Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2009
Any survey of the effects of the possession and use of firearms among the Tswana and, to the north of them, the Ndebele and Shona peoples, must start with a brief investigation of firearms among the Khoikhoi and the mixed Khoikhoi-white groups. The latter were in some respects the vanguard of the expansions of the white frontier in southern Africa. They originated in unions between Khoikhoi and white hunters, traders and farmers, and probably never existed without firearms; from an early date they also acquired horses. In the middle years of the eighteenth century the Khoikhoi-whites and the Khoikhoi peoples, whose economic basis and political structure had been broken by various aspects of white settlement amongst them, were being armed by the whites to take part in commando expeditions against the San. There is evidence that some Khoikhoi trekked from the colony to avoid this service.
1 The mixed Khoikhoi-white group was the origin of the Cape Coloured population. Those Khoikhoi to the north of the colonial frontier, and others (Khoikhoi and mixed) who trekked to join them, formed groups such as the Koranna, Bergenaars and Griqua; there was some intermixture between these and Tswana and Sotho peoples. For the sake of convenience all these peoples will be referred to in this article as Griqua.
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63 Ranger, Ibid. 247. Also cartoon in plate VIII.
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