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
- 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
In this, the third edition of my history of South Africa before the conquest of the Cape Colony by Great Britain in September 1795, I have added so largely to the information previously given concerning the Bushmen, or the aborigines of the country, the Hottentots, and particularly the Bantu immigrants, that I think it right to alter the old title by inserting the words “and Ethnography” in it.
Each volume, as before, covers a distinct period, and may therefore be regarded to some extent as a complete work of itself. Thus, the one in the reader's hands deals with the Portuguese in South Africa before the close of the seventeenth century, volume ii is devoted to an account of the Dutch colony in its early days, and volume iii brings the whole down to the fall of the Netherlands East India Company and the substitution of the British for the Dutch flag on the castle of Good Hope.
The history of South Africa after the British conquest forms a separate work, and consists of five volumes, including one just sent to the press.
Before I entered the civil service of the Cape Colony in 1877 I had been engaged for many years in studying the traditions, habits, and power of thought of the Bantu tribes of the south-eastern coast, and the knowledge gained thereby led, on the outbreak of the ninth war with the Xosas, to my being requested by Governor Sir Bartle Frere to fill a post then considered to be one of considerable difficulty.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1907