A SHORT HISTORY OF SOUTH AFRICA
If the history of
South Africa is in large part one of increasing racial divisiveness, today it
can also be seen as the story of – eventually – a journey through massive
obstacles towards the creation, from tremendous diversity, of a single nation
whose dream of unity and common purpose is now capable of realisation.
THE EARLIEST PEOPLE
The earliest
representatives of South Africa's diversity – at least the earliest we can name
– were the San and Khoekhoe peoples (otherwise known individually as the
Bushmen and Hottentots or Khoikhoi; collectively called the Khoisan). Both were
resident in the southern tip of the continent for thousands of years before its
written history began with the arrival of European seafarers.
And before that,
modern human beings had lived here for more than 100 000 years – indeed,
the country is an archaeological treasure chest. The hunter-gatherer San ranged widely over the area; the
pastoral Khoekhoe lived in those comparatively well-watered areas, chiefly
along the southern and western coastal strips, where adequate grazing was to be
found. So it was with the latter that the early European settlers first came
into contact – much to the disadvantage of the Khoekhoe.
As a result of
diseases such as smallpox imported by the Europeans, of some assimilation with
the settlers and especially with the slaves who were to arrive in later years,
and of some straightforward extermination, the Khoekhoe have effectively
disappeared as an identifiable group.
Other long-term
inhabitants of the area that was to become South Africa were the Bantu-speaking
people who had moved into the north-eastern and eastern regions from the north,
starting at least many hundreds of years before the arrival of the Europeans.
The Thulamela site
in the northern Kruger National Park is estimated to have been first occupied
in the 13th century. The ruins of Mapungubwe, where artefacts from as far away
as China have been found, are the remains of a large trading settlement thought
to stretch back to the 12th century. Agro-pastoralists, these people brought
with them an Iron Age culture and sophisticated socio-political systems.
SETTLERS AND
SLAVES
Their existence was
of little import to Jan van Riebeeck and the 90 men who landed with him in 1652
at the Cape of Good Hope, under instructions by the Dutch East India Company to
build a fort and develop a vegetable garden for the benefit of ships on the
Eastern trade route.
Their relationship
with the Khoekhoe was initially one of bartering, but a mutual animosity
developed over issues such as cattle theft – and, no doubt, the growing
suspicion on the part of the Khoekhoe that Van Riebeeck's outpost was becoming
a threat to them.
Perhaps the first
sign that the threat was to be realised came in 1657 when nine men, released
from their contracts, were given land to farm. In the same year the first
slaves were imported. By the time Van Riebeeck left in 1662, 250 white people
lived in what was beginning to look like a developing colony.
Later governors of
the Cape Colony encouraged immigration, and in the early 1700s independent
farmers called trekboers began to push north and east. Inevitably, the Khoisan
started literally losing ground, in addition to being pressed by difficult
circumstances into service for the colonists.
The descendants of some of the Khoisan, slaves from elsewhere
in Africa and the East, and white colonists formed the basis of the mixed-race
group now known as "coloured". It is noteworthy that the slaves from
the East brought a potent new ingredient to South Africa's racial and cultural
mix, especially with their religion of Islam.
Read more: http://www.southafrica.info/about/history/history.htm#.WAkM7DyKTIU#ixzz4NeSCzp9Y
Read more: http://www.southafrica.info/about/history/history.htm#.WAkM7DyKTIU#ixzz4NeSCzp9Y
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