Recorded
Bushman History
Despite
literary distortions, most records have important information that
can be gleaned from the tarnished words, with a little careful
polishing. The attached Bibliography gives a list of the most
important (my assumption) with sometimes a note of caution if I
thought some observations were grossly inaccurate in any way.
It has been
implied that the Bushmen troubles started with the arrival of the
whites (and the launch of recorded history). Not so - As has been
mentioned before, they faced a variety of problems throughout
Africa in the past from other Africans of all types - from Egypt
to the mid South, and from the Arabs along the full eastern
seaboard. The fact that rock art and archeological evidence shows
they once were a very widely spread culture, by the time the
whites arrived, the South was virtually the only area where they
were to be found in any significant numbers.
Upon van Reebeck's
arrival at the Cape, he recorded a running battle between the Khoikhoi
, with whom he was trying to trade for cattle, and the Strandlopers
(a similar coastal people without cattle), mostly revolving around
the Strandlopers theft of Cattle. The first true Bushmen encountered
were to the mountains north of Table Bay in 1655. Also noticeable
in all these records was the absence of any Bantu in the southern
Cape. These people were certainly encountered further north in the
northern & eastern Cape regions, Natal and the Transvaal. Despite
virulent objections from some quarters, every written record from
a multitude of different sources state that the southern Cape was
only populated by Khoisan peoples at a time when the Bantu pastoralists
were migrating down through areas conducive to cattle. The very
arid regions of the Karoo and Namaqualand to the north & northeast
would have been virtually impenetrable barriers to these people.
It is
however fair to say that the Dutch arrival in the Cape raised the
persecution of the Bushmen to a new level, which eventually
resulted in their near extermination in South Africa. Frequently
forming treaties or pacts with both Khoi and Bantu at various
times and supplying arms, both the Dutch & the British
succeeded in "freeing the sub continent of their vexing
problem" (Their words).
The scattered
Bushmen in the Cape were eventually eliminated piecemeal in the
mountains to the north. Small pockets remained in more inaccessible
regions for many years until they too succumbed. Many no doubt survived
by integrating themselves in the growing mixed colored communities
that serviced the Cape Colony while records show that many were
imprisoned by the Dutch in the 1860's & 70's and used in harbour
and defense construction. Their former prison is now the Breakwater
Lodge Hotel in Cape Town.
The
expansion that resulted from the Freeburghers (Settlers freed from
the constraints of the Cape Colony) meant that this same
persecution continued further afield to encompass the whole Cape
Province and the Orange Free State. There is too much to fit into
these few short pages but I will mention two particular events,
that of the demise of the Free State Bushmen at Wepinaar and the
end of the Natal Drakensburg Bushmen.
Both these
conflicts culminated in pitched battles virtually destroying the
existing Clans but intriguingly there seems to be a direct link
between the Free State Bushman and the later events in Natal.
There is much evidence to suggest that survivors from the Free
State massacre, traveled up the Orange River into Lesotho, later
teaming up with local Bushmen in the northeast Drakensburgs and
starting to steal cattle over the escarpment in Natal. Survivors
from the final Natal Commando raid in Lesotho apparently escaped
over Bushman's Nek and continued to live in fairly peaceful
isolation the southern Drakensburgs. In both these events there
seemed an uncharacteristic (but very understandable) ferocity on
the part of the Bushmen.
Throughout this
devastating period, however, much evidence exists of pockets of
cooperation between white farmers & the Bushmen, and indeed
the Bantu & Bushmen. These isolated events certainly pale into
insignificance when faced with the overriding opinion of the day,
that Bushmen were vermin, cattle thieves and scavengers but, despite
this general feeling, there were several researchers who saw an
honorable and worthy side to these people and recorded heavy volumes
on them, while many farmers, while displacing them, actively employed
Bushmen to look after their livestock and children.
While a
great many died from the actions of the whites, many more just
faded into the landscape as these changes occurred, surviving in
isolated communities. Later game reserves were declared and
resident Bushmen were ejected, farmers moved in and killed or
pushed them out. Far from running vast distances into the deserts,
most survivors just assimilated themselves into the growing
mixed/colored settlements that were springing up, supplying
seasonal and casual labour to anyone willing to employ them.
The Kalahari
Bushmen seem to have always existed in that region and became some
of the last survivors simply because they lived in an area
unattractive to the keepers of cattle. Botswana, Namibia, Angola
and Zambia provided the last real refuge for these people until
the advent of the modern world.
The
Khoikhoi
The Cape Hottentots
become totally involved in the developing Dutch Cape Colony with
increasing interbreeding, understandable with many of the white
inhabitants without women and a bustling seafaring trade. The familiar
"Cape Coloureds" are a product of this and the many other
peoples, like Malays, who were brought in to provide labour for
the settlement. I would guess that a measure of Bushman blood is
present here from those captured and imprisoned in Cape Town.
The expansion
of the Freeburghers out from the Cape had a similar effect, where
coloured communities evolved, providing services to the white communities.
From this kaleidoscope world, several distinctive and proud groups
emerged, who claimed their measure of White parentage. The Witboois
(White Boys) and the Afrikaners (not to be confused with the white
Afrikaaners) were two such groups which emerged from this melting
pot along with the later Basters who were Dutch settlers with Hottentot
wives. Squeezed out, they first travelled north and then west and
finally north again finding themselves in the very inhospitable
Namaqualand and Namibia.
These groups
made a name for themselves by giving all aggressors, including the
Germans, a good fight. The end however was a collection of severely
weakened clans who, for the most part, still survive today. Now
usually associated with dry habitats and having been further diluted
with Bantu blood, they are generally called "Nama" in
Namaqualand & Namibia, and represent a very diverse group of
physical and cultural characteristics. The Khoi language (called
Nama here) generally still remains but with a large smattering of
Afrikaans and a little German.
Similar groups
can be found in the Karoo as well, although there is little or no
Bantu blood found here. Very likely that Bushmen surviving the various
commando raids would have blended in here, the women if not the
men.
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