Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-hc48f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T05:55:24.242Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

11 - Southern Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

A. P. Walshe
Affiliation:
University of Notre Dame, Indiana
Get access

Summary

By 1910, three governments held sway in southern Africa over a region as large as India and five times the size of France. The Union of South Africa, created in that year, was a self-governing Dominion in the British Empire; it brought together, under a unitary constitution, the territories of the Cape, Natal, the Orange River Colony and the Transvaal. The British government, which had thereby granted virtual independence to the white people of South Africa, retained responsibility for three adjacent protectorates: Bechuanaland, Swaziland and Basutoland. However, these were closely tied to the Union; Basutoland was a mountain enclave within it; and all three were administered by a British high commissioner who until 1931 was also governor-general of South Africa. South West Africa was a German colony, but the best harbour along its coastline, Walvis Bay, belonged to the Union, for the Cape Colony had annexed it before the Germans took over the surrounding territory.

Geographically, southern Africa encompasses huge contrasts. Its watershed, the Drakensberg range, falls abruptly to the east coast and causes monsoon rains to fall over Natal and the eastern Cape. For centuries this coastal belt had been colonised by African mixed farmers; more recently, they had been joined by British planters and Indian workers. Elsewhere, the only important regions for arable farming were parts of the northern plateaux, where Afrikaners had settled, and the south-western Cape, which enjoys a Mediterranean climate: this was the heartland of the Coloured people. Otherwise, the western two-thirds of southern Africa comprise arid grassland, scrub and desert, where annual rainfall varies from 15 inches to little or none. In 1911 there were probably well under 200,000 people in South West Africa and less than 150,000 in Bechuanaland.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1986

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adler, T.Lithuania's diaspora: the Johannesburg Jewish workers' club, 1928–1948’, Journal of Southern African Studies, 1979, 6, 1.Google Scholar
Archer, R. and Bouillon, A. The South African game. Sport and racism. London, 1982.
Ashton, H. The Basuto. London, 1952. 2nd ed. 1967.
Ballinger, M. From union to apartheid. London, 1969.
Barnes, L. The new Boer War. London, 1932.
Beinart, W. The political economy of Pondoland, 1860–1950. Cambridge, 1982.
Beinart, W. and Bundy, C. Hidden struggles in rural South Africa. London, 1986.
Benjamin, A. Lost Johannesburg. Johannesburg, 1979.
Benson, M. Tshekedi Khama. London, 1960.
Bisset, M. and Smith, P. F. The digest of South African case law. Cape Town, —1921, 6 vols.; 1922–33, 2 vols.; 1934–45, 2 vols.
Bley, H. Kolonialherrschaft undSozialstruktur in Deutsch-Südwestafrika. Hamburg, 1968. tr. Ridley, H., South-West Africa under German Rule, 1894–1914. London, 1971.
Bouch, R.Farming and politics in the Karroo and Eastern Cape, 1910–1924’, South African Historical journal, 1980, 12.Google Scholar
Bozzoli, B. ed. Labour, townships and protest. Johannesburg, 1979.
Bozzoli, B. The political nature of a ruling class: capital and ideology in South Africa, 1890–1933. London, 1981.
Bozzoli, B. ed. Town and countryside in the Transvaal. Johannesburg, 1983.
Bradford, H.Mass movements and the petty bourgeoisie: the social origins of ICU leadership, 1924–1929’, Journal of African History, 1984, 25, 3.Google Scholar
Braum, R. L. ed. Southwest Africa under mandate. Documents… 1919–1929. Salisbury, NC, 1976.
Brits, J. P. Tielman Roos. Sy rol in die Suid-Afrikaanse politick, 1970–1935. Pretoria, 1979.
Brookes, E. H. A South African pilgrimage. Johannesburg, 1977.
Brown, A. C. A history of scientific endeavour in South Africa. Cape Town, 1977.
Bundy, Colin. The rise and fall of the South African peasantry. London, 1978.
,Carnegie Commission. Report on the poor white problem in South Africa. Stellenbosch, 1932. 5 vols.
Cartwright, A. P. The dynamite company: the story of African explosives and Chemical Industries Limited. Cape Town, 1964.
Cartwright, A. P. Gold paved the way: the story of the Gold Fields group of companies. London, 1967.
Cartwright, A. P. Golden age: the story of the industrialisation of South Africa and… the Corner House group of companies 1910–1967. Cape Town, 1968.
Cell, John W. The highest stage of white supremacy: the origins of segregation in South Africa and the American south. Cambridge, 1982.
Chanock, M. L. Unconsummated union: Britain, Rhodesia and South Africa, 1900–45. Manchester, 1977.
Chapman, M. ed. A century of South African poetry. Johannesburg, 1981.
Christie, R. Electricity, industry and class in South Africa. London, 1984.
Clarence-Smith, W. G. and Moorsom, R.Underdevelopment and class formation in Ovamboland, 1845–1915’, Journal of African History, 1975, 16, 3.Google Scholar
Cockram, G. M. South West African mandate. Cape Town, 1976.
Coka, G.The story of Gilbert Coka’, in Perham, M. ed. Ten Africans. London, 1936. Reprinted 1963.Google Scholar
Corder, H. Judges at work… 1910–50. Cape Town, 1984.
Creswell, M. An epoch of the political history of South Africa in the life of Frederick Hugh Page Creswell. Cape Town, 1956.
Crush, J.The colonial division of space: the significance of the Swaziland land partition’, International Journal of African Historical Studies, 1980, 12, 1.Google Scholar
Cunningham, Anna M. Guide to the archives and papers of the Library of the University of the Witwatersrand. 3rd ed. Johannesburg, 1975. Cumulative supplement, 1975–1979. Johannesburg, 1979.
Cutten, T. E. G. A history of the press in South Africa. Cape Town, 1935.
Dale, R.The ambiguities of self-determination for South West Africa, 1918–1939’, Plural Societies, 1974, 5, 1.Google Scholar
Davenport, T. R. H.The triumph of Colonel Stallard: the transformation of the Natives (Urban Areas) Act between 1923 and 1937’, South African Historical Journal, 1970, 2.Google Scholar
Davenport, T. R. H. South Africa: a modern history. London, 1977.
Davies, Robert. Capital, state and white labour in South Africa, 1900–1960. Brighton, 1979.
Doxey, G. V. The industrial colour bar in South Africa. Cape Town, 1961.
Dreschler, H. Südwestafrika unter deutscher Kolonialberrschaft: der Kampf der Herero und Nama gegen den deutschen Imperialismus (1884–1915). Berlin, 1966. tr. Zöllner, H., ‘Let us die fighting’: the struggle of the Herero and Nama against German imperialism (1884–1915). London, 1981.
Dugard, J. Human rights and the South African legal order. Princeton, 1978.
Dugard, J. The South West Africa/Namibia dispute. Berkeley, 1973.
Edgar, R.The Prophet Motive: Enoch Mgijima, the Israelites and the background to the Bulhoek massacre’, International journal of African Historical Studies, 1982, 15, 3.Google Scholar
Eriksen, T. L. with Moorsom, R. The political economy of Namibia: an annotated critical bibliography. Uppsala, 1985.
Frack, I. A South African doctor looks backwards – and forward. Cape Town, 1943.
Frankel, S. H. and Herzfeld, H., ‘An analysis of the growth of the national income of the Union in the period of prosperity before the War’, South African Journal of Economics, 1944, 12, 2 –15;Google Scholar
Frankel, S. H. Co-operation and competition in the marketing of maize in South Africa. London, 1926.
Frankel, S. H. The railway policy of South Africa. Johannesburg, 1928.
Frankel, S. H. Capital investment in Africa. London, 1938.
Frankel, S. H. Investment and the relation to equity capital in the South African gold mining industry, 1887–1965. Oxford, 1967.
Fransen, H. Three centuries of South African art: fine art, architecture, applied arts. Johannesburg and Cape Town, 1982.
Fraser, M. and Jeeves, A. eds. All that glittered: the selected correspondence of Lionel Phillips 1890–1924. Cape Town, 1979.
Freislich, R. The last tribal war. Cape Town, 1964.
Gaitskell, Deborah. ‘“Christian compounds for girls’: Church hostels for African women in Johannesburg, 1907–1970’, journal of Southern African Studies, 1979, 6, 1.Google Scholar
Gaitskell, Deborah. ‘Housewives, maids or mothers: some contradictions of domesticity for Christian women in Johannesburg, 1903ndash;39’, Journal of African History, 1983, 24, 2.Google Scholar
Gandhi, M. K. tr. Desai, V. G.. Satyagraha in South Africa. Ahmedabad, 1928. 2nd ed. 1950.
Garson, N. G.South Africa and World War I’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 1979, 8, 1.Google Scholar
,General Staff: Defence Headquarters, Pretoria. The Union of South Africa and the Great War, 1914–1918. Official history. Pretoria, 1924.
Geyser, O. et al. Die Nasionale Party, vol. I. ed. Geyser, O. and Marais, A. H.. Agtermud, Stigting en Konsolidasie. Pretoria and Cape Town, n.d. [1975]; vol. II. ed. Roux, J. H. Le and Coetzer, P. W.. Die Eerste Bemindsjare 1924–1934. Part I, Bloemfontein, 1980. Part 2, Bloemfontein, 1982.
Geyser, O., Coetzer, P. W. and Le Roux, J. H. Bibliographies on South African political history, vol. 1. Register of private document collections on the political history of South Africa since 1902. Boston, 1979; vol. II. General sources of South African Political History since 1902. Boston, 1979; vol. III. Index to periodical articles on South African political and social history since 1902. Boston, 1982.
Gluckman, M. Analysis of a social situation in modern Zululand, Rhodes-Livingstone Paper no. 28. Manchester, 1958; reprinted 1968. First printed in Bantu Studies, 1940, and African Studies, 1942.
Goldblatt, I. The history of South West Africa. Johannesburg, 1971.
Gregory, T. Ernest Oppenheimer and the economic development of Southern Africa. Cape Town, 1962.
Greyling, J. J. C. and Miskin, J. Bibliography on Indians in South Africa. Durban, 1976.
Grundy, K. W. Soldiers without politics. Blacks in the South African armed forces. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London, 1983.
Gutsche, T. The history and social significance of motion pictures in South Africa, 1895–1940. Cape Town, 1972.
Hahlo, H. R. and Kahn, E. The Union of South Africa: the development of its laws and constitution. London, 1960.
Hailey, Lord. Native administration in the British African territories. Part v. The High Commission Territories: Basutoland, Bechuanaland Protectorate and Swaziland. London, 1953.
Haliburton, G. Historical dictionary of Lesotho. Metuchen, NJ and London, 1977.
Halpern, J. South Africa's hostages. Harmondsworth, 1965.
Hancock, W. K., Smuts, I. The sanguine years, 1870–1919 (Cambridge, 1962).
Hancock, W. K., Smuts, II. The fields of force, 1919–195O (Cambridge, 1968).
Hancock, W. K. Survey of British Commonwealth affairs, vol. 1. Problems of nationality, 1918–1936. London, 1937; vol. II. Problems of economic policy 1918–1939, part 2, ch.1 ‘Evolution of the settlers’ frontier, southern Africa’. London, 1942.Google Scholar
Hardinge, R. South African Cinderella: a trek through ex-German South-West Africa. London, 1937.
Hellmann, E. Rooiyard. A sociological survey of an urban native slum-yard. [1934]. Rhodes-Livingstone Paper no. 13. London, 1948. Reprinted Manchester, 1969.
Hellmann, E. ed. Handbook on race relations in South Africa. Cape Town, 1949.
Herbert, G. Martienssen and the international style. The modern movement in South African architecture. Cape Town and Rotterdam, 1975.
Hexham, I. The irony of apartheid: the struggle for national independence of Afrikaner Calvinism against British imperialism. New York, 1981.
Hobart Houghton, D. and Dagut, J. Source material on the South African economy: 1860–1970, vol. II (1899–1919); vol. III (1920–1970). Cape Town, 1972, 1973.
Hoernlé, R. F. A. South African native policy and the liberal spirit. Cape Town, 1939.
Holland, R. F. Britain and the Commonwealth alliance, 1918–1939. London, 1981.
Humphriss, D. and Thomas, D. Benoni son of my sorrow: the social, political and economic history of a South African goldmining town. Benoni, 1968.
Hunter, M. Reaction to conquest. London, 1936.
Hyam, R. The failure of South African expansion, 1908–1948. London, 1972.
Innes, D. Anglo American and the rise of modern South Africa. London, 1984.
Jingoes, S. J. A chief is a chief by the people, eds. , J. and Perry, C.. London, 1975.
Johnstone, F. Class, race and gold: a study of class relations and racial discrimination in South Africa. London, 1976.
Jones, R. A. and Griffiths, H. R. Labour legislation in South Africa. Johannesburg, 1980.
Kadalie, C. My life and the ICU, ed. Trapido, S.. London, 1970.
Kallaway, P.F. S. Malan, the Cape liberal tradition and South African politics, 1903–1924’, Journal of African History, 1974, 15, 1.Google Scholar
Kallaway, P. ed. Apartheid and education. The education of black South Africans. Johannesburg, 1984.
Kalley, J. A. The Transkei region of southern Africa, 1877–1978: an annotated bibliography. Boston, 1980.
Kaplan, D. E.The politics of industrial protection in South Africa, 1910–1939’, Journal of Southern African Studies, 1976, 3, 1.Google Scholar
Karis, T. and Carter, G. M. eds. From protest to challenge: a documentary history of African politics in South Africa, vol.1. Protest and hope, 1882–1934, ed. Johns, S., Stanford, 1972; vol. II. Hope and challenge, 1935–1952, ed. Karis, T., Stanford, 1973; vol. IV. Political profiles, 1882–1964, by Gerhart, G. M. and Karis, T., Stanford, 1977.
Katz, E. N. A trade union aristocracy: a history of white workers in the Transvaal and the general strike of 1913. Johannesburg, 1976.
Katzen, L. Gold and the South African economy: the influence of the gold mining industry on business cycles and economic growth in South Africa, 1886–1961. Cape Town, 1964.
Keiser, R. D.The South African Indians' challenge to the Union and Imperial governments, 1910–1919’, South African Historical journal, 1981, 13.
Kentridge, Morris. I recall. Johannesburg, 1959.
Kerr, A. Fort Hare, 1915–1948. London, 1968.
Kienzle, W.German-South African trade relations in the Nazi era’, African Affairs, 1979, 78, no. 310.Google Scholar
Kiewiet, C. W.. A history of South Africa: social and economic. London, 1941.
Kock, W. J.. et al. eds. Dictionary of South African biography. Cape Town, 1968–1981. 4 vols.
Krogh, D. C.The national income and expenditure of South West Africa (1920–1950)’, South African Journal of Economics, 1960, 28, 1.Google Scholar
Krüger, D. W. ed. South African parties and policies, 1910–1960: a select source book. Cape Town, 1960.
Kuczynski, R. R. A demographic survey of the British colonial empire, vol. 11. High Commission Territories, East Africa.… London, 1949.
Kuper, Hilda. Sobhuza II. Ngwenyama and King of Swaziland. London, 1978.
Lacey, M. Working for Boroko: the origins of a coercive labour system in South Africa. Johannesburg, 1981.
Lass, H. D. Nationale Integration in Südafrika: Die Rolle der Parteien zwischen den Jahren 1922 und 1934. Hamburg, 1969.
Legassick, M.South Africa: forced labor, industrialization, and racial differentiation’, in Harris, R. ed. The political economy of Africa. New York, 1975.Google Scholar
Legassick, M.Race, industrialization and social change in South Africa: the case of R. F. A. Hoernlé’, African Affairs, 1976, 75, no. 299.
Leubuscher, C. Der südafrikanische Eingeborene als Industriearbeiter und als Stadtbewohner. Jena, 1931.
Levinson, D. Diamonds in the desert. The story of August Stanch and his times. Cape Town, 1983.
Lewin, J. Studies in African native law. Oxford, 1947. Reprinted Philadelphia, 1971.
Lewis, Jon. Industrialisation and Trade Union organisation in South Africa, 1924–1955: the rise and fall of the South African Trades and Labour Council. Cambridge, 1984.
Macmillan, Allister. The Golden City: Johannesburg. London, n.d. [1933].
Macmillan, Allister. Environs of the Golden City and Pretoria. Cape Town, n.d. [1936].
Macmillan, Allister. Durban past and present. Durban, n.d. [1936].
Macmillan, Allister. Homes of the Golden City. Cape Town, 1948.
Macmillan, W. M. The South African agrarian problem. Johannesburg, 1919.
Macmillan, W. M. Complex South Africa. London, 1930.
Macmillan, W. M. My South African years. Cape Town, 1975.
Mahabane, Z. R. The good fight. Selected speeches of Rev. Zaccheus R. Mahabane. Evanston, n.d. [c. 1965].
Malan, J. P. ed. South African music encyclopaedia. Cape Town, 1979–85. 4 vols.
Malan, M. P. A. Die Nasionale Party van Suid Afrika, 1914–1964: sy stryd en sy prestasies. Cape Town, 1964.
Malherbe, E. G. Education in South Africa, vol. 1. (1652–1922). Cape Town, 1925; vol. 11. (1923–1975). Cape Town, 1977.
Mansergh, N. Survey of British Commonwealth affairs: problems of external policy, 1931–1939. London, 1952. ed. Documents and speeches on British Commonwealth affairs, 1931–1952. London, 1953.
Marks, Shula, and Rathbone, Richard, eds. Industrialisation and social change in South Africa: essays on African class formation, culture and consciousness, 1870-–1930. London, 1982.
Marks, Shula. ‘The ambiguities of dependence: John L. Dube of Natal’, Journal of Southern African Studies, 1975, 1, 2.Google Scholar
Marks, Shula. ‘Natal, the Zulu royal family and the ideology of segregation’, Journal of Southern African Studies, 1978, 4, 2.Google Scholar
Maud, J. P. R. City government – the Johannesburg experiment. Oxford, 1938.
Merriman, J. X. Selections from the correspondence of J. X. Merriman. ed. Lewsen, P.. Vol. iv. (1905–24). Cape Town, 1969.
Moodie, T. D. The rise of Afrikanerdom. Power, apartheid and the Afrikaner civil religion. Berkeley, 1975.
Moorsom, R.Underdevelopment, contract labour and worker consciousness in Namibia 1915–1972’, Journal of Southern African Studies, 1977, 4, 1.Google Scholar
Morris, M.The development of capitalism in South African agriculture: class struggle in the countryside’, Economy and Society, 1976, 5, 3.Google Scholar
Muller, C. F. J., Jaarsveld, F. A., Wijk, T. and Boucher, M. South African history and historians – a bibliography. Pretoria, 1979.
Murray, B. K. Wits: the early years. A history of the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, and its precursors, 1896–1939. Johannesburg, 1982.
Musiker, R. South Africa. World Bibliographical Series, vol. 7. Oxford and Santa Barbara, 1980.
Neame, L. E., General Hertzog: prime minister of the Union of South Africa since 1924 (London, c. 1934).
Nicholls, G. Heaton. South Africa in my time. London, 1961.
Nicol, Martin. ‘Riches from rags: bosses and Unions in the Cape clothing industry 1926–1937, journal of Southern African Studies, 1983, 9, 2.Google Scholar
Nyeko, B. Swaziland. World Bibliographical Series, vol. 24. Oxford and Santa Barbara, 1982.
Oberholster, A. G. Die Mynwerkerstaking. Witwatersrand, 1922. Pretoria, 1982.
O'Meara, Dan. Volkskapitalisme. Class, capital and ideology in the development of Afrikaner nationalism, 1934–1948. Cambridge, 1983.
Pachai, B. The international aspects of the South African Indian question, 1860–1971. Cape Town, 1971.
Pachai, B. ed. South Africa's Indians: the evolution of a minority. Washington, DC, 1979.
Packard, R.Maize, cattle and mosquitoes: the political economy of colonial Swaziland’, Journal of African History, 1984, 25, 2.Google Scholar
Parsons, Q. N.The economic history of Khama's country in Botswana, 1844–1930’, in Palmer, R. and Parsons, N. eds. The roots of rural poverty. London, 1971.Google Scholar
Parsons, Q. N.“Khama & Co.” and the Jousse trouble, 1910–1916’, journal of African History, 1975, 16, 3.Google Scholar
Parsons, Q. N.The High Commission Territories, 1909–1964: a bibliography’, Mohlomi (Roma, Lesotho), 1976.Google Scholar
Paton, A. Towards the mountain: an autobiography. Oxford, 1981.
Paton, A. Hofmeyr. Cape Town, 1964.
Pearson, P.The Rehoboth rebellion’, in Bonner, P. ed., Working papers in Southern African Studies. Johannesburg, 1981.Google Scholar
Perham, M. African apprenticeship. London, 1974.
Perham, M. F. and Curtis, L. The protectorates of South Africa: the question of their transfer to the Union. London, 1935.
Phillips, R. E. The Bantu in the city. Lovedale, 1938.
Pienaar, S. W. and Scholtz, J. J. J. eds. Glo in u Volk: Dr. B. F. Malan as Redenaar, 1908–1954. Cape Town, 1964.
Pirow, O. J. B. M. Hertzog. Cape Town, n.d. [1958].
Pollak, O. B. and , K. Theses and dissertations on southern Africa. Boston, 1976.
Reyher, R. H. Zulu woman. New York, 1948.
Rich, P. White power and the liberal conscience: racial segregation and South African liberalism, 1921–1960. Manchester, 1984.
Richards, C. S. The iron and steel industry in South Africa. Johannesburg, 1940.
Roberts, A. A. A South African legal bibliography. Pretoria, 1942.
Rogers, H. Native administration in the Union of South Africa. Johannesburg, 1933.
Rose Innes, J. James Rose Innes, Chief Justice of South Africa, 1914–1927: autobiography, ed. Tindall, B. A.. Cape Town, 1949.
Rose, B. W. and Tunmer, R. eds. Documents in South African education. Johannesburg, 1975.
Rosenthal, E. You have been listening… the early history of radio in South Africa. Cape Town, 1974.
Roux, E. S. P. Bunting: a political biography, 1873–1936. Cape Town, 1944.
Roux, E. Time longer than rope. London, 1948. Madison, 1964.
Sachs, A. Justice in South Africa. London, 1973.
Sachs, W. Black Hamlet. London, 1937.
Saker, H. The South African flag controversy, 1925–1928. Cape Town, 1980.
Saunders, C. C. Historical dictionary of South Africa. Metuchen, NY, 1983.
Schapera, I. ed. Western civilisation and the natives of South Africa: studies in culture contact. London, 1934.
Schapera, I. Select bibliography of South African native life and problems. London, 1941.
Schapera, I. Migrant labour and tribal life: a study of conditions in the Bechuanaland Protectorate. London, 1947.
Schapera, I. Tribal innovators. Tswana chiefs and social change, 1795–1940. London, 1970.
Schumann, C. G. W. Structural changes and business cycles in South Africa. London, 1938.
Searle, C. The history of the development of nursing in South Africa, 1652–1960. Cape Town, 1965.
Seitz, T. Vom Ausfstieg und Niederbruch deutscher Kolonialmacht. Karlsruhe, 1927–9. 3 vols.
Shimoni, G. Jews and Zionism: the South African experience (1910–1967). Cape Town, 1980.
Simkins, C.Agricultural production in the African reserves’, Journal of Southern African Studies, 1981, 7, 2.Google Scholar
Simons, H. J. African women: their legal status in South Africa. London, 1968.
Simons, H.J. and , R. E. Class and colour in South Africa 1850–1950. Harmondsworth, 1969.
Smith, I. C.J. C. Smuts' role in the establishment of the League of Nations and the mandate for South West Africa’, South African Historical Journal, 1973, 5.Google Scholar
Smuts, J. C. Africa and some world problems. Oxford, 1930.
Smuts, J. C. Selections from the Smuts Papers, vols, III, IV. (1910–1919), eds. Hancock, W. K. and Poel, J.. Cambridge, 1966; vols, v, vi (1919–1945), ed. Poel, J. vander. Cambridge, 1973.
,South African Library, Cape Town, ed. A South African bibliography to the year 1925. Cape Town, 1979. 4 vols.
Stevens, R. P. Weizmann and Smuts. Khartoum, 1975.
Stultz, N. M. Afrikaner politics in South Africa, 1934–1948. Berkeley, 1974.
Sundkler, B. Bantu prophets in South Africa. London, 1948. 2nd ed. 1961.
Swan, M. J. Gandhi: the South African experience. Johannesburg, 1985.
Switzer, L. and , D. The black press in South Africa and Lesotho: a descriptive guide to African, Coloured and Indian newspapers, newsletters and magazines, 1836–1976. Boston, Mass., 1979.
Tatz, C. M. Shadow and substance in South Africa: a study in land and franchise policies affecting Africans, 1910–1960. Pietermaritzburg, 1962.
Toynbee, Arnold J. Survey of international affairs, 1929. London, 1930.
Tyrrell-Glynn, W. A guide to the South African manuscript collections in the South African Library, Cape Town. Cape Town, 1976.
,Union of South Africa (Bureau of Census and Statistics). Union statistics for fifty years, 1910–1960. Pretoria, 1960.
,Union of South Africa (Union Office of Census and Statistics). Official year book of the Union and of Basutoland, Bechuanaland Protectorate, and Swaziland. No. 22–1941. Pretoria, 1941.
van der Horst, S. Native labour in South Africa. Cape Town, 1942. Reprinted London, 1971.
van Onselen, C. Studies in the social and economic history of the Witwatersrand, 1886–1914, vol. 1. New Babylon; vol. 11. New Nineveh. Harlow, 1982.
Wade, M.Myth, truth and the South African reality in the fiction of Sarah Gertrude Millin’, Journal of Southern African Studies, 1974, 1, 1.Google Scholar
Waldt, F. ed. Native uprisings in Southwest Africa: documents [1922, 1925]. Salisbury, NC, 1976.
Walker, Cherryl. The woman's suffrage movement in South Africa. Cape Town, 1979.
Walker, Cherryl. Women and resistance in South Africa. London, 1983.
Walker, I. L. and Weinbren, B. 2000 casualties: a history of the trade unions and the labour movement in the Union of South Africa. Johannesburg, 1961.
Walshe, A. P. The rise of African nationalism in South Africa: the African National Congress, 1912–1952. London, 1971.
Warner, H. W. A digest of South African native civil case law 1894–1957. Cape Town, Wynberg and Johannesburg, 1961.
Webster, E. ed. Essays in southern African labour history. Johannesburg, 1978.
Whitfield, G. M. B. South African native law. Cape Town and Johannesburg, 1930. 2nd ed. 1948.
Wickins, P. L. The Industrial and Commercial Workers'Union of Africa, Cape Town, 1978.
Willan, Brian, ‘Sol Plaatje, De Beers and an old tram shed: class relations and social control in a South African town, 1918–1919’, Journal of Southern African Studies, 1978, 4, II.Google Scholar
Willan, B. P.The South African native labour contingent, 1916–1918'’, Journal of African History, 1978, 19, 1.Google Scholar
Willan, B. P. The Southern African materials project, 1973–1976, ed. Larby, P.. London, 1980.
Willan, B. P. Sol Plaatje: South African nationalist, 1876–1932. London, 1984.
Willet, Shelagh M. and Ambrose, David. Lesotho: a comprehensive bibliography. World Bibliographical Series, vol. 3. Oxford and Santa Barbara, 1980.
Wilson, F. Labour in the South African Gold Mines, 1911–1969. Cambridge, 1972.
Wilson, F. and Perrot, D. eds. Outlook on a century: South Africa, 1870–1970. Lovedale, 1973.
Wilson, M. and Thompson, L. M. eds. The Oxford history of South Africa, vol. 11. South Africa 1870–1966. Oxford, 1971.
Wynne, S. G. South African political materials: a catalogue of the Carter-Karis collection. Bloomington, 1977.
Yudelman, David. The emergence of modern South Africa: state, capital, and the incorporation of organised labour on the South African gold fields, 1902–1939. Westport, Conn., 1982.

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure no-reply@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×