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‘HAVE YOU EVER CAPTURED ANYTHING FOR YOUR PARENTS?’ WAR, CAPTIVITY, AND SLAVERY ON THE PRECOLONIAL SOUTHERN AFRICAN HIGHVELD, C.1800–71
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 May 2019
Abstract
The article analyses various cases of captivity in a region comprised within modern-day South Africa and Lesotho in the late precolonial period. Focusing on a single social institution, bohlanka, the article follows its traces scattered among the Batlhaping, the Basotho, the Barolong, the Bataung, and other smaller precolonial communities. Generally considered by scholars as a form of clientship based on cattle-loans, bohlanka is here redefined as originating from warfare and captivity, and later expanding to include the destitute. The fundamental elements of the institution — violence, natal alienation, and suspended death — lead to the conclusion that bohlanka constituted a local form of slavery that pre-dated colonial influences.
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Footnotes
Parts of the article were presented at the ASAI Conference in Catania (2016), at the Cambridge ARF (2017), and the SAHS Conference in Johannesburg (2017). I am grateful for the useful feedback received in all these occurrences, and I would like to single out the great comments by Rachel King and Mark McGranaghan. Wayne Dooling, Pierluigi Valsecchi, and Paul Landau commented on earlier drafts. I thank them and two anonymous reviewers for their valuable help. Author's email: 619226@soas.ac.uk.
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100 Letter from Arbousset to Society, Morija, 3 December 1835, JME, 11 (1836), 140–2.
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111 Damane and Sanders, Lithoko, 68n2.
112 Ibid. 130–1.
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115 ‘A queen, after she became a widow, usually entertains a crowd of female servants; she marries her servants, she would tell you every day: Ke nyetse mometsana (“I've just married a girl”), that is to say that she has just acquired a girl.’ Porte, ‘Les Réminescences’, 311. This nameless description was very likely based on ‘MaMosa, because the missionary Porte worked mainly in Molapo's district of Leribe. This practice is also described by Perrot, Les Sotho et les Missionnaires Européens, 109–10.
116 Mangoaela, Lithoko, 116. Unfortunately, the connection between bohlanka, polygamy, and marriage cannot be properly examined in this paper, and will be analysed in another work.
117 V. Ellenberger, La Fin, 258.
118 Ibid. 255–7.
119 The French original is ‘s'apprivoisèrent’. V. Ellenberger, La Fin, 257.
120 Dooling, ‘Reconstructing the household’, 407; Meillassoux, Anthropologie de l'Esclavage, 109.
121 V. Ellenberger, La Fin, 256. Author's translation from the original French.
122 Ibid.
123 Ibid.
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