Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- MAPS AND PLATES
- CHAPTER I THE BUSHMEN
- CHAPTER II THE HOTTENTOTS
- CHAPTER III THE BANTU
- CHAPTER IV DESCRIPTION OF THE BANTU—(continued)
- CHAPTER V DESCRIPTION OF THE BANTU—(continued)
- CHAPTER VI SPECIMENS OF BANTU FOLKLORE
- CHAPTER VII DESCRIPTION OF THE BANTU—(continued)
- CHAPTER VIII ARAB AND PERSIAN SETTLEMENTS IN SOUTH-EASTERN AFRICA
- CHAPTER IX DISCOVERY OF AN OCEAN ROUTE TO INDIA
- CHAPTER X SUCCEEDING VOYAGES AND CONQUESTS
- CHAPTER XI OCCUPATION OF SOFALA AND MOZAMBIQUE
- CHAPTER XII INTERCOURSE OF THE PORTUGUESE WITH THE BANTU
- CHAPTER XIII DISASTROUS EXPEDITIONS UNDER BARRETO AND HOMEM
- CHAPTER XIV EVENTS TO THE CLOSE OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY
- CHAPTER XV KNOWLEDGE DERIVED FROM SHIPWRECKS
- CHAPTER XIV APPEARANCE OF RIVALS IN THE EASTERN SEAS
- CHAPTER XVII PROCEEDINGS OF THE DUTCH AND ENGLISH
- CHAPTER XVIII FRUITLESS SEARCH FOR SILVER MINES
- CHAPTER XIX EVENTS OF INTEREST FROM 1628 TO 1652
- CHAPTER XX WEAKNESS OF PORTUGUESE RULE IN SOUTH AFRICA
- Plate section
CHAPTER VIII - ARAB AND PERSIAN SETTLEMENTS IN SOUTH-EASTERN AFRICA
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- MAPS AND PLATES
- CHAPTER I THE BUSHMEN
- CHAPTER II THE HOTTENTOTS
- CHAPTER III THE BANTU
- CHAPTER IV DESCRIPTION OF THE BANTU—(continued)
- CHAPTER V DESCRIPTION OF THE BANTU—(continued)
- CHAPTER VI SPECIMENS OF BANTU FOLKLORE
- CHAPTER VII DESCRIPTION OF THE BANTU—(continued)
- CHAPTER VIII ARAB AND PERSIAN SETTLEMENTS IN SOUTH-EASTERN AFRICA
- CHAPTER IX DISCOVERY OF AN OCEAN ROUTE TO INDIA
- CHAPTER X SUCCEEDING VOYAGES AND CONQUESTS
- CHAPTER XI OCCUPATION OF SOFALA AND MOZAMBIQUE
- CHAPTER XII INTERCOURSE OF THE PORTUGUESE WITH THE BANTU
- CHAPTER XIII DISASTROUS EXPEDITIONS UNDER BARRETO AND HOMEM
- CHAPTER XIV EVENTS TO THE CLOSE OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY
- CHAPTER XV KNOWLEDGE DERIVED FROM SHIPWRECKS
- CHAPTER XIV APPEARANCE OF RIVALS IN THE EASTERN SEAS
- CHAPTER XVII PROCEEDINGS OF THE DUTCH AND ENGLISH
- CHAPTER XVIII FRUITLESS SEARCH FOR SILVER MINES
- CHAPTER XIX EVENTS OF INTEREST FROM 1628 TO 1652
- CHAPTER XX WEAKNESS OF PORTUGUESE RULE IN SOUTH AFRICA
- Plate section
Summary
At some unknown period in the past the territory between the Zambesi and Limpopo rivers was occupied by people more advanced in knowledge than the Bantu who were found living there at the beginning of the sixteenth century. Their nationality is uncertain, and nearly everything connected with them is involved in mystery. They were miners, and were skilled in looking for gold-bearing reefs and in working them when found. It is not impossible, though it is only a conjecture of some writers, that traders from the great commercial city of Tyre on the eastern shore of the Mediterranean sea visited them, and that in holy scripture an account of those visits is given. The conditions mentioned of the fleets that went down the Red sea to Ophir in the time of Solomon are not inapplicable to voyages to the mouths of the Zambesi or to Sofala, and the articles—gold, silver, precious stones, almug trees, ivory, apes, and peacocks—with which they returned are all found in South-Eastern Africa, if by almug trees ebony or some other very hard wood is meant, by precious stones pearls, and by peacocks the bustards that to-day are called wilde pauwen (wild peacocks) by the Dutch colonists.
The object that brought the first traders to South Africa can only be conjectured. They may have come in search of ivory, which from very early times was a valuable article of commerce, and the fact that elephants were plentiful in the country may have been ascertained by hunters pushing their way down from the north.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1907