Skip to main content

Home/ University of Johannesburg History 2A 2023/ Contents contributed and discussions participated by gracebvuma

Contents contributed and discussions participated by gracebvuma

gracebvuma

Firearms in Southern Africa: A Survey.pdf - 0 views

shared by gracebvuma on 26 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • . As time passed, firearms came to be used by ever-widening circles of the combatants, often as much the result of the increased collaboration and interdependence between peoples as of the increased conflict
    • gracebvuma
       
      Guns were used as a result of collaboration between the different race groups present in Southern Africa at the time.
  • d. By the time of the first Dutch-Khoi war of I659-60, the Cape Khoi were clearly aware of some of the limitations of Dutch muskets
    • gracebvuma
       
      Khois's knowledge of firearms was ivreasing, maybe because of the increase in the use of firearms in Southern Africa during this period.
  • N SOUTHERN AFRICA 519 guns and horses, as well as cattle.13 There was also a constant supply of firearms to the 'resisters' through the desertion of Khoi servants and slaves, who frequently fled with their masters' weapons to join the Khoisan in the mountain
    • gracebvuma
       
      Africans were aquiring guns through theft during this time because the distribution of guns to the Natives of southern Africa was illegal.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Throughout the nineteenth century, their knowledge and use of firearms was to stand the Khoisan and mixed or coloured groups in good stead. On two occasions, their joining the Xhosa in resistance (1799-I802 and I850-3) made the wars on the eastern frontier particularly formidable, while as late as I878 the long duration of the Griqua 'rebellion' was attributed to their long experience of firearm
    • gracebvuma
       
      their increase in knowledge of firearms and their acquiring of firearms made Africans a more formidable opponent to the settlers.
  • The significance of the acquisition of a knowledge of firearms by the Khoisan and coloured population was not limited solely to the resistance they were able to mount against white expansion. It was through them that the 'gun frontier' preceded the white man amongst the Nama and Herero of south-west Africa, the Tswana and southern Sotho groups across the Orange River,16 and the Xhosa and allied peoples on the Cape's eastern frontier. Although the arming of all these people on a large scale was a feature of the second half, if not the last third, of the nineteenth century, this first introduction to firearms may have in some ways shaped their response to them
    • gracebvuma
       
      Guns shaped and heavily influenced the political and social climate
  • 7 The Africans were able to counter the mobile Boer commandos with superior numbers and, probably, with a more efficient social and military organization. Probably also because of the gradualness of the contact between the Xhosa and whites, with fifty years of trading interaction as well as the mediation of the Khoi prior to the more violent conflicts, firearms per se held no terror for the Xhosa. Moreover in this warfare even in the eighteenth century, the Xhosa were able to acquire a certain number of firearm
    • gracebvuma
       
      the Acquiring of firearms by the Africans greatly increased their military strength, making them much harder to suppress and dominate.
gracebvuma

Firearms in Nineteenth-Century Botswana: The Case of Livingstone's 8-Bore Bullet.pdf - 0 views

shared by gracebvuma on 26 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • Although closely associated with the South African experience, the pre-colonial emergence of an indigenous gun culture among communities within modern Botswana was a determining factor in the territory’s separate colonial and thus postcolonial destiny.
    • gracebvuma
       
      could the use of firearms have turned the tide and allowed Botwana to achieve freedom while the surrounding African countries were losing the fight against colonization
  • The significance of firearms as symbolic markers as well as material instruments of power is reflected in Setswana praise poetry
    • gracebvuma
       
      guns increased the power of Botswana
  • Thereafter, possession of breechloaders was a common and critical factor in subsequent Batswana martial success
    • gracebvuma
       
      firearms was a key part of their success in fending off settlers
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Batswana were also quick to incorporate gun wielding cavalry into their military formations and tactics.
    • gracebvuma
       
      Botswana was quick to adapt and incorporate firearms into its military strategy. this made them better equipped to deal with the threat of invasion.
  • y Botswana is paralleled by the social and environmental impact of their use in hunting. The acquisition of guns was both a cause and consequence of a surge in the region’s hunting trade from the 1840s; involving the export of ivory, karosses and ostrich feathers from hunting grounds largely falling under the effective control of the Dikgosi of Kweneng, Gammangwato, Gangewaketse and Gatawana. 1
    • gracebvuma
       
      their acquiring of guns and their common use in Botswana helped foster economic growth. they were able to hunt better and trade more.
gracebvuma

Guns, Race, and Skill in Nineteenth-Century Southern Africa.pdf - 1 views

shared by gracebvuma on 26 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • ettlers of the Cape of Good Hope to procure firearms and to serve in the militia. The European farmers (called Boers) who crossed the colonial boundaries into the African interior distributed guns to Africans, in spite of company regulations fo
    • gracebvuma
       
      Africans procured firearms from the Boers. The distribution of guns to Africans was prohibited most likely to ensure the superiority of the Boers or settlers.
  • lly free. Liberals also encouraged the spread of evangelical Christianity among Africans. Partly through the encouragement of traders and missionaries, more African
    • gracebvuma
       
      The spread of Christianity can be linked to the increase in Africans having firearms.
  • s. Settler perceptions of the threat posed by armed Africans persuaded British conservatives to portray Africans as skilled with firearms, even as they otherwise characterized Africans as racially inferi
    • gracebvuma
       
      Africans were still unskilled with firearms, this could mean the use of guns amongst Africans was not widespread yet.
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • rms completely into their military tactics, but by the Anglo-Zulu War of 1879 some Zulu shot well because, according to a British government source, they had received instruction from redcoat deserters.4
    • gracebvuma
       
      Africans may have been taught how to operate firearms by deserters who were white.
  • lonial descriptions of African peoples of the region, they characterized the Khoisan and Griqua as skilled with weapons, a facility that enabled them to resist colonialism for a w
    • gracebvuma
       
      Some sources tell of Africans having advanced skills with guns, this could mean more guns were being distributed to Africans. The use of firearms gave them the ability to fight the settlers, confirming that early settlers did not want to give Africans guns because it somewhat leveled the playing field in the struggle against colonization.
  • The Sotho were "indifferently armed and were poor shots" before the 18
    • gracebvuma
       
      this shows that many different tribes had acquired guns. Koi, San, Sotho, Zulu.
  • em. It happens that skills with guns and the perceived and real links to political power weapons and skills conferred were debated extensively in southern Africa in the nineteenth
    • gracebvuma
       
      Heavy correlation between access to guns and the intensity with which Africans were able to fight settlers.
  • he much-sought-after elephant, fostered a preference for large-caliber weapons. By the eighteenth century a distinct local pattern of firearms design had begun to emerge, which can be understood as a technological response to the region's ecology and eco
    • gracebvuma
       
      the distribution and use of guns seemed to have encouraged economic growth in Southern Africa.
1 - 4 of 4
Showing 20 items per page