Abstract
Colonization of Africa began in 1488 when the Portuguese explorer Bartolemeu Dias first sailed along the cost of South Africa and eventually arrived at the north of South Africa. Then the British sailors stopped briefly in the southwest of Africa on their way to India in the 1600s. In 1602, the Dutch East India Company was established to expand trade relationship with colonies in Asia by entering into a fierce rivalry with Britain, and Jan van Riebeeck brought in 1652 three Dutch East India Company ships with around 100 people to establish a station, and these people, known as Afrikaners, were the first white settlers of South Africa. By the end of the seventeenth century, the white population, including Dutch, German, and French, increased considerably in South Africa by killing, driving out or enslaving the indigenous peoples, and then the slave trade started.
Highlights
Colonization of Africa began in 1488 when the Portuguese explorer Bartolemeu Dias first sailed along the cost of South Africa and eventually arrived at the north of South Africa
The Mines and Works Amendment Act of 1926 enabled to implement racially differentiated salaries, whereas the Native Administration Act of 1927 assigned the Governor-General as the “Paramount Chief” of all the Africans, allowing him to appoint chiefs, define tribal boundaries and shuffle tribes in South Africa. (Beinart and Dubow 1-24; Frederickson 3-14; Ashcroft, Griffiths and Tiffin 14-5) This segregation even went further, and it was officially legalized as apartheid in 1948 with the election of the Afrikaner National Party and Daniel F
The Afrikaner National Party institutionalized apartheid with the legislation as the Group Areas Act, which specified that separate areas be reserved for the four main racial groups - whites, blacks, Coloureds, and Asians, but it “moved and restricted the rights of ‘non-whites’ in every possible sphere.” (3), or it brought about what George M
Summary
Colonization of Africa began in 1488 when the Portuguese explorer Bartolemeu Dias first sailed along the cost of South Africa and eventually arrived at the north of South Africa.
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