Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CHAPTER XLIV HENDRIK SWELLENGREBEL, GOVERNOR, (continued)
- CHAPTER XLV RYK TULBAGH, GOVERNOR, ASSUMED OFFICE 27TH FEBRUARY 1751, DIED 11TH AUGUST 1771
- CHAPTER XLVI RYK TULBAGH, GOVERNOR, (continued)
- CHAPTER XLVII HISTORY OF THE XOSA TRIBE
- CHAPTER XLVIII JOACHIM VAN PLETTENBERG, FISCAL AND SECUNDE, ACTING GOVERNOR, 12TH AUGUST 1771 TO 18TH MAY 1774; GOVERNOR, INSTALLED 18TH MAY 1774, RETIRED 14TH FEBRUARY 1785
- CHAPTER XLIX JOACHIM VAN PLETTENBERG, GOVERNOR, (continued)
- CHAPTER L JOACHIM VAN PLETTENBERG, GOVERNOR, (continued)
- CHAPTER LI CORNELIS JACOB VAN DE GRAAFF, GOVERNOR, INSTALLED 14TH FEBRUARY 1785, LEFT SOUTH AFRICA 24TH JUNE 1791
- CHAPTER LII JOHAN ISAAC RHENIUS, SECUNDE, ACTING GOVERNOR, 24TH JUNE 1791 TO 3RD JULY 1792
- CHAPTER LIII SEBASTIAAN CORNELIS NEDERBURGH AND SIMON HENDRIK FRYKENIUS, COMMISSIONERS-GENERAL,—(continued)
- CHAPTER LIV ABRAHAM JOSIAS SLUYSKEN, COMMISSIONER-GENERAL, FROM 2ND SEPTEMBER 1793 to 16TH SEPTEMBER 1795
- CHAPTER LV ABRAHAM JOSIAS SLUYSKEN, COMMISSIONER-GENERAL,—(continued)
- CHAPTER LVI CONDITION OF THE EUROPEANS IN THE CAPE COLONY AT THE TIME OF THE ENGLISH CONQUEST
- CHAPTER LVII CONDITION OF THE EUROPEANS IN THE CAPE COLONY AT THE TIME OF THE ENGLISH CONQUEST—(continued)
- CHAPTER LVIII EVENTS IN PORTUGUESE SOUTH AFRICA DURING THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
- CHAPTER LIX HISTORY OF THE KORANA CLANS AND THE BETSHUANA TRIBES DURING THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
- NOTES ON BOOKS
- INDEX
- Plate section
CHAPTER XLV - RYK TULBAGH, GOVERNOR, ASSUMED OFFICE 27TH FEBRUARY 1751, DIED 11TH AUGUST 1771
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CHAPTER XLIV HENDRIK SWELLENGREBEL, GOVERNOR, (continued)
- CHAPTER XLV RYK TULBAGH, GOVERNOR, ASSUMED OFFICE 27TH FEBRUARY 1751, DIED 11TH AUGUST 1771
- CHAPTER XLVI RYK TULBAGH, GOVERNOR, (continued)
- CHAPTER XLVII HISTORY OF THE XOSA TRIBE
- CHAPTER XLVIII JOACHIM VAN PLETTENBERG, FISCAL AND SECUNDE, ACTING GOVERNOR, 12TH AUGUST 1771 TO 18TH MAY 1774; GOVERNOR, INSTALLED 18TH MAY 1774, RETIRED 14TH FEBRUARY 1785
- CHAPTER XLIX JOACHIM VAN PLETTENBERG, GOVERNOR, (continued)
- CHAPTER L JOACHIM VAN PLETTENBERG, GOVERNOR, (continued)
- CHAPTER LI CORNELIS JACOB VAN DE GRAAFF, GOVERNOR, INSTALLED 14TH FEBRUARY 1785, LEFT SOUTH AFRICA 24TH JUNE 1791
- CHAPTER LII JOHAN ISAAC RHENIUS, SECUNDE, ACTING GOVERNOR, 24TH JUNE 1791 TO 3RD JULY 1792
- CHAPTER LIII SEBASTIAAN CORNELIS NEDERBURGH AND SIMON HENDRIK FRYKENIUS, COMMISSIONERS-GENERAL,—(continued)
- CHAPTER LIV ABRAHAM JOSIAS SLUYSKEN, COMMISSIONER-GENERAL, FROM 2ND SEPTEMBER 1793 to 16TH SEPTEMBER 1795
- CHAPTER LV ABRAHAM JOSIAS SLUYSKEN, COMMISSIONER-GENERAL,—(continued)
- CHAPTER LVI CONDITION OF THE EUROPEANS IN THE CAPE COLONY AT THE TIME OF THE ENGLISH CONQUEST
- CHAPTER LVII CONDITION OF THE EUROPEANS IN THE CAPE COLONY AT THE TIME OF THE ENGLISH CONQUEST—(continued)
- CHAPTER LVIII EVENTS IN PORTUGUESE SOUTH AFRICA DURING THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
- CHAPTER LIX HISTORY OF THE KORANA CLANS AND THE BETSHUANA TRIBES DURING THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
- NOTES ON BOOKS
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
The memory of Governor Ryk Tulbagh is still preserved by tradition in South Africa as that of a wise, just, and benevolent ruler. The eldest son of Dirk Tulbagh and Catharina Cattepoel, he was born in the city of Utrecht on the 21st of May 1699. He was of a plain, but honest and respectable family, many of the members of which had done good service for their country in time of war. Several of his near relatives, and among them in later years his father, laid down their lives on the battle field, fighting in the cause of the Netherlands. His parents removed from Utrecht to Bergen-op-Zoom while he was still an infant, and at this place his early life was spent. Here he remained at school until he was sixteen years of age, when his friends considered him sufficiently well educated to make his way in the world. Other capital than his own good qualities and the knowledge gained at school he had none.
In those days, although its purest period was past, the East India Company's service offered special inducements to lads like young Tulbagh. Whatever were the faults in colonising and ruling immense territories by means of such an association, there were merits also which ordinary governments do not possess. One of these merits was that the Company regarded ability in its officers as so much capital to be turned to account.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1910