South Africa: A Narrative HistoryIn this epic narrative Frank Welsh explores South Africa's eventful history through the clash and engagement of cultures -- tribal, Afrikaner, and British, among them -- that have made this nation on the tip of Africa not only the most powerful country on the African continent but also the most controversial. South Africa: A Narrative History begins in pre-colonial times, when South Africa was home to the now extinct Bushman, and ends with Nelson Mandela's last year of power as the first black leader of the post-apartheid nation. Among the seminal events that take center stage in this drama are accounts of the Jameson Raid, the Great Trek, the Zulu Wars and the Boer War, and the struggle of the African National Congress for legitimacy and political power. Welsh, the author of A Borrowed Place: The History of Hong Kong which the New York Review of Books called "a magnificent, much-needed and compendious history", has now written an essential book on South Africa, a book for anyone wishing to understand the historical and economic underpinnings beneath the present day realities. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 29
Page 236
... Tswana tribes of the Kalahari . Waterboer's lands being less attractive than those of Adam Kok , his people had suffered less from white pressure , their main rivals being the Tswana . In the Free State the solid work put in by ...
... Tswana tribes of the Kalahari . Waterboer's lands being less attractive than those of Adam Kok , his people had suffered less from white pressure , their main rivals being the Tswana . In the Free State the solid work put in by ...
Page 283
... Tswana peoples had recovered a measure of stability as those who had fled to the desert returned to the more hospitable east . Linguistically close to the Sotho , the Tswana were differentiated by some customs , including that of ...
... Tswana peoples had recovered a measure of stability as those who had fled to the desert returned to the more hospitable east . Linguistically close to the Sotho , the Tswana were differentiated by some customs , including that of ...
Page 284
... Tswana had thrown up no outstanding leader until the emergence in 1875 of Kgama , chief of the Ngwato branch of the Tswana people . Kgama , one of the most remarkable Africans of his time , had been converted by Lutheran missionaries ...
... Tswana had thrown up no outstanding leader until the emergence in 1875 of Kgama , chief of the Ngwato branch of the Tswana people . Kgama , one of the most remarkable Africans of his time , had been converted by Lutheran missionaries ...
Contents
The Fairest Cape | 1 |
Early exploration | 3 |
An Inn on the Road to the Indies | 21 |
Copyright | |
31 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
accepted annexation apartheid attempted Basuto Basutoland became Boer Botha Britain British government burghers Caledon Cape Colony Cape Town Carnarvon cattle century Cetshwayo chief civil Colonial Office Colonial Secretary colonists Coloured command communities Council Dingane Dutch elected English English-speaking established European farmers farms fighting force franchise frontier Governor Graaff-Reinet Grey Griqua Hertzog Hofmeyr Hottentots hundred Imperial independent Indian insisted Jabavu Johannesburg Kaffirs Khoikhoi Kimberley Kruger labour land Landdrost later leaders liberal London Lord majority Malan Mandela ment Merriman mfecane Mfengu Milner missionaries Moshoeshoe Natal Natalian National Nationalists native Nguni non-whites Orange Free Orange River parliament Party political population Potgieter President Pretoria Prime Minister protection remained Republic Rhodes settled settlement settlers Shaka Shepstone slaves Smuts society Sotho South Africa Stockenström successful Swazi territory Thembu thousand traditional Transvaal trekkers Tswana Vaal Volksraad voortrekkers vote Xhosa Zulu