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 III - THE BANTU
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
THE DARK-SKINNED PEOPLE TERMED BY EUROPEANS BANTU.
At a period that may or may not be later than the advent of the Hottentots, offshoots of the dark-skinned race now known to Europeans as the Bantu began to make their way into Africa south of the Zambesi. It is quite impossible to affix a date to any of the early migrations, and it is by no means certain that the most degraded of the dark-skinned people now occupying the Kalahari desert and parts of the territory some distance to the eastward did not come down from the north before the Hottentots reached Table Bay. The large tribes of our time, however, to a certainty migrated to South Africa at a more recent date, when the Hottentots were in possession of at least the south-western and the greater part of the southern coast.
After the first pioneers found their way across the Zambesi and Kunene rivers, bands were constantly coming down until the middle of the eighteenth century of our era, but even now, though they have multiplied at an amazing rate since they have been under the protection of Europeans, the whole number in Africa south of those rivers does not exceed six or seven millions, who represent all the offshoots from the great mass of the race in the central zone of the continent.
The original home or birthplace of this section of the human family is unknown: some inquirers believe it to have been in the continent which its widespread branches now so largely occupy, others that it was in some distant eastern land.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1907