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===Xhosa rule===
===Xhosa rule===
The native [[Xhosa people]] were ruled by the [[Ngqika]] ("Gaika") Chiefs (part of the [[Rarabe]] offshoot of the main [[Xhosa people|Xhosa]] line):
The native [[Xhosa people]] were ruled by the [[Ngqika]] ("Gaika") Chiefs (part of the [[Rarabe]] offshoot of the main [[Xhosa people|Xhosa]] line):
*[[Ngqika ka Rarabe|Ngqika]] (the founding Chief), 1797 – 13 November 1829
*[[Ngqika ka Rarabe]] (the founding Chief), 1797 – 13 November 1829
*[[Mgolombane Sandile|Sandile]], 13 November 1829 – 1 June 1878
*[[Mgolombane Sandile]], 13 November 1829 – 1 June 1878


===British rule===
===British rule===
[[File:Sir Harry Smith.jpg|340px|thumb|Sir Harry Smith]]
The territory came under British rule in the 19th century. However, there was great disagreement on how it should be governed, with the [[Cape Colony]] being reluctant to take responsibility for its administration. Its status therefore changed several times before it finally became part of the Cape Colony.
The territory came under British rule in the 19th century. However, there was great disagreement on how it should be governed, with the [[Cape Colony]] being reluctant to take responsibility for its administration. Its status therefore changed several times before it finally became part of the Cape Colony.


The territory’s administration was handled by a British military officer who was appointed as the chief commissioner. Each administrative chief was assisted by assistant commissioners who acted as magistrates, advisors and arbitrators among the several Xhosa tribes.<ref name="Mixed Legal System">[https://docs.escr-net.org/usr_doc/Church.pdf Church, J. 2005. The Place of Indigenous Law in a Mixed Legal System and a Society in Transformation: A South African Experience. Pp 94 – 106. African Human Rights Law Journal (AHRLJ). Accessed 6 April 2018.]</ref> The authority of the Xhosa chiefs was recognised to a limited degree since their decisions were subject to review by the colonial administration. Any decisions made by the Xhosa chiefs could also be reversed if they were contrary to the British colonisers’ agenda. The Xhosa Chiefs had to acknowledge the Queen of England and recognise their own subordination to the appointed British military commander.<ref name="Mixed Legal System" />
The successive administrative chiefs, with repeatedly changed styles, were:

* [[Administrator of the Government|Administrator]] [[Sir Harry Smith, 1st Baronet|Harry Smith]], 10 May 1835 – 5 December 1835
British commander [[Harry Smith]] initially arrived in the Cape Of Good Hope in 1828 to lead the British army. He led a British force in the Sixth Xhosa War of 1834-36. He returned from [[India]] in 1847 to become the governor of the Cape Colony.<ref name="SMU">[http://smu-facweb.smu.ca/~wmills/course322/British_Kaffraria.html British Kaffraria. Historical Dictionary of the British Empire. Accessed 6 April 2018.]</ref> He attempted to unseat Chief Sandile of the Ngqika people ( he was also the paramount chief of all Rharhabe tribes) in the British Kaffraria when the Mlanjeni War (also known as the 8th Xhosa War) erupted in 1850. The war lasted until 1853 even after Smith was recalled.<ref name="SMU" />
*[[Lieutenant-governor]]s:
**[[Sir Harry Smith, 1st Baronet|Harry Smith]] (acting), 10 December 1835 – 13 September 1836
**Sir [[Andries Stockenström]], 13 September 1836 – 9 August 1838
**John Hare, 9 August 1838 – September 1846 (acting to 31 August 1839)
**Under direct rule from [[British Cape Colony|Cape Colony]], September 1846 – 9 April 1847
**Sir Henry Young, 9 April 1847 – 4 November 1847
*Direct rule from [[British Cape Colony|Cape Colony]], 4 November 1847 – 17 December 1847
*[[Chief Commissioner]]s:
**George Henry Mackinnon, 23 December 1847 – October 1852
**John Mclean, October 1852 – 7 March 1860
*Lieutenant-governor (again): John Mclean, 7 March 1860 – 24 December 1864
*[[Governor's Deputy]]: Robert Graham, 24 December 1864 – 17 April 1866


===="Queen Adelaide Province" in the Cape Colony (1835)====
===="Queen Adelaide Province" in the Cape Colony (1835)====

Revision as of 07:36, 30 April 2018

British Kaffraria
Colony of the British Empire
1835–1866

CapitalKing William's Town[1]
Population 
• 1858[2]
52,535
History 
• Established
1835
• Disestablished
1866

British Kaffraria was a British colony/subordinate administrative entity in present-day South Africa, consisting of the districts now known as King Williams Town and East London.

The British Kaffraria was established in 1847 when the British colonisers occupying South Africa invaded the Transkei region between the Keiskamma and Great Kei rivers and declared it a Crown Colony. Just 17 years later, it was incorporate into the Cape Colony after the Xhosa suffered from a great famine following the Xhosa cattle-killing movement of 1856-7 and required relief from the colonisers’ government.[3]

The term Kaffraria stems from the extremely offensive word "Kaffir" which was used as a racial slur for the Black African inhabitants of southern Africa. The word “kaffir” is derived from the Arabic word “kafr” which means “a waste”.[4] The word "Kaffraria" came to refer specifically to the Xhosa lands in what is now the Eastern Cape. Later, the western Xhosa lands which fell under British rule came to be known as "British Kaffraria", while the independent Xhosa territory to the east was known simply as "Kaffraria".

It was inhabited primarily by the Ngqika ("Gaika") people, the major branch of the Rharhabe Xhosa.It was inhabited primarily by the Ngqika ("Gaika") people, the major branch of the Rharhabe Xhosa. A subsection of British Kaffraria was later reconstituted by the Apartheid regime as the semi-independent homeland of Ciskei.

Colonial Rule

Similar to elsewhere in southern Africa, the aboriginal inhabitants of the area were the Khoisan hunter gatherers and herders. Early on, these peoples were displaced by the Bantu expansion, when it crossed the Kei river from the north. The area was consolidated under the rule of a branch of the Xhosa people.

Xhosa rule

The native Xhosa people were ruled by the Ngqika ("Gaika") Chiefs (part of the Rarabe offshoot of the main Xhosa line):

British rule

Sir Harry Smith

The territory came under British rule in the 19th century. However, there was great disagreement on how it should be governed, with the Cape Colony being reluctant to take responsibility for its administration. Its status therefore changed several times before it finally became part of the Cape Colony.

The territory’s administration was handled by a British military officer who was appointed as the chief commissioner. Each administrative chief was assisted by assistant commissioners who acted as magistrates, advisors and arbitrators among the several Xhosa tribes.[5] The authority of the Xhosa chiefs was recognised to a limited degree since their decisions were subject to review by the colonial administration. Any decisions made by the Xhosa chiefs could also be reversed if they were contrary to the British colonisers’ agenda. The Xhosa Chiefs had to acknowledge the Queen of England and recognise their own subordination to the appointed British military commander.[5]

British commander Harry Smith initially arrived in the Cape Of Good Hope in 1828 to lead the British army. He led a British force in the Sixth Xhosa War of 1834-36. He returned from India in 1847 to become the governor of the Cape Colony.[6] He attempted to unseat Chief Sandile of the Ngqika people ( he was also the paramount chief of all Rharhabe tribes) in the British Kaffraria when the Mlanjeni War (also known as the 8th Xhosa War) erupted in 1850. The war lasted until 1853 even after Smith was recalled.[6]

"Queen Adelaide Province" in the Cape Colony (1835)

After the 6th Frontier War ("Hintsa's War"), on 10 May 1835, the area was seized by the British Governor Sir Benjamin d'Urban, and annexed to the Cape Colony as Queen Adelaide Province. A location for the new province's government was selected, and named King William’s Town. The province was declared to be for the settlement of loyal African tribes, those rebel tribes who agreed to replace their leadership, and the Fengu (known to the Europeans as the "Fingo people"), who had recently arrived fleeing from the Zulu armies and had been living under Xhosa subjection. Magistrates were appointed to administer the territory in the hope that they would gradually, with the help of missionaries, undermine tribal authority.

A separate "Queen Adelaide Land district" (1836–1847)

Only a few months after its forcible joining to the Cape Colony, on 5 December 1835, the Cape Colony disallowed the annexation. The province's creation was also condemned by London, as being uneconomical and unjust.

Queen Adelaide was formally disannexed in December 1836, the Cape's border was re-established back at the Keiskamma river, and new treaties were made with the chiefs responsible for order beyond the Fish River. The area was now renamed Queen Adelaide Land district, with Grahamstown as its capital. Indigenous rule by and large re-established itself in much of the territory and the land remained a separate entity until 1847.[7]

"British Kaffraria" in the Cape Colony (1847–1866)

After the 7th Frontier War ("Amatola War"), on 17 December 1847, the area was again seized by the new British Governor Harry Smith, and again annexed to the Cape Colony, this time as the British Kaffraria Colony, with King William's Town as its capital. The new Governor re-occupied the abandoned forts and British Imperial troops were moved into the territory.[8]

German emigrants arrived in British Kaffraria in 1858–1859, and again in 1877–1878.[9]

A separate "British Kaffraria" Crown Colony (1860–1866)

On 7 March 1860, in the wake of the great Xhosa cattle-killing, the Cape Colony again dis-annexed British Kaffraria, and it became a separate crown colony. A separate Lieutenant Governor, Colonel John Maclean, was appointed to administer the colony. However economic problems threatened to bankrupt the colony and pressure was brought upon the neighbouring Cape Colony once again to take on the territory and its expenses.

Final Annexation to the Cape Colony (1866)

It was finally re-incorporated into the Cape Colony on 17 April 1866.

From 1853 to 1866 the territory used the stamps of the Cape of Good Hope, the mail being sent from Port Elizabeth or overland from the Cape.

The area eventually formed the basis of the Ciskei independent homeland.

See also

References

  1. ^ Henry Hall (F.R.G.S.) (1859). Manual of South African Geography. S. Solomon. p. 43. Retrieved 2013-07-24.
  2. ^ Henry Hall (F.R.G.S.) (1859). Manual of South African Geography. S. Solomon. p. 46. Retrieved 2013-07-24.
  3. ^ 2013. Literature on the History of Southern Africa: British Kaffraria. World History at KMLA. Accessed 6 April 2018.
  4. ^ [http://www.worldhistory.knowledge4africa.com/south-africa/queen-adelaide-00.jsp A brief history of South Africa: Queen Adelaide Province & British KaffrariaWorld History. Accessed 6 April 2018.]
  5. ^ a b British Kaffraria. Historical Dictionary of the British Empire. Accessed 6 April 2018.
  6. ^ "Conquest of the Eastern Cape 1779–1878 | South African History Online". Sahistory.org.za. Retrieved 2012-11-18.
  7. ^ "7th Frontier War 1846–1847". Makana Tourism. Archived from the original on 2014-10-06. Retrieved 2015-03-03. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  8. ^ Spanuth, Johannes (1914). British Kaffraria and its German Settlements. München and Leipzig: Duncker and Humblot – World Digital Library. Retrieved 2015-03-03.

32°53′S 27°24′E / 32.883°S 27.400°E / -32.883; 27.400