. History of Africa south of the Zambesi : from the settlement of the Portuguese at Sofala in September 1505 to the conquest of the Cape Colony by the British in September 1795. W A-. A TT John gtOP .T,TTTrtt*»fi TTrhriVn-ir^h The places where there were courts of law wereCapetown, city founded in April 1652,Stellenbosch, village founded in December 1679,Swellendam, village founded in October 1746,Graaff-Reinet, village founded in churches were at Capetown, established in August 1665,Stellenbosch, established in January 1687,Drakenstein; established in December 1691,Roodezand (
. History of Africa south of the Zambesi : from the settlement of the Portuguese at Sofala in September 1505 to the conquest of the Cape Colony by the British in September 1795. W A-. A TT John gtOP .T,TTTrtt*»fi TTrhriVn-ir^h The places where there were courts of law wereCapetown, city founded in April 1652,Stellenbosch, village founded in December 1679,Swellendam, village founded in October 1746,Graaff-Reinet, village founded in churches were at Capetown, established in August 1665,Stellenbosch, established in January 1687,Drakenstein; established in December 1691,Roodezand (now Tulbagh), established in October 1743,Zwartland (now Malmesbury), established in July 1745,Graaff-Reinet, established in October , established in December1780. Moravian 1 Genadendal, established in Decembermission J 1792. Dutchreformed Lutheran Map X. This maj> stows the extent o£ the settlement in the year Tfrigriah Miles 50 40 30 20 10 O 20° Xongittttlfi East of Greenwich. 22 London : George Allen & Unwin, House, 40 Mimeuni St., J Vff. k y 7rJrrn»*w iTwrtiJ K^mHir^h *795] Abraham Josias Sluysken. 345 eral had done all that was possible against the over-whelming force opposed to him, and they made a strong-point of his holding out so long in order that the advan-tage of compulsory capitulation, rather than submissionwithout a struggle, should not be lost when terms ofpeace came to be considered. In consequence of this report, on the 2nd of De-cember 1796 the National Assembly decreed that had performed his duty correctly and thathe deserved well of the fatherland. Of the members of the council of policy at the Cape,the secunde, the fiscal, and the resident at Simonstownhad no scruple in at once accepting office under theBritish authorities. Three hundred and ninetv-one men—mostly Germans—of the national battalion were inducedby a bounty of five guin
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubje, booksubjectportuguese