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 Cape Town - History

Hundreds of millions of years ago, when the Cape was part of the super- continent geologists call Gondwana, the feature that is now Table Mountain was a flat, empty plain. As the vast land-mass shifted and heaved, the plain slowly subsided under the sea. For 50 million years fine sediment built up, layer after layer. Then the earth's plates buckled again and the layers of sediment were thrust upward, first as an island and then, as the glaciers of the ice age tore and carved the solid mass, as what we now know as Table Mountain, Devil's Peak and Lion's Head. The layers of ancient submarine sediment can still be seen as horizontal lines across the face of the mountain.

The early history of the Cape is lost, for the simple reason that the first inhabitants did not leave any records, the only clues to their existence being rock paintings which tell us little about them. Although archaeologists can piece together a picture of life at the Cape before European invasion, it is sketchy and, for the most part, inaccurate. This picture is of people ,who roamed the beaches - strandlopers - gathering food from the sea. There is also evidence of people inland who herded animals across large areas. They built no permanent houses and set up no towns. The Cape was also inhabited by wild animals no longer found here today: lions, elephants, hippos, rhino and buffalo. All have long since vanished in the wake of what we like to call 'civilization'.

According to tradition, when Portuguese explorer Bartholomew Dias first rounded the Cape in 1488, he named it the Cape of Storms, in deference to the stormy weather he experienced off the tip of Africa. However, it was quickly renamed Cape of Good Hope by King John II of Portugal, who believed that they had finally found a sea route to India. Africans in the region have a different perspective. They call it Ikapa Lodumo (Cape of Fame) because of its attractions as a world class tourist destination.

The active history of the cape town start from the arrival of European settlers in the 17th century.

There was two related groups the Khoikhoi and the San The languages of the Khoisan were remarkable for their peculiar "clicking" sounds. Although they had no written language, much of their history and mythology is recorded in the rock-paintings which can be found in caves throughout Southern Africa. Although Bartholomew Dias became the first European to round the Cape of Good Hope in 1488, it was only in 1652, with the arrival of Hollander Jan van Riebeeck that the first European colony was established. The colony was set up to provide fresh water and provisions for ships of the Dutch East India Company.

As an important node on the trade route to the East it was not surprising that Cape Town should have developed a substantial community of immigrants from the East, particularly Malays. The Malays brought with them a culture rich with tradition and customs. To this day Cape Town has a strong Muslim community. Every morning the city wakes to the call to prayer from the mosques in the old Malay Quarter.

The rise of British imperialism in the eighteenth century rapidly brought them into conflict with the Dutch settlers in the Cape. The British emerged victorious and the new rulers soon began to anglicise the colony. During the nineteenth century, political and social institutions were recast in the British mould and English was made the official language of the public service, the judiciary, Parliament and public education.

Dutch settlers came under strong pressure to abandon their own language, customs and heritage for English cultural forms and lifestyles. These factors and others, such as increasing pressure on the land and the abolition of slavery, caused many to migrate away from the Cape Colony into the interior.

The discovery of gold and diamonds around the turn of the century resulted in rapid industrialisation and urbanisation of South Africa, including the Cape. As the demand for labour on the mines grew various legislative measures (restricting access to land and promulgating certain taxes) were adopted to promote urbanisation.

As a result the black population of South African cities swelled with labourers and their families living in informal settlements attached to the cities.

Following the Boer War (1899 - 1902), the four colonies (Natal, the Orange Free State, the Transvaal Republic and the Cape Colony) joined together to form the Union of South Africa. Cape Town became the legislative capital of the Union and Pretoria the administrative capital.

It was only in 1990, with the unbanning of the ANC and the release of Nelson Mandela, that South Africa finally abondoned the policy of Apartheid. Although South Africa is now a democratic, non-racial state, the legacy of apartheid remains, and will take many generations to undo. We believe that bringing the Games to Cape Town can substantially assist this process, by providing a much needed stimulus to the regional economy.

 


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