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- This extract comes from a very large document reporting on every detail
of the meeting between Sir Alfred Milner and Paul Kruger. Milner was
the most senior British colonial official in Africa. His report was
sent to Joseph Chamberlain, the minister in charge of the colonies.
Kruger was the leader of the Boers.
- Britain took control of the Cape Colony in South Africa in 1806. However,
there were already European settlers there. They were descended from
the original Dutch settlers and were known as Afrikaaners or Boers.
- During the 1800s the Boers moved inland into South Africa because
they did not like British rule. They objected to British taxes. They
also objected because under British rule native Africans were given
basic civil rights.
- As they moved inland the Boers clashed with the Zulus and other African
nations. The British became involved in these wars. By the late 1800s
the British controlled the provinces of Cape and Natal. Further north,
the Boers controlled separate republics called the Orange Free State
and the Transvaal.
- Tensions increased between the British and the Boers in the 1860s
when diamonds were discovered. The tensions got worse in the 1890s when
gold was discovered in the Transvaal. Large numbers of foreign miners
(called Uitlanders by the Boers) arrived in the Transvaal to look for
gold. So did large numbers of Africans, looking for jobs in the mines.
- The Boers treated the Uitlanders badly. They were heavily taxed and
had no rights (eg they could not vote). The British government constantly
pressured the Boers to improve conditions for the Uitlanders and this
eventually led to war in 1899.
- Some historians believe that the British deliberately provoked
the war to give them a reason to take over all of South Africa and the
gold mines.
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