Khoikhoi (pastoralists) - mostly killed in smallpox outbreak or absorbed into coloured population
San (hunters) - forced to retreat (Bantu) from early 17th century; mainly in Botswana today
Bantu Peoples
linguistic group; 'ntu' =human being; found in southern two thirds of Africa
in SA - Nguni, Sotho, Venda, Tonga
Peoples and 'homelands'
Nguni - Zulu (Kwazulu),Xhosa (Ciskei and Transkei) Swazi (KaNgwane), South Ndebele (KwaNdebele)
Zulu military conquest in mid 19th century known as mfecane; expaned absorbing groups; fluid ethnicity
Buthelezi - leader of Inkatha Freedom Party; draws on myths of Zulu military history to mobilise
Jacob Zuma is Zulu
Nguni staple crop maize, avoid fish
Sotho - North Sotho (Lebowa), South Sotho (QwaQwa), Tswana (Bophuthatswana)
traditionally (19th C) lived between Orange River and Limpopo
Venda (Vanda)
south of Limpopo in NE of country
Tsonga - Shangaan (Gazankulu)
Structures
over 600 tribal authorities - how to incorporate these into democracy?
structures fluid: strangers accepted, similarities in symbolism, rituals, law
77% of total pop of 45m; herders and cultivators esp cattle; staple crop mize; ancient migration from east Africa; Zulu expansion led to 'mfecane'
'mfecane' = warfare in early 19th century; pressure on the European's 'eastern front'; Ndebele flee into 'Rhodesia'
Dutch/Boers/Afrikaners
1652 - Jan van Riebeck founded Dutch East India company refreshment station
bitter almond hedge; first attempt at apartheid (between Dutch and Khoikhoi) overcome by economic pressures
French Huguenots 1688 - 1700
protestant refugees
Germans in 18th century
The Great Trek in 1830s/40s north eastwrds away from British control in the Cape (angered by anti slavery movement); aim to get to Natal
Boer War 1899 - 1902
nationalism based on memory of suffering under British rule; death of 26,000 Boers in concentration camp; The Great Trek; Afrikaaner language; Dutch Reform Church; divine intervention in Battle of Blood River
expressed through National Party (founded 1915; governed 1948 - 1994; disbanded 2005 under name of New National Party) & Herstigte Natiosale Party (ultra conservative)
British
1795: French revolutionary armies invaded Holland; Britain occupied the Cape by arrangement with the Dutch King
1802 - 5: Cape restored to Dutch Republic
1805: Britain reoccupied the Cape and retained it until the Act of Union in 1910
1820: settlers in Eastern Cape; intended to secure eastern frontier; approx 5,000; large compared to existing population
1848 1851: Byrne settlers in Natal (J.C. Byrne & Co.); British character in Natal
SA became essentially independent within British Commonwealth post 1910
Coloured People
slave population 1652 - 1672: 75% of children born to slave women had European fathers
slaves brought from West Africa, Mozambique, Dutch East Indies from 1650s
import ended 1807 - 21
emancipation 1839 : 39,000 mostly in Cape Town and hinterland
1685: intercourse with slave women prohibited but continued esp w soldiers and sailors
children of mixed unions became a people apart from late 18th C; does not refer to white - bantu mix (bantu not in the area)
Khoikhoi also important contributors to group; san less so
slave descendants predominant esp in W Cape - 85% of coloureds
mostly in the Cape; 'Cape coloureds'
Indians
1860 - 1917: 140,000 inc 10% 'passenger' migrants (restricted from 1896) who paid their own passage
indentured labour; brought to Natal; sugar plantations; cotton; later railways; N Natal coal mines, servants
most stayed
indentured = min. 25 women per 100 men whereas 'passenger' more like 50:50; 30% of contemporary Indians descended from 'passengers'
movement controlled; excluded from OFC and N Natal until 1985; 80% in Natal today
1950 Census - only on Indian in OFC!
smallest group; over 80% live in KwaZulu Natal today
1820 - 1860: only 40,000 of all nationalities emigrated tp SA
labour was performed by slaves/coloureds/blacks >> only room for the employing class