- Title
- The Stockenström judgment, the Warren report and the Griqualand West rebellion, 1876-8
- Creator
- White, Anthony Nevins
- ThesisAdvisor
- Davenport, T. R. H.
- Subject
- Warren, Charles, Sir, 1840-1927
- Subject
- Griqualand West -- History
- Subject
- Land tenure -- Griqualand West
- Subject
- Griqua Rising, 1878
- Subject
- Griqua (African people) -- History
- Subject
- Tlharo (African people) -- History
- Subject
- Tlhaping (African people) -- History
- Subject
- Baga-maidi (African people) -- History
- Subject
- Stockenström, Andries, 1844-1880
- Subject
- Genealogy
- Subject
- Korana (African people) -- History
- Date
- 1978
- Type
- Thesis
- Type
- Masters
- Type
- MA
- Identifier
- vital:2591
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007239
- Identifier
- Warren, Charles, Sir, 1840-1927
- Identifier
- Griqualand West -- History
- Identifier
- Land tenure -- Griqualand West
- Identifier
- Griqua Rising, 1878
- Identifier
- Griqua (African people) -- History
- Identifier
- Tlharo (African people) -- History
- Identifier
- Tlhaping (African people) -- History
- Identifier
- Baga-maidi (African people) -- History
- Identifier
- Stockenström, Andries, 1844-1880
- Identifier
- Genealogy
- Identifier
- Korana (African people) -- History
- Description
- From Preface: South African frontiers periodically provided the backdrop for conflict between Blacks and Whites over land, and, in this respect, Griqualand West proved no exception. The arrival of the trekboers in the 1830s heralded the beginning of the land problem in Griqualand West, and the situation worsened with the discovery of diamonds and the subsequent influx of land-hungry Whites. By the 1870s the stage was then set for a major clash between Blacks and Whites with land as the central focus. The Griqualand West Administration tried to rectify this situation in 1875 by setting up a Land Court under Judge Andries Stockenström. Stockenström's judgment was highly controversial, as many Griqua and Blacks lost land, although no land which had been claimed by a Griqua or Black was granted to a White. As Stockenström had not resolved the land problem, the Griqualand West authorities brought in Captain Charles Warren to settle the matter of land ownership in the Province. The Warren Report was considered by all concerned to be fair, but it did not prevent the outbreak of hostilities in 1878. The two main foci of this study are, then, land ownership and the Rebellion and the link, if any, between them. The main sources for the work have been the Griqualand West archive in the Cape Archives, for the period 1872-1880, and various newspapers. The Cape and Imperial Blue Books were useful sources, especially on the military history of the rebellion. Interviews conducted in Bophuthatswana and Griqualand West clarified many obscure points and raised others, most of which have been answered in this work. A considerable number of contemporary published works were also consulted, but, although most mentioned the land problem and the Rebellion, few contained anything worthy of mention, especially with regard to the military history of the Rebellion.
- Description
- KMBT_363
- Description
- Adobe Acrobat 9.54 Paper Capture Plug-in
- Format
- 215 p., pdf
- Publisher
- Rhodes University, Faculty of Humanities, History
- Language
- English
- Rights
- White, Anthony Nevins
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