This open access book offers a detailed study of the foundation and expansion of the Dutch Cape Colony to ask why certain regions in the global south became European settler societies from the 16th century onwards.Examining the different factors that led to the creation of the Cape Colony, Erik Green reveals it was a gradual process, made up of ad hoc decisions, in which the agency of indigenous peoples played an important role. He identifies the drivers behind settler expansion, explores the effect of inequality on long-term economic development and examines the relationship between settlers and the colonial authorities, asserting that they should not be treated as one homogenous group with shared economic interests. Assessing specific cha...
Since the Dutch colonization of the Cape, South African space has become an effective geostrategic p...
Paper presented at the Wits History Workshop: The Making of Class, 9-14 February, 198
The Cape Colony at the southernmost tip of Africa, founded in 1652 with the arrival of European sai...
This open access book offers a detailed study of the foundation and expansion of the Dutch Cape Colo...
Three important questions about the Dutch Cape Colony are investigated in this dissertation: 1) how ...
In the historiography of the period of Dutch rule in the Cape of Good Hope, from 1652 until 1795, Ca...
Because information about the livelihoods of indigenous groups in Africa is often missing from colon...
Most historians regard the Cape Colony of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as an impoverishe...
This paper comments on studies that aim to quantify the long-term economic effects of historical Eur...
The emphasis on location-specific factors, such as climate or disease environment, in the explanatio...
This paper comments on studies that aim to quantify the long-term economic effects of historical Eur...
Queen Adelaide Province consisted of some 7,000 square miles of Rarabe Xhosa territory annexed by th...
This paper ties into the growing literature on the long-term economic implications of historical Eur...
From the late 1830s Boer settlers conquered and settled vast new lands outside the Cape Colony. Alth...
Religious, linguistic, and material cultures of the Dutch Cape Colony (present-day South Africa) ref...
Since the Dutch colonization of the Cape, South African space has become an effective geostrategic p...
Paper presented at the Wits History Workshop: The Making of Class, 9-14 February, 198
The Cape Colony at the southernmost tip of Africa, founded in 1652 with the arrival of European sai...
This open access book offers a detailed study of the foundation and expansion of the Dutch Cape Colo...
Three important questions about the Dutch Cape Colony are investigated in this dissertation: 1) how ...
In the historiography of the period of Dutch rule in the Cape of Good Hope, from 1652 until 1795, Ca...
Because information about the livelihoods of indigenous groups in Africa is often missing from colon...
Most historians regard the Cape Colony of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as an impoverishe...
This paper comments on studies that aim to quantify the long-term economic effects of historical Eur...
The emphasis on location-specific factors, such as climate or disease environment, in the explanatio...
This paper comments on studies that aim to quantify the long-term economic effects of historical Eur...
Queen Adelaide Province consisted of some 7,000 square miles of Rarabe Xhosa territory annexed by th...
This paper ties into the growing literature on the long-term economic implications of historical Eur...
From the late 1830s Boer settlers conquered and settled vast new lands outside the Cape Colony. Alth...
Religious, linguistic, and material cultures of the Dutch Cape Colony (present-day South Africa) ref...
Since the Dutch colonization of the Cape, South African space has become an effective geostrategic p...
Paper presented at the Wits History Workshop: The Making of Class, 9-14 February, 198
The Cape Colony at the southernmost tip of Africa, founded in 1652 with the arrival of European sai...