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100 000 BC |
The south-western Cape was inhabited by people
who hunted, used stone tools and fire. |
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18 000 BC |
Even though the
Ice Age had reached its peak, it is unlikely
that the Cape was covered with ice, but winter
temperatures were possibly 10°C lower than
presently experienced. The sea was about 120
metres below its current level as a result of
large parts of seawater being frozen elsewhere.
As a result of a wetter climate, the Cape Flats
was home to rich forests. |
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2 600 BC |
Phoenician
mariners circumnavigated Africa on a mission by
Egyptian Pharaoh Necho II. |
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2 000 BC |
Migration of
inland tribes occurred, bringing agricultural
skills to the Cape. |
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300 AD |
Some of the Cape
inhabitants owned fat-tailed sheep, thought to
have originated in East Central Africa. |
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1470 |
Turkey closed off European
trade routes to the East forcing them to find
another route to the spice lands of the East.
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1486 |
Bartholomew Diaz,
a Portuguese explorer, discovered the Cape.
Vasco da Gama, also from Portugal, rounded the
Peninsula in 1497. The goal was to find a trade
route between Europe and the East. |
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1503 |
Table Mountain is
given the name Taboa do cabo (Table of the Cape)
by Antonio da Saldanha, a Portuguese admiral and
explorer. The original name given by the first
Khoi inhabitants was Hoeri ‘kwaggo (Sea
Mountain). |
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1588 |
Netherlands defeats the Spanish Armada led by
William of Orange |
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1652 |
Jan
van Riebeeck and other employees of the Dutch
East India Company were sent to the Cape to
establish a halfway station to provide fresh
water, vegetables and meat for passing ships
travelling to and from the East. Jan van
Riebeeck's party of three vessels landed at the
Cape on 6 April 1652.
Jan van Riebeeck and his men erected shelters
and laid out vegetable gardens and orchards. The
Company Gardens are part of the original gardens
and are situated at the top of Adderley Street
in Government Avenue. Water from the Fresh River
which descended from Table Mountain was
channeled into canals to provide irrigation. The
settlers bartered with the native inhabitants
for their sheep and cattle. Forests in Hout Bay
and south and east of the mountain provided
timber for ships and houses. The Dutch East
India Company had the monopoly on trade and
prohibited any private trade.
The indigenous
people encountered by the settlers were short in
stature and with yellow-brown skin. The Khoi San
people. The first nation people of South AFrica. |
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1654 |
The first Asians
arrived at the Cape. They were banished here by
the High Court in Batavia. These Asians
contributed to the enlargement of the Cape
Coloured population as well as the spread of
Islam in the Cape. |
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1657 |
Farms were
granted by the Company to a few servants in an
attempt to increase productivity. The farms were
situated on farmland along the Liesbeeck River
and the Company still retained financial control
of them. The first slaves were imported to the
Cape from Java and Madagascar. |
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1658 |
Conflict erupted
between the settlers and the Khoi San people,
who had began to realize that territory
previously theirs had been lost to them. |
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1662 |
Jan van Riebeeck
left the Cape on promotion to a position on the
Council of Justice in Batavia. He later went on
to become a Commander in Malacca. |
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1666 |
Work commenced on
a fortress, known as the Castle, which replaced
the previous wooden fort built by Van Riebeeck
and his men. The Castle was completed in 1679
and is the oldest building in South Africa. It
originally stood on the beach, and it is only
since reclaiming the Foreshore begun in 1943
that it is now a distance from the sea.
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1679 |
Simon van der
Stel arrived to govern in the Cape. The
beautiful town of Stellenbosch is named after
him. Simon van der Stel was the founding father
of the Cape wine industry. He was a dynamic
commander promoted colonial-style expansion, as
per his instructions from the Company. |
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1685 |
Simon van der
Stel was granted a 900-morgen property by the
Company. This home and winefarm was named Groot
Constantia, and was built by Louis Thibault, an
architect whose name is associated with many
early Cape buildings. Groot Constantia is thus
the oldest wine estate at the Cape. It has been
rebuilt after a fire and is a prime example of
Cape Dutch architecture. The cellar is renowned
for its sculptures by Anton Anreith. |
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1688 |
The Huguenots
arrived at the Cape. They had fled from
anti-Protestant persecution in Catholic France
to Holland where they were offered by the
Company free passage to the Cape and farmland.
The Huguenots made an important contribution to
the Cape's wine industry. |
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1689 |
Serious friction
developed between the Huguenots and the Dutch.
The Huguenots had not been recognized as a
separate group and felt dissatisfied that they
had been randomly placed among the Dutch. |
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1693 |
The road to Hout
Bay via Constantia Nek was completed. |
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1699 |
William Adriaan
van der Stel (son of Simon) was appointed
Governor. His rule was harshly corrupt and
discriminatory. |
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1707 |
Colonists, after
a long struggle, were successful in having
Willem Adriaan van der Stel recalled to Holland.
The strong animosity between the French and
Dutch colonists dissolved in the wake of the
hardships equally endured under Willem's rule. |
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1737 |
On 21 May, nine
ships were wrecked in a gale in Table Bay. 208
Lives were lost. |
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1743 |
The
Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies, Von
Imhoff, visited the Cape. A site at Simon's Bay
was chosen to be used as a harbour between
mid-May and mid-August. This would reduce damage
in Table Bay caused by the winter storms. |
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1754 |
There were 5,510
Europeans and 6,279 slaves in the Cape. |
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1780 |
England and
France were at war, with the Netherlands on the
French side. French troops were therefore sent
to the Cape to guard it against the English. |
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1784 |
The French troops
departed once again for home. |
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1789 |
The
start of the French Revolution.
1793: War declared by victorious French
revolutionaries against the Dutch Prince of
Orange. Britain went to war against France.
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1795 |
The Cape
Commissioner at the time, Sluysken, as a result
of the long time it took to send news from
Europe to the Cape, only knew that the French
had been making headway into the Netherlands but
the Dutch could at any moment change sides. News
hadn't yet reached him of the latest events.
British forces arrived at the Cape bringing with
them a letter from the Prince of Orange asking
Sluysken to allow the Cape to be protected from
the French by the British until the war was
over, and the British informed him that the
Prince had fled to England, thus misrepresenting
him to the Dutch. The Cape Council was Orangist
but recognized its allegiance belonged with the
mother country, and Sluysken thus
procrastinated. The British won the Battle of
Muizenberg after landing at Simon's Bay, taking
the Cape. The start of free trade was announced. |
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1795 |
The
Dutch East India Company was in financial ruins.
The Netherlands was invaded by the French, and a
republic was declared by Dutch revolutionaires.
The Prince of Orange fled to England, and the
way was cleared for the establishment of the
Dutch Batavian Republic. The French and Dutch
were united against Britain. |
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1797 |
The first British
Governor, Earl Macartney, arrived at the Cape.
As his wife stayed behind in England, Lady Anne
Barnard, his secretary's wife, did his
entertaining and started a social whirl in the
Cape. |
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1802 |
A fragile peace
was concluded between England and France. The
Cape was handed back to the Dutch. Jan Willem
Janssens, the new Governor, ruled the Cape for
three years. |
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1805 |
France and Britain at war again, and the British
once again set sail for the Cape as the
Batavians were still allied with France. |
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1806 |
The British
landed at Losperds Bay, between Bloubergstrand
and Melkbosstrand. Governor Jan Willem Janssens
capitulated. |
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1809 |
The British
Governor, Caledon, declared that the KhoiSan had
to have a fixed residence and could not migrate
between regions without written authority. |
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1811 |
Taps and iron pipes were installed along the
Cape's main streets. Water was still provided
from wells or the Parade fountain. |
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1814 |
Holland had reverted to a monarchy and the
French had been defeated by the British. Britain
engineered a complex peace treaty, whereby
various pieces of real estate and amounts of
money were exchanged for various countries. The
Cape was permanently taken from the Dutch by The
British in return for a large sum of money. The
British saw the Cape as a key to India. The
Dutch were too impoverished and depleted and
agreed to be allowed to continue to use the Cape
for repairs and refreshment. The new governor
was Lord Charles Somerset. |
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1822 |
A program was inaugurated by Somerset to abolish
Dutch, and make English the only official
language. |
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1824 |
The first
newspaper was published - The South African
Commercial Advertiser - and Somerset became
involved in tussles with the paper about freedom
of the press and clashed with missionary Dr
Philip, who preached freedom for the KhoiSan. |
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1826 |
Governor Somerset left the Cape under a cloud of
bad feelings. |
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1828 |
The vagrancy and
pass laws were abolished. The Khoi, in theory,
shared equality with the Europeans. |
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1834 |
The emancipation
of the slaves, estimated to be in the region of
39 000. However, slaves had to serve 4 year
apprenticeships to 'ready themselves' for
freedom. This led to the establishment of Bo-Kaap,
or 'upper city', by a Muslim community after
being freed from slavery. This year also saw the
start of a Legislative Council. |
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1836 |
The start of the Great Trek. About 10 000 Dutch
families, unable to adapt to the progressive
changes brought about by the freedom of the
slaves and the new authority, went north in
search of new land, thereby opening up the
interior. Elected municipal councils was
provided for by the Legislative Council. |
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1838 |
Slaves were officially free after serving a 4
year apprenticeship.
A municipality was formed covering the Green
Point-Sea Point area.
Battle of BLood River fought between Zulus and
Boers. |
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1840 |
The Cape Town
Municipality was formed. The population stood at
20 016, of which 10 560 were Whites. |
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1845 |
The road to
Stellenbosch through the Maitland area was
completed. |
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1846 |
Bloemfontein founded |
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1849 |
The proposal by
the British to send a ship of convicts to the
Colony was strongly objected to by the Cape
population. The shipment was successfully
stopped and the name of the Heerengracht was
changed to Adderley Street, after a British MP
who had supported their cause. The convicts went
to Australia.
First Jewish
Congregation founded in Cape Town. |
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1850 |
First Afrikaans book written by an imam (Muslim
prayer leader) of slave descent. |
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1858 |
Jewish congregation founded in Port Elizabeth. |
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1859 |
The first railway
in South Africa was started in Cape Colony. It's
route was from Cape Town to Stellenbosch, Paarl
and Wellington. |
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1860 |
Construction of
the first of the Table Bay docks, Alfred Dock,
was started. |
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1861 |
Griqua trek under Adam Kok III from Philippolis
to Nomansland. |
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1863 |
The first tramway
company in Cape Town, the 'Cape Town and Green
Point Tramway Company', commenced operations
with a horse-drawn service running on rails from
the foot of Adderley Street and out along
Somerset Road to Green Point. |
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1866 |
India officially stops sending Indian labourers
to Natal. |
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1867 |
The Cape Town
Municipality Amendment Act, granting full
municipal government, was enacted by the Cape
Colonial Parliament. It made provision for 18
town councilors and a council chairman, elected
by the Council as Mayor. |
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1870 |
Completion of
Alfred Dock. |
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1874 |
College founded at Stellenbosch. |
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1879 |
The Cape Town
City Council authorized a second tramways
company, the 'City Tramways Company Limited', to
operate a similar horse-drawn service, initially
out to Green Point and Sea Point, and later to
the Gardens and the southern suburbs. |
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1880 |
Cape Town was
linked telegraphically to Europe by means of an
overseas cable.
First Anglo Boer war.
Boers defeat Britain.
Formation of DeBeers Company. |
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1882 |
The Dutch
language was once again admitted as an official
language alongside English. |
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1884 |
The official
inauguration of the Houses of Parliament,
designed by Charles Freeman. |
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1886 |
Discovery of gold bearing rock at Ferreira's
Camp, later to become Johannesburg. |
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1887 |
Victoria Road to
Hout Bay was completed. A toll-house was erected
where Victoria Road joined up with Kloof Road
from Sea Point. Toll was collected until about
1900. |
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1888 |
Cecil Rhodes amalgamates Kimberley mining
companies as DeBeers Consolidated Mines Ltd.
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1890 |
The ambitious
project of paving the streets of Cape Town was
started. |
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1894 |
The Cape Town
City Council granted the right to a local
businessman, Henry Butters, to build and operate
the first electric tramway company through the
city.
Glen Grey Act passed in Cape to control African
labour and land. |
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1895 |
The Metropolitan
Tramways Company was formed. The inauguration of
the Graaff Electric Lighting Works at the
Molteno reservoir was held, followed by the
official switching on of the street lights at
the Town House, Greenmarket Square. |
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1896 |
The first
electric tram service in Cape Town was
officially inaugurated by Lady Sivewright, when
she started the first tram on its maiden run
through a flag-bedecked Adderley Street to
Mowbray Hill. |
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1899 |
Green Point
Common was established as a military camp.
Beginning of the
Anglo-Boer War. |
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1900 |
Sir Alfred Milner appointed Governor of the Cape
Colony. |
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1901 |
The extension of
the electric tramline between Camps Bay and Sea
Point was opened.
Bubonic plague in Cape
Town.
300 foreign teachers brought to South Africa to
teach in the British concentration camps. Some
30,000 women and children ultimately died in the
horrible camps. |
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1902 |
The electric
tramline public service was extended to a Kloof
Nek line. Work commenced on the new power
station in Dock Road, near the docks, known as
the Central Power and Lighting Station.
End of the Anglo-Boer War
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1904 |
The official
opening of the Central Electric Station in Dock
Road.
Chinese labourers recruited for the Transvaal
mines. |
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1905 |
Cape Town was
declared the legislative capital of the
newly-formed Union of South Africa. The Cape
Province retained voting rights for non-Whites.
The Cape Town City Hall, in Darling Street, was
built with its impressive opulent decorated
marble facade which is combined with Italian
renaissance features and the English colonial
style. |
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1907 |
Asiatic Registration Act passed in Transvaal,
Indians oppose it. |
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1913 |
The construction
of a pier at the bottom of Adderley Street was
completed. It contained an amphitheatre,
restaurant, observation tower, bathing cubicles
and a landing stage for sailing and rowing
boats. The City of Greater Cape Town was formed
by the union of Central Cape Town, Green Point
and Sea Point, Woodstock, Maitland, Mowbray,
Rondebosch, Claremont and Kalk Bay.
Natives Land Act restricts
black ownership of land.
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1919 |
Afrikaans used for the first time in Church. |
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1924 |
Herzog appointed Prime Minister of South Africa |
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1925 |
Afrikaans becomes the second official language,
after English |
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1927 |
The first Town
Planning Ordinance was passed by the Cape Town
City Council. The Greater Cape Town area was
extended to include Wynberg. |
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1930 |
White women receive the right to vote. |
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1932 |
Airmail service between South Africa and Britain
begins. |
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1933 |
Cape Town City
Council authorized the use of trolley buses, or
trackless trams as they were called. |
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1934 |
The Slums Act
of 1934 was passed. This gave municipalities and
the government the authority to acquire slum
properties. It could have encouraged landlords
to improve their buildings but effectively
resulted in areas being more easily demarcated
for development. District Six presented special
problems in this regard.
SABC South African Broadcast
Company is established.
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1935 |
The reclamation
of 480 acres of land on the foreshore was
started. This included the expansion of the
harbour and the expansion of the central city by
some 270 acres. |
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1936 |
The first of a
series of laws was promulgated in National
Parliament which diminished the voting rights of
non-Whites in the Cape (Representation of
Natives Act). |
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1948 |
National Party
wins the general election and remains in power
until 1994. This year saw the ending of the
ambivalence towards residential segregation. The
National Party had apartheid (separate racial
development) as its central theme.
This also marks the beginning of the Apartheid
era. |
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1949 |
The Prohibition
of Mixed Marriages Act was promulgated. Post
Office apartheid also started: Europeans and
non-Europeans had to stand in separate queues in
post offices and were served at different
counters. |
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1950 |
Some of the Acts
passed by the Government: The Immorality Act,
the Group Areas Act, the Suppression of
Communism Act, and the Population Registration
Act (which officially
divided South
Africans into 'White', 'Coloured', 'Asian' or
'Native'). It was compulsory for all Capetonians
over 16 to carry ID cards specifying their race. |
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1958 |
An enormous road
construction project was started, including
Table Bay Boulevard, Settlers Way, Eastern
Boulevard, Liesbeeck Parkway and Black River
Parkway.
Verwoerd serves as
Prime Minister of South Africa. |
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1961 |
South Africa becomes a republic and leaves the
Commonwealth. |
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1962 |
Robben Island
used as a 'maximum security institution' and
thousands of black political prisoners were sent
there. |
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1964 |
Nelson Mandela
was sentenced to imprisonment on Robben Island. |
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1966 |
District Six was
declared a "White Group Area". This meant that
all buildings except religious ones could be
demolished ('slum clearance'). About 65,000
people (mostly Coloureds) were forced to move to
residential areas on the Cape Flats. |
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1971 |
The Nico Malan
Theatre, now called Artscape, was completed. |
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1972 |
The early 1970s
saw the emergence of various shanty towns -
Unibel (1972), Crossroads (1974), KTC (1975),
and Modderdam (1975). |
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1975 |
Development of
Mitchells Plain started – 40 000 home-ownership
dwellings for 250 000 people. |
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1977 |
The Baxter
Theatre in Rondebosch was completed. |
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1979 |
The Golden Acre
Complex in Strand Street, and the Cape Town City
Council's new Civic Centre complex on the
Foreshore were completed. |
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1984 |
Coloureds and Asians given right to vote. |
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1985 |
The State of
Emergency declared by government conferred
almost limitless powers on the security forces
and restricted media coverage. Thousands were
detained, some without trial. Coloured schools
were temporarily closed. |
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1986 |
The
pedestriansation of St George's and Church
Streets starts. |
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1989 |
The redevelopment
of the historic docklands begins by the Victoria
& Alfred Waterfront company, a subsidiary of
Transnet. |
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1990 |
The start of repealing
apartheid laws.
President FW de Klerk unbans all political
organizations. Certain political prisoners were
released, including Nelson Mandela.
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1991 |
The Group Areas
Act was abolished. |
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1994 |
First national
and provincial democratic elections.
Nelson Mandela becomes SA's first democratically
elected president.
Internet invented.
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1995 |
The removal of
statutory discrimination from state schools
begins. Cape Town hosted the opening game of the
1995 Rugby World Cup, with SA playing against
Australia. SA won the first game and the series. |
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1996 |
First democratic
local government elections were held. Greater
Cape Town was then split into six
municipalities, with a total of 174 wards within
an umbrella Metropolitan Council. The NP won 5
of the 6 municipalities. |
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1999 |
The Unicity
Commission was established as a temporary
political body to manage and ensure a smooth
transition from the current seven municipal
councils into one structure.
Thabo Mbeki
becomes SA president
|
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2006 |
Helen Zille (DA party) elected Mayor Cape Town |
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2008 |
Xenophobic rioting due to ongoing controversy of
immigration.
The High Court in South Africa rules that
Chinese South Africans are to be reclassified as
black people.
Filming begins for I'm Not Black, I'm Coloured
in the Western Cape. |
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|
2009 |
Jacob Zuma elected president
of South Africa.
Helen Zille (DA Party) elected Western Cape
Premier.
First Mandela Day organized.
Helen Suzman, Anti Apartheid activist dies.
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2010 |
September - The Hangberg Hout Bay uprising.
Residents of this predominantly coloured
community and council clash over housing
shortages. Three residents lose their eyes from
rubber bullets.
http://www.hangberg.co.za/?p=49 |
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July - first ever World Cup soccer games held in
South Africa. |
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Outcast Cape Town - John
Western
sahistory.org.za
The Mind of South - Alistair
Sparks
Anglo Boer War
Washing of the Spears
griqualand.com
|
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