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British Imperialism: South Africa

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Title: British Imperialism: South Africa


1
British ImperialismSouth Africa
  • Global Studies
  • Landmark High School
  • Agustin Vecino, Siu Chan, Theo Cachola

2
Geography
South Africa occupies the southern tip of Africa.
Its long coastline stretching more than 2,500
kilometers from Namibia on the Atlantic coast
southwards around the tip of Africa and then
north to the border with Mozambique on the Indian
Ocean.
3
The First Europeans The Boers
In 1652, a group of Dutch people settled in South
Africa. These settlers came to be known as Boers
because Boer is the Dutch word for farmer. The
Boers thought that their new home was empty, but
it was a homeland for nomadic Bantu people.
The Bantus attempted to fight for their land, but
their spears were no match for the Europeans
guns. The Boers enslaved many of the Bantus and
forced them to work on the colonists farms.
4
Great Britain assumed control of South Africa in
1795. The Dutch settlers were unhappy with
British rule and became even angrier when the
British outlawed slavery in 1835. The British
government paid owners for their slaves, but the
Boers complained the payments were too small.
Gold and diamonds were discovered in South
Africa in 1867, causing a large number of people
from Great Britain to move to the colony.
Tensions between the parties led to the Boer
Wars from 1899 to 1902, where the British
soundly defeated the Boers.
5
Why South Africa?
  • From the late 1800s to early 1900s, the British
    were interested in
  • Diamonds (1867)
  • Gold (1886)
  • Ivory
  • Spread of religion
  • In 1910, the British granted South Africa its
    independence.

6
Social Effect of British Imperialism Apartheid
Even though the British granted South Africa
independence in 1910, it gave power only to white
people. In 1948, the National Party gained
office in an election where only white people
were allowed to vote. The party began a policy of
racial segregation known as apartheid, which
means apartness.
7
South African Society
  • The Population Registration Act classified the
    people as
  • Bantu (black Africans)
  • colored (people of mixed race)
  • white (the descendants of Europeans)
  • Asian (Indian and Pakistani immigrants)

The Group Areas Act established separate sections
for each race. Members of other races were
forbidden to live, work, or own land in areas
belonging to other races. Pass Laws required
non-whites to carry a pass to prove they had
permission to travel in white areas.
8
Other South African laws forbade most social
contacts between races, authorized segregated
public facilities, established separate school
systems with lower standards for non-whites, and
restricted each race to certain jobs.
9
More than 80 of South Africas land was set
aside for its white residents, despite the fact
that they comprised less than 10 of the
population.
10
South Africas black majority had resisted
apartheid for many years. They began rioting in
1976, when the South African government tried to
force black children one of the languages of the
white minority. The rioting continued for the
next fourteen years until the apartheid laws were
repealed.
11
Nelson Mandela
Nelson Mandela led a black liberation group that
opposed South Africas white minority government
and apartheid. Mandela was initially opposed to
violence, but after a massacre of unarmed black
South Africans in 1962, he began advocating acts
of sabotage against the government. In 1962,
Mandela began a 27 year stay in prison.
12
During his imprisonment, Mandela became a symbol
of the anti-apartheid movement. In 1990, Mandela
was released from prison and instantly became an
international celebrity. Three years after his
release, South Africans of all races were allowed
to vote for the first time in a national
election. They selected Mandela as their
president, giving him 62 of the vote.
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