An archaeological perspective on the nineteenth century development of land, landscape and sheep farming in the Karoo

Includes bibliographical references. === The nineteenth century was one of considerable change within the Cape Colony. There was the change from Dutch VOC control to a British government early in the nineteenth century which exposed small scale Trekboer sheep farmers of the Karoo to a wider mercanti...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Smuts, Troy Nathaniel
Other Authors: Hall, Simon
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/11703
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-117032020-10-06T05:11:43Z An archaeological perspective on the nineteenth century development of land, landscape and sheep farming in the Karoo Smuts, Troy Nathaniel Hall, Simon Archaeology Includes bibliographical references. The nineteenth century was one of considerable change within the Cape Colony. There was the change from Dutch VOC control to a British government early in the nineteenth century which exposed small scale Trekboer sheep farmers of the Karoo to a wider mercantile capitalism, especially with the adoption of Merino sheep for the global export market. This thesis charts the early nineteenth century history of colonial Trekboer society into the Karoo with a specific focus on the region to the north of the Roggeveld Mountains and west of the Nieuweveld Mountains. Of particular importance in this history is the change in land rights whereby title deeds and ownership were introduced by the British early in the nineteenth century. The distribution and chronology of title deeds are explored in this area of the Karoo using GIS to map and determine the chronological spread of deeded farms and possible links with environmental and ecological variability. While some correlations can be made under the assumption that better areas were claimed earlier in the nineteenth century other factors were also important. In particular the spread of Merino sheep, for wool production, from the Eastern Cape accounts for some of the geographic emphasis in title deed chronology, while technological innovations may underpin others. Furthermore, the thesis also examines the relationship between the title deeds and the distribution of corbelled buildings, a unique nineteenth century vernacular architecture associated with the Trekboer farmer. 2015-01-07T13:37:07Z 2015-01-07T13:37:07Z 2012 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/11703 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Archaeology
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Archaeology
spellingShingle Archaeology
Smuts, Troy Nathaniel
An archaeological perspective on the nineteenth century development of land, landscape and sheep farming in the Karoo
description Includes bibliographical references. === The nineteenth century was one of considerable change within the Cape Colony. There was the change from Dutch VOC control to a British government early in the nineteenth century which exposed small scale Trekboer sheep farmers of the Karoo to a wider mercantile capitalism, especially with the adoption of Merino sheep for the global export market. This thesis charts the early nineteenth century history of colonial Trekboer society into the Karoo with a specific focus on the region to the north of the Roggeveld Mountains and west of the Nieuweveld Mountains. Of particular importance in this history is the change in land rights whereby title deeds and ownership were introduced by the British early in the nineteenth century. The distribution and chronology of title deeds are explored in this area of the Karoo using GIS to map and determine the chronological spread of deeded farms and possible links with environmental and ecological variability. While some correlations can be made under the assumption that better areas were claimed earlier in the nineteenth century other factors were also important. In particular the spread of Merino sheep, for wool production, from the Eastern Cape accounts for some of the geographic emphasis in title deed chronology, while technological innovations may underpin others. Furthermore, the thesis also examines the relationship between the title deeds and the distribution of corbelled buildings, a unique nineteenth century vernacular architecture associated with the Trekboer farmer.
author2 Hall, Simon
author_facet Hall, Simon
Smuts, Troy Nathaniel
author Smuts, Troy Nathaniel
author_sort Smuts, Troy Nathaniel
title An archaeological perspective on the nineteenth century development of land, landscape and sheep farming in the Karoo
title_short An archaeological perspective on the nineteenth century development of land, landscape and sheep farming in the Karoo
title_full An archaeological perspective on the nineteenth century development of land, landscape and sheep farming in the Karoo
title_fullStr An archaeological perspective on the nineteenth century development of land, landscape and sheep farming in the Karoo
title_full_unstemmed An archaeological perspective on the nineteenth century development of land, landscape and sheep farming in the Karoo
title_sort archaeological perspective on the nineteenth century development of land, landscape and sheep farming in the karoo
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/11703
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