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What two mineral discoveries make up the Mineral Revolution, and when?
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All Flashcards in Topic 10.6
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10.6.112 cards
What two mineral discoveries make up the Mineral Revolution, and when?
Diamonds near the Orange River (1867) and gold on the Witwatersrand in the Transvaal (1886).
Uitlanders
Afrikaans term meaning "foreigners" — mainly British migrants who flooded into the Transvaal for gold mining and had no vote despite paying heavy taxes.
Who controlled most world diamond production by 1889, and how?
Cecil Rhodes, through De Beers Consolidated Mines — small diggers were bought out because deep-level mining needed huge capital.
Randlords
The small group of powerful financiers who came to dominate Witwatersrand gold mining, needing huge capital for deep, low-grade gold deposits.
Explain the process by which African men became migrant mine labourers.
Colonial taxes (like hut tax) and the need for cash wages pushed African men to leave rural homesteads; labour agents recruited them, often from far away, to work under contract in the mines.
Compound system
Housing African miners in fenced, guarded compounds near the mine, isolated from surrounding towns and their own families.
Colour bar
A rule, informal then legal, reserving skilled and supervisory mining jobs for white workers while confining Africans to low-paid, unskilled labour.
Compare the British/Uitlander view and the Boer view on Uitlander voting rights.
British/Uitlanders: taxation without representation was unjust and Kruger's government was corrupt. Boers: fast enfranchisement would let outsiders vote away Transvaal independence.
Name the three main causes historians debate for the South African War.
Economic (control of goldfields/Randlord interests), political/strategic (British "paramountcy" over the region), and the Uitlander rights question used as the immediate trigger.
What were Britain's scorched-earth and concentration camp policies, and roughly how many Boer civilians died?
Farms were burned to deny guerrillas support, and over 100,000 Boer civilians were interned in camps where roughly 26,000 died from disease and poor conditions; thousands of Africans in separate camps also died.
What did the Peace of Vereeniging (1902) establish?
The Boer republics surrendered their independence to Britain, in exchange for a promise of eventual self-government and no immediate political rights for Africans.
How did the South African War affect Afrikaner identity in the long term?
The suffering in the concentration camps deepened resentment of Britain and hardened a more defensive Afrikaner nationalism, which later shaped the politics that produced apartheid in 1948.
10.6.212 cards
What was the Natives' Land Act (1913)?
A law banning Black South Africans from buying or renting land outside small reserves, restricting them to about 7% of the country.
Why did the National Party win the 1948 election?
It promised apartheid — total legal racial separation — appealing to white voters (especially Afrikaners) fearful of losing jobs and land to Black South Africans.
Petty Apartheid vs Grand Apartheid
Petty Apartheid = everyday segregation (benches, buses, entrances). Grand Apartheid = large-scale laws restructuring land, citizenship and education (Group Areas Act, Bantu Education, Bantustans).
What did the Population Registration Act (1950) do?
Classified every South African at birth into a racial category, which then determined where they could live, work and go to school.
What was the Freedom Charter (1955)?
A declaration adopted by the ANC and allies at the Congress of the People, stating 'South Africa belongs to all who live in it' and demanding equal rights and land reform.
What happened at Sharpeville on 21 March 1960?
Police shot dead 69 people protesting the pass laws; it led to the ANC and PAC being banned and pushed the ANC toward armed struggle.
What was Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK)?
The ANC's armed wing, formed in 1961 with Nelson Mandela as first commander, which used sabotage against property to avoid civilian casualties.
What happened at the Rivonia Trial (1963–64)?
Nelson Mandela and other ANC/MK leaders were tried after a raid on their Rivonia headquarters; Mandela gave his famous dock speech and was sentenced to life imprisonment.
What did Steve Biko and Black Consciousness argue?
That Black South Africans needed to overcome psychological oppression and build pride ('Black is beautiful') before political liberation was possible; Biko co-founded SASO in 1968.
What triggered the Soweto uprising (16 June 1976)?
Student protests against a rule forcing Afrikaans as a teaching language in Black schools; police opened fire, and unrest spread nationwide for months.
How did Steve Biko die?
He was arrested in August 1977 and died in police custody after being beaten and driven while injured, becoming an international symbol of apartheid's brutality.
How did resistance strategy change over time?
It shifted from ANC petitions, to the 1952 Defiance Campaign (civil disobedience), to armed struggle after 1960, to Black Consciousness and mass township uprisings from the 1970s–80s.
10.6.312 cards
What was the Gleneagles Agreement (1977)?
A Commonwealth agreement to discourage sporting contact with apartheid South Africa.
Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid Act
1986 US law imposing tough sanctions on South Africa; Congress overrode President Reagan's veto to pass it.
Why did economic sanctions matter so much by the late 1980s?
Foreign banks stopped renewing loans after 1985, causing a real economic crisis and pushing business leaders to demand political change.
How did the end of the Cold War (1989–91) affect South Africa?
It removed apartheid's anti-communist justification for Western support, and cut the ANC's Soviet-bloc backing, pushing both sides toward negotiation.
What were the Frontline States?
Neighbouring African countries (e.g. Zambia, Tanzania, Mozambique, Zimbabwe) that gave the ANC bases, training and diplomatic support.
What happened on 2 February 1990?
De Klerk unbanned the ANC, PAC and Communist Party; Mandela was released 9 days later after 27 years in prison.
What was CODESA?
Convention for a Democratic South Africa — multi-party talks from 1991 that negotiated South Africa's new democratic constitution.
Compare Mandela's and de Klerk's contributions to ending apartheid.
Mandela chose reconciliation over revenge and kept the ANC united behind negotiation; de Klerk took the political risk of unbanning liberation movements and accepted white minority rule had no future.
What were the results of the 1994 elections?
South Africa's first multiracial elections; the ANC won about 62% of the vote and Mandela became the first Black president.
What was the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC)?
A body led by Archbishop Desmond Tutu (1995–2003) that let perpetrators of apartheid-era crimes confess publicly in exchange for amnesty, aiming to expose truth rather than punish.
Give one criticism of the TRC.
Many victims' families felt granting amnesty for confession was unjust, letting perpetrators go unpunished.
Name two ongoing challenges South Africa faced after 1994.
Persistent racial economic inequality (land/wealth still concentrated with white South Africans), plus later corruption and unemployment undermining ANC promises.
Topic 10.6 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Developments in South Africa (1867–2020)
History (2028+) exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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