|
Through the Ages
- Incident at Whitewater"
The Boer War
The war was fought in South Africa 1899-1902.
It was fought between the Boers, descendants
of Dutch settlers who had first come to
South Africa in the 17th Century, and the
British. The war was the result of growing
hostilities and tensions that had built
up over the 19th Century. During the century,
Britain had increased the amount of South
African territory under its possession.
In 1833 Slavery was
abolished in the British Empire, including
South Africa. The Boers were not happy with
the amount of compensation given by the
British government for the loss of their
slaves.
At a similar time
to this, the British government gave the
native Bantu tribes control of an area cherished
by the Boers. The Boers hatred of the British
increased as a result.
Thousands of Boers
begun "The Great Trek," an attempt
to find a place where they would be free
from British domination and could make their
own laws. They set up the independent Orange
Free State and the Transvaal.
The discovery of gold
in the Transvaal in 1886, brought with it
an influx of prospectors - mainly British.
Many of the riches from the gold fields
were passing straight into British hands
The Boers sought to protect itself from
the growing number of Uitlanders (foreigners),
refusing Uitlanders the vote and taxed them
very heavily. The British felt aggrieved
and considered they were being denied their
rights to make a living.
War between Britain and the joint Transvaal
- Orange Free State Boers, officially begun
in October, 1899. British troops were shipped
in. Britain experienced initial difficulties
but by June 1900 both Transvaal and the
Orange Free State had been captured by British
forces.
However,
the Boer forces were to prove very difficult
to beat. Boers conducted guerilla warfare;
attacking specified targets, disrupting
communications, and hiding out in the countryside.
The British, in a desperate attempt to achieve
final victory, resorted to imprisoning many
Boer civilians in concentration camps. The
British, made up of approximately 350,000
troops, went through the Boer guerilla country
area by area and herded out the 60,000 Boer
troops. The Treaty of Vereeniging ended
the war in May, 1902.
In the Treaty the
Boers accepted British sovereignty but retained
personal freedoms and property. Afrikaans,
the Boer language, would continue to be
spoken.
Britain lost 22,000
lives two thirds of these were lost
to disease.
The Boers lost 24,000 20,000 of those
killed were in concentration camps.
Bitterness from the war was to plague South
Africa for many years to come. Boer resentment
towards the British was partly responsible
for Afrikaaner nationalism that led to the
setting up of Apartheid (racial separation)
in South Africa during the 20th Century.
|