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motlolisi066

District of East Africa, Congregation of Holy Cross - 1 views

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    It is the congregration of the holy cross it has more to do with christians .On 1st March 1837, after a Fundamental union between the brothers of Saint Joseph and the auxiliary priests, Blessed Basil Moreau became the founding father of the Congregation of Holy Cross (Sainte Croix). This union at the village of Sainte Croix (Holy Cross) led to the birth of the Congregation of Holy Cross. Holy Cross grew fast in France in 1840 to 1860 with the foreign mission that had full zeal of Moreau. The first overseas mission to Algeria was in 1840 from Le Mans with approval from Rome
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    Link is broken. It does not work.
motlolisi066

CHRISTIAN MISSIONS AND INDEPENDENT AFRICAN CHIEFDOMS IN SOUTH AFRICA IN THE 19TH CENTUR... - 1 views

  • Missionary activity amongst the Bantu-speaking people in South Africa started at the beginning of the 19th century. Today, according to census returns, 70%of the African population describe themselves as Christians. There was, however, a good deal of initial resistance to Christianisation on the part of independent African chiefs and their people. It is true that the chiefs generally welcomed missionaries; but this was because of their usefulness in such secular spheres as diplomacy and technology. Their religious and moral teachings necessarily involved an attack on African customs, and so were perceived as subversive of the social order and of chiefly authority. This, together with the missionaries' association with the British colonial authority, made conversion appear an act of disloyalty. A convert was seen as casting off his own people and throwing in his lot with the Whites. Consequently chiefs actively discouraged conversion. The converts the missionaries made tended to be the outcasts and misfits of tribal society. Missionaries, discouraged at the frustration of their work, became more and more inclined to the view that the overthrow of savage customs and of chiefly authority by the imposition of British rule was the necessary precondition for African acceptance of the gospel. And, indeed, as the independent power of chiefs was replaced by that of White magistrates, and as economic as well as political factors caused the disintegration of the traditional social structure, so it became easier for members of African societies to accept the new religion without seeming to be traitors to their own people. But converts found they were not accepted as equals by their White co-religionists. This, together with the continuing cultural distinctiveness of African Christians, has led in many cases to Christianity being embraced not simply as it was proffered but in a form adapted to African needs. This content downloaded from 154.117.167.42 on Wed, 26 Apr 2023 16:46:49 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms Stickynote
    • motlolisi066
       
      missionary in chiefdomsy,religion
  • COPE Missionary activity amongst the Bantu-speaking people in South Africa started at the beginning of the 19th century. Today, according to census returns, 70%of the African population describe themselves as Christians. There was, however, a good deal of initial resistance to Christianisation on the part of independent African chiefs and their people. It is true that the chiefs generally welcomed missionaries; but this was because of their usefulness in such secular spheres as diplomacy and technology. Their religious and moral teachings necessarily involved an attack on African customs, and so were perceived as subversive of the social order and of chiefly authority. This, together with the missionaries' association with the British colonial authority, made conversion appear an act of disloyalty. A convert was seen as casting off his own people and throwing in his lot with the Whites. Consequently chiefs actively discouraged conversion. The converts the missionaries made tended to be the outcasts and misfits of tribal society. Missionaries, discouraged at the frustration of their work, became more and more inclined to the view that the overthrow of savage customs and of chiefly authority by the imposition of British rule was the necessary precondition for African acceptance of the gospel. And, indeed, as the independent power of chiefs was replaced by that of White magistrates, and as economic as well as political factors caused the disintegration of the traditional social structure, so it became easier for members of African societies to accept the new religion without seeming to be traitors to their own people. But converts found they were not accepted as equals by their White co-religionists. This, together with the continuing cultural distinctiveness of African Christians, has led in many cases to Christianity being embraced not simply as it was proffered but in a form adapted to African needs. ********
    • motlolisi066
       
      In paragraph 1 colonialism had a negative effect on the work progress of African missionaries ,because white magistatres overpowered black people that were already in charge which made it hard for them to work or progress.
  • by R.L. COPE Missionary activity amongst the Bantu-speaking people in South Africa started at the beginning of the 19th century. Today, according to census returns, 70%of the African population describe themselves as Christians. There was, however, a good deal of initial resistance to Christianisation on the part of independent African chiefs and their people. It is true that the chiefs generally welcomed missionaries; but this was because of their usefulness in such secular spheres as diplomacy and technology. Their religious and moral teachings necessarily involved an attack on African customs, and so were perceived as subversive of the social order and of chiefly authority. This, together with the missionaries' association with the British colonial authority, made conversion appear an act of disloyalty. A convert was seen as casting off his own people and throwing in his lot with the Whites. Consequently chiefs actively discouraged conversion. The converts the missionaries made tended to be the outcasts and misfits of tribal society. Missionaries, discouraged at the frustration of their work, became more and more inclined to the view that the overthrow of savage customs and of chiefly authority by the imposition of British rule was the necessary precondition for African acceptance of the gospel. And, indeed, as the independent power of chiefs was replaced by that of White magistrates, and as economic as well as political factors caused the disintegration of the traditional social structure, so it became easier for members of African societies to accept the new religion without seeming to be traitors to their own people. But converts found they were not accepted as equals by their White co-religionists. This, together with the continuing cultural distinctiveness of African Christians, has led in many cases to Christianity being embraced not simply as it was proffered but in a form adapted to African needs.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • CHRISTIAN
    • motlolisi066
       
      The Taung Child is among the most important early human fossils ever discovered. It was the first hominid to be discovered in Africa, a species later named Australopithecus africanus, supporting Charles Darwin's concepts that the closest living relatives of humans are the African apes.
  • s. The Gqunukhwebe
    • motlolisi066
       
      What is a Qgunukhwebe chief? Ama Gqunukhwebe is a chiefdom of the Xhosa Nation that was created under the reign of King Tshiwo (1670-1702) of amaXhosa who was a grandfather to Gcaleka and Rharhabe. It consisted mostly of the Khoi chiefdoms (Gonaqua, Hoengeniqua, Inqua and others) that had been displaced by colonists and became incorporated into the Xhosa nation.
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    Missionaries were an advantage for African people because it created oppurtunities for people to learn new skills and once they had those necessary skills like reading they could even use it for religious things for instance read bible versus and teach people how to read the bible .
motlolisi066

Correspondence Respecting Sir Bartle Frere's Mission to the East Coast of Africa.pdf - 0 views

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    In paragraph 1 there is a letter written about the missions in East Africa and the purposes of these missions in the Eastern Africa.
motlolisi066

Introduction: Christian Missions in Southern Africa.pdf - 0 views

  • A further boundary that is currently being breached, investigates the manner in which Africans who came into contact with missionaries and itinerant pastors understood the Christian message. Critical to this investigation is the question of how we can read mission documents, which are often the only written sources available for studying nineteenth- and early twentieth-century mission societies, for African agency. These studies, taking the cue from work on colonial history and frontier studies, push the boundaries of interpretation of written texts beyond the obvious constriction of the intentions and cultural assumptions of the authors. They identify signs of debate, challenge, and dispute between the various parties that were engaged in mission, from the missionaries and converted Christians to the first evangelists and itinerant preachers, to political and traditional religious leaders, to people rejecting the Christian message.
    • motlolisi066
       
      Christianity and missions lead to literacy studies which means people were learned more about their religion which is christianity for example bible versus and gospel songs
  • Changing identities
    • motlolisi066
       
      changing identities is a theme in this article and in this theme when people undergo this stage through missionary and christianity they have a different perspective and they are open minded and they also get to learn more
seeranefm

ANNUAL ADDRESS READ BEFORE THE \"SOUTH AFRICAN PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY,\" - 1 views

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    This is also not shared properly. It shows the landing page rather than the article.
seeranefm

American Anti-Slavery Almanac Vol. II, No. I/ - 1 views

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    The American Anti-Slavery Almanac was published annually by the American Anti-Slavery Society from 1836 to 1843 as part of the Society's attempts to increase awareness of the reality of slavery in nineteenth-century America. The yearly almanac combined astronomical data and calendars with anti-slavery literature, art, and marketing in the form of a compact, elegant pamphlet. The 1843 edition, for example, includes works by authors such as William Lloyd Garrison and Thomas Moore, as well as stories of recent slave rebellions and extracts from political speeches in support of slavery abolition. The almanac did not call for an uprising or violence, but rather served to increase awareness of the anti-slavery movement.
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    This source is not shared properly.
seeranefm

African American men, women and children pick cotton in a cotton field and place it in ... - 2 views

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    growing cotton meant an expanded interest for slaves. Slaves in the Upper South turned out to be unbelievably more important as a result of this interest for them in the Profound South. They were auctions off in large numbers. This made a Second Center Section, the second biggest constrained movement in America's set of experiences.
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    Good attempt.
ntswaki

U.S. Consuls in Zanzibar and the Slave Trade, 1870-1890 on JSTOR - 1 views

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    This is not shared properly.
ntswaki

Report Addressed to the Earl of Clarendon by the Committee on the East African Slave Tr... - 1 views

    • ntswaki
       
      The first part of this journal shows the introduction of the hardship that slaves in zanzibar went through during the slave trade that was happening it also addresses te Earl of clarendon by the committee on the east africa.
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    Good. Well done!
ntswaki

The Tensions of Internationalism: Transnational Anti-Slavery in the 1880s and 1890s - 1 views

  • In 1888 Cardinal Lavigerie, the Archbishop of Algiers and Carthage, launched his ‘anti-slavery crusade’. Drawing attention to slave raids in Africa and to the East African slave trade, this initiative resulted in the foundation of several new antislavery associations.
    • ntswaki
       
      this journal focuses on the final two decades of the nineteenth century and the period in which the transatlantic slave trade had all but ceased, with Cuba (1880/86) and Brazil (1888) being the last parts of the Americas where slavery was abolished
  • nti-slavery; empire; internationalism; humanitarianism; transnational history; civilising mission
    • ntswaki
       
      it also gives full understanding on the issue of anti-slavery and civilising mission on this on this journal we come to understand the full history of anti-slavery, my point of choosing this journal it was to make sure that i come to understnad more about the other sides of slaves and the full history of slavery not looking only on the zanzibar topic
ntswaki

A Detailed Snapshot of Zanzibar Slavery History - UnitedRepublicofTanzania.com - 3 views

  • It starts when one discovers events like when their own nation is battling with another: the prisoners are not killed, but rather tied with rope and taken to the town, where they are told, ‘You stay here as our slaves.”
    • ntswaki
       
      this article explains the beginning of the slave trade in zanzibar and also it highlights the struggle that they went through in the past, also it tries to show the important concept of slave trade in zanzibar.
  • Slaves on plantations or agricultural slaves generally worked between 6 to 11 a.m. and between 2 and 5 p.m. Sick slaves were not allowed to work, and the master oversaw their care until they recovered. In the event of the death of a slave, the master covered the costs of the funeral. However, the master did not attend all of the slaves’ funerals. He was only involved in the burials of concubines, home-born slaves, their offspring, and slaves who occupied key positions.
    • ntswaki
       
      This part of the article explains on how people that worked in the planation were being treated during the slave trade and also the fact that they didn't get any special treatment of working
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    Good.
ntswaki

History of zanzibar - 1 views

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    This image shows how slaves were being treated during the 1890 in zanzibar and also it explains the point that most slaves that were working in the planation part were not being treated fairly and they were forced to work for hours without getting any food or break
ntswaki

U.S. Consuls in Zanzibar and the Slave Trade, 1870-1890.pdf - 2 views

  • U.S. consuls in Zanzibar were influenced by a political and social milieu where racism and segregation fed off of each other. Racism was necessary to justify segregation and segregation was needed to put racist ideology into pra
    • ntswaki
       
      Gerald J. Pierson written about the history of the U.S consuls in Zanzibar and also on th U.S. consuls in Zanzibar were influenced by a political and social milieu where racism and segregation fed off of each other.
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    Good attempt.
mothipi

Zulu people - 3 views

  • The Zulu formed a powerful state in 1818 under the leader Shaka. Shaka, as the Zulu King, gained a large amount of power over the tribe. As commander in the army of the powerful Mthethwa Empire, he became leader of his mentor Dingiswayo's paramouncy and united what was once a confederation of tribes into an imposing empire under Zulu hegemony.
  • Under apartheid, the homeland of KwaZulu (Kwa meaning place of) was created for Zulu people. In 1970, the Bantu Homeland Citizenship Act provided that all Zulus would become citizens of KwaZulu, losing their South African citizenship. KwaZulu consisted of a large number of disconnected pieces of land, in what is now KwaZulu-Natal. Hundreds of thousands of Zulu people living on privately owned "black spots" outside of KwaZulu were dispossessed and forcibly moved to bantustans – worse land previously reserved for whites contiguous to existing areas of KwaZulu – in the name of "consolidation." By 1993, approximately 5.2 million Zulu people lived in KwaZulu, and approximately 2 million lived in the rest of South Africa. The Chief Minister of KwaZulu, from its creation in 1970 (as Zululand) was Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi. In 1994, KwaZulu was joined with the province of Natal, to form modern KwaZulu-Natal.
mothipi

Gale Primary Source - 5 views

  • Papers Relating to the Zulu War, Including an Account of the Fighting by Lt. Col.
mothipi

Zulu Kingdom image - 3 views

shared by mothipi on 20 Apr 23 - No Cached
rikarooi

ARMMTQ442864476.pdf - 4 views

shared by rikarooi on 10 Apr 23 - No Cached
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    Link does not work.
rikarooi

ZULU WAR ONLINE ARTICLE.pdf - 5 views

  • T he Anglo-Zulu war is perhaps the most well known colonial campaign of the V ictorian or any other era
  • ut before the discovery of gold in 1886, the region was poor and unpromising –
    • rikarooi
       
      Therefore, the British army had a desire for the Zulu population to provide labor.
  • the aim of this paper is to challenge some of these assumptions and to put forward a more radical and, I think, a more plausible answer to the question of why there was an Anglo-Zulu war in 1879.
    • rikarooi
       
      There are various perspectives concerning the Zulu war.
  • ...14 more annotations...
  • 18 000 Europea
  • settlers
  • ritannica but with the emergence of the USA,
  • Other theorists have argued that Zululand was conquered to turn the Zulu warriors into miners and farm labourers, b
    • rikarooi
       
      Similar to the context of slavery. The British or European army (capitalists wanted to oppress the lower class (in this case the Zulu people)
  • efore 1860, Britain had had no serious rivals for her easy dominance of trade and empire expressed in the idea of Pa
  • ir Bartle Frere an
    • rikarooi
       
      The former governor of the Bombay presidency
  • And at the tip of this iceberg was Lord Carnarvon, whose first act as Colonial Secretary was to order a thoroughgoing imperial defence review
  • The first visible sign of this review in Natal was the building of Fort Durnford at Estcourt and Fort Amiel at Newcastle.
  • t Lucia Bay in the north of Zululand was annexed in 1886 without the knowledge of th
  • Colonial Secretary while Zululand itself was finally annexed in 1887 by Melmoth Osborn on his own initiative.
  • up the Political and Secret Committee (a fact that was carefully omitted from his tombstone biography) and shepherded the Prince of Wales on his tour of India in 1876 – no mean feat, given Bertie the Boundah’s extra-curricular interests
  • esponsibility for starting the Zulu war – it was the work of Sir Bartle Frere, British High Commissioner
  • Henry Bartle Edward Frere was born at Bath in 1815, joined the East India Company in 1834 and went to work in the Bombay presidency, where he rose rapidly through the ranks – it helped that he married the governor’s daughter – to become the Chief Commissioner of Sind on the North West frontier, member of the Viceroy’s Council (1859–62) and ultimately, the legendary Governor of Bombay (1862–7). For a short period after the mutiny he was, de facto, Viceroy of India as everyone else on the Council had died or was in England. On his return to England he served on the India Council heading
    • rikarooi
       
      Sir Henry Bartle Frere's biography
  • Frere was sent out to South Africa not to tame the Zulus but to get ready to fight the Russians.
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    Counts as your general historical source (not Diigo or T&F)
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