Stellaland

Republiek Stellaland & Het Land Goosen
Republic of Stellaland & State of Goshen (1882–1883)
united as
Verenigde Staten van Stellaland
United States of Stellaland
Boer Republic
ZAR protectorate (1884)
1882–1885
Motto
Gewapend en Regtvaardig
Dutch: Armed and just(ified)
Location of Stellaland in Southern Africa (1882–1885)
Capital Vrijburg (Vryburg)
Languages Dutch
Tswana
Religion Dutch Reformed,
Indigenous
Government Republic
Administrator
   Stellaland Gerrit Jacobus van Niekerk
  Goshen (1882–1883) Nicolaas Claudius Gey van Pittius
Legislature Die Bestuur
History
   Founding of Stellaland 26 July 1882
   Founding of Goshen October 1882
  Unification 6 August 1883
  Annexation (ZAR) 10 September 1884
  Invasion (British) December 1884
   Abolished August 1885
Area
   Stellaland[1] 15,500 km2 (6,000 sq mi)
   Goshen[1] 10,400 km2 (4,000 sq mi)
Population
   Stellaland[1] est. 20,500 
     Density 1/km2 (3/sq mi)
   Goshen[1] est. 17,000 
     Density 2/km2 (4/sq mi)
Currency South African pound (£)
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Tswana people
Griqua people
British Bechuanaland
Today part of  Botswana
 South Africa

The Republic of Stellaland (Dutch: Republiek Stellaland) was from 1882 to 1883 a Boer republic located in an area of British Bechuanaland (now in South Africa's North West Province), west of the Transvaal. After unification with the neighbouring State of Goshen, it was the United States of Stellaland (Dutch: Verenigde Staten van Stellaland) from 1883 to 1885.

During its short history, the small state became a focal point for conflict between the British Empire and the South African Republic, the two major players vying for control of the territory. After a series of claims and annexations, British fears of Boer expansionism led to its demise and, among other factors, set the stage for the Second Boer War.

Background

Before the proclamation of the republic, the area was under the control of competing Griqua and Tswana groups, while the United Kingdom laid claim to it as a part of the emerging protectorate of British Bechuanaland. Two of the indigenous groups were under the leadership of chiefs Mankoroane and Montsioa, whom the British regarded as "friendly,"[2] and another two under the leadership of chiefs Moshette and Massouw. When a feud erupted between Mankoroane and another chief, each side resorted to recruiting volunteers, promising them land in return for their assistance. After a settlement was negotiated with mediation from the Transvaal Republic,[3] large portions of Mankoroane's land with 416 farms of 3,000 morgen (2,563 ha) each were given to Boer mercenaries who had fought on his adversary's side, and the new inhabitants decided to declare independence.[4]

Unification

Stellaland with its capital Vryburg on a contemporary map prior to unification with Goshen to the northeast

The Republic of Stellaland was created on 26 July 1882, under the leadership of its elected president Gerrit Jacobus van Niekerk, a farmer from Transvaal,[3] and was given the name Stellaland (Star Land) in reference to a comet that was visible in the skies at the time.[3][4] The town of Vryburg was founded and declared its capital. At its founding, the new country covered an area of 15,500 km2 (5,985 sq mi) and was home to an estimated population of 20,500 individuals, 3,000 of whom were of European ancestry.[1]

The State of Goshen, named after the biblical Land of Goshen, was founded by Nicolaas Claudius Gey van Pittius in October 1882 in the neighbouring area called Rooigrond[4] with the approval of chief Moshette.[5] Goshen had an estimated population of 17,000, of whom approximately 2,000 were of European origin, and covered an area of 10,400 km2 (4,015 sq mi).[1]

On 6 August 1883, Stellaland and Goshen united to form the United States of Stellaland.[6]

Status

Whether or not the independence of any of these states was ever recognised by another country is not clear. In Stellaland's favour, one can point out that the Montevideo convention which formalised the definition of sovereignty in the modern sense would not be signed until 1933, and that the local chiefs approved its existence.[5] On the other hand, several British sources refer to van Niekerk and his followers as "freebooters"[7][8] and "marauders",[9] but de iure recognition from the United Kingdom can be implied from a telegram that was erroneously sent by Sir Charles Warren, military commander for British Bechuanaland, to van Niekerk in which he endorsed Cecil Rhodes' settlement in Stellaland. Only later did Warren realise that his wording could be interpreted as an acknowledgment of Stellaland's legality,[8] and he tried to deny the message's implications. In February 1884, Great Britain unilaterally declared the area a British protectorate.[10]

Stellaland's laws and constitution were practically identical to those of the South African Republic.[11] It never issued an independent currency, but instead—like all the surrounding states—used the South African pound; it did, however, print its own postage stamps beginning in February 1884[12] which are still traded among collectors to the present day.

Annexation

Because van Niekerk's government had announced its intention to levy taxes on all trade going through its territory, Cecil Rhodes, founder of the De Beers diamond company, and the British administration feared a setback for their endeavours in the mining business,[13] because Stellaland lay on one of the main trade routes. It was also presumed that the small country could eventually be incorporated into the neighbouring South African Republic in an effort to circumvent the Pretoria Convention of 1881 which called for an end to Boer expansionism.[9]

Rhodes even asserted that the area was of such a crucial nature to the Crown that if the territory held by Stellaland remained under Afrikaner control, British presence "should fall from the position of a paramount state in South Africa to that of a minor state."[14] These fears were fuelled when, on 10 September 1884, President Paul Kruger of Transvaal declared the area to be under the protection of the South African Republic[9] and annexed it six days later.[15] In December 1884 the British sent in a force under Sir Charles Warren, who invaded the country and abolished the republic in August of the following year before it was incorporated into British Bechuanaland.[9]

In current politics

Beginning in 2008, the far-right political group Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (Afrikaner Resistance Movement) started lobbying for the area to be re-established as an independent Boer republic. According to the group's former leader, Eugène Terre'Blanche, the group is in possession of the old contracts of 1882 that conferred ownership of the area and has vowed to take their case to the International Court of Justice in The Hague if necessary.[16]

Eugène Terre'Blanche has since been murdered.

On 4 May 2014 the Front National political party said they want to call for restitution of the Republic of Stellaland.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Tijdschrift van het Nederlandsch Aardrijkskundig Genootschap, Amsterdam, 2 (1): 690f, 1884 Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. Williams, Basil (1921), Cecil Rhodes, New York: Henry Holt & Company, pp. 71f
  3. 1 2 3 Theal, George M. (1919), History of South Africa from 1873 to 1884, London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd., pp. 147f
  4. 1 2 3 Webster, Roger (2003), "The Boer Republics of Stellaland and Goshen", The Illustrated at the Fireside: True Southern African Stories, Claremont: Spearhead, p. 23, ISBN 0-86486-558-9
  5. 1 2 Theal, George M. (1919), History of South Africa from 1873 to 1884, London: George Allen & Unwin, p. 153
  6. Stewart, GJohn (2006), African states and rulers, McFarland & Co., p. 114
  7. Meredith, Martin (2007), Diamonds, Gold, and War: The British, the Boers, and the Making of South Africa, New York: Public Affairs, ISBN 978-1-58648-473-6
  8. 1 2 Sillery, Anthony (1974), Botswana: A Short Political History, London: Methuen Young Books, p. 75, ISBN 0-416-75480-5
  9. 1 2 3 4 Cook, Edward Tyas (1902), Rights and Wrongs of the Transvaal War, London: Edward Arnold, pp. 37f
  10. Fuller, Thomas Elkins (1910), The Right Honourable Cecil John Rhodes, a Monograph and a Reminiscence, London: Longmans, Green and Co., p. 42
  11. Fisher, William Edward Garrett (1900), The Transvaal and the Boers, London: Chapman & Hall, p. 242
  12. Mekeel, ed. (27 September 1919), Mekeel's weekly stamp news, WholeNo. 1500, Portland, ME: Severn-Wylie-Jewett Co., 33 (39): 344 Missing or empty |title= (help)
  13. Paulin, Christopher M. (2001), White men's dreams, Black men's blood: African labor and British expansionism in Southern Africa, 1877–1895, Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press, p. 131, ISBN 0-86543-928-1
  14. Tamarkin, Mordechai (1996), Cecil Rhodes and the Cape Afrikaners, London: Frank Cass & Co., p. 90, ISBN 0-7146-4627-X
  15. Aitton, D. (1897), Geschiedenis van Zuid-Afrika, Amsterdam/Pretoria: J.H. de Bussy, p. 318
  16. Harper, Paddy (15 June 2008), "O volk! Terre Blanche is back again", The Sunday Times

Coordinates: 29°57′S 24°44′E / 29.950°S 24.733°E / -29.950; 24.733

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