South African History [The British Colonial Era] - Part 2

In 1795 the British occupied the Cape as apolitics. The result was that frontier warfare
strategic base against the French, controlling thebecame endemic through much of the 19th
sea route to the East.After a brief reversion tocentury, during which Xhosa war leaders such as
the Dutch in the course of the Napoleonic wars, itChief Maqoma became heroic figures to their
was retaken in 1806 and kept by Britain in thepeople.By the mid-1800s, British settlers of similar
post-war settlement of territorial claims. Thepersuasion were to be found in Natal. They too
closed and regulated economic system of thecalled for imperial expansion in support of their
Dutch period was swept away as the Capeland claims and trading enterprises.Meanwhile large
Colony was integrated into the dynamicnumbers of the original colonists, the Boers, were
international trading empire of industrializinggreatly extending white settlement beyond the
Britain.A crucial new element was evangelicalism,Cape's borders to the north in the movement
brought to the Cape by Protestant missionaries.that became known as the Great Trek in the
The evangelicals believed in the liberating effect ofmid-1830s. Alienated by British liberalism, and with
'free' labor and in the 'civilizing mission' of Britishtheir economic enterprise usurped by British
imperialism. They were convinced that indigenoussettlers, several thousand Boers from the interior
peoples could be fully assimilated into Europeandistricts, accompanied by a number of Khoisan
Christian culture, once the shackles of oppressionservants, began a series of migrations
had been removed.The most importantnorthwards. They moved to the Highveld and
representative of the mission movement in SouthNatal, skirting the great concentrations of black
Africa was Dr. John Philip, who arrived asfarmers on the way by taking advantage of the
superintendent of the London Missionary Societyareas disrupted during the mfecane.When the
in 1819. His campaign on behalf of the oppressedBritish, who were concerned about controlling the
Khoisan coincided with a high point in officialtraffic through Port Natal (Durban), annexed the
sympathy for philanthropic concerns.One resultterritory of Natal in 1843, those emigrant Boers
was Ordinance 50 of 1828, which guaranteedwho had hoped to settle there returned inland.The
equal civil rights for 'people of co lour' within theVoortrekkers (as they were later called)
colony and freed them from legal discrimination.Atcoalesced in two land-locked republics, the South
the same time, a powerful anti-slaveryAfrican Republic (Transvaal) and the Orange Free
movement in Britain promoted a series ofState. There, the principles of racially exclusive
ameliorative measures, imposed on the colonies incitizenship were absolute, despite the trekkers'
the 1820s, and the proclamation of emancipation,reliance on black labor. With limited coercive
which came into force in 1834. The slaves werepower, the Boer communities had to establish
subjected to a four-year period of 'apprenticeship'relations and develop alliances with some black
with their former owners on the grounds thatchiefdoms, neutralizing those who obstructed their
they must be prepared for freedom, which cameintrusion or who posed a threat to their
on 1 December 1838.Although slavery hadsecurity.Only after the mineral discoveries of the
become less profitable because of a depression inlate 1800s did the balance of power swing
the wine industry, Cape slave-owners rallied todecisively towards the colonists. The Boer
oppose emancipation.The compensation money,republics then took on the trappings of real
which the British treasury paid out to sweetenstatehood and imposed their authority within the
the pill, injected unprecedented liquidity into theterritorial borders that they had notionally claimed
stagnant local economy.This brought a spurt offor themselves.The Colony of Natal, situated to
company formation, such as banks and insurancethe south of the mighty Zulu State, developed
companies, as well as a surge of investment inalong very different lines from the original colony
land and wool sheep in the drier regions of theof settlement, the Cape.The size of the black
colony in the late 1830s. Wool became a staplepopulation left no room for the assimilationist
export on which the Cape economy dependedvision of race domination embraced in the Cape.
for its further development in the middle decadesChiefdoms consisting mainly of refugee groups in
of the century.For the ex-slaves, as for thethe aftermath of the mfecane were persuaded
Khoisan servants, the reality of freedom wasto accept colonial protection in return for reserved
very different from the promise. As theland and the freedom to govern themselves in
wage-based economy developed, they remainedaccordance with their own customs. These
a dispossessed and exploited element in thechiefdoms were established in the heart of an
population, with little opportunity to escape theirexpanding colonial territory.Natal developed a
servile lot.Increasingly, they were lumped togethersystem of political and legal dualism, whereby
as the coloured people, a group which included thechiefly rule was entrenched and customary law
descendants of unions between indigenous andwas codified. Although exemptions from
European peoples, and a substantial Muslimcustomary law could be granted to the educated
minority who became known as the 'Cape Malays'products of the missions, in practice they were
(misleadingly, as they mostly came from therare. Urban residence was strictly controlled and
Indonesian archipelago).The coloured people werepolitical rights outside the reserves were
discriminated against on account of theireffectively limited to whites. Natal's system is
working-class status as well as their racial identity.widely regarded as having provided a model for
Among the poor, especially in and around Capethe segregationism of the 20th century.Natal's
Town, there continued to be a great deal of racialeconomy was boosted by the development of
mixing and intermarriage throughout the 1800s.Insugar plantations in the subtropical coastal
1820, several thousand British settlers, who werelowlands. Indian-indentured laborers were imported
swept up by a scheme to relieve Britain of itsfrom 1860 to work the plantations, and many
unemployed, were placed in the eastern CapeIndian traders and market gardeners
frontier zone as a buffer against the Xhosafollowed.These Indians, who were segregated and
chiefdoms.The vision of a dense settlement ofdiscriminated against from the start, became a
small farmers was, however, ill-conceived andfurther important element in South Africa's
many of the settlers became artisans andpopulation. It was in South Africa that Mohandas
traders. The more successful became anGandhi refined from the mid-1890s the techniques
entrepreneurial class of merchants, large-scaleof passive resistance, which he later effectively
sheep farmers and speculators with an insatiablepractised in India. Although Indians gradually
demand for land.Some became fiercemoved into the Transvaal and elsewhere, they
warmongers, who pressed for the militaryremain concentrated mainly in Natal.In 1853, the
dispossession of the chiefdoms. They covetedCape Colony was granted a representative
Xhosa land and welcomed the prospect of warlegislature in keeping with British policy, followed in
involving large-scale military expenditure by the1872 by self-government. The franchise was
imperial authorities.The Xhosa engaged in raiding asformally non-racial but also based on income and
a means of asserting their prior claims to the land.property qualifications.
Racial paranoia became integral to white frontier