.[5] Following the Invasion of the Cape Colony by the British in 1795 and 1806, mass migrations collectively known as the Great Trek occurred during which the Voortrekkers established several Boer Republics in the interior of South Africa.[6] The discoveries of diamonds and gold in the nineteenth century had a profound effect on the fortunes of the region, propelling it onto the world stage and introducing a shift away from an exclusively agrarian-based economy towards industrialisation and the development of urban infrastructure. The discoveries also led to new conflicts culminating in open warfare between the Boer settlers and the British Empire, fought for control over the nascent South African mining industry.[citation needed]

Following the defeat of the Boers in the Anglo–Boer or South African War (1899–1902), the Union of South Africa was created as a self-governing dominion of the British Empire on 31 May 1910 in terms of the South Africa Act 1909, which amalgamated the four previously separate British colonies: Cape Colony, Colony of Natal, Transvaal Colony, and Orange River Colony. The country became a fully sovereign nation state within the British Empire, in 1934 following enactment of the Status of the Union Act. The monarchy came to an end on 31 May 1961, replaced by a republic as the consequence of a 1960 referendum, which legitimised the country becoming the Republic of South Africa.

From 1948–1994, South African politics was dominated by Afrikaner nationalism. Racial segregation and white minority rule known officially as apartheid were implemented in 1948.

On 2 February 1990, FW de Klerk, then president of South Africa and leader of the Nationalist Party, unbanned the African National Congress (ANC) and freed Nelson Mandela from life imprisonment on Robben Island. The CODESA talks negotiated the creation of a new non-racial democratic South Africa, for which de Klerk and Mandela were later awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

These negotiations led to the creation of a democratic constitution for all South Africa. On 27 April 1994, after decades of ANC led resistance to white minority rule, armed guerrilla struggle, and international opposition to apartheid - which ended in crippling sanctions against the minority white government, the ANC achieved a majority in the country's first democratic election. Since then, despite a continually decreasing electoral majority,[7] the ANC has ruled South Africa. The ANC has notionally been in alliance with the South African Communist Party and the Congress of South African Trade Unions since 1994.[citation needed]

High rates of crime, corruption, unemployment, low economic growth, an ongoing energy crisis, and poorly maintained infrastructure are some of the problems challenging contemporary South Africa.

Early history (before 1652)

[edit]

Prehistory

[edit]

Scientists researching the periods before written historical records were made have established that the territory of what is now referred to generically as South Africa was one of the important centers of human evolution. It was inhabited by Australopithecines since at least 2.5 million years ago. Modern human settlement occurred around 125,000 years ago in the Middle Stone Age, as shown by archaeological discoveries at Klasies River Caves.[8] The first human habitation is associated with a DNA group originating in a northwestern area of southern Africa and still prevalent in the indigenous Khoisan (Khoi and San). Southern Africa was later populated by Bantu-speaking people who migrated from the western region of central Africa during the early centuries AD.

Professor Raymond Dart discovered the skull of a 2.51 million year old Taung Child in 1924, the first example of Australopithecus africanus ever found. Following in Dart's footsteps Robert Broom discovered a new much more robust hominid in 1938 Paranthropus robustus at Kromdraai, and in 1947 uncovered several more examples of Australopithecus africanus at Sterkfontein. At the Blombos cave in 2002, stones were discovered engraved with grid or cross-hatch patterns, dated to some 70,000 years ago. This has been interpreted as the earliest example ever discovered of abstract art or symbolic art created by Homo sapiens.[9]

Many more species of early hominid have come to light in recent decades. The oldest is Little Foot, a collection of footbones of an unknown hominid between 2.2 and 3.3 million years old, discovered at Sterkfontein by Ronald J. Clarke. An important recent find was that of 1.9 million year old Australopithecus sediba, discovered in 2008. In 2015, the discovery near Johannesburg of a previously unknown species of Homo was announced, named Homo naledi. It has been described as one of the most important paleontological discoveries in modern times.[10]

San and Khoikhoi

[edit]

The descendants of the Middle Paleolithic populations are thought to be the aboriginal San and Khoikhoi tribes. These are collectively known as the Khoisan, a modern European portmanteau of these two tribes' names. The settlement of southern Africa by the Khoisan corresponds to the earliest separation of the extant Homo sapiens populations altogether, associated in genetic science with what is described in scientific terms as matrilinear haplogroup L0 (mtDNA) and patrilinear haplogroup A (Y-DNA), originating in a northwestern area of southern Africa.[11][12][13]

The San and Khoikhoi are essentially distinguished only by their respective occupations. Whereas the San were hunter-gatherers, the Khoikhoi were pastoral herders.[14][15][16] The initial origin of the Khoikhoi remains uncertain.[17][18]

Archaeological discoveries of livestock bones on the Cape Peninsula indicate that the Khoikhoi began to settle there by about 2000 years ago.[19] In the late 15th and early 16th centuries, Portuguese mariners, who were the first Europeans at the Cape, encountered pastoral Khoikhoi with livestock. Later, English and Dutch seafarers in the late 16th and 17th centuries exchanged metals for cattle and sheep with the Khoikhoi. The conventional view is that availability of livestock was one reason why, in the mid-17th century, the Dutch East India Company established a staging post where the port city of Cape Town is today situated.

The establishment of the staging post by the Dutch East India Company at the Cape in 1652 soon brought the Khoikhoi into conflict with Dutch settlers over land ownership. Competition between Dutch and Khoikhoi pastoralists over grazing land led to livestock theft and conflict.[20] The Khoikhoi were ultimately expelled from the peninsula by force, after a succession of wars. The first Khoikhoi–Dutch War broke out in 1659, the second in 1673, and the third 1674–1677.[21] By the time of their defeat and expulsion from the Cape Peninsula and surrounding districts, the Khoikhoi population was decimated by a smallpox epidemic introduced by Dutch sailors against which the Khoikhoi had no natural resistance or indigenous medicines.[22]

The Bantu people

[edit]
Looking out over the floodplains of the Luvuvhu River (right) and the Limpopo River (far distance and left)

The Bantu expansion was one of the major demographic movements in human prehistory, sweeping much of the African continent during the 2nd and 1st millennia BC.[23] Bantu-speaking communities reached southern Africa from the Congo basin as early as the 4th century BC.[24] Some groups, ancestral to today's Nguni peoples (the Zulu, Xhosa, Swazi, and Ndebele), preferred to live near the eastern coast of what is present-day South Africa.[25] Others, now known as the Sotho–Tswana peoples (Tswana, Pedi, and Sotho), settled in the interior on the plateau known as the Highveld,[25] while today's Venda and Tsonga peoples made their homes in the north-eastern areas of present-day South Africa.

The Kingdom of Mapungubwe, which was located near the northern border of present-day South Africa, at the confluence of the Limpopo and Shashe rivers adjacent to present-day Zimbabwe and Botswana, was the first indigenous kingdom in southern Africa between AD 900 and 1300. It developed into the largest kingdom in the sub-continent before it was abandoned because of climatic changes in the 14th century. Smiths created objects of iron, copper and gold both for local decorative use and for foreign trade. The kingdom controlled trade through the east African ports to Arabia, India and China, and throughout southern Africa, making it wealthy through the exchange of gold and ivory for imports such as Chinese porcelain and Persian glass beads.[26]

Specifics of the contact between Bantu-speakers and the indigenous Khoisan ethnic group remain largely unresearched, although linguistic proof of assimilation exists, as several southern Bantu languages (notably Xhosa and Zulu) are theorised in that they incorporate many click consonants from the Khoisan languages, as possibilities of such developing independently are valid as well.

Colonization

[edit]

Portuguese role

[edit]
Statue of Bartolomeu Dias at the High Commission of South Africa in London. He was the first European navigator to sail around the southernmost tip of Africa.

The Portuguese mariner Bartolomeu Dias was the first European to explore the coastline of South Africa in 1488, while attempting to discover a trade route to the Far East via the southernmost cape of South Africa, which he named Cabo das Tormentas, meaning Cape of Storms. In November 1497, a fleet of Portuguese ships under the command of the Portuguese mariner Vasco da Gama rounded the Cape of Good Hope. By 16 December, the fleet had passed the Great Fish River on the east coast of South Africa, where Dias had earlier turned back. Da Gama gave the name Natal to the coast he was passing, which in Portuguese means Christmas. Da Gama's fleet proceeded northwards to Zanzibar and later sailed eastwards, eventually reaching India and opening the Cape Route between Europe and Asia.[27] Many Portuguese words are still found along the coast of South Africa including Saldanha, Algoa, Natal, Agulhas, Benguela and Lucia.

Dutch role

[edit]
Replica of an East Indiaman of the Dutch East India Company/United East Indies Company (VOC). The Dutch East India Company was a major force behind the Golden Age of Dutch exploration (c. 1590s–1720s) and Netherlandish cartography (c. 1570s–1670s).

Dutch colonization (1652–1815)

[edit]
View of Table Bay with ships of the Dutch East India Company (VOC), c. 1683.
Jan van Riebeeck, first Commander of the Dutch East India Company colony
Groot Constantia, the oldest wine estate in South Africa, was founded in 1685 by Simon van der Stel. The South African wine industry (New World wine) is among the lasting legacy of the VOC era. The recorded economic history of South Africa began with the VOC period.

The Dutch East India Company (in the Dutch of the day: Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie, or VOC) decided to establish a permanent settlement at the Cape in 1652. The VOC, one of the major European trading houses sailing the spice route to the East, had no intention of colonizing the area, instead wanting only to establish a secure base camp where passing ships could be serviced and restock on supplies.[25] To this end, a small VOC expedition under the command of Jan van Riebeeck reached Table Bay on 6 April 1652.[28]

The VOC had settled at the Cape in order to supply their trading ships. The Cape and the VOC had to import Dutch farmers to establish farms to supply the passing ships as well as to supply the growing VOC settlement. The small initial group of free burghers, as these farmers were known, steadily increased in number and began to expand their farms further north and east into the territory of the Khoikhoi.[25] The free burghers were ex-VOC soldiers and gardeners, who were unable to return to Holland when their contracts were completed with the VOC.[29] The VOC also brought some 71,000 slaves to Cape Town from India, Indonesia, East Africa, Mauritius, and Madagascar.[30]

The statue of Jan van Riebeeck, the founder of Cape Town, in Heerengracht Street.
The Castle of Good Hope (Kasteel de Goede Hoop in Dutch), Cape Town. Founded officially in 1652, Kaapstad/Cape Town is the oldest urban area in South Africa.

The majority of burghers had Dutch ancestry and belonged to the Dutch Reformed Church, but there were also some Germans, who often happened to be Lutherans. In 1688, the Dutch and the Germans were joined by French Huguenots, Calvinist Protestants fleeing religious persecution in France under its Catholic ruler, King Louis XIV.

Van Riebeeck considered it impolitic to enslave the local Khoi and San aboriginals, so the VOC began to import large numbers of slaves, primarily from the Dutch colonies in Indonesia. Eventually, van Riebeeck and the VOC began to make indentured servants out of the Khoikhoi and the San. The descendants of unions between the Dutch settlers and the Khoi-San and Malay slaves became known officially as the Cape Coloureds and the Cape Malays, respectively. A significant number of the offspring from the white and slave unions were absorbed into the local proto-Afrikaans speaking white population. The racially mixed genealogical origins of many white South Africans have been traced to interracial unions at the Cape between the European occupying population and imported Asian and African slaves, the indigenous Khoi and San, and their mixed-ethnicity descendants.[31] Simon van der Stel, the first Governor of the Dutch settlement, famous for his development of the lucrative South African wine industry, was himself of mixed race-origin.[32]

British colonisation, Mfecane and Boer Republics (1815–1910)

[edit]

British at the Cape

[edit]
The Rhodes ColossusCecil Rhodes spanning "Cape to Cairo"

In 1787, shortly before the French Revolution, a faction within the politics of the Dutch Republic known as the Patriot Party attempted to overthrow the regime of stadtholder William V. Though the revolt was crushed, it was resurrected after the French invasion of the Netherlands in 1794/1795 which resulted in the stadtholder fleeing the country. The Patriot revolutionaries then proclaimed the Batavian Republic, which was closely allied to revolutionary France. In response, the stadtholder, who had taken up residence in England, issued the Kew Letters, ordering colonial governors to surrender to the British. The British then seized the Cape in 1795 to prevent it from falling into French hands. The Cape was relinquished back to the Dutch in 1803.[33] In 1805, the British inherited the Cape as a prize during the Napoleonic Wars,[25] again seizing the Cape from the French controlled Kingdom of Holland which had replaced the Batavian Republic.[34]

Like the Dutch before them, the British initially had little interest in the Cape Colony, other than as a strategically located port. As one of their first tasks they outlawed the use of the Dutch language in 1806 with the view of converting the European settlers to the British language and culture.[35] The Cape Articles of Capitulation of 1806 allowed the colony to retain "all their rights and privileges which they have enjoyed hitherto",[36] and this launched South Africa on a divergent course from the rest of the British Empire, allowing the continuance of Roman-Dutch law. British sovereignty of the area was recognised at the Congress of Vienna in 1815, the Dutch accepting a payment of 6 million pounds (equivalent to £31,2 billion in 2023)[37] for the colony.[38] This had the effect of forcing more of the Dutch colonists to move (or trek) away from British administrative reach. Much later, in 1820 the British authorities persuaded about 5,000 middle-class British immigrants (most of them "in trade") to leave Great Britain. Many of the 1820 Settlers eventually settled in Grahamstown and Port Elizabeth.

British policy with regard to South Africa would vacillate with successive governments, but the overarching imperative throughout the 19th century was to protect the strategic trade route to India while incurring as little expense as possible within the colony. This aim was complicated by border conflicts with the Boers, who soon developed a distaste for British authority.[25]

European exploration of the interior

[edit]

Colonel Robert Jacob Gordon of the Dutch East India Company was the first European to explore parts of the interior while commanding the Dutch garrison at the renamed Cape of Good Hope, from 1780 to 1795. The four expeditions Gordon undertook between 1777 and 1786 are recorded in a series of several hundred drawings known collectively as the Gordon Atlas, as well as in his journals, which were only discovered in 1964.[39]

Early relations between the European settlers and the Xhosa, the first Bantu peoples they met when they ventured inward, were peaceful. However, there was competition for land, and this tension led to skirmishes in the form of cattle raids from 1779.[25]

The British explorers David Livingstone and William Oswell, setting out from a mission station in the northern Cape Colony, are believed to have been the first white men to cross the Kalahari desert in 1849.[40] The Royal Geographical Society later awarded Livingstone a gold medal for his discovery of Lake Ngami in the desert.[41]

Zulu militarism and expansionism

[edit]
The rise of the Zulu Empire   under Shaka forced other chiefdoms and clans to flee across a wide area of southern Africa. Clans fleeing the Zulu war zone   included the Soshangane, Zwangendaba, Ndebele, Hlubi, Ngwane, and the Mfengu. Some clans were caught between the Zulu Empire and advancing Voortrekkers and British Empire   such as the Xhosa  .

The Zulu people are part of the Nguni ethnic group and were originally a minor clan in what is today northern KwaZulu-Natal, founded ca. 1709 by Zulu kaNtombela.

The 1820s saw a time of immense upheaval relating to the military expansion of the Zulu Kingdom, which replaced the original African clan system with kingdoms. Sotho-speakers know this period as the difaqane ("forced migration"); Zulu-speakers call it the mfecane ("crushing").[42]

Various theories have been advanced for the causes of the difaqane, ranging from ecological factors to competition in the ivory trade.[43] Another theory attributes the epicentre of Zulu violence to the slave trade out of Delgoa Bay in Mozambique situated to the north of Zululand.[44] Most historians recognise that the Mfecane wasn't just a series of events caused by the founding of the Zulu kingdom but rather a multitude of factors caused before and after Shaka Zulu came into power.[45][46][25]

In 1818, Nguni tribes in Zululand created a militaristic kingdom between the Tugela River and Pongola River, under the driving force of Shaka kaSenzangakhona, son of the chief of the Zulu clan.[47] Shaka built large armies, breaking from clan tradition by placing the armies under the control of his own officers rather than of hereditary chiefs. He then set out on a massive programme of expansion, killing or enslaving those who resisted in the territories he conquered. His impis (warrior regiments) were rigorously disciplined: failure in battle meant death.[48]

Shaka Zulu in traditional Zulu military garb

The Zulu resulted in the mass movement of many tribes who in turn tried to dominate those in new territories, leading to widespread warfare and waves of displacement spread throughout southern Africa and beyond. It accelerated the formation of several new nation-states, notably those of the Sotho (present-day Lesotho) and the Swazi (now Eswatini (formerly Swaziland)). It caused the consolidation of groups such as the Matebele, the Mfengu and the Makololo.

In 1828 Shaka was killed by his half-brothers Dingaan and Umhlangana. The weaker and less-skilled Dingaan became king, relaxing military discipline while continuing the despotism. Dingaan also attempted to establish relations with the British traders on the Natal coast, but events had started to unfold that would see the demise of Zulu independence. Estimates for the death toll resulting from the Mfecane range from 1 million to 2 million.[49][50][51][52]

Boer people and republics

[edit]

After 1806, a number of Dutch-speaking inhabitants of the Cape Colony trekked inland, first in small groups. Eventually, in the 1830s, large numbers of Boers migrated in what came to be known as the Great Trek.[42] Among the initial reasons for their leaving the Cape colony were the English language rule. Religion was a very important aspect of the settlers culture and the bible and church services were in Dutch. Similarly, schools, justice and trade up to the arrival of the British, were all managed in the Dutch language. The language law caused friction, distrust and dissatisfaction.

An account of the first trekboers

Another reason for Dutch-speaking white farmers trekking away from the Cape was the abolition of slavery by the British government on Emancipation Day, 1 December 1838. The farmers complained they could not replace the labour of their slaves without losing an excessive amount of money.[53] The farmers had invested large amounts of capital in slaves. Owners who had purchased enslaved people on credit or put them up as surety against loans faced financial ruin. Britain had allocated the sum of 1,200,000 British Pounds (equivalent to £5,53 billion in 2023)[37] as compensation to the Dutch settlers, on condition the Dutch farmers had to lodge their claims in Britain as well as the fact that the value of the enslaved people was many times the allocated amount. This caused further dissatisfaction among the Dutch settlers. The settlers, incorrectly, believed that the Cape Colony administration had taken the money due to them as payment for freeing their slaves. Those settlers who were allocated money could only claim it in Britain in person or through an agent. The commission charged by agents was the same as the payment for one slave, thus those settlers only claiming for one slave would receive nothing.[54]

South African Republic

[edit]
Flag of the South African Republic, often referred to as the Vierkleur (meaning four-coloured)

The South African Republic (Dutch: Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek or ZAR, not to be confused with the much later Republic of South Africa), is often referred to as The Transvaal and sometimes as the Republic of Transvaal. It was an independent and internationally recognised nation-state in southern Africa from 1852 to 1902. Independent sovereignty of the republic was formally recognised by Great Britain with the signing of the Sand River Convention on 17 January 1852.[55] The republic, under the premiership of Paul Kruger, defeated British forces in the First Boer War and remained independent until the end of the Second Boer War on 31 May 1902, when it was forced to surrender to the British. The territory of the South African Republic became known after this war as the Transvaal Colony.[56]

Free State Republic

[edit]
Flag of the Republic of the Orange Free State

The independent Boer republic of Orange Free State evolved from colonial Britain's Orange River Sovereignty, enforced by the presence of British troops, which lasted from 1848 to 1854 in the territory between the Orange and Vaal rivers, named Transorange. Britain, due to the military burden imposed on it by the Crimean War in Europe, then withdrew its troops from the territory in 1854, when the territory along with other areas in the region was claimed by the Boers as an independent Boer republic, which they named the Orange Free State. In March 1858, after land disputes, cattle rustling and a series of raids and counter-raids, the Orange Free State declared war on the Basotho kingdom, which it failed to defeat. A succession of wars were conducted between the Boers and the Basotho for the next 10 years.[57] The name Orange Free State was again changed to the Orange River Colony, created by Britain after the latter occupied it in 1900 and then annexed it in 1902 during the Second Boer War. The colony, with an estimated population of less than 400,000 in 1904[58] ceased to exist in 1910, when it was absorbed into the Union of South Africa as the Orange Free State Province.

Natalia

[edit]

Natalia was a short-lived Boer republic established in 1839 by Boer Voortrekkers emigrating from the Cape Colony. In 1824 a party of 25 men under British Lieutenant F G Farewell arrived from the Cape Colony and established a settlement on the northern shore of the Bay of Natal, which would later become the port of Durban, so named after Benjamin D'Urban, a governor of the Cape Colony. Boer Voortrekkers in 1838 established the Republic of Natalia in the surrounding region, with its capital at Pietermaritzburg. On the night of 23/24 May 1842 British colonial forces attacked the Voortrekker camp at Congella. The attack failed, with British forces then retreating back to Durban, which the Boers besieged. A local trader Dick King and his servant Ndongeni, who later became folk heroes, were able to escape the blockade and ride to Grahamstown, a distance of 600 km (372.82 miles) in 14 days to raise British reinforcements. The reinforcements arrived in Durban 20 days later; the siege was broken and the Voortrekkers retreated.[59] The Boers accepted British annexation in 1844. Many of the Natalia Boers who refused to acknowledge British rule trekked over the Drakensberg mountains to settle in the Orange Free State and Transvaal republics.[60]

Cape Colony

[edit]
Harry Smith

Between 1847 and 1854, Harry Smith, governor and high commissioner of the Cape Colony, annexed territories far to the north of the original British and Dutch settlement.

Smith's expansion of the Cape Colony resulted in conflict with disaffected Boers in the Orange River Sovereignty who in 1848 mounted an abortive rebellion at Boomplaats, where the Boers were defeated by a detachment of the Cape Mounted Rifles.[61] Annexation also precipitated a war between British colonial forces and the indigenous Xhosa nation in 1850, in the eastern coastal region.[62]

Starting from the mid-1800s, the Cape of Good Hope, which was then the largest state in southern Africa, began moving towards greater independence from Britain. In 1854, it was granted its first locally elected legislature, the Cape Parliament.

In 1872, after a long political struggle, it attained responsible government with a locally accountable executive and Prime Minister. The Cape nonetheless remained nominally part of the British Empire, even though it was self-governing in practice.

The Cape Colony was unusual in southern Africa in that its laws prohibited any discrimination on the basis of race and, unlike the Boer republics, elections were held according to the non-racial Cape Qualified Franchise system, whereby suffrage qualifications applied universally, regardless of race.

Initially, a period of strong economic growth and social development ensued. However, an ill-informed British attempt to force the states of southern Africa into a British federation led to inter-ethnic tensions and the First Boer War. Meanwhile, the discovery of diamonds around Kimberley and gold in the Transvaal led to a later return to instability, particularly because they fueled the rise to power of the ambitious colonialist Cecil Rhodes. As Cape Prime Minister, Rhodes curtailed the multi-racial franchise, and his expansionist policies set the stage for the Second Boer War.[63]

Natal

[edit]
Indian indentured labourers arriving in Durban

Indian slaves from the Dutch colonies in India had been introduced into the Cape area of South Africa by the Dutch settlers in 1654.[64]

By the end of 1847, following annexation by Britain of the former Boer republic of Natalia, nearly all the Boers had left their former republic, which the British renamed Natal. The role of the Boer settlers was replaced by subsidised British immigrants of whom 5,000 arrived between 1849 and 1851.[65]

By 1860, with slavery having been abolished in 1834, and after the annexation of Natal as a British colony in 1843, the British colonists in Natal (now kwaZulu-Natal) turned to India to resolve a labour shortage, as men of the local Zulu warrior nation were refusing to work on the plantations and farms established by the colonists. In that year, the SS Truro arrived in Durban harbour with over 300 Indians on board.[66]

Over the next 50 years, 150,000 more indentured Indian servants and labourers arrived, as well as numerous free "passenger Indians," building the base for what would become the largest Indian diasporic community outside India.[67]

By 1893, when the lawyer and social activist Mahatma Gandhi arrived in Durban, Indians outnumbered whites in Natal. The civil rights struggle of Gandhi's Natal Indian Congress failed; until the 1994 advent of democracy, Indians in South Africa were subject to most of the discriminatory laws that applied to all non-white inhabitants of the country.[68]

Griqua people

[edit]
Nicolaas Waterboer, Griqualand ruler, 1852–1896

By the late 1700s, the Cape Colony population had grown to include a large number of mixed-race so-called "coloureds" who were the offspring of extensive interracial relations between male Dutch settlers, Khoikhoi women, and enslaved women imported from Dutch colonies in the East.[69] Members of this mixed-race community formed the core of what was to become the Griqua people.

Under the leadership of a former slave named Adam Kok, these "coloureds" or Basters (meaning mixed race or multiracial) as they were named by the Dutch—a word derived from baster, meaning "bastard"[70]—started trekking northward into the interior, through what is today named Northern Cape Province. The trek of the Griquas to escape the influence of the Cape Colony has been described as "one of the great epics of the 19th century."[71] They were joined on their long journey by a number of San and Khoikhoi aboriginal people, local African tribesmen, and also some white renegades. Around 1800, they started crossing the northern frontier formed by the Orange River, arriving ultimately in an uninhabited area, which they named Griqualand.[72]

In 1825, a faction of the Griqua people was induced by Dr John Philip, superintendent of the London Missionary Society in Southern Africa, to relocate to a place called Philippolis, a mission station for the San, several hundred miles southeast of Griqualand. Philip's intention was for the Griquas to protect the missionary station there against banditti in the region, and as a bulwark against the northward movement of white settlers from the Cape Colony. Friction between the Griquas and the settlers over land rights resulted in British troops being sent to the region in 1845. It marked the beginning of nine years of British intervention in the affairs of the region, which the British named Transorange.[73]

In 1861, to avoid the imminent prospect of either being colonised by the Cape Colony or coming into conflict with the expanding Boer Republic of Orange Free State, most of the Philippolis Griquas embarked on a further trek. They moved about 500 miles eastward, over the Quathlamba (today known as the Drakensberg mountain range), settling ultimately in an area officially designated as "Nomansland", which the Griquas renamed Griqualand East.[74] East Griqualand was subsequently annexed by Britain in 1874 and incorporated into the Cape Colony in 1879.[75]

The original Griqualand, north of the Orange River, was annexed by Britain's Cape Colony and renamed Griqualand West after the discovery in 1871 of the world's richest deposit of diamonds at Kimberley, so named after the British Colonial Secretary, Earl Kimberley.[76]

Although no formally surveyed boundaries existed, Griqua leader Nicolaas Waterboer claimed the diamond fields were situated on land belonging to the Griquas.[77] The Boer republics of Transvaal and the Orange Free State also vied for ownership of the land, but Britain, being the preeminent force in the region, won control over the disputed territory. In 1878, Waterboer led an unsuccessful rebellion against the colonial authorities, for which he was arrested and briefly exiled.[78]

Factional conflicts

[edit]

Wars against the Xhosa

[edit]

In early South Africa, European notions of national boundaries and land ownership had no counterparts in African political culture. To Moshoeshoe the BaSotho chieftain from Lesotho, it was customary tribute in the form of horses and cattle represented acceptance of land use under his authority.[79][80] To European settlers in Southern Africa, the same form of tribute was believed to constitute purchase and permanent ownership of the land under independent authority.

As European settlers started establishing permanent farms after trekking across the country in search of prime agricultural land, they encountered resistance from the local Bantu people who had originally migrated southwards from central Africa hundreds of years earlier. The consequent frontier wars became known as the Xhosa Wars (which were also referred to in contemporary discussion as the Kafir Wars or the Cape Frontier Wars[81]). In the southeastern part of South Africa, Boer settlers and the Xhosa clashed along the Great Fish River, and in 1779 the First Xhosa War broke out. For nearly 100 years subsequently, the Xhosa fought the settlers sporadically, first the Boers or Afrikaners and later the British. In the Fourth Xhosa War, which lasted from 1811 to 1812, the British colonial authorities forced the Xhosa back across the Great Fish River and established forts along this boundary.[82]

The increasing economic involvement of the British in southern Africa from the 1820s, and especially following the discovery of first diamonds at Kimberley and gold in the Transvaal, resulted in pressure for land and African labour, and led to increasingly tense relations with Southern African states.[42]

In 1818 differences between two Xhosa leaders, Ndlambe and Ngqika, ended in Ngqika's defeat, but the British continued to recognise Ngqika as the paramount chief. He appealed to the British for help against Ndlambe, who retaliated in 1819 during the Fifth Frontier War by attacking the British colonial town of Grahamstown.

Wars against the Zulu

[edit]
King Cetshwayo (ca. 1875)

In the eastern part of what is today South Africa, in the region named Natalia by the Boer trekkers, the latter negotiated an agreement with Zulu King Dingane kaSenzangakhona allowing the Boers to settle in part of the then Zulu kingdom. Cattle rustling ensued and a party of Boers under the leadership of Piet Retief were killed.

Subsequent to the killing of the Retief party, the Boers fought against the Zulus, at the Ncome River on 16 December 1838. The Boers took a defensive position with the high banks of the Ncome River forming a natural barrier to their rear with their ox waggons as barricades between themselves and the attacking Zulu army in the clash known historically as the Battle of Blood River.[83][84]

In the later annexation of the Zulu kingdom by imperial Britain, an Anglo-Zulu War was fought in 1879. Following Lord Carnarvon's successful introduction of federation in Canada, it was thought that similar political effort, coupled with military campaigns, might succeed with the African kingdoms, tribal areas and Boer republics in South Africa.

In 1874, Henry Bartle Frere was sent to South Africa as High Commissioner for the British Empire to bring such plans into being. Among the obstacles were the presence of the independent states of the South African Republic and the Kingdom of Zululand and its army. Frere, on his own initiative, without the approval of the British government and with the intent of instigating a war with the Zulu, had presented an ultimatum on 11 December 1878, to the Zulu king Cetshwayo with which the Zulu king could not comply. Bartle Frere then sent Lord Chelmsford to invade Zululand. The war is notable for several particularly bloody battles, including an overwhelming victory by the Zulu at the Battle of Isandlwana, as well as for being a landmark in the timeline of imperialism in the region.

Britain's eventual defeat of the Zulus, marking the end of the Zulu nation's independence, was accomplished with the assistance of Zulu collaborators who harboured cultural and political resentments against centralised Zulu authority.[85] The British then set about establishing large sugar plantations in the area today named KwaZulu-Natal Province.

Wars with the Basotho

[edit]
King Moshoeshoe with his advisors

From the 1830s onwards, numbers of white settlers from the Cape Colony crossed the Orange River and started arriving in the fertile southern part of territory known as the Lower Caledon Valley, which was occupied by Basotho cattle herders under the authority of the Basotho founding monarch Moshoeshoe I. In 1845, a treaty was signed between the British colonists and Moshoeshoe, which recognised white settlement in the area. No firm boundaries were drawn between the area of white settlement and Moshoeshoe's kingdom, which led to border clashes. Moshoeshoe was under the impression he was loaning grazing land to the settlers in accordance with African precepts of occupation rather than ownership, while the settlers believed they had been granted permanent land rights. Afrikaner settlers in particular were loath to live under Moshoesoe's authority and among Africans.[86]

The British, who at that time controlled the area between the Orange and Vaal Rivers called the Orange River Sovereignty, decided a discernible boundary was necessary and proclaimed a line named the Warden Line, dividing the area between British and Basotho territories. This led to conflict between the Basotho and the British, who were defeated by Moshoeshoe's warriors at the battle of Viervoet in 1851.

As punishment to the Basotho, the governor and commander-in-chief of the Cape Colony, George Cathcart, deployed troops to the Mohokare River; Moshoeshoe was ordered to pay a fine. When he did not pay the fine in full, a battle broke out on the Berea Plateau in 1852, where the British suffered heavy losses. In 1854, the British handed over the territory to the Boers through the signing of the Sand River Convention. This territory and others in the region then became the Republic of the Orange Free State.[87]

A succession of wars followed from 1858 to 1868 between the Basotho kingdom and the Boer republic of Orange Free State.[88] In the battles that followed, the Orange Free State tried unsuccessfully to capture Moshoeshoe's mountain stronghold at Thaba Bosiu, while the Sotho conducted raids in Free State territories. Both sides adopted scorched-earth tactics, with large swathes of pasturage and cropland being destroyed.[89] Faced with starvation, Moshoeshoe signed a peace treaty on 15 October 1858, though crucial boundary issues remained unresolved.[90] War broke out again in 1865. After an unsuccessful appeal for aid from the British Empire, Moshoeshoe signed the 1866 treaty of Thaba Bosiu, with the Basotho ceding substantial territory to the Orange Free State. On 12 March 1868, the British parliament declared the Basotho Kingdom a British protectorate and part of the British Empire. Open hostilities ceased between the Orange Free State and the Basotho.[91] The country was subsequently named Basutoland and is presently named Lesotho.

Wars with the Ndebele

[edit]
Boer Voortrekkers depicted in an early artist's rendition

In 1836, when Boer Voortrekkers (pioneers) arrived in the northwestern part of present-day South Africa, they came into conflict with a Ndebele sub-group that the settlers named "Matabele", under chief Mzilikazi. A series of battles ensued, in which Mzilikazi was eventually defeated. He withdrew from the area and led his people northwards to what would later become the Matabele region of Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe).[92]

Other members of the Ndebele ethnic language group in different areas of the region similarly came into conflict with the Voortrekkers, notably in the area that would later become the Northern Transvaal. In September 1854, 28 Boers accused of cattle rustling were killed in three separate incidents by an alliance of the Ndebele chiefdoms of Mokopane and Mankopane. Mokopane and his followers, anticipating retaliation by the settlers, retreated into the mountain caves known as Gwasa, (or Makapansgat in Afrikaans). In late October, Boer commandos supported by local Kgatla tribal collaborators laid siege to the caves. By the end of the siege, about three weeks later, Mokopane and between 1,000 and 3,000 people had died in the caves. The survivors were captured and allegedly enslaved.[93]

Wars with the Bapedi

[edit]

The Bapedi wars, also known as the Sekhukhune wars, consisted of three separate campaigns fought between 1876 and 1879 against the Bapedi under their reigning monarch King Sekhukhune I, in the northeastern region known as Sekhukhuneland, bordering on Swaziland. Further friction was caused by the refusal of Sekhukhune to allow prospectors to search for gold in territory he considered to be sovereign and independent under his authority. The First Sekhukhune War of 1876 was conducted by the Boers, and the two separate campaigns of the Second Sekhukhune War of 1878/1879 were conducted by the British.[94]

During the final campaign, Sekukuni (also spelled Sekhukhune) and members of his entourage took refuge in a mountain cave where he was cut off from food and water. He eventually surrendered to a combined deputation of Boer and British forces on 2 December 1879. Sekhukhune, members of his family and some Bapedi generals were subsequently imprisoned in Pretoria for two years, with Sekhukhuneland becoming part of the Transvaal Republic. No gold was ever discovered in the annexed territory.[95]

Discovery of diamonds

[edit]
Cecil John Rhodes, co-founder of De Beers Consolidated Mines at Kimberley

The first diamond discoveries between 1866 and 1867 were alluvial, on the southern banks of the Orange River. By 1869, diamonds were found at some distance from any stream or river, in hard rock called blue ground, later called kimberlite, after the mining town of Kimberley where the diamond diggings were concentrated. The diggings were located in an area of vague boundaries and disputed land ownership. Claimants to the site included the South African (Transvaal) Republic, the Orange Free State Republic, and the mixed-race Griqua nation under Nicolaas Waterboer.[96] Cape Colony Governor Henry Barkly persuaded all claimants to submit themselves to a decision of an arbitrator and so Robert W Keate, Lieutenant-Governor of Natal was asked to arbitrate.[97] Keate awarded ownership to the Griquas. Waterboer, fearing conflict with the Boer republic of Orange Free State, subsequently asked for and received British protection. Griqualand then became a separate Crown Colony renamed Griqualand West in 1871, with a Lieutenant-General and legislative council.[98]

The Crown Colony of Griqualand West was annexed into the Cape Colony in 1877, enacted into law in 1880.[99] No material benefits accrued to the Griquas as a result of either colonisation or annexation; they did not receive any share of the diamond wealth generated at Kimberley. The Griqua community became subsequently dissimulated.[100]

By the 1870s and 1880s the mines at Kimberley were producing 95% of the world's diamonds.[101] The widening search for gold and other resources were financed by the wealth produced and the practical experience gained at Kimberley.[102] Revenue accruing to the Cape Colony from the Kimberley diamond diggings enabled the Cape Colony to be granted responsible government status in 1872, since it was no longer dependent on the British Treasury and hence allowing it to be fully self-governing in similar fashion to the federation of Canada, New Zealand and some of the Australian states.[103] The wealth derived from Kimberley diamond mining, having effectively tripled the customs revenue of the Cape Colony from 1871 to 1875, also doubled its population, and allowed it to expand its boundaries and railways to the north.[104]

In 1888, British mining magnate Cecil John Rhodes co-founded De Beers Consolidated Mines at Kimberley, after buying up and amalgamating the individual claims with finance provided by the Rothschild dynasty. Abundant, cheap African labour was central to the success of Kimberley diamond mining, as it would later also be to the success of gold mining on the Witwatersrand.[105][106] It has been suggested in some academic circles that the wealth produced at Kimberley was a significant factor influencing the Scramble for Africa, in which European powers had by 1902 competed with each other in drawing arbitrary boundaries across almost the entire continent and dividing it among themselves.[107][108]

Discovery of gold

[edit]
Johannesburg before gold mining transformed it into a bustling modern city

Although many tales abound, there is no conclusive evidence as to who first discovered gold or the manner in which it was originally discovered in the late 19th century on the Witwatersrand (meaning White Waters Ridge) of the Transvaal.[109] The discovery of gold in February 1886 at a farm called Langlaagte on the Witwatersrand in particular precipitated a gold rush by prospectors and fortune seekers from all over the world. Except in rare outcrops, however, the main gold deposits had over many years become covered gradually by thousands of feet of hard rock. Finding and extracting the deposits far below the ground called for the capital and engineering skills that would soon result in the deep-level mines of the Witwatersrand producing a quarter of the world's gold, with the "instant city" of Johannesburg arising astride the main Witwatersrand gold reef.[110]

Within two years of gold being discovered on the Witwatersrand, four mining finance houses had been established. The first was formed by Hermann Eckstein in 1887, eventually becoming Rand Mines. Cecil Rhodes and Charles Rudd followed, with their Gold Fields of South Africa company. Rhodes and Rudd had earlier made fortunes from diamond mining at Kimberley.[111] In 1895 there was an investment boom in Witwatersrand gold-mining shares. The precious metal that underpinned international trade would dominate South African exports for decades to come.[112]

Of the leading 25 foreign industrialists who were instrumental in opening up deep level mining operations at the Witwatersrand gold fields, 15 were Jewish, 11 of the total were from Germany or Austria, and nine of that latter category were also Jewish.[113] The commercial opportunities opened by the discovery of gold attracted many other people of European Jewish origin. The Jewish population of South Africa in 1880 numbered approximately 4,000; by 1914 it had grown to more than 40,000, mostly migrants from Lithuania.[114]

The working environment of the mines, meanwhile, as one historian has described it, was "dangerous, brutal and onerous", and therefore unpopular among local black Africans.[115] Recruitment of black labour began to prove difficult, even with an offer of improved wages. In mid-1903 there remained barely half of the 90,000 black labourers who had been employed in the industry in mid-1899.[116] The decision was made to start importing Chinese indentured labourers who were prepared to work for far less wages than local African labourers. The first 1,000 indentured Chinese labourers arrived in June 1904. By January 1907, 53,000 Chinese labourers were working in the gold mines.[117]

First Anglo–Boer War

[edit]
Regional geography during the period of the Anglo–Boer wars:
  South African Republic/Transvaal
  Orange Free State
  British Cape Colony
  Natal Colony

The Transvaal Boer republic was forcefully annexed by Britain in 1877, during Britain's attempt to consolidate the states of southern Africa under British rule. Long-standing Boer resentment turned into full-blown rebellion in the Transvaal and the first Anglo–Boer War, also known as the Boer Insurrection, broke out in 1880.[118] The conflict ended almost as soon as it began with a decisive Boer victory at Battle of Majuba Hill (27 February 1881).

The republic regained its independence as the Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek ("South African Republic"), or ZAR. Paul Kruger, one of the leaders of the uprising, became President of the ZAR in 1883. Meanwhile, the British, who viewed their defeat at Majuba as an aberration, forged ahead with their desire to federate the Southern African colonies and republics. They saw this as the best way to come to terms with the fact of a white Afrikaner majority, as well as to promote their larger strategic interests in the area.[119]

The cause of the Anglo–Boer wars has been attributed to a contest over which nation would control and benefit most from the Witwatersrand gold mines.[120] The enormous wealth of the mines was in the hands of European "Randlords" overseeing the mainly British foreign managers, mining foremen, engineers and technical specialists, characterised by the Boers as uitlander, meaning aliens. The "aliens" objected to being denied parliamentary representation and the right to vote, and they complained also of bureaucratic government delays in the issuing of licenses and permits, and general administrative incompetence on the part of the government.[121]

In 1895, a column of mercenaries in the employ of Cecil John Rhodes' Rhodesian-based Charter Company and led by Captain Leander Starr Jameson had entered the ZAR with the intention of sparking an uprising on the Witwatersrand and installing a British administration there. The armed incursion became known as the Jameson Raid.[122] It ended when the invading column was ambushed and captured by Boer commandos. President Kruger suspected the insurgency had received at least the tacit approval of the Cape Colony government under the premiership of Cecil John Rhodes, and that Kruger's South African Republic faced imminent danger. Kruger reacted by forming an alliance with the neighbouring Boer republic of Orange Free State. This did not prevent the outbreak of a Second Anglo–Boer war.

Second Anglo–Boer War

[edit]
Emily Hobhouse campaigned against the appalling conditions of the British concentration camps in South Africa, thus influencing British public opinion against the war.

Renewed tensions between Britain and the Boers peaked in 1899 when the British demanded voting rights for the 60,000 foreign whites on the Witwatersrand. Until that point, President Paul Kruger's government had excluded all foreigners from the franchise. Kruger rejected the British demand and called for the withdrawal of British troops from the borders of the South African Republic. When the British refused, Kruger declared war. This Second Anglo–Boer War, also known as the South African War lasted longer than the first, with British troops being supplemented by colonial troops from Southern Rhodesia, Canada, India, Australia and New Zealand. It has been estimated that the total number of British and colonial troops deployed in South Africa during the war outnumbered the population of the two Boer Republics by more than 150,000.[123] By June 1900, Pretoria, the last of the major Boer towns, had surrendered. Yet resistance by Boer bittereinders (meaning those who would fight to the bitter end) continued for two more years with guerrilla warfare, which the British met in turn with scorched earth tactics. The Boers kept on fighting.

The British suffragette Emily Hobhouse visited British concentration camps in South Africa and produced a report condemning the appalling conditions there. By 1902, 26,000 Boer women and children had died of disease and neglect in the camps.[124]

The Anglo–Boer War affected all ethnic groups in South Africa. Black people were recruited or conscripted by both sides into working for them either as combatants or non-combatants to sustain the respective war efforts of both the Boers and the British. The official statistics of blacks killed in action are inaccurate. Most of the bodies were dumped in unmarked graves. It has, however, been verified that 17,182 black people died mainly of diseases in the Cape concentration camps alone, but this figure is not accepted historically as a true reflection of the overall numbers. Concentration camp superintendents did not always record the deaths of black inmates in the camps.[125]

From the outset of hostilities in October 1899 to the signing of peace on 31 May 1902 the war claimed the lives of 22,000 imperial soldiers and 7,000 republican fighters.[126] In terms of the peace agreement known as the Treaty of Vereeniging, the Boer republics acknowledged British sovereignty, while the British in turn committed themselves to reconstruction of the areas under their control.

Union of South Africa (1910–1948)

[edit]
Union Buildings, government administrative centre, Pretoria, c. 1925

During the years immediately following the Anglo–Boer wars, Britain set about unifying the four colonies including the former Boer republics into a single self-governed country called the Union of South Africa. This was accomplished after several years of negotiations, when the South Africa Act 1909 consolidated the Cape Colony, Natal, Transvaal, and Orange Free State into one nation. Under the provisions of the act, the Union became an independent Dominion of the British Empire, governed under a form of constitutional monarchy, with the British monarch represented by a Governor-General. This status was affirmed and further defined at the 1926 Imperial Conference, where the Balfour Declaration officially recognized the Dominions, including South Africa, as "autonomous communities within the British Empire, equal in status, in no way subordinate one to another in any aspect of their domestic or external affairs."[127] Prosecutions before the courts of the Union of South Africa were instituted in the name of the Crown and government officials served in the name of the Crown. The British High Commission territories of Basutoland (now Lesotho), Bechuanaland (now Botswana), and Swaziland (now Eswatini) continued under direct rule from Britain.[128]

Among other harsh segregationist laws, including denial of voting rights to black people, the Union parliament enacted the 1913 Natives' Land Act, which earmarked only eight percent of South Africa's available land for black occupancy. White people, who constituted 20 percent of the population, held 90 percent of the land. The Land Act would form a cornerstone of legalised racial discrimination for the next nine decades.[129]

Daniel François Malan, National Party leader from 1934 to 1953

General Louis Botha headed the first government of the new Union, with General Jan Smuts as his deputy. Their South African National Party, later known as the South African Party or SAP, followed a generally pro-British, white-unity line. The more radical Boers split away under the leadership of General Barry Hertzog, forming the National Party (NP) in 1914. The National Party championed Afrikaner interests, advocating separate development for the two white groups, and independence from Britain.[130]

Dissatisfaction with British influence in the Union's affairs reached a climax in September 1914, when impoverished Boers, anti-British Boers and bitter-enders launched a rebellion. The rebellion was suppressed, and at least one officer was sentenced to death and executed by firing squad.[131]

In 1924 the Afrikaner-dominated National Party came to power in a coalition government with the Labour Party. Afrikaans, previously regarded as a low-level Dutch patois, replaced Dutch as an official language of the Union. English and Dutch became the two official languages in 1925.[132][133]

The Union of South Africa came to an end after a referendum on 5 October 1960, in which a majority of white South Africans voted in favour of unilateral withdrawal from the British Commonwealth and the establishment of a Republic of South Africa.

First World War

[edit]
The British Empire is red on the map, at its territorial zenith in the late 1910s and early 1920s. (India highlighted in purple.) South Africa, bottom centre, lies between both halves of the Empire.

At the outbreak of World War I, South Africa joined Great Britain and the Allies against the German Empire. Both Prime Minister Louis Botha and Defence Minister Jan Smuts were former Second Boer War generals who had previously fought against the British, but they now became active and respected members of the Imperial War Cabinet. Elements of the South African Army refused to fight against the Germans and along with other opponents of the government; they rose in an open revolt known as the Maritz Rebellion. The government declared martial law on 14 October 1914, and forces loyal to the government under the command of generals Louis Botha and Jan Smuts defeated the rebellion. The rebel leaders were prosecuted, fined heavily and sentenced to imprisonment ranging from six to seven years.[134]

Public opinion in South Africa split along racial and ethnic lines. The British elements strongly supported the war, and formed by far the largest military component. Likewise the Indian element (led by Mahatma Gandhi) generally supported the war effort. Afrikaners were split, with some like Botha and Smuts taking a prominent leadership role in the British war effort. This position was rejected by many rural Afrikaners who supported the Maritz Rebellion. The trade union movement was divided. Many urban blacks supported the war expecting it would raise their status in society. Others said it was not relevant to the struggle for their rights. The Coloured element was generally supportive and many served in a Coloured Corps in East Africa and France, also hoping to better themselves after the war.[134]

With a population of roughly 6 million, between 1914–1918, over 250,000 South Africans of all races voluntarily served their country. Thousands more served in the British Army directly, with over 3,000 joining the British Royal Flying Corps and over 100 volunteering for the Royal Navy. It is likely that around 50% of white men of military age served during the war, more than 146,000 whites. 83,000 Black men and 2,500 Coloured and Asian men also served in either German South-West Africa, East Africa, the Middle East, or on the Western Front in Europe. Over 7,000 South Africans were killed, and nearly 12,000 were wounded during the course of the war.[135] Eight South Africans won the Victoria Cross for gallantry, the Empire's highest and most prestigious military medal. The Battle of Delville Wood and the sinking of the SS Mendi being the greatest single incidents of loss of life.

Generals Smuts (right) and Botha were members of the British Imperial War Cabinet during World War I.

25,000 Black South Africans were recruited at the request of the British War Cabinet to serve as non-combatant labourers in the South African Native Labour Contingent (SANLC). 21,000 of these people were deployed to France as stevedores at French ports, where they were housed in segregated compounds. A total of 616 men from the Fifth Battalion of the SANLC drowned on 21 February 1917 when the troopship SS Mendi, on which they were being transported to France, collided with another vessel near the Isle of Wight.[136] The Mendi disaster was one of South Africa's worst tragedies of the Great War, second perhaps only to the Battle of Delville Wood.[137] The South African government issued no war service medal to the black servicemen and the special medal issued by King George V to "native troops" that served the Empire, the British War Medal in bronze, was disallowed and not issued to the SANLC.[138]

Black and mixed-race South Africans who had supported the war were embittered when post-war South Africa saw no easing of white domination and racial segregation.[139]

The assistance that South Africa gave the British Empire was significant. Two German African colonies were occupied, either by South Africa alone or with significant South African assistance. Manpower, from all races, helped Allied operations not just on the Western Front and Africa, but also in the Middle East against the Ottoman Empire. South Africa's ports and harbours on the Home Front were a crucial strategic asset when conducting a war on a global scale. Providing important rest and refuelling stations, the Royal Navy could ensure vital sea lane connections to the British Raj, and the Far East stayed open.

Economically, South Africa supplied two-thirds of gold production in the British Empire, with most of the remainder coming from Australia. At the start of the war, Bank of England officials in London worked with South Africa to block gold shipments to Germany, and force mine owners to sell only to the British Treasury, at prices set by the Treasury. This facilitated purchases of munitions and food in the United States and neutral countries.[140]

Second World War

[edit]

During World War II, South Africa's ports and harbours, such as at Cape Town, Durban, and Simon's Town, were important strategic assets to the British Royal Navy. South Africa's top-secret Special Signals Service played a significant role in the early development and deployment of radio detection and ranging (radar) technology used in protecting the vital coastal shipping route around southern Africa.[141] By August 1945, South African Air Force aircraft in conjunction with British and Dutch aircraft stationed in South Africa had intercepted 17 enemy ships, assisted in the rescue of 437 survivors of sunken ships, attacked 26 of the 36 enemy submarines operating the vicinity of the South African coast, and flown 15,000 coastal patrol sorties.[142][143]

Simon's Town harbour and naval base in South Africa were used by the Allies during World War II.

About 334,000 South Africans volunteered for full-time military service in support of the Allies abroad. Nearly 9,000 were killed in action.[144] On 21 June 1942 nearly 10,000 South African soldiers, representing one-third of the entire South African force in the field, were taken prisoner by German Field Marshal Rommel's forces in the fall of Tobruk, Libya.[145] A number of South African fighter pilots served with distinction in the Royal Air Force during the Battle of Britain, including Group Captain Adolph "Sailor" Malan who led 74 Squadron and established a record of personally destroying 27 enemy aircraft.[146]

General Jan Smuts was the only important non-British general whose advice was constantly sought by Britain's war-time Prime Minister Winston Churchill.[citation needed] Smuts was invited to the Imperial War Cabinet in 1939 as the most senior South African in favour of war. On 28 May 1941, Smuts was appointed a Field Marshal of the British Army, becoming the first South African to hold that rank. When the war ended, Smuts represented South Africa in San Francisco at the drafting of the United Nations Charter in May 1945. Just as he had done in 1919, Smuts urged the delegates to create a powerful international body to preserve peace; he was determined that, unlike the League of Nations, the UN would have teeth. Smuts also signed the Paris Peace Treaty, resolving the peace in Europe, thus becoming the only signatory of both the treaty ending the First World War, and that which ended the Second.[143]

Pro-German and pro-Nazi attitudes

[edit]

After the suppression of the abortive, pro-German Maritz Rebellion during the South African World War I campaign against German South West Africa in 1914, the South African rebel General Manie Maritz escaped to Spain.[147] He returned in 1923, and continued working in the Union of South Africa as a German Spy for the Third Reich.

In 1896, the German Kaiser Kaiser Wilhelm had enraged Britain by sending congratulations to Boer republican leader Paul Kruger after Kruger's commandos captured a column of British South Africa Company soldiers engaged in an armed incursion and abortive insurrection, known historically as the Jameson Raid, into Boer territory. Germany was the primary supplier of weapons to the Boers during the subsequent Anglo–Boer war. Kaiser Wilhelm's government arranged for the two Boer Republics to purchase modern breech-loading Mauser rifles and millions of smokeless gunpowder cartridges. Germany's Ludwig Loewe company, later known as Deutsche Waffen-und Munitionfabriken, delivered 55,000 of these rifles to the Boers in 1896.[148]

The early-1940s saw the pro-Nazi Ossewa Brandwag (OB) movement become half-a-million strong, including future prime minister John Vorster and Hendrik van den Bergh, the future head of police intelligence.[149] The anti-semitic Boerenasie (Boer Nation) and other similar groups soon joined them.[150] When the war ended, the OB was one of the anti-parliamentary groups absorbed into the National Party.[151][152]

The South African Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging or AWB (meaning Afrikaner Resistance Movement), a militant neo-Nazi, mainly Afrikaner white supremacist movement that arose in the 1970s, and was active until the mid-1990s, openly used a flag that closely resembled the swastika.[153][154] In the early to mid-1990s, the AWB attempted unsuccessfully through various acts of public violence and intimidation to derail the country's transition to democracy. After the country's first multiracial democratic elections in 1994, a number of terrorist bomb blasts were linked to the AWB.[155] On 11 March 1994, several hundred AWB members formed part of an armed right-wing force that invaded the nominally independent "homeland" territory of Bophuthatswana, in a failed attempt to prop up its unpopular, conservative leader Chief Lucas Mangope.[156] The AWB leader Eugène Terre'Blanche was murdered by farm workers on 3 April 2010.

A majority of politically moderate Afrikaners were pragmatic and did not support the AWB's extremism.[157]

Encyclopedia Britannica documentary about South Africa from 1956

Apartheid era (1948–1994)

[edit]

Apartheid legislation

[edit]
"For use by white persons" – sign from the apartheid era

The segregationist policies of apartheid stemmed from colonial legislation introduced during the period of Dutch rule in the 17th century, which was continued and expanded upon during the British colonial era, and reached its apogee during the Boer-dominated Union of South Africa.[158]

From 1948, successive National Party administrations formalised and extended the existing system of racial discrimination and denial of human rights into the legal system of apartheid,[159] which lasted until 1991. A key act of legislation during this time was the Homeland Citizens Act of 1970. This act augmented the Native Land Act of 1913 through the establishment of so-called "homelands" or "reserves". It authorised the forced evictions of thousands of African people from urban centres in South Africa and South West Africa (now Namibia) to what became described colloquially as "Bantustans" or the "original homes", as they were officially referred to, of the black ethnic groups of South Africa. The same legislation applied also to South West Africa over which South Africa had continued after World War I to exercise a disputed League of Nations mandate. Pro-apartheid South Africans attempted to justify the Bantustan policy by citing the British government's 1947 partition of India, which they claimed was a similar situation that did not arouse international condemnation.[160]

Map of the black homelands in South Africa at the end of apartheid in 1994

Although many important events occurred during this period, apartheid remained the central pivot around which most of the historical issues of this period revolved, including violent conflict and the militarisation of South African society. By 1987, total military expenditure amounted to about 28% of the national budget.[161]

In the aftermath of the 1976 Soweto uprising and the security clampdown that accompanied it, Joint Management Centres (JMCs) operating in at least 34 State-designated "high-risk" areas became the key element in a National Security Management System. The police and military who controlled the JMCs by the mid-1980s were endowed with influence in decision-making at every level, from the Cabinet down to local government.[162]

UN embargo

[edit]

On 16 December 1966, United Nations General Assembly Resolution 2202 A (XXI) identified apartheid as a "crime against humanity". The Apartheid Convention, as it came to be known, was adopted by the General Assembly on 30 November 1973 with 91 member states voting in favour, four against (Portugal, South Africa, the United Kingdom and the United States) and 26 abstentions. The convention came into force on 18 July 1976. On 23 October 1984 the UN Security Council endorsed this formal determination. The convention declared that apartheid was both unlawful and criminal because it violated the Charter of the United Nations.[163] The General Assembly had already suspended South Africa from the UN organisation on 12 November 1974. On 4 November 1977, the Security Council imposed a mandatory arms embargo in terms of Resolution 181 calling upon all States to cease the sale and shipment of arms, ammunition and military vehicles to South Africa. The country would only be readmitted to the UN in 1994 following its transition to democracy.[164] Apartheid South Africa reacted to the UN arms embargo by strengthening its military ties with Israel, and establishing its own arms manufacturing industry with the help of Israel.[165] Four hundred M-113A1 armoured personnel carriers, and 106mm recoilless rifles manufactured in the United States were delivered to South Africa via Israel.[166]

Extra-judicial killings

[edit]

In the mid-1980s, police and army death squads conducted state-sponsored assassinations of dissidents and activists.[167] By mid-1987 the Human Rights Commission knew of at least 140 political assassinations in the country, while about 200 people died at the hands of South African agents in neighbouring states. The exact numbers of all the victims may never be known.[168] Strict censorship disallowed journalists from reporting, filming or photographing such incidents, while the government ran its own covert disinformation programme that provided distorted accounts of the extrajudicial killings.[169] At the same time, State-sponsored vigilante groups carried out violent attacks on communities and community leaders associated with resistance to apartheid.[170] The attacks were then falsely attributed by the government to "black-on-black" or factional violence within the communities.[171]

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) would later establish that a covert, informal network of former or still serving army and police operatives, frequently acting in conjunction with extreme right-wing elements, was involved in actions that could be construed as fomenting violence and which resulted in gross human rights violations, including random and targeted killings.[172] Between 1960–1994, according to statistics from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, the Inkatha Freedom Party was responsible for 4,500 deaths, South African Police 2,700, and the ANC about 1,300.[173]

In early 2002, a planned military coup by a white supremacist movement known as the Boeremag (Boer Force) was foiled by the South African police.[174] Two dozen conspirators including senior South African Army officers were arrested on charges of treason and murder, after a bomb explosion in Soweto. The effectiveness of the police in foiling the planned coup strengthened public perceptions that the post-1994 democratic order was irreversible.[citation needed]

The TRC, at the conclusion of its mandate in 2004, handed over a list of 300 names of alleged perpetrators to the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) for investigation and prosecution by the NPA's Priority Crimes Litigation Unit. Less than a handful of prosecutions were ever pursued.[175][176]

Military operations in frontline states

[edit]

South African security forces during the latter part of the apartheid era had a policy of destabilising neighbouring states, supporting opposition movements, conducting sabotage operations and attacking ANC bases and places of refuge for exiles in those states.[177] These states, forming a regional alliance of southern African states, were named collectively as the Frontline States: Angola, Botswana, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, Tanzania, Zambia and, from 1980, Zimbabwe.[178][179]

Members of 44 Parachute Brigade on patrol during the South African Border War.

In early-November 1975, immediately after Portugal granted independence to its former African colony of Angola, civil war broke out between the rival UNITA and MPLA movements. In order to prevent UNITA's collapse and cement the rule of a friendly government, South Africa intervened on 23 October, sending between 1,500 and 2,000 troops from Namibia into southern Angola in order to fight the MPLA.[180][181] In response to the South African intervention, Cuba sent 18,000 soldiers as part of a large-scale military intervention nicknamed Operation Carlota in support of the MPLA. Cuba had initially provided the MPLA with 230 military advisers prior to the South African intervention.[182] The Cuban intervention was decisive in helping reverse SADF and UNITA advances and cement MPLA rule in Angola. More than a decade later 36,000 Cuban troops were deployed throughout the country helping providing support for MPLA's fight with UNITA.[183] The civil war in Angola resulted in 550,000–1,250,000 deaths in total mostly from famine. Most of the deaths occurred between 1992 and 1993, after South African and Cuban involvement had ended.[184][185][186]

Between 1975 and 1988, the SADF continued to stage massive conventional raids into Angola and Zambia to eliminate PLAN's forward operating bases across the border from Namibia as well as provide support for UNITA.[187] A controversial bombing and airborne assault conducted by 200 South African paratroopers on 4 May 1978 at Cassinga in southern Angola, resulted in around 700 South West Africans being killed, including PLAN militants and a large number of women and children. Colonel Jan Breytenbach, the South African parachute battalion commander, claimed it was "recognised in Western military circles as the most successful airborne assault since World War II."[188] The Angolan government described the target of the attack as a refugee camp. The United Nations Security Council on 6 May 1978 condemned South Africa for the attack.[189] On 23 August 1981 South African troops again launched an incursion into Angola with collaboration and encouragement provided by the American Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).[190][191] The Angolan army, in resisting what it perceived as a South African invasion, was supported by a combination of Cuban forces and PLAN and ANC guerrillas, all armed with weapons supplied by the Soviet Union. The apartheid-era South African military and political intelligence services, for their part, worked closely with American, British and West German secret services throughout the Cold War.[192]

Both South Africa and Cuba claimed victory at the decisive battle of Cuito Cuanavale, which have been described as "the fiercest in Africa since World War II".[193] However, the South African military had lost air superiority and its technological advantage, largely due to an international arms embargo against the country.[194] South African involvement in Angola ended formally after the signing of a United Nations-brokered agreement known as the New York Accords between the governments of Angola, Cuba and South Africa, resulting in the withdrawal of all foreign troops from Angola and also South Africa's withdrawal from South West Africa (now Namibia), which the UN regarded as illegally occupied since 1966.[195][196]

South Africa in the 1980s also provided logistical and other covert support to Resistência Nacional Moçambicana (RENAMO) rebels, in neighbouring Mozambique fighting the FRELIMO-run government during the Mozambique Civil War, and it launched cross-border raids into Lesotho, Swaziland and Botswana, killing or capturing a number of South African exiles.[197][198][199]

Resistance to apartheid

[edit]
Painting of the Sharpeville massacre of March 1960

From the 1940s to the 1960s, anti-apartheid resistance within the country took the form mainly of passive resistance, influenced in part by the pacifist ideology of Mahatma Gandhi. After the March 1960 massacre of 69 peaceful demonstrators at Sharpeville, and the subsequent declaration of a state of emergency, and the banning of anti-apartheid parties including the African National Congress (ANC), the Pan-Africanist Congress (PAC), and the Communist Party of South Africa, the focus of national resistance turned to armed struggle and underground activity.[200] The armed wing of the ANC, Umkhonto weSizwe (abbreviation MK, meaning Spear of the Nation) claimed moral legitimacy for the resort to violence on the grounds of necessary defence and just war.[201] From the 1960s onwards until 1989, MK carried out numerous acts of sabotage and attacks on military and police personnel.[202] The Truth and Reconciliation Commission noted in 2003 that, despite the ANC's stated policy of attacking only military and police targets, "the majority of casualties of MK operations were civilians."[203]

Organised resistance to Afrikaner nationalism was not confined exclusively to Black and Coloured activists. A movement known as the Torch Commando was formed in the 1950s, led by white war veterans who had fought the Axis Powers in Europe and North Africa during World War II. With 250,000 paid-up members at the height of its existence, it was the largest white protest movement in the country's history. By 1952, the brief flame of mass-based white radicalism was extinguished, when the Torch Commando disbanded due to government legislation under the Suppression of Communism Act, 1950. Some members of the Torch Commando subsequently became leading figures in the armed wing of the banned African National Congress.[204]

The national liberation movement was divided in the early 1960s when an "Africanist" faction within the ANC objected to an alliance between the ANC and the Communist Party of South Africa. Leaders of the Communist Party of South Africa were mostly white.[205] The Africanists broke away from the ANC to form the Pan-Africanist Congress and its military wing named Poqo, which became active mainly in the Cape provinces. During the early-1990s, Poqo was renamed Azanian People's Liberation Army (APLA). Its underground cells conducted armed robberies to raise funds and obtain weapons and vehicles. Civilians were killed or injured in many of these robberies. In 1993, attacks on white civilian targets in public places increased. APLA denied the attacks were racist in character, claiming that the attacks were directed against the apartheid government as all whites, according to the PAC, were complicit in the policy of apartheid. An attack on a Christian church in Cape Town in 1993, left eleven people dead and 58 injured.[206]

Hundreds of students and others who fled to neighbouring countries, especially Botswana, to avoid arrest after the Soweto uprising of 16 June 1976, provided a fertile recruiting ground for the military wings of both the ANC and PAC.[207] The uprising had been precipitated by Government legislation forcing African students to accept Afrikaans as the official medium for tuition,[208] with support from the wider Black Consciousness Movement. The uprising spread throughout the country. By the time it was finally quelled, hundreds of protesters had been shot dead with many more wounded or arrested by police.[209]

A non-racial United Democratic Front (UDF) coalition of about 400 civic, church, student, trade union and other organisations emerged in 1983. At its peak in 1987, the UDF had some 700 affiliates and about 3,000,000 members.[210] A strong relationship existed between the African National Congress (ANC) and the UDF, based on the shared mission statement of the Freedom Charter.[211] Following restrictions placed on its activities, the UDF was replaced in 1988 by the Mass Democratic Movement, a loose and amorphous alliance of anti-apartheid groups that had no permanent structure, making it difficult for the government to place a ban on its activities.[212]

A total of 130 political prisoners were hanged on the gallows of Pretoria Central Prison between 1960 and 1990. The prisoners were mainly members of the Pan Africanist Congress and United Democratic Front.[213]

Democratic period (1994–present)

[edit]
Frederik W. de Klerk and Nelson Mandela, two of the driving forces in ending apartheid

The dissolution of the Soviet Union in the late-1980s meant the African National Congress (ANC) in alliance with the South African Communist Party, could no longer depend on the Soviet Union for weaponry and political support. It also meant the apartheid government could no longer link apartheid and its purported legitimacy to the protection of Christian values and civilisation in the face of the rooi gevaar, meaning "red danger" or the threat of communism.[214] Both sides were forced to the negotiating table, with the result that in June 1991, all apartheid laws were finally rescinded- opening the way for the country's first multiracial democratic elections three years later.[215] As the culmination of mounting local and international opposition to apartheid in the 1980s, including the armed struggle, widespread civil unrest, economic and cultural sanctions by the international community, and pressure from the anti-apartheid movement around the world, State President F. W. de Klerk announced the lifting of the ban on the African National Congress, the Pan Africanist Congress and the South African Communist Party, as well as the release of political prisoner Nelson Mandela on 2 February 1990, after twenty-seven years in prison. In a referendum held on 17 March 1992, the white electorate voted 68% in favour of democracy.[216] After lengthy negotiations under the auspices of the Convention for a Democratic South Africa (CODESA), a draft constitution was published on 26 July 1993, containing concessions towards all sides: a federal system of regional legislatures, equal voting-rights regardless of race, and a bicameral legislature.

From 26–29 April 1994, the South African population voted in the first universal suffrage general elections. The African National Congress won, well ahead of the governing National Party and the Inkatha Freedom Party. The Democratic Party and Pan Africanist Congress, among others, formed a parliamentary opposition in the country's first non-racial parliament. Nelson Mandela was elected as President on 9 May 1994 and formed a Government of National Unity, consisting of the ANC, the National Party and Inkatha. On 10 May 1994 Mandela was inaugurated as South Africa's new President in Pretoria with Thabo Mbeki and F. W. De Klerk as his vice-presidents. The Government of National Unity lapsed at the end of the first parliament sitting in 1999, with the ANC becoming the sole party in power while maintaining a strategic alliance with the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) and the South African Communist Party. After considerable debate, and following submissions from advocacy groups, individuals and ordinary citizens, the Parliament enacted a new Constitution and Bill of Rights in 1996. The death penalty was abolished, land reform and redistribution policies were introduced, and equitable labour laws legislated.

The ANC had risen to power on the strength of a socialist agenda embodied in a Freedom Charter, which was intended to form the basis of ANC social, economic and political policies.[217] The Charter decreed that "the national wealth of our country, the heritage of South Africans, shall be restored to the people; the mineral wealth beneath the soil, the banks and monopoly industry shall be transferred to the ownership of the people".[218] ANC icon Nelson Mandela, asserted in a statement released on 25 January 1990: "The nationalisation of the mines, banks and monopoly industries is the policy of the ANC, and a change or modification of our views in this regard is inconceivable."[219]

Following the ANC's electoral victory in 1994, the eradication of mass poverty through nationalisation was never implemented. The ANC-led government, in a historic reversal of policy, adopted neoliberalism instead.[220] A wealth tax on the super-rich to fund developmental projects was set aside, while domestic and international corporations, enriched by apartheid, were excused from any financial reparations. Large corporations were allowed to shift their main listings abroad. According to Solomon Johannes Terreblanche, a South African academic economist, the government's concessions to big business represented "treacherous decisions that [will] haunt South Africa for generations to come".[221] In the 2024 national election the African National Congress (ANC) failed to secure more than 50% of the vote for the first time in the democratic era.[222]

Emigration

[edit]

The immediate post-apartheid period was marked by an exodus of skilled, white South Africans amid crime related safety concerns. The South African Institute of Race Relations estimated in 2008 that 800,000 or more white people had emigrated since 1995, out of the approximately 4,000,000 who were in South Africa when apartheid formally ended the year before. Large white South African diasporas, both English- and Afrikaans-speaking, sprouted in Australia, New Zealand, North America, and especially in the UK, to which around 550,000 South Africans emigrated.[223] As of 2021, tens of thousands of white South Africans continue to emigrate each year.[224] By 2019 the number of skilled black South Africans emigrating out of the country had surpassed the number of white emigres.[225][226]

Financial burdens

[edit]

The apartheid government had declared a moratorium on foreign debt repayments in the mid-1980s, when it declared a state of emergency in the face of escalating civil unrest. With the formal end of apartheid in 1994, the new democratic government was saddled with an onerous foreign debt amounting to R86.7B (US$14B at then current exchange rates) accrued by the former apartheid regime. The cash-strapped post-apartheid government was obliged to repay this debt or else face a credit downgrading by foreign financial institutions.[227] The debt was finally settled in September 2001.[228]

A further financial burden was imposed on the new post-apartheid government through its obligation to provide antiretroviral (ARV) treatment to impoverished victims of the HIV/AIDS epidemic sweeping the country. South Africa had the highest prevalence of HIV/AIDS compared to any other country in the world, with 5,600,000 people afflicted by the disease and 270,000 HIV-related deaths were recorded in 2011. By that time, more than 2,000,000 children were orphaned due to the epidemic. The provision of ARV treatment resulted in 100,000 fewer AIDS-related deaths in 2011 than in 2005.[229]

Labour relations

[edit]
Church on Greenmarket Square in Cape Town, South Africa with a banner memorialising the Marikana massacre

Migrant labour remained a fundamental aspect of the South African mining industry, which employed half a million mostly black miners. Labour unrest in the industry resulted in a massacre in mid-August 2012, when anti-riot police shot dead 34 striking miners and wounded many more in what is known as the Marikana massacre. The incident was widely criticised by the public, civil society organisations and religious leaders.[230] The migrant labour system was identified as a primary cause of the unrest. Multi-national mining corporations including Anglo-American Corporation, Lonmin, and Anglo Platinum, were accused of failing to address the enduring legacies of apartheid.[231]

Poverty

[edit]

In 2014, around 47% of (mostly black) South Africans lived in poverty, making it one of the most unequal countries in the world.[232] Widespread dissatisfaction with the slow pace of socio-economic transformation, government incompetence and maladministration, and other public grievances in the post-apartheid era, precipitated many violent protest demonstrations. In 2007, less than half the protests were associated with some form of violence, compared with 2014, when almost 80% of protests involved violence on the part of the participants or the authorities.[233] The slow pace of transformation also fomented tensions within the tripartite alliance between the ANC, the Communist Party and the Congress of South African Trade Unions.[234]

Corruption

[edit]

During the administration of President Jacob Zuma corruption in South Africa had also become a growing problem.[235][236][237] Notable corruption related scandals during this period included incidents of widespread state capture[238] often involving allegations against the Gupta family.[239] These also involved corruption related financial difficulties at some state owned enterprises such as Eskom and South African Airways that had a notable negative economic impact on the country's finances.[240] Other corruption related scandals to emerge during this period included the collapse of VBS Mutual Bank[241] and Bosasa.[238] The Zondo Commission of Inquiry was appointed during the Presidency of Cyril Ramaphosa to investigate allegations of state capture related corruption.

Energy crisis

[edit]

Since 2007 South Africa has experienced an ongoing energy crisis that has negatively impacted the country's economy,[242] its ability to create jobs,[242] and reduce poverty.[243] A lack of investment in new power generating capacity and an aging fleet of existing power plants was the initial cause of the crisis.[244] The government owned power utility Eskom has been plagued with corruption and mismanagement, most notability during the presidency of Jacob Zuma, which has limited its ability to resolve the crisis.[245][246]

Xenophobia

[edit]

The post-apartheid period has been marked by numerous outbreaks of xenophobic attacks against foreign migrants and asylum seekers from various conflict zones in Africa. An academic study conducted in 2006, found that South Africans showed levels of xenophobia greater than anywhere else in the world.[247] The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) found that competition over jobs, business opportunities, public services and housing gave rise to tension among refugees, asylum seekers, migrants and host communities, identified as a main cause of the xenophobic violence.[248] South Africa received more than 207,000 individual asylum applications in 2008 and a further 222,300 in 2009, representing nearly a four-fold rise in both years over the levels seen in 2007. These refugees and asylum seekers originated mainly from Zimbabwe, Burundi, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Rwanda, Eritrea, Ethiopia and Somalia.[249]

2021 civil unrest

[edit]

Civil unrest occurred in South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng provinces in July 2021, sparked by the imprisonment of former President Jacob Zuma for contempt of court, after he declined to testify at the Zondo Commission, an inquiry into allegations of corruption during his term as president from 2009 to 2018.[250] Protests against the incarceration triggered wider rioting and looting, further exacerbated by job layoffs and economic woes worsened by the COVID-19 pandemic.[251][252] The Economist called it the worst violence that South Africa had experienced since the end of Apartheid.[253]

Police and military authorities were mobilised to quell the unrest.[254][255] By mid-July, the South African National Defense Forces had deployed approximately 25,000 military personnel.[256] As of 18 July, over 3,400 people had been arrested, while as of 22 July, 337 people had died in connection with the unrest.[257]

The July 2021 unrest coincided with the Cape Town taxi conflict[258] and Transnet ransomware attack[259][260] leading to unproven speculation that they might have been connected.

Post-apartheid heads of state

[edit]

Under the post-apartheid Constitution the president is head of both state and government. The president is elected by the National Assembly and serves a term that expires at the next general election. A president may serve a maximum of two terms. In the event of a vacancy the Deputy President serves as Acting President.

President Term of office Political party
# Portrait Name Took office Left office Duration
1 Nelson Mandela
(1918–2013)
10 May 1994 16 June 1999 5 years, 37 days African National Congress
2 Thabo Mbeki
(1942–)
16 June 1999 24 September 2008
(resigned)
9 years, 100 days African National Congress
3 Kgalema Motlanthe
(1949–)
25 September 2008 9 May 2009 226 days African National Congress
4 Jacob Zuma
(1942–)
9 May 2009 14 February 2018
(resigned)
8 years, 264 days African National Congress
5 Cyril Ramaphosa
(1952–)
15 February 2018 Present 6 years, 278 days African National Congress

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "History | South African Government". Archived from the original on 29 March 2019. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
  2. ^ "South Africa - History". Britannica. 11 October 2020. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
  3. ^ "Portuguese & Dutch Exploration of South Africa". Study.com. 22 January 2016. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
  4. ^ "Dutch East India Company (DEIC)/VOC | South African History Online". Sahistory.org.za. 27 August 2019. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
  5. ^ "Free Burghers". Artefacts.co.za. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
  6. ^ "Sarie Marais.Com Geskiedenis". Geskiedenis.sariemarais.com. Archived from the original on 28 June 2019. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
  7. ^ "New poll shows dramatic decline in electoral support of ANC".
  8. ^ Bert Woodhouse, The Rock Art of the Golden Gate and Clarens Districts, Johannesburg: Waterman 1996, p.34 – (citing report by Professor C van Riet Lowe and Dr D J H Visser, published in 1955 by government Department of Mines). ISBN 1 874959 31 5
  9. ^ "'Oldest' prehistoric art unearthed". BBC News. 10 January 2002.
  10. ^ National Geographic, "New Human Ancestor Elicits Awe—and Many Questions", 10 September 2015. Accessed 20 September 2015
  11. ^ Chen YS, Olckers A, Schurr TG, Kogelnik AM, Huoponen K, Wallace DC (2000). "mtDNA variation in the South African Kung and Khwe, and their genetic relationships to other African populations". The American Journal of Human Genetics. 66 (4): 1362–83. doi:10.1086/302848. PMC 1288201. PMID 10739760.
  12. ^ Tishkoff, SA; Gonder, MK; Henn, BM; Mortensen, H; Knight, A; Gignoux, C; Fernandopulle, N; Lema, G; et al. (2007). "History of click-speaking populations of Africa inferred from mtDNA and Y chromosome genetic variation" (PDF). Molecular Biology and Evolution. 24 (10): 2180–95. doi:10.1093/molbev/msm155. PMID 17656633. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 April 2011.
  13. ^ Schlebusch CM, Naidoo T, Soodyall H (2009). "SNaPshot minisequencing to resolve mitochondrial macro-haplogroups found in Africa". Electrophoresis. 30 (21): 3657–64. doi:10.1002/elps.200900197. PMID 19810027. S2CID 19515426.
  14. ^ Area Study – South Africa, US Library of Congress The Earliest South Africans
  15. ^ Barnard, Alan (2007). Anthropology and the Bushman. Oxford: Berg. pp. 4–7. ISBN 9781847883308.
  16. ^ "Who are the San? – San Map". WIMSA. Archived from the original on 13 January 2014. Retrieved 13 January 2014.
  17. ^ Karim Sadr, Invisible Herders: The Archaeology of Khoekhoe Pastoralists, Archived 20 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine University of Witwatersrand, South Africa
  18. ^ C. Garth Sampson, Prehistoric Livestock Herders in the Upper Seacow River Valley[permanent dead link]
  19. ^ Arthur, Charles (December 2008). "The archaeology of indigenous herders in the Western Cape of South Africa". Southern African Humanities. 20. Pietermaritzburg: 205–220. Archived from the original on 5 February 2017. Retrieved 22 January 2017.
  20. ^ "How Indigenous South Africans Resisted The First European Intruders". Africa Rebirth. 24 October 2023. Retrieved 13 March 2024.
  21. ^ "Chronology of the 1600s at the Cape". sahistory.org.za. 21 November 2006. Archived from the original on 6 June 2011. Retrieved 18 April 2015.
  22. ^ SA History Online, Smallpox epidemic strikes Cape
  23. ^ Molecular Biology and Evolution "Genetic and Demographic Implications of the Bantu Expansion: Insights from Human Paternal Lineages" (Abstract). Oxford Journals. 30 March 2009. Accessed 11 July 2015
  24. ^ Lander, Faye; Russell, Thembi (2018). "The archaeological evidence for the appearance of pastoralism and farming in southern Africa". PLOS ONE. 13 (6): e0198941. Bibcode:2018PLoSO..1398941L. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0198941. PMC 6002040. PMID 29902271.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h Knight, Ian (1989). Windrow, Martin (ed.). Queen Victoria's Enemies 1: Southern Africa. Great Britain: Osprey. pp. 3–4. ISBN 085045901X.
  26. ^ United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (Unesco), Mapungubwe Cultural Landscape. Accessed 18 June 2015
  27. ^ Felipe Fernandez-Armesto, Pathfinders: A Global History of Exploration, New York: Norton 2006, pp. 177–178.ISBN 0-393-06259-7
  28. ^ Noble, John (1893). Illustrated official handbook of the Cape and South Africa; a résumé of the history, conditions, populations, productions and resources of the several colonies, states, and territories. J.C. Juta & Co. p. 141. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
  29. ^ Ransford, Oliver. The Great Trek. John Murray. Great Britain. 1972. Page 1 – 2.
  30. ^ Collinson, Lee-Shay (9 February 2017). "The Untold Stories of Slavery at Cape Town's Iziko Slave Lodge". Culture Trip.
  31. ^ Hans F Heese, Cape Melting Pot: The Role and Status of the Mixed Population at the Cape, 1652–1795, Cape Town: D A Robertson, 2011 (translation by Delia A Robertson from Professor Heese's original 1985 Afrikaans study Groep Sonder Grense, Die Rol en Status van die Gemengde Bevolking aan die Kaap, 1652–1795), ISBN 062034153X
  32. ^ F Wallis, Nuusdagboek: Feite en Fratse oor 1000 Jaar Cape Town: Human &Rousseau 2000
  33. ^ "South Africa - British occupation of the Cape | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 12 July 2022.
  34. ^ "Batavian Republic 1803-1806 | South African History Online".
  35. ^ Kachru, Braj; Kachru, Yamuna; Nelson, Cecil (2009). The Handbook of World Englishes. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 160–161. ISBN 978-1405188319.
  36. ^ John Dugard (1978). Human rights and the South African legal order. Princeton University Press. Princeton (New Jersey). ISBN 0-691-09236-2.
  37. ^ a b "Measuring Worth - Purchase Power of the Pound: economic share". www.measuringworth.com. Retrieved 16 April 2024.
  38. ^ Arthur Conan Doyle (2010). The War in South Africa. Nabu Press. ISBN 978-1141789283.
  39. ^ Patrick Robert Cullinan, Robert Jacob Gordon 1743–1795: The Man and His Travels at the Cape, Struik Publishers, Cape Town, 1992
  40. ^ David Hatcher Childress, A Hitchhiker's Guide to Armageddon, SCB Distributors, Gardena, California, 2011. ISBN 1935487507
  41. ^ Norbert C. Brockman, An African Biographical Dictionary Archived 8 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine, Santa Barbara, California 1994. Accessed 7 July 2015
  42. ^ a b c Knight, Ian (1989). Windrow, Martin (ed.). Queen Victoria's Enemies 1: Southern Africa. Great Britain: Osprey. pp. 4–6. ISBN 085045901X.
  43. ^ Noel Mostert, Frontiers: The Epic of South Africa's Creation, London: Pimlico 1993, pp.496–7 ISBN 0-7126-5584-0
  44. ^ Julian Cobbing, "The Mfecane as Alibi", Journal of African History, 29 March 1988, p.487.
  45. ^ Etherington, Norman (2004). "A Tempest In A Teapot? Nineteenth-Century Contests For Land In South Africa's Caledon Valley And The Invention Of The Mfecane". The Journal of African History. 45 (2): 203–219. doi:10.1017/S0021853703008624. ISSN 0021-8537. S2CID 162838180.
  46. ^ Eldredge, Elizabeth (2014). The Creation of the Zulu Kingdom, 1815–1828. Cambridge University Press. p. 9.
  47. ^ Bulliet (2008). The Earth and Its Peoples. USA: Houghton Mifflin Company. p. 708. ISBN 978-0-618-77148-6.
  48. ^ Rubinstein, W. D. (2004). Genocide: A History. Pearson Longman.
  49. ^ Walter, Eugene Victor (1969). Terror and Resistance: A Study of Political Violence, with Case Studies of Some Primitive African Communities. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195015621.
  50. ^ Charters, R. A. (1839). "Notices Of The Cape And Southern Africa, Since The Appointment, As Governor, Of Major-Gen. Sir Geo. Napier". United Service Journal and Naval and Military Magazine. Vol. 1839, Part III, no. September, October, November. London: Henry Colburn. pp. 19–25, 171–179, 352–359, page 24.
  51. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica, 15th edition
  52. ^ Hanson, Victor Davis (2001). Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power. New York: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. p. 313. ISBN 978-0-307-42518-8.
  53. ^ SA History.org Slavery in South Africa Accessed 23 April 2015
  54. ^ Kruger, Paul (1902). Memoirs of Paul Kruger. Canada: George R Morang and Co. p. 3. ISBN 9780804610773.
  55. ^ Eybers (1917). Select_constitutional_documents_illustrating_South_African_history_1795-1910. pp. 357–359. OL 24129017M.
  56. ^ Boereafrikana.com Geskiedenis. Accessed 6 June 2015
  57. ^ Cameron, T. (ed) An Illustrated History of South Africa. Johannesburg: Jonathan Ball Publishers, 1986, pp. 137, 138, 143, 147–9, 169. ISBN 0715390511
  58. ^ Openlibrary.org,Census of the British empire, 1906, p. 169. Retrieved 3 May 2015.
  59. ^ George McCall Theal, History of the Boers in South Africa, 3rd ed. Cape Town: Struik 1973, pp 156–165. ISBN 0869770365
  60. ^ The Voortrekkers: A history of the Voortrekkers Great Trek 1835–1845, Voortrekkers leave Natal Archived 22 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 17 June 2015
  61. ^ Karel Schoeman (ed), The British Presence in the Transorange 1845–1854, Human & Rosseau, Cape Town, 1992, p.22-25 ISBN 0-7981-2965-4
  62. ^ Piers Brendon, Decline and Fall of the British Empire, New York: Knopf 2007, page 98.
  63. ^ Neil Parsons (1993). A New History of Southern Africa. Macmillan, London. ISBN 0333570103.
  64. ^ SA History.org History of Indians in South Africa Archived 12 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine, Accessed 29 April 2015
  65. ^ Alan F Hattersley, The British Settlement of Natal: A Study in Imperial Migration, Cambridge University Press, 1950
  66. ^ "First Indian workers arrive in South Africa | South African History Online". www.sahistory.org.za. Retrieved 12 July 2022.
  67. ^ Stiebel, Lindy (1 July 2011). "Crossing the Kala Pani: cause for "Celebration" or "Commemoration" 150 years on? Portrayals of indenture in recent South African writing". Journal of Literary Studies. 27 (2): 77–91. doi:10.1080/02564718.2011.580649. S2CID 143867244. Archived from the original on 13 November 2023.
  68. ^ "Indianness Reconfigured, 1944-1960: The Natal Indian Congress in South Africa - The O'Malley Archives". omalley.nelsonmandela.org. Retrieved 12 July 2022.
  69. ^ Allison Blakely Blacks in the Dutch World, Indiana University Press 2001, pp. 18–19
  70. ^ Pauls, Elizabeth (21 January 2016). "Baster". Encyclopædia Britannica. Chicago, Illinois, U.S: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. topic/Baster/. Retrieved 14 March 2021.
  71. ^ Roger Webster, "Die Adam Kok-Trek", in Langs die Kampvuur: Waare Suider-Afrikaanse stories, (Afrikaans, translated as "At the Campfire: True South African stories") New Africa Books, 2003, p84
  72. ^ Nigel Penn. The Forgotten Frontier. Ohio University Press, 2005. ISBN 0-8214-1682-0.
  73. ^ Karel Schoeman, The British Presence in the Transorange 1845–1854, Human & Rosseau, Cape Town, 1992, p.11, ISBN 0-7981-2965-4
  74. ^ Charles Prestwood Lucas et al. A historical geography of the British colonies. Vol IV: South and East Africa. Clarendon Press. London: 1900. p.186
  75. ^ George McCall Theal, History of South Africa Since September 1795, Cambridge University Press, 2010, p.99
  76. ^ Brian Roberts, Kimberley, Turbulent City, Cape Town: David Philips 1976 ISBN 0949968625
  77. ^ George McCall Theal, "Discovery of diamonds and its consequences", in History of South Africa from 1795 to 1872, Vol.IV, London: Allen & Unwin 1919, pp.331
  78. ^ EJ Verwey: New Dictionary of South African Biography, Vol I, Human Sciences and Research (HSRC) Press, Pretoria: 1995
  79. ^ Paul Germond, Chronicles of Basutoland, Morija (Lesotho): Morija Sesuto Books, 1967, pp. 144f, 252–53
  80. ^ Elizabeth Eldredge, A South African Kingdom, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993, pp. 48–9, ISBN 052144067X
  81. ^ "Surgeon-General SIR CHARLES MacDONAGH CUFFE, K.C.B., LL.D". BMJ. 2 (2859): 589. 1915. doi:10.1136/bmj.2.2859.589-b. ISSN 0959-8138. PMC 2303193.
  82. ^ "Eastern Cape Wars of Dispossession 1779-1878 | South African History Online". www.sahistory.org.za. Retrieved 12 July 2022.
  83. ^ Ngubane, Jordan K. An African Explains Apartheid. New York: Praeger, 1970. pp.40–41
  84. ^ Donald R Morris, The Washing of the Spears, London: Cardinal, 1973, p.148-50 ISBN 0 351 17400 1
  85. ^ Dacob Dlamini, "Jacob Zuma a spawn of collaborators trying to right old wrongs", Rand Daily Mail, 30 July 2015. Accessed 31 July 2015.
  86. ^ David B Coplan, Unconquered Territory: Narrating the Caledon Valley, Journal of African Cultural Studies, Vol 13, No 2, December 2000, p.192
  87. ^ Information department, Government of Lesotho, About Lesotho. Accessed 1 May 2015
  88. ^ Roger B Beck, History of South Africa, Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut 2000, p.74 ISBN 0-313-30730-X
  89. ^ George McCall Theal, History of South Africa, Vol IV, "War with the Basuto", London: Allen & Unwin, 1919, p. 225-79
  90. ^ Beck 2000, p. 74
  91. ^ James S Olson, Robert S Shadle (eds.) Historical Dictionary of the British Empire, Greenwood Press: Westport, Connecticut 1996, p.118 ISBN 0-313-27917-9
  92. ^ A history of the Voortrekkers Great Trek 1835 – 1845, Mzilikazi Archived 22 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed 15 May 2015
  93. ^ Isabel Hofmeyr, We Spend Our Years as a Tale that is Told: Oral Historical Narrative in a South African Chiefdom. Witwatersrand University Press, Johannesburg: 1993, pp.109–111
  94. ^ H W Kinsey,"The Sekukuni Wars", South African Military History Journal, Vol 2 No 5 – June 1973. Accessed 28 June 2015
  95. ^ SA History Online, King Sekhukhune. Accessed 29 June 2015
  96. ^ Dougie Oakes, Illustrated History of South Africa: The Real Story, Reader's Digest:Cape Town 1992, p.166 ISBN 9781874912279
  97. ^ Oakes (1992), p.168
  98. ^ Colin Newbury, "Technology, Capital, and Consolidation: The Performance of De Beers Mining Company Limited, 1880–1889", Business History Review, Vol 61, Issue 1 Spring 1987, p.3
  99. ^ Newbury (1987), p.4
  100. ^ Gearge McCall Theal, History of South Africa: 1975 to 1872, Vol IV, London: Allen & Unwin 1919, pp.224–5
  101. ^ Diamond Museum, Cape Town, History of Diamonds. Accessed 1 June 2015
  102. ^ John Lang, Bullion Johannesburg: Men, Mines and the Challenge of Conflict, Johannesburg: Jonathan Ball 1986, pp.7–8 ISBN 086850 130 1
  103. ^ Thomas Pakenham, The Scramble for Africa, Johannesburg: Jonathan Ball 1991, p.46 ISBN 0-947464-47-6
  104. ^ Newbury (1987), p.1 citing D Hobart Houghton and Jennifer Dagut (eds), Source Material on the South African Economy 1860–1970, Vol I, Cape Town: 1972, pp.290,346
  105. ^ Cornelius William de Kiewiet, A History of South Africa, Social and Economic, London: Oxford University Press, 1957, p.96
  106. ^ Newbury (1987), p. 3
  107. ^ Christopher Oldstone-Moore, The Imperialist Venture, Wright State University. Accessed 24 May 2015
  108. ^ Stacey Greer,South African Diamond Mines 1970s Archived 24 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine, University of California, Davis. Accessed 24 May 2015
  109. ^ P Holz, The Greatest Discovery of them all Archived 27 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine, (originally published in Guide Book, Geological Society of South Africa). Accessed 27 May 2015.
  110. ^ Extract from New History of South Africa, by Hermann Giliomee and Bernard Mbenga (eds.) Chapter 8, "The story of gold" Archived 1 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed 27 May 2015
  111. ^ Goldavenue.com South African Gold Rush: 1885 Archived 21 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 30 May 2015.
  112. ^ PJ Cain and AG Hopkins, British Imperialism, Innovation and Expansion, 1688–1914, London: Longman 1993, pp.276–314 ISBN 0582491762
  113. ^ JDF Jones,Through Fortress and Rock, Johannesburg: Jonathan Ball 1995, p.5 ISBN 1 86842 029 9
  114. ^ Aubrey Newman, Nicholas J Evans, J Graham Smith & Saul W Issroff, Jewish Migration to South Africa: The Records of the Poor Jews' Temporary Shelter, 1885–1914 Cape Town: Jewish Publications-South Africa, 2006. ISBN 978-0-7992-2315-6
  115. ^ Alan H Jeeves, Migrant Labour in South Africa's Mining Economy 1890–1920, cited in Jones (1995), p.53
  116. ^ Jones (1995), p.47
  117. ^ Jones (1995), p.53
  118. ^ Rayne Kruger, Goodbye Dolly Gray: The story of the Boer War, London: Pimlico 1996, p.7 ISBN 978-0-7126-6285-7
  119. ^ "Southern Africa - European and African interaction in the 19th century | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 12 July 2022.
  120. ^ Thomas Pakenham, The Boer War, New York: Random House, 1979, p.xxi. ISBN 0-394-42742-4
  121. ^ Robert Crisp, The Outlanders: The story of the men who made Johannesburg, London: Mayflower, pp.73–8 ISBN 0583122914
  122. ^ "First Boer War". BBC.
  123. ^ Michael Davitt, The Boer Fight for Freedom, Chapter XL – "Summary and Estimates" New York: Funk & Wagnalls 1902
  124. ^ Owen Coetzer, Fire in the Sky: The destruction of the Orange Free State 1899–1902, Johannesburg: Covos Day, 2000, pp.82–88 ISBN 0-620-24114-4.
  125. ^ Nosipho Nkuna, "Black involvement in the Anglo–Boer War, 1899–1902", Military History Journal of the South African Military History Society, Vol 11 No 3/4 – October 1999. Accessed 6 June 2015
  126. ^ Peter Warwick, Black People and the South African War 1899–1902, London: Cambridge University Press 2004, p.1 ISBN 0521272246
  127. ^ "Our history". The Commonwealth. Retrieved 17 January 2024.
  128. ^ Leonard M. Thompson, A history of South Africa (Yale University Press, 2001).
  129. ^ "19 June 1913 Native Land Act Archived 14 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine", This day in history, publish date unknown (accessed 20 December 2007).
  130. ^ Thompson, A history of South Africa (2001).
  131. ^ Denys Reitz, Adrift on the Open Veld: The Anglo–Boer War and its Aftermath, Cape Town: Stormberg 1999, pp.215–228, ISBN 0-620-24380-5
  132. ^ Cherryl Walker (1991). Women and Resistance in South Africa. New Africa Books. p. 62. ISBN 9780864861702.
  133. ^ Standaard Afrikaans (PDF). Afrikaner Pers. 1948. Retrieved 17 September 2014. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  134. ^ a b Bill Nasson (2012). Springboks On The Somme – South Africa in the Great War 1914 – 1918. Penguin. ISBN 9780143027164.
  135. ^ Great Britain. War Office (1922). Statistics of the military effort of the British Empire during the Great War, 1914-1920. Robarts - University of Toronto. London H.M. Stationery Off.
  136. ^ BP Willan, "The South African Native Labour Contingent, 1916–1918". Journal of African History, No 19 Vol 1, 1978, pp. 61–86.
  137. ^ Delville Wood Memorial Sinking of the Mendi. Accessed 7 August 2015
  138. ^ BP Willan, "The South African Native Labour Contingent, 1916–1918", Journal of African History No.19, Vol 1 1978, p.83
  139. ^ Bill Nasson, "A Great Divide: Popular Responses to the Great War in South Africa," War & Society (1994) 12#1 pp 47–64
  140. ^ Russell Ally, "War and gold—the Bank of England, the London gold market and South Africa's gold, 1914–19," Journal of Southern African Studies (1991) 17#2 pp 221–38 in JSTOR
  141. ^ South African Military History Society, "The Special Signals Service", Military History Journal, Vol 11 No 2, December 1998. Accessed 30 July 2015
  142. ^ Andre Wessels, South African Military History Journal, Vol. 11 No. 5, June 2000, South African Military History Society.
  143. ^ a b John Keene (1995). South Africa in World War II. Human & Rousseau. ISBN 978-0-7981-3388-3.
  144. ^ Commonwealth War Graves Commission War dead. Accessed 11 August 2015
  145. ^ Neil Orpen, South African Forces in World War II (3 vols.), Cape Town: Purnell 1971, Vol. II War in the Desert.
  146. ^ Alfred Price, Spitfire Mark V Aces, 1941–45. Oxford: Osprey Publishing 1997, p. 65. ISBN 978-1-85532-635-4.
  147. ^ Denys Reitz, Adrift on the Open Veld: The Anglo–Boer War and its Aftermath, Cape Town: Stormberg 1999, p.227, ISBN 0-620-24380-5
  148. ^ Paul Scarlata, The 1893/95 "Boer Model" Mauser. Accessed 21 May 2015
  149. ^ Angelo del Boca & Mario Giovana, Fascism Today: A World Survey. New York: Pantheon Books. ISBN 0-434-18040-8. p. 382
  150. ^ Del Boca & Giovana (1969) p.382
  151. ^ Del Boca & Giovana (1969), pp. 381–83
  152. ^ Ivor Wilkins & Hans Strydom, Broederbond: The super-Afrikaners, London: Corgi, 1980, pp.1–2, ISBN 0-552-11512-6
  153. ^ Anti-defamation League, Hate on Display, Accessed 25 April 2015
  154. ^ AWB neo-Nazi insignia
  155. ^ Mail & Guardian, "New bomb blasts link to AWB" 10 January 1997. Accessed 14 May 2015.
  156. ^ Nelson Mandela Foundation, Mandela: 'A lesson they will never forget' . Accessed 29 May 2015
  157. ^ Wessel Visser, Coming to terms with the past and the present: Afrikaner experience and reaction to the "new" South Africa Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, (Seminar lecture presented at the Centre of African Studies, University of Copenhagen, 30 September 2004), p.2. Accessed 3 May 2015.
  158. ^ SA History.org Segregationist legislation 1856–1913 Archived 7 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 4 May 2015
  159. ^ Brian Bunting, Rise of the South African Reich, Chapter Nine, "South Africa's Nuremberg Laws"
  160. ^ Susan Mathieson and David Atwell, "Between Ethnicity and Nationhood: Shaka Day and the Struggle over Zuluness in post-Apartheid South Africa" in Multicultural States: Rethinking Difference and Identity edited by David Bennett ISBN 0-415-12159-0 (Routledge UK, 1998) p.122
  161. ^ Mark Swilling & Mark Phillips, "State power in the 1980s: from total strategy to counter revolutionary warfare", in Jacklyn Cock & Laurie Nathan (eds) War and Society: The Militarisation of South Africa, Cape Town: David Philip, pp. 5, 145–8 ISBN 0-86486-115-X.
  162. ^ Desiree Hansson, "Changes in counter-revolutionary state strategy in the decade 1979–89", in Desiree Hansson and Dirk van Zyl Smit (eds.), Towards Justice?: Crime and state control in South Africa, Cape Town: Oxford University Press 1990, pp.45–50 ISBN 0 19 570579 3
  163. ^ John Dugard, Convention on the Suppression and Punishment of the Crime of Apartheid, New York: UN Office of Legal Affairs, 2013. Accessed 26 July 2015
  164. ^ United Nations, "Partner in the Struggle against Apartheid". Accessed 30 September 2015.
  165. ^ Benjamin Beit-Hallahmi, The Israeli Connection: Whom Israel arms and why, London: I B Tauris 1998, pp. 108–174 ISBN 1-85043-069-1
  166. ^ International Defence and Aid Fund, The Apartheid War Machine, London, 1980.
  167. ^ Truth and Reconciliation Commission (1998), Findings in respect of the state and its allies: findings 82, 100 c, 100 f, 101, 102 pp. 213, 219, 223, 224 – Quote: "Evidence placed before the Commission indicates, however, that from the late-1970s, senior politicians – as well as police, national intelligence and defence force leaders – developed a strategy to deal with opposition to the government. This entailed, among other actions, the unlawful killing, within and beyond South Africa, of people whom they perceived as posing a significant challenge to the state's authority."
  168. ^ Patrick Laurence, Death Squads: Apartheid's secret weapon, London: Penguin 1990, p.30
  169. ^ Richard Leonard, South Africa at War, Chapter six: "The propaganda war", Johannesburg: Donker, 1983, pp.161–197 ISBN 0-86852-093-4
  170. ^ Truth and Reconciliation Commission (1998), Findings on the role of allies of the state, pages 227–238
  171. ^ Peter Harris, "The role of rightwing vigilantes in South Africa", in States of Terror, Catholic Institute of International Relations, London: 1989, pp. 2–3 ISBN 1-85287-019-2
  172. ^ Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Report, Vol. 6, Section 4 Appendix: The "Third Force", 2003, p.584
  173. ^ "Volume Five – Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa Report" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 January 2017. Retrieved 2 May 2014.
  174. ^ "Institute of Security Studies, Monograph No.81" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 January 2012. Retrieved 18 October 2010.
  175. ^ Ranjeni Munusamy, Unfinished business of the TRC, Daily Maverick 23 March 2013. Accessed 23 April 2015.
  176. ^ Paul Seils, Political pardons would damage the legacy of South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Huffington Post, 6 March 2015. Accessed 25 April 2015.
  177. ^ Stephen Ellis, Comrades against apartheid: the ANC and the South African Communist Party in exile. James Currey Publishers. p. 106.
  178. ^ M Evans, The Frontline States, Zambezia (1984/5), Vol XII, University of Zimbabwe. Accessed 11 April 2016.
  179. ^ Scott Thomas, The Diplomacy of Liberation: Foreign relations of the ANC since 1960, London: I B Taurus 1996, p.18 ISBN 1850439931
  180. ^ W. Martin James III (2011). A Political History of the Civil War in Angola 1974–1990. Piscataway: Transaction Publishers, p. 65.
  181. ^ Meredith, Martin (2005). The Fate of Africa: From the Hopes of Freedom to the Heart of Despair, a History of Fifty Years of Independence, p. 316.
  182. ^ Bourne, Peter G. (1986), Fidel: A Biography of Fidel Castro, New York City: Dodd, Mead & Company, pp. 281, 284–287.
  183. ^ Wilson Center Digital Archives, International History Declassified, Archive of the Cuban Armed Forces. Accessed 12 November 2015.
  184. ^ Inge Tvedten, Angola: Struggle for Peace and Reconstruction
  185. ^ SIPRI Yearbook: Stockholm International Peace Research Institute
  186. ^ Victoria Brittain, Hidden Lives, Hidden Deaths: South Africa's crippling of a continent, London: Faber 1990, p. 2, ISBN 0571142168.
  187. ^ Clayton, Anthony (1999). Frontiersmen: Warfare in Africa since 1950. Philadelphia: UCL Press, Limited. pp. 120–124. ISBN 978-1857285253.
  188. ^ Jan Breytenbach, They Live by the Sword: 32 Battalion, South Africa's Foreign Legion, Johannesburg: Lemur 1990, p.180 ISBN 0620148705
  189. ^ UN Security Council, Resolution 435
  190. ^ Cambridge Journals, Review of Stockwell, In Search of Enemies accessed 27 April 2015
  191. ^ John Stockwell, In Search of Enemies, London: Futura, 1979 pp. 193–96, 228–29, 214, 241 ISBN 0 7088 1647 9
  192. ^ Anthony Egan, Review of "The Hidden Thread: Russia and South Africa in the Soviet Era" by Irina Filatova & Apollon Davidson, Focus: Journal of the Helen Suzman Foundation, issue 70, October 2013
  193. ^ Horace Campbell, "Siege of Cuito Cuanavale" Current African Issues No.10, Scandinavian Institute of African Studies, Uppsala, Sweden, pp.22–6 Accessed 27 April 2015
  194. ^ Phyllis Johnson & David Martin, Apartheid Terrorism: The destabilisation report, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1989, p.122 ISBN 0253331331
  195. ^ UN General Assembly, res n° 2154 (XXI), 17 November 1966. Available at http://www.un.org/documents/ga/res/21/ares21.htm [Recovered 1 October 2015]
  196. ^ United Nations, UN Resolution 435 of 1978 Archived 18 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 1 May 2015
  197. ^ B Turok (ed), Witness from the Frontline: Aggression and resistance in southern Africa, London: Institute for African Alternatives, 1990 ISBN 1 870425 12X
  198. ^ Edgerton, Robert B, Africa's armies: from honor to infamy: a history from 1791 to the present (2002) p.109
  199. ^ "B&J": Jacob Bercovitch and Richard Jackson, International Conflict: A Chronological Encyclopedia of Conflicts and Their Management 1945–1995 (1997).
  200. ^ Sibiso Ndlovu (ed.)The Turn to Armed Resistance Archived 12 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine. University of South Africa (Unisa) Press, Pretoria, Chapter 2, Vol 2, 2001
  201. ^ Padraig O'Malley,Umkhonto weSizwe (MK) Operations Report, Nelson Mandela Centre of Memory, Johannesburg. Accessed 25 April 2015
  202. ^ South African Department of Justice, 4 Further submissions and response by the African National Congress to questions raised by the Commission for Truth and Reconciliation Archived 29 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine, 12 May 1997
  203. ^ South African Press Association (SAPA), "ANC killed mostly civilians", 21 March 2003. Accessed 18 October 2015.
  204. ^ Sunday Times (Johannesburg), Insight section. 1 November 1998
  205. ^ Apartheid Museum, Johannesburg Resistance to Apartheid Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 26 April 2015
  206. ^ South African Broadcasting Corporation and South African History Archive,Truth Commission Special Report: APLA attacks. Accessed 26 April 2015
  207. ^ Gregory Houston and Bernard Magubane, "ANC Political Underground in the 1970s" Archived 27 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine, in The Road to Democracy, Pretoria: South African Democracy Education Trust, Vol 2, p.381, Accessed 4 May 2015
  208. ^ Giliomee, Hermann (2003), The Rise and Possible Demise of Afrikaans as a Public Language (PDF), Cape Town: PRAESA, archived from the original (PDF) on 6 September 2015, retrieved 1 May 2015
  209. ^ SA History.org Soweto uprising casualties Accessed 1 May 2015.
  210. ^ Kraft, Scott (5 March 1991). "Anti-Apartheid Group Disbanding in August : South Africa: The UDF alliance, which united some 700 organizations, says its goals have been met. Many key figures have become ANC leaders". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 28 December 2023.
  211. ^ Daily Dispatch, "UDF unites Apartheid divides", 7 January 2000. Accessed 28 March 2016
  212. ^ Padraig O'malley, "Mass Democratic Movement" Nelson Mandela Foundation. Accessed 29 March 2016
  213. ^ News24.com Remains of hanged prisoners to be exhumed. Archived 23 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 25 March 2016.
  214. ^ Vladimir Shubin, The Hot "Cold War": The USSR in Southern Africa, London: Pluto Press 2008. ISBN 978 0745324722
  215. ^ United Nations Yearbook 1992 Apartheid laws rescinded UN Dept of Public Information, Accessed 3 May 2015
  216. ^ African Elections Database. Accessed 9 May 2015
  217. ^ African National Congress, "ANC policy". Accessed 25 October 2015. Archived 14 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  218. ^ Freedom Charter, adopted 26 June 1955 Archived 29 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed 17 September 2015
  219. ^ Mail & Guardian, "We will nationalise – Mandela", 26 January 1990. Accessed 21 September 2015.
  220. ^ Ashwin Desai, "Neoliberalism and resistance in South Africa", Monthly Review, Volume 54, Issue 08, January 2003. Accessed 18 September 2015
  221. ^ Solomon Johannes Terreblanche, Lost in Transformation, Johannesburg: KMM Review Publishing, 2012, ISBN 0620537256, quoted in Ronnie Kasrils, "How the ANC's Faustian pact sold out South Africa's poorest", The Guardian 24 June 2013. Accessed 26 October 2015.
  222. ^ "South Africa parliament opening: Cyril Ramaphosa outlines his plans". www.bbc.com.
  223. ^ The Economist, "White flight from South Africa" 25 September 2008. Accessed 18 July 2015
  224. ^ Staff Writer (19 July 2021). "White South Africans are leaving the country in their thousands: Stats SA". BusinessTech. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  225. ^ Brophy, Selene (25 August 2019). "More black than white South Africans leaving the country". News24. Retrieved 20 September 2022.
  226. ^ "More skilled black professionals are leaving South Africa". 26 August 2019. Retrieved 20 September 2022.
  227. ^ The Economist, South Africa's Debt Unforgivable, 22 April 1999. Accessed 11 June 2015
  228. ^ Fin24.com, Apartheid debt settled 3 September 2001. Accessed 26 July 2015.
  229. ^ Aids Foundation of South Africa Archived 25 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed 24 September 2015.
  230. ^ Saks, David (24 August 2012). "Rabbi Goldstein, as part of NIFC-SA, reaches out to Lonmin victims" (PDF). SA Jewish Report. p. 3. Retrieved 26 August 2012.[permanent dead link]
  231. ^ Financial Times,"South African mining stuck in the past". Accessed 9 May 2015
  232. ^ James L. Gibson, "Apartheid's Long Shadow", Foreign Affairs, March/April 2015. Accessed 27 July 2015
  233. ^ DM Powell, M O'Donovan and J De Visser, Civic Protests Barometer 2007–2014 Archived 18 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine, Cape Town: Community Law Centre, University of Western Cape, 2015. Accessed 9 May 2015
  234. ^ Independent Online, "Spat within tripartite alliance runs deep", 14 November 2004. Accessed 12 October 2015
  235. ^ Swilling, Mark (May 2017). "BETRAYAL OF THE PROMISE: HOW SOUTH AFRICA IS BEING STOLEN" (PDF). State Capacity Research Project.
  236. ^ Coovadia, Imraan (4 May 2019). "Corruption". Social Dynamics. 45 (2): 213–217. doi:10.1080/02533952.2019.1621027. ISSN 0253-3952. S2CID 219697148.
  237. ^ von Holdt, Karl (February 2019). "The political economy of corruption: elite-formation, factions and violence" (PDF). Society, Work, and Politics Institute.[permanent dead link]
  238. ^ a b Gevisser, Mark (11 July 2019). "'State capture': the corruption investigation that has shaken South Africa". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 14 February 2020.
  239. ^ "Who are the Guptas?". BBC. 14 May 2013. Retrieved 7 February 2016.
  240. ^ Wexler, Alexandra (31 December 2019). "South Africa's Scandal-Hit State Firms Put Economy on 'Cliff's Edge'". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 14 February 2020.
  241. ^ Masondo, Sipho (1 July 2018). "What happened at VBS Bank?". Fin24. Archived from the original on 8 September 2019. Retrieved 30 November 2018.
  242. ^ a b Inglesi-Lotz, Roula (12 April 2022). "South Africa's economic growth affected by mismatch of electricity supply and demand". The Conversation. Retrieved 20 September 2022.
  243. ^ Africa, Tracy Ledger for Energy Governance South (16 February 2022). "ENERGY EQUITY OP-ED: Universal access to electricity is a necessary prerequisite to ending poverty itself". Daily Maverick. Retrieved 20 September 2022.
  244. ^ Rathi, Anusha (8 July 2022). "Why South Africa Is in the Dark, Again". Foreign Policy. Retrieved 20 September 2022.
  245. ^ Staff Writer. "How the ANC government broke Eskom – 2008 versus 2018". myBoardband. Retrieved 20 September 2022.
  246. ^ "South Africa: How Jacob Zuma helped destroy Eskom". The Africa Report.com. 9 May 2022. Retrieved 20 September 2022.
  247. ^ Jonathan Crush (ed), The Perfect Storm: Realities of Xenophobia in Contemporary South Africa, Southern African Migration Project, University of Cape Town & Queen's University, Canada, 2006, p.1
  248. ^ UNHCR Global Appeal 2011 – South Africa
  249. ^ 2011 UNHCR country operations profile – South Africa
  250. ^ "S Africa violence spreads after Jacob Zuma jailed". www.aljazeera.com. Archived from the original on 12 July 2021. Retrieved 12 July 2021.
  251. ^ "Deaths climb to 72 in South Africa riots after Zuma jailed". CNBC. 13 July 2021. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  252. ^ Bauer, Nickolaus. "'Little to lose': Poverty and despair fuel South Africa's unrest". www.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  253. ^ "Where does South Africa go from here?". The Economist. Archived from the original on 23 July 2021. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
  254. ^ Wroughton, Lesley (12 July 2021). "South Africa deploys military as protests turn violent in wake of Jacob Zuma's jailing". Washington Post. Archived from the original on 14 July 2021. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  255. ^ "Live Updates: Looting and violence in Gauteng and KZN". www.iol.co.za. Archived from the original on 12 July 2021. Retrieved 12 July 2021.
  256. ^ Mkhwanazi, Siyabonga. "Mapisa-Nqakula: We have deployed 25 000 soldiers". iol. Archived from the original on 14 July 2021. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  257. ^ "Unrest death toll rises to 337". SAnews. 22 July 2021. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
  258. ^ "Flare-up in taxi war sparks looting alarm in Cape Town city centre". TimesLIVE. Retrieved 30 August 2021.
  259. ^ "Cyber attacks expose the vulnerability of South Africa's ports". ISS Africa. 29 July 2021. Retrieved 2 August 2021.
  260. ^ "Call to 'connect dots between insurrection modus operandi and crippling Transnet cyber attack'". www.iol.co.za. 28 July 2021. Retrieved 2 August 2021.

Further reading

[edit]

General

[edit]
  • Beinart, William. Twentieth-Century South Africa. Oxford University Press. 2001.
  • Beck, Roger S. History of South Africa, Greenwood Press, Westport CT: 2000
  • Blignaut, Charl. "Untold History with a Historiography: A Review of Scholarship on Afrikaner Women in South African History." South African Historical Journal 65.4 (2013): 596–617.
  • Bunting, Brian. Rise of the South African Reich First published by Penguin Africa Library 1964, revised 1969.
  • Christopher, A. J. The Atlas of Changing South Africa. 2000. 216 pages. ISBN 0-415-21178-6.
  • Deegan, Heather. The Politics of the New South Africa. 2000. 256 pages. ISBN 0-582-38227-0.
  • Elbourne, Elizabeth. Blood Ground: Colonialism, Missions, and the Contest for Christianity in the Cape Colony and Britain, 1799–1853. McGill-Queen's University Press. December 2002. 560 pages. ISBN 0-7735-2229-8.
  • Hamilton, Carolyn and Bernard K. Mbenga, eds. The Cambridge History of South Africa: Volume 1: From Early Times to 1885 (2009) excerpt
  • Hetherington, Penelope. "Women in South Africa: the historiography in English." The International Journal of African Historical Studies 26#2 (1993): 241–269.
  • Hrbek, Ivan [in Czech] (1981). "Written sources from the fifteenth century onwards". In J. Ki-Zerbo (ed.). Methodology and African Prehistory. General History of Africa. Vol. 1. UNESCO. pp. 121–124. ISBN 0435948075. Republic of South Africa
  • Johnson, R.W. South Africa's Brave New World: The Beloved Country Since the End of Apartheid (Overlook Press; 2011) 702 pages; a history since 1994
  • Joyce, Peter. The Making of a Nation South Africa's Road to Freedom, Zebra Press, 2004, ISBN 978-1-77007-312-8
  • Le Cordeur, Basil Alexander. The War of the Axe, 1847: Correspondence between the governor of the Cape Colony, Sir Henry Pottinger, and the commander of the British forces at the Cape, Sir George Berkeley, and others. Brenthurst Press. 1981. 287 pages. ISBN 0-909079-14-5.
  • Mabin, Alan. Recession and its aftermath: The Cape Colony in the eighteen eighties. University of the Witwatersrand, African Studies Institute. 1983. 27 pages.
  • Meiring, Hannes. Early Johannesburg, Its Buildings and People, Human & Rousseau, 1986, 143 pages, ISBN 0-7981-1456-8
  • Mitchell, Laura. Belongings: Property, Family, and Identity in Colonial South Africa: An Exploration of Frontiers, 1725-c. 1830. Columbia University Press, 2008. Gutenberg-e.org
  • Pakenham, Thomas. The Boer War, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London 1979, ISBN 9780349104669
  • Rosenthal, Eric. Gold! Gold! Gold! The Johannesburg Gold Rush, AD. Donker, 1970, ISBN 0-949937-64-9
  • Ross, Robert, and David Anderson. Status and Respectability in the Cape Colony, 1750–1870 : A Tragedy of Manners. Cambridge University Press. 1999. 220 pages. ISBN 0-521-62122-4.
  • Ross, Robert, Anne Kelk Mager and Bill Nasson, eds. The Cambridge History of South Africa: Volume 2 since 1885 (2011) excerpt
  • Thompson, Leonard. A History of South Africa, Third Edition. Yale University Press. 2001. 384 pages. ISBN 0-300-08776-4.
  • Tomlinson, Richard, et al. Emerging Johannesburg: Perspectives on the Postapartheid City. 2003. 336 pages. ISBN 0-415-93559-8.
  • Welsh, Frank. South Africa: A Narrative History. Kodansha America. 1 February 1999. 606 pages. ISBN 1-56836-258-7.
  • Worden, Nigel. Making of Modern South Africa: Conquest, Segregation and Apartheid. 2000. 194 pages. ISBN 0-631-21661-8.

VOC period

[edit]
  • Barend-van Haeften, Marijke; Paasman, Bert: De Kaap: Goede Hoop halverwege Indië. Bloemlezing van Kaapteksten uit de Compagnietijd. (Hilversum: Verloren, 2003)
  • Biewenga, A.: De Kaap de Goede Hoop: Een Nederlandse Vestigingskolonie, 1680–1730. (Amsterdam: Promotheus and Bert Bakker, 1999)
  • Botha, Colin Graham: The French Refugees at the Cape. (1919; reprint, Cape Town: C. Struik, 1970)
  • Bryer, Lynne; Theron, Francois: The Huguenot Heritage: The Story of the Huguenots at the Cape. (Diep River, Chameleon Press, 1987)
  • Coertzen, Pieter: Die Hugenote van Suid Afrika, 1688–1988. (Cape Town: Tafelberg Publishers Limited, 1988)
  • Delmas, Adrien, 'The Role of Writing in the First Steps of the Colony: A Short Enquiry in the Journal of Jan van Riebeeck, 1652–1662', in Contingent Lives: Social Identity and Material Culture in the VOC World, ed. Nigel Worden (Cape Town: Royal Netherlands Embassy, 2007)
  • Elphick, Richard; Giliomee, Hermann (eds.): The Shaping of South African Society, 1652–1840. (Wesleyan University Press, 1989, ISBN 978-0819562111)
  • Fourie, J.; Boshoff, W. (2008). 'Explaining the Ship Traffic Fluctuations in the Early Cape Settlement: 1652–1793', South African Journal of Economic History, 23 (2008), pp. 1–27.
  • Fourie, J.; Boshoff, W. (2010). 'The significance of the Cape trade route to economic activity in the Cape Colony: a medium-term business cycle analysis', European Review of Economic History, 14 (2010), pp. 469–503.
  • Fourie, J. (2014). 'The quantitative Cape: A review of the new historiography of the Dutch Cape Colony', South African Historical Journal 66.1, 2014, pp. 142–168.
  • Franken, J. L. N.: Die Hugenote aan die Kaap. (Pretoria: Die Staatsdrukker, 1978)
  • Gerstner, Jonathan Neil: The Thousand Generation Covenant: Dutch Reformed Covenant Theology and Group Identity in Colonial South Africa, 1652–1814. (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1991)
  • Godée Molsbergen, E.C.: Reizen in Zuid-Afrika in de Hollandse tijd: eerste deel, Tochten naar het noorden, 1652–1686. ('s-Gravenhage: Martinus Nijhoff, 1976)
  • Godée Molsbergen, E.C.: Reizen in Zuid-Afrika in de Hollandse tijd: tweede deel, Tochten naar het noorden, 1686–1806. ('s-Gravenhage: Martinus Nijhoff, 1976)
  • Godée Molsbergen, E.C.: Jan van Riebeeck en zijn tijd. Een stuk zeventiende-eeuws Oost-Indië [Jan van Riebeeck and his times: A piece of seventeenth-century East Indies]. (Amsterdam: P. N. Van Kampen en Zoon, 1937)
  • Groenewald, Gerald: Een Dienstig Inwoonder: Entrepreneurs, Social Capital and Identity in Cape Town, c. 1720–1750. South African Historical Journal, 59, 1(2007), pp. 126–152
  • Guelke, Leonard (1976). "Frontier Settlement in Early Dutch South Africa,". (Annals of the Association of American Geographers 66, no. 1 (March 1976): 25–42)
  • Huigen, Siegfried: Knowledge and Colonialism: Eighteenth-Century Travellers in South Africa. (Leiden: Brill, 2009, pp. xii + 273 pp)
  • Hunt, John: Dutch South Africa: Early Settlers at the Cape, 1652–1708. (Leicester, UK: Matador, 2005, ISBN 978-1904744955)
  • Johnson, David: Imagining the Cape Colony: History, Literature and the South African Nation. (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2012)
  • Lucas, Gavin: An Archaeology of Colonial Identity: Power and Material Culture in the Dwars Valley, South Africa. (New York: Springer, 2006)
  • Marais, J.S.: The Cape Coloured People, 1652–1937. (1939; reprint, Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University Press, 1968)
  • Mitchell, L.J.: Belongings: Property and Identity in Colonial South Africa, an Exploration of Frontiers, 1725–c. 1830. (New York: Columbia University Press, 2009, pp. xv + 232)
  • Newton-King, Susan: Masters and Servants on the Cape Eastern Frontier, 1760–1803. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999)
  • Raven-Hart, Rowland (ed.): Cape Good Hope, 1652–1702: The First Fifty Years of Dutch Colonisation as Seen by Callers [2 vols]. (Cape Town: A.A.Balkema, 1971)
  • Schoeman, Karel: Early Slavery at the Cape of Good Hope, 1652–1717. (Pretoria: Protea Book House, 2007)
  • Schoeman, Karel: Portrait of a Slave Society: The Cape of Good Hope, 1717–1795. (Pretoria: Protea Boekhuis, 2012)
  • Shell, Robert: Children of Bondage: A Social History of the Slave Society at the Cape of Good Hope, 1652–1838. (Hanover, Conn.; Wesleya University Press, 1994)
  • Singh, Daleep: From Dutch South Africa to Republic of South Africa, 1652–1994. The Story of Three and a Half Centuries of Imperialism. (New Delhi: Allied Publishers, 2010)
  • Sleigh, Dan: Die Buiteposte: VOC-buiteposte onder Kaapse Bestuur, 1652–1795. (Pretoria: HAUM, 1993)
  • Stapleton, Timothy J.: A Military History of South Africa: From the Dutch-Khoi Wars to the End of Apartheid. (Santa Barbara, CA.: Praeger, 2010)
  • Terreblanche, Sampie: A History of Inequality in South Africa, 1652–2002. (Pietermaritzburg: University of Natal Press, 2002)
  • Theal, George McCall: History of South Africa under the Administration of the Dutch East India Company, 1652 to 1795. Nabu Press, 2010, 474pp
  • Theal, George McCall: History of the Boers in South Africa; Or, the Wanderings and Wars of the Emigrant Farmers from Their Leaving the Cape Colony to the Acknowledgment of Their Independence by Great Britain. (Greenwood Press, 1970, ISBN 0-8371-1661-9)
  • Twidle, Hedley (2013). Writing the Company: From VOC Daghregister to Sleigh's Eilande, South African Historical Journal 65(1) (2013): 125–52.
  • Valentijn, Francois: Description of the Cape of Good Hope with Matters Concerning It. (Amsterdam, 1726). [Edited and annotated by Prof. P. Serton, Maj. B. Raven-Hart, Dr. W. J. de Kock.]
  • Van der Merwe, P. J. : The Migrant Farmer in the History of the Cape Colony, 1657–1842. Translated from the Dutch by Roger B. Beck. (Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press, 1995)
  • Van Duin, Pieter; Ross, Robert: The Economy of the Cape Colony in the Eighteenth Century. (Leiden: Centre for the History of European Expansion, 1987, pp. viii + 166)
  • Van Riebeeck, Jan: 1652–1662, Daghregister gehouden by den oppercoopman Jan Anthonisz van Riebeeck. In Bosman, D.B. & B. Thorn (eds). Daghregister Gehouden by den Oppercoopman Jan Anthonisz van Riebeeck, 3 vols. [Treated as a sequence of eleven manuscripts]. (Cape Town: Balkema, 1952–1957)
  • Verstegen, M.: De Indische Zeeherberg, De stichting van Zuid-Afrika door de VOC. (Zaltbommel, 2001)
  • Viljoen, Russel: Jan Paerl: A Khoikhoi in Cape Colonial Society, 1761–1851. (Boston, MA: Brill, 2006, pp. xviii + 213)
  • Viljoen, Russel S. (1995). "Disease and Society: VOC Cape Town, Its People, and the Smallpox Epidemics of 1713, 1755, and 1767," Kleio 27
  • Welch, Sidney: Portuguese and Dutch in South Africa, 1641–1806. (Cape Town: Juta Press, 1951)
  • Worden, Nigel (1985). Slavery in Dutch South Africa. Cambridge University Press. pp. xiii, 207. ISBN 9780521258753.
  • Worden, Nigel; van Heyningen, Elizabeth; Bickford-Smith, Vivian (1998). Cape Town: The Making of a City. New Africa Books. ISBN 9780864866561.
  • Worden, Nigel; Groenewald, G., eds. (2005). Trials of Slavery: Selected Documents Concerning Slaves from the Criminal Records of the Council of Justice at the Cape of Good Hope, 1705–1794. Cape Town: Van Riebeeck Society for the Publication of South African Historical Documents.
  • Worden, Nigel (2007). Contingent Lives: Social Identity and Material Culture in the VOC World. University of Cape Town. p. vi, 612. ISBN 9780620385091.
  • Worden, Nigel (2007). Ray, Himanshu Prabha; Alpers, Edward A. (eds.). VOC Cape Town as an Indian Ocean Port. Oxford University Press. pp. 142–162. ISBN 9780195677058. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Worden, Nigel (2007). "New Approaches to VOC History in South Africa". South African Historical Journal. 59 (1): 3–18. doi:10.1080/02582470709464770. S2CID 145747452.
  • Worden, Nigel (2010). "After Race and Class: Recent Trends in the Historiography of Early Colonial Cape Society". South African Historical Journal. 62 (3): 589–602. doi:10.1080/02582473.2010.519904. hdl:11427/28195. S2CID 161070564.
  • Worden, Nigel, ed. (2012). Cape Town between East and West: Social Identities in a Dutch Colonial Town. Jacana Media. p. xxii, 264. ISBN 9781431402922.
  • Worden, Nigel (2014). "Cape Slaves in the Paper Empire of the VOC". Kronos. 40 (1): 23–44.
  • Worden, Nigel (2016). "Indian Ocean Slaves in Cape Town, 1695–1807". Journal of Southern African Studies. 42 (3): 389–408. doi:10.1080/03057070.2016.1171554. S2CID 147980814.
[edit]