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16 - Untapped Sources: Slave Exports from Southern and Central Namibia up to c. 1850

from Part Three - The Interior

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2019

Jan-Bart Gewald
Affiliation:
An historian who studied at Rhodes University. He is currently completing a Ph.D. at Leiden University in the Netherlands on the socio-economic history of the Herero between 1890 and 1920.
Carolyn Hamilton
Affiliation:
University of Cape Town
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Summary

This essay was written as a reaction to the attempts to prescribe the ‘Mfecane’ as a historiographical panacea for Namibian history. Until the mid-1980s Namibia's unique historiography - the idea that Namibian history did not exist prior to the German and South African occupations - served to shield it from mfecane mythology. However as historians have sought to develop an ‘authentic African’ Namibian history, they have begun taking nips of this addictive brew. Of late historians have had Kololo or other ‘Zulu-ised’ hordes zigzagging out of the southern African highveld and attacking Herero settlements in western Botswana and eastern Namibia.

At present I do not dispute that these attacks took place for there is no question that central and southern Namibia were shaken up in the early nineteenth century. I do, however, dispute the idea of the mfecane as the cause of all these disturbances. The perspectives robs Namibia of its history, and might, as was the case with South African history, spawn decades of informationless history, obscuring details of Namibia's past. In no way do I wish to argue that Namibian history was formed within a unique area encapsulating present-day Namibia, untouched by events in surrounding areas. Jonker Afrikaner did not suddenly materialise out of nowhere. Namibian history is inextricably linked with that of the rest of southern Africa and the world; the same historical processes operating in the rest of Africa operated in Namibia. It would, however, be wrong to sully Namibian history with the myths of the mfecane. Instead this essay falls within the stream of thought which argues that the expulsion of the Oorlam into present-day Namibia and the raiding for cattle, goods and slaves for the Cape and Atlantic trade were the prime causes for the instability in central and southern Namibia in the early nineteenth century.

It is a generally accepted historical thesis that no slaving for the transatlantic or Cape colonial trade ever occurred in precolonial central and southern Namibia.

Type
Chapter
Information
Mfecane Aftermath
Reconstructive Debates in Southern African History
, pp. 417 - 436
Publisher: Wits University Press
Print publication year: 1995

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