The "Dutch have made slaves of them all, and... they are calledFree": Slavery and Khoisan Indentured Servitude in theEighteenth-century Dutch Cape Colony Öffentlichkeit

Brenner, Ashley T. (2009)

Permanent URL: https://etd.library.emory.edu/concern/etds/st74cq93z?locale=de
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Abstract

Abstract The "Dutch have made slaves of them all, and... they are called Free": Slavery and Khoisan Indentured Servitude in the Eighteenth-century Dutch Cape Colony By Ashley T. Brenner Throughout much of South Africa's history, coercion has been the primary means of acquiring labor. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, settlers relied on the coerced labor of two non-European populations: slaves and Khoisan indentured servants. The term "slave" referred to people with a specific status under the law, mainly individuals imported from India, Angola, Mozambique, Madagascar, and the Dutch East Indies. The term "Khoisan indentured servant" designated people indigenous to South Africa. This thesis traces the history of the early Cape from its foundation by the Dutch East India Company in 1652 through 1795, when the British took control of the colony. It examines the reasons for the settlement of the Cape, the creation of private landownership, the expansion of the frontier, as well as the consequences these processes had for the formation of labor systems. Finally, this thesis argues that, during the Dutch colonial period, European settlers to the Cape gradually formed opinions about slavery and Khoisan indentured servitude that sharply discriminated between the two forms of labor. While the status of Khoisan indentured servants certainly resembled that of slaves, particularly in the tasks performed, Khoisan were nevertheless thought of as separate from the slave population in a number of key ways. Contemporaries distinguished between slaves and Khoisan indentured servants based on their status under the law, the free or slave status they inherited from their mothers, their method of acquisition, their transferability from one master to another, and the levels of violence that could be perpetrated upon them. Most importantly, despite their declining position, Khoisan themselves were able to maintain their free, non-slave status based on a tradition of Khoisan freedom. These differences between slaves and Khoisan indentured servants caused settlers to think about these forms of coerced labor as separate institutions, rather than as related labor processes.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents and Figures Figure 1: The colony in 1803... 11 Figure 2: Approximate locations of Khoikhoi before contact with Europeans... 18 Figure 3: The route VOC ships followed to Asia... 22 Figure 4: The southwestern Cape, c.1710... 30 Figure 5: Expansion of the frontier, 1703 - 1780... 32 Glossary of Terms... 73 Appendix A: Population figures for the Cape Colony, 1660 - 1820... 74 Appendix B: Number of males and females in the slave population... 75 Appendix C: European immigration to the Cape... 76 Bibliography... 80

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