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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Die geskiedenis van die vissery aan die Kaap tot aan die middel van die agtiende eeu

Muller, C. F. J., Du Plessis, Andries Johannes 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA) -- Stellenbosch University, 1943. / 'Die republiek Natalia' is a DPhil thesis, University of Stellenbosch. / INLEIDING: Reeds baie lank voor die stigting van die volksplanting is die vissery beoefen in die Suid-Afrikaanse waters : eers alleen deur die inheemse rasse, maar later ook deur die bemanning van verbyseilende skepe. Omtrent die ras wat Suid-Afrika voor die koms van die Boesman, Hottentot en Bantoe bewoon het, is baie min bekend. Uit hul lewenswyse wat nagespoor is sowel as uit die rol van die visvangs in die vroegste geskiedenis van ander lande, kan egter met sekerheid vasgestel word dat seediere vanaf 'n baie vroeë tydperk een van hul vernaamste voedselbronne was. Ophopinge van grotendeels vergane skulpe van eetbare weekdiere soos o.a. die mossel, oester en perlemoen en ook visgrate, is op verskillende plekke langs die Suid-Afrikaanse kus gevind. Vandaar die benaming "the Ancient Shellmound Men" deurTheal aan hietdie ras gegee. Maar uit die vroegste geskiedenis van ander lande blyk ook dat "fishing was one of man's earliest sources of food supply") en waarskynlik die oudste bedryf in die wêreld.
2

The transformation of KwaZulu homeland from a primary Agrarian to a more integrated political and socio-economic entity, 1972 - 1994

Ntuli, Sihle Herbert January 2006 (has links)
Submitted to the faculty of Arts in fulfilment of the requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy in the History Department at the University of Zululand, 2006. / The purpose of this thesis is to present the critical understanding of how KwaZulu and its people have changed and developed under the abnormal conditions of apartheid.
3

Gender, power and iron metallurgy in archives of African societies from the Phongolo-Mzimkhulu region

Kotze, Steven January 2018 (has links)
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Humanities, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfilment of the requirements of Master of Arts, Durban 2018 / This dissertation examines the social, cultural and economic significance of locally forged field-hoes, known as amageja in Zulu. A key question I have engaged in this study is whether gender-based divisions of labour in nineteenth-century African communities of this region, which largely consigned agricultural work to women, also affect attitudes towards the tools they used. I argue that examples of field-hoes held in eight museum collections form an important but neglected archive of “hoeculture”, the form of subsistence crop cultivation based on the use of manual implements, within the Phongolo-Mzimkhulu geographic region that roughly approximates to the modern territory of KwaZulu-Natal. In response to observations made by Maggs (1991), namely that a disparity exists in the numbers of fieldhoes collected by museums in comparison with weapons, I conducted research to establish the present numbers of amageja in these museums, relative to spears in the respective collections. The dissertation assesses the historical context that these metallurgical artefacts were produced in prior to the twentieth-century and documents views on iron production, spears and hoes or agriculture recorded in oral testimony from African sources, as well as Zulu-language idioms that make reference to hoes. I furthermore examine the collecting habits and policies of private individuals and museums in this region from the nineteenthcentury onwards, and the manner in which hoes are used in displays, in order to provide recommendations on how this under-utilised category of material culture should be incorporated into future exhibitions. / XL2019
4

The impact of east coast fever on African homestead society in the Natal colony 1901-1910

Thabede, Mfanimpela Ishmael 08 1900 (has links)
This dissertation looks at the impact of East Coast Fever on African homestead society in Natal in the period 1901-1910. The disease broke out in Natal at the beginning of 1904. With the realization that East Coast Fever was another lethal epizootic, the Natal Colonial Government introduced measures to control the spread of the disease and finally eradicate it. The campaign was, however, not successful. The disease thus spread throughout the colony and led to the loss of many cattle owned by Africans. By 1909 not more than four divisions in the colony remained free of the disease. The death of many cattle deprived Africans of the means of extensive cultivation, the source of income for the payment of rents and taxes, and Ilobolo. Many African males were forced to leave their homesteads for the towns and the mining sector in search of work. This eventually changed the nature of the homestead society. / History / M.A. (History)
5

The impact of east coast fever on African homestead society in the Natal colony 1901-1910

Thabede, Mfanimpela Ishmael 08 1900 (has links)
This dissertation looks at the impact of East Coast Fever on African homestead society in Natal in the period 1901-1910. The disease broke out in Natal at the beginning of 1904. With the realization that East Coast Fever was another lethal epizootic, the Natal Colonial Government introduced measures to control the spread of the disease and finally eradicate it. The campaign was, however, not successful. The disease thus spread throughout the colony and led to the loss of many cattle owned by Africans. By 1909 not more than four divisions in the colony remained free of the disease. The death of many cattle deprived Africans of the means of extensive cultivation, the source of income for the payment of rents and taxes, and Ilobolo. Many African males were forced to leave their homesteads for the towns and the mining sector in search of work. This eventually changed the nature of the homestead society. / History / M.A. (History)

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