Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Glossary
- Maps
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 ‘The dog of the Boers’? Moiloa II of the baHurutshe c.1795–1875
- Chapter 2 The South African War and its aftermath 1899–1908
- Chapter 3 Land, leaders and dissent 1900–1940
- Chapter 4 ‘Away in the locations’: Life in the Bechuanaland Reserves 1910–1958
- Chapter 5 Rural resistance: The baHurutshe revolt of 1957–58
- Chapter 6 ‘Blunting the prickly pear’: Bophuthatswana and its consequences 1977–1994
- Chapter 7 Modernity in the bushveld: Mining, national parks and casinos
- Conclusion
- Bibliography and sources
- Index
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 April 2018
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Glossary
- Maps
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 ‘The dog of the Boers’? Moiloa II of the baHurutshe c.1795–1875
- Chapter 2 The South African War and its aftermath 1899–1908
- Chapter 3 Land, leaders and dissent 1900–1940
- Chapter 4 ‘Away in the locations’: Life in the Bechuanaland Reserves 1910–1958
- Chapter 5 Rural resistance: The baHurutshe revolt of 1957–58
- Chapter 6 ‘Blunting the prickly pear’: Bophuthatswana and its consequences 1977–1994
- Chapter 7 Modernity in the bushveld: Mining, national parks and casinos
- Conclusion
- Bibliography and sources
- Index
Summary
This book deals with aspects of the history of the black, predominantly Setswana-speaking population of today's North West Province of South Africa. It covers the period from approximately1840, with the beginning of settler and colonial domination, to the present. It is not a comprehensive account but, rather, a number of interrelated chapters on different topics which chart the various political and economic forces that have shaped the fortunes of communities and personalities in the province.
The North West Province is a recent geographical construct that arose out of the Constitution underpinning the new democratic dispensation in 1994. It comprises parts of the former western Transvaal, most of the former homeland of Bophuthatswana, and the northern reaches of the Cape Colony, later Cape Province (see Map 1). In one sense, the construct is not entirely artificial, for its inhabitants broadly comprise two culturally and politically homogeneous units – Setswana-speakers and Afrikaners – who have experienced close to 200 years of contact with one another. This is not to suggest that both societies were sealed off from outside influences. Both had extensive contact with their surrounding inhabitants and there was a constant infusion of other people into this region over a long period of time. Both societies interacted with British colonialism and bore the imprint of that association.
The history of the baTswana in South Africa has by no means been neglected. The early arrival of missionaries, traders and hunters from south of the Orange River, and the settlement of the Boers on the western highveld have ensured that many aspects of their societies were written down, providing a rich source of information for later scholars.
Generally speaking, however, the prominent Tswana personalities are less well-known and respected than leading figures among other African societies in South Africa such as the amaZulu, amaXhosa and baPedi, and some of their contemporaries in Botswana. Of course there are exceptions. Silas Modiri Molema wrote an excellent account of the life of Montshiwa of the Ratshidi baRolong, surely one of the most outstanding African figures of the nineteenth century. Kevin Shillington published his important doctoral thesis on the colonisation of what he terms the Southern Tswana (mainly the baTlhaping, baTlharo and baRolong) in 1986, putting them on the map.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Land, Chiefs, MiningSouth Africa's North West Province Since 1840, pp. 1 - 15Publisher: Wits University PressPrint publication year: 2014