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The Boers
In
1652, a group of Europeans 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. Nomads travel from place to place in search of food. They
need a large area to dwell in because they do not cultivate crops. 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.
Great Britain assumed control of South Africa in 1795,
after the Napoleonic Wars in Europe. 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. The British outlawed slavery
twenty-three years before the United States. 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. | |
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To cite this page:
Dowling, Mike, "Mr. Dowling's Boers Page," available
from http://www.mrdowling.com/609-boers.html; Internet; updated
Sunday, October 3, 2004
. ©2008, Mike Dowling. All rights reserved. |