Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago
References
-
[1]
19. South Africa/Namibia (1920-1990) - University of Central ArkansasPre-Crisis Phase (December 17, 1920-May 4, 1922): South Africa was granted a League of Nations (LON) mandate to administer the former German colony of South ...
-
[2]
UNTAG - United Nations PeacekeepingNamibia -- formerly known as South West Africa -- was the only one of the seven African Territories once held under the League of Nations Mandate System that ...
-
[3]
German Southwest Africa - World War I TodayA German colony in southwest Africa from 1884, German Southwest Africa, now Namibia, was conquered by Allied forces, primarily South African, in 1915.
-
[4]
Historical Documents - Office of the HistorianThe Territory of South-West Africa is still a Territory under the international Mandate assumed by the Union of South Africa on 17 December 1920.
-
[5]
Bantustans - South Africa: Overcoming ApartheidThe Bantustans (also known as "homelands") were a cornerstone of the “grand apartheid” policy of the 1960s and 1970s.
-
[6]
United Nations Revokes South African Mandate over South-West ...The United Nations stripped South Africa of authority over the South-West Africa mandate, formally transferring administration to a U.N. committee in 1967.
-
[7]
The UN ends SA mandate over South West AfricaMar 16, 2011 · The SA government rejected the resolution of the General Assembly, arguing that it was unconstitutional and in conflict with international law, ...<|separator|>
-
[8]
Border War - SASFAA largely asymmetric conflict that occurred in Namibia (then South West Africa), Angola and Zambia from 26 August 1966 to 21 March 1990.
-
[9]
The Border War - The Airforce - The South African Air ForceThe first major clash between a unit of the South African Police, supported by SAAF helicopters, and SWAPO occurred on 26 August 1966. And so began the 23 year ...
-
[10]
The San people of Africa - NatucateJul 10, 2024 · Most archaeologists believe that the San hunter-gatherer culture dates back 20,000 years. However, some archaeological evidence supports the ...
-
[11]
The San | South African History OnlineMar 24, 2011 · The earliest hunter-gatherers in southern Africa were the San people. The San were also known as 'Bushmen', a term used by the European Colonists that is now ...
-
[12]
Southern African States | Boundless World History - Lumen LearningThe San (also called Bushmen) are generally assumed to have been the earliest inhabitants of the region comprising today's Namibia, Botswana, and South Africa.
-
[13]
The Khoisan | South African History OnlineMar 21, 2011 · When European settlement began, Khoikhoi groups called the Namaqua were settled in modern day Namibia and the north-eastern Cape; others, ...
-
[14]
Namibia (03/09) - State.govEthnic groups: About 50% of the population belong to Ovambo ethnic group, and 9% to the Kavango ethnic group. Other ethnic groups are: Herero 7%, Damara 7 ...
-
[15]
Namibia | Early World Civilizations - Lumen LearningIt is believed that they separated themselves early on from their Bantu brothers of Southern and Central Africa and moved to Southwest Africa. The Ovambo, and ...
-
[16]
Namibia: A timeline of Germany's brutal colonial history - DWSep 22, 2021 · 1884/85: Following the Berlin Conference, the territory of present-day Namibia becomes a protectorate of the German Empire called German South ...
-
[17]
Deutsch Sudwestafrika (German South West Africa)Dec 29, 2011 · In May 1886, Heinrich Ernst Göring was appointed Commissioner of German South West Africa, and established his administration at Otjimbingwe. A ...
-
[18]
German Southwest Africa booklet pane of sixOn August 7, 1884, German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck declared Southwest Africa (today Namibia) a German protectorate. Stamps were first issued for the ...Missing: proclamation | Show results with:proclamation
-
[19]
'Rivers of Blood and Rivers of Money' (Chapter 26)26 - 'Rivers of Blood and Rivers of Money'. The Herero and Nama Genocides in German Southwest Africa, 1904–1908. from Part IV - Premonitions. Published online ...
-
[20]
Germans in South West Africa: A History of Colonization & GenocideSep 19, 2023 · The German colonization of South West Africa was a bloody affair that included concentration camps and genocide of the native peoples.
-
[21]
Hendrik Witbooi and the Evolution of Germany's Imperial ... - jstorBasters, the “Red Nation,” the Bethanie people, and the Berseba. 8For instance, Maharero, chief of the Herero (Ovaherero), signed a German protection treaty in ...
-
[22]
Environing Empire: Nature, Infrastructure and the Making of German ...The creation of a model colony are key in chapter 7. Although debates about the future of German Southwest Africa (mining, cattle, agriculture) loomed for some ...
-
[23]
HistoriaThe African guano trade which began on the Namib coast in 1843, was located in a harsh area which generally consisted of angry surf, barren rocks, arid sand ...<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[24]
[PDF] Historical reconstruction of guano production on the Namibian ...This paper presents data on guano produc- tion on the Namibian islands from 1843 to. 1895, reconstructed from the nineteenth-.
-
[25]
[PDF] The Herero Genocide in German Southwest Africa - TopSCHOLARColonial Roots of Nazism, (London: Faber and Faber, 2010), 3. 2 Olusoga and Erichsen, Kaiser's Holocaust, 8. 3 Birthe Kundrus, “German Colonialism: Some ...
-
[26]
[PDF] Redressing Colonial Genocide: The Hereros' Cause of Action ...It is widely supposed that the genocidal wars waged by colonial ad- ministrations against indigenous peoples or nations before 1948 did not.
-
[27]
The Prusso-German General Staff and the Herero Genocide - jstorAfter the Battle of Waterberg, however, the local military com- mander, Lieutenant General Lothar von Trotha, fought his own war. Meanwhile, the general staff ...
-
[28]
[PDF] than a century since germany's colonial genocide, ovaherero and ...Oct 2, 2025 · 2 October marks the anniversary of the extermination order issued by a German colonial commander in 1904, calling for the.<|separator|>
-
[29]
[PDF] Britain's Response to the Herero and Nama Genocide, 1904-07Neighbouring British and German Colonies in Southern Africa” in Hybrid Cultures – Nervous. States, Britain and Germany in a (Post) Colonial World, ed. Ulrike ...
-
[30]
[PDF] Genocide in Colonial Namibia Andreas Eckl and Matthias Häussler ...The call for recognition of the German crimes and their Namibian victims has grown ever louder over the past years. If we are serious about this demand, we ...<|separator|>
-
[31]
[PDF] New perspectives on the annihilation of the Herero and Nama ...xvi + 170 pp. paperback. ISBN 90-5448-064-5. and. Genocide in German South-West Africa: The Colonial War of 1904- ...
-
[32]
Military power in German colonial policy in - Manchester HiveMar 1, 2017 · Leutwein became the first official Governor of German South-West Africa and, at the same time, the commander of the Schutztruppe. Although he ...
-
[33]
Schutztruppe (East Africa, Southwest Africa, Cameroon)Oct 8, 2014 · “Schutztruppe” was the official name for the German colonial armed forces in the “protectorates” of German East Africa, German Southwest Africa and Cameroon.
-
[34]
Imperial Schutztruppe For German South West Africa (GSWA)Jul 19, 2025 · The formal establishment of the Schutztruppe for German South West Africa was carried out by the Reich Law of 09 June 1895. The support of these ...
-
[35]
Southern Africa - 1914-1918 OnlineMay 30, 2017 · 14,000 German settlers had immigrated to South-West Africa, attracted by farmland in the vicinity of Windhoek in the interior. Their settlement ...
-
[36]
[PDF] German Southwest Africa, 1904, in Comparative PerspectiveEnslaved prisoners built the Otavi railway to the Tsumeb copper mines (completed in 1906) and worked in the mines there and at. Gibeon. The mining company ...
-
[37]
[PDF] Sovereignty and Diamonds in Southern Africa, 1908-1920May 2, 2018 · In 1908, a colonial company held sovereign rights over diamond fields, not the German state. The company controlled mining permits and ...Missing: economy Otavi copper
-
[38]
[PDF] South-west Africa during the German occupation, 1884-1914TOGOLAND. Over 150 Illustrations and Maps. THE GERMAN COLONIES. IN AFRICA. With Coloured Plates.
-
[39]
[PDF] German Colonialism in Africa and the Pacific, 1884-1914German South-West Africa. South-West Africa became Germany's only settler colony in 1884. By 1910, c. 24,000. Germans had migrated to German colonies. More ...
-
[40]
A Prime Minister Goes To War - British Modern Military History SocietyThe South Africans invade In February 1915 with Louis Botha in command, the Union Defence Force of approximately 60,000 troops invaded German South West Africa ...
-
[41]
South-West African campaign | National Army MuseumUndertaken by South African colonial troops, the campaign was aimed at preventing the German navy from using the colony's ports.Missing: settlements | Show results with:settlements<|separator|>
-
[42]
South African Invasion of German South West Africa (Union of South ...Jul 1, 2015 · The South African invasion of German South West Africa (GSWA) in September 1914 was specifically aimed at securing several strategic British war objectives.
-
[43]
South Africa's Military Presence in South West Africa 1915-1980Dec 19, 2020 · To this end, Botha personally travelled to Walvis Bay on February 2, 1915, where he arrived on the 11th of the month and assumed command of the ...
-
[44]
[PDF] Africa's Freedom Railway - South African History OnlineAfrica's freedom railway : how a Chinese development project changed lives and livelihoods in Tanzania / Jamie Monson. p. cm. Includes bibliographical ...
-
[45]
[PDF] nam01. South West Africa - Anti-Apartheid Movement ArchivesSOUTH WEST AFRICA is the only one of the former Mandated Ter- ritories established under the League of Nations in 1918, which is.
-
[46]
Sub-Saharan Africa 1922: League of Nations Mandates - OmniatlasSouth West Africa was designated a Class C Mandate—to be administered as an integral territory—and assigned to South Africa in December 1920.<|control11|><|separator|>
-
[47]
South-West Africa Cases; Advisory Opinion Concerning ... - RefworldAfter the war of 1914-1918 this Territory was placed under a Mandate conferred upon the Union of South Africa which was to have full power of administration and ...Missing: Class | Show results with:Class
-
[48]
[PDF] GENERAL ASSEMBLY - United Nations Digital Library SystemAt that time, the Union of South Africa had explained its refusal to place South West Africa under the Trusteeship System by its desire to satisfy the wishes of ...Missing: incorporation | Show results with:incorporation
-
[49]
South West Africa (Liberia v. South Africa)On 4 November 1960, Ethiopia and Liberia, as former States Members of the League of Nations, instituted separate proceedings against South Africa.
-
[50]
South West Africa United Nations General Assembly Resolution ...Mar 28, 2017 · Adopted by a vote of 114 to 2 (Portugal and South Africa) with 3 abstentions (France, Malawi, and United Kingdom); Botswana and Lesotho were absent.<|separator|>
-
[51]
[PDF] The 1971 I.C.J. Advisory Opinion on South West Africa (Nambia)South Africa was the only mandatory that refused to execute a trusteeship agreement. Winter, 1971. Page 6. THE 1971 NAMIBIA ADVISORY OPINION. This opinion, ...
-
[52]
[PDF] [ 1964 ] Part 1 Sec 3 Chapter 3 The Question of South West AfricaJan 27, 2025 · The Odendaal Commission recommended a five-year development plan for South West. Africa at an estimated cost of some 115 million. Rands (one ...
-
[53]
Historical Documents - Office of the Historian3 Odendaal Commission Report. I presented aide-memoire to PriMin Verwoerd this morning as scheduled. ForMin Muller was also present. I told Dr. Verwoerd ...
-
[54]
“The Odendaal Plan” – The Commission of Enquiry into South West ...Jul 27, 2017 · The most notable recommendations made by the Odendaal Plan called for the creation of homelands to separately house different ethnic groups in South West ...
-
[55]
The Odendaal Plan | Namibia - NamibWeb.comThe Odendaal Commission recommended that the next stage of 'development' should be based on the ethnic division of Namibian society.
-
[56]
[PDF] general assembly - Official Document SystemUnder the Plan, separate "homelands" would be established for ten "non-white" groups, which would be allocated an aggregate of 40,07 per cent of the land area ...
-
[57]
600. National Policy Paper - Office of the HistorianUnder the Odendaal Commission's recommendations, measures of economic development would have accompanied the creation of racially defined homelands and ...
-
[58]
South West Africa/Namibia 1975-1988 - Sabinet African JournalsThere are nine "Legislative Assemb- lies", constituting the legislative arms of the second-tier Representative Authorities, whose constitutional origin is ...
- [59]
- [60]
-
[61]
UN Digital Library - the United Nations10 November 1964. ORIGINAL: ENGLISH. Nineteenth session. QUESTION OF SOUTH WEST AFRICA*. Report of the Secretary-General. 1. In paragraphs 5 and 6 of resolution ...
-
[62]
Uranium in Namibia - World Nuclear AssociationNov 14, 2023 · Rössing has nominal capacity of 4000 tU/yr and to the end of 2017 had supplied 112,453 tU. Annual production is tabulated above. In March 2020, ...Missing: diamonds CDM
- [63]
-
[64]
ECONOMIC ASPECTS OF THE KARAKUL INDUSTRY IN SOUTH ...26 The export of. Karakul sheep “capable of breeding” was prohibited by law in 1929 with the object of protecting the farming industry in S.W.A. This ...
- [65]
-
[66]
History of Rail | ARIAMar 28, 2025 · During World War I, construction of the railway system to South West Africa (Prieska-Nakop). 142 miles (229 km) completed in 82 days. SAR&H ...
-
[67]
Power plant profile: Ruacana, Namibia - Power TechnologyOct 21, 2024 · Ruacana is a 332MW active hydro power project in Omusati, Namibia, owned by NamPower, with construction starting in 1973 and operation in 1977.Missing: West | Show results with:West
-
[68]
Namibia GDP per capita - Trading EconomicsGDP per Capita in Namibia averaged 3605.82 USD from 1980 until 2024, reaching an all time high of 4774.11 USD in 2015 and a record low of 2857.34 USD in 1990.Missing: 1960-1990 West
-
[69]
[PDF] Ufahamu: A Journal of African Studies - eScholarshipTHE "CONSOLIDATED DIAMOND MINES OF S.W. AFRICA" (CDM). In the years after ... Diamonds of South West Africa (66%) and Marmora Mines and. Estates (100 ...Missing: statistics | Show results with:statistics
-
[70]
THE MILITARY BALANCE IN NAMIBIA | CIA FOIA (foia.cia.gov)h Africa Population of Namibia, 1981* Ethnic Group Numbers Percentage Ovambo 470,000 44.8 Kavango 112,000 10.7 White 88,000 8.4 Damara 85,000 8.0 Herero ...
-
[71]
Jimmy Carter, South Africa, and the Independence of Namibia - jstorPopulation figures for the 1970s are unreliable. The more reliable 1981 census sets the white population at 7.39 percent. See Erich Leistner and Pieter.
-
[72]
Healthcare and Warfare. Medical Space, Mission and Apartheid in ...The major reason for the South African administration to develop biomedical care in South-West Africa was to sustain the labour supply of black people and to ...
-
[73]
What were the average life expectancies in Africa before, during ...Dec 20, 2021 · Average Life Expectancy: Generally estimated between 30 to 40 years. Some individuals, particularly those in favourable conditions, could live ...What was it like to live in Namibia in 1988-1990, during the ... - QuoraWhy does South Africa have such a low life expectancy (it's ... - QuoraMore results from www.quora.com
-
[74]
Influx Control and African UrbanisationNot only did the Nationalists' influx control laws threaten the livelihood of women engaged in informal economic activities; an attack was also launched on the ...
-
[75]
South West African People's Organization (SWAPO)Sep 9, 2016 · By 1962 party leaders decided to begin a campaign of guerrilla warfare and sabotage in Namibia. Training facilities for SWAPO guerrillas were ...
-
[76]
South African Paratroopers' Raid on CassingaSouth African paratroopers descended on an Angolan guerrilla base in 1978, sparking decades of debate over the ultimate aims of the raid.
-
[77]
[PDF] SADF Military Operations 1975 -1989 - Parabat Veterans OrganisationSWAPO. The operation began at first light on the 30 July 1980 when South African forces attacked SWAPO facilities in Angola.[1]:94 The objective was a PLAN ...
-
[78]
[PDF] SOUTH AFRICANS DIG IN TO WIN WAR IN NAMIBIA - CIAFor almost as long,. South African soldiers have led tribesmen and Bushmen into battle against the indigenous revolutionar- ies of SWAPO, the South-West Africa.
-
[79]
ANGOLA-CUBA-SOUTH AFRICA: NEGOTIATIONS AT A CRITICAL ...Tripartite meetings, with the US mediating, in London, Cairo, New York, and Geneva have pushed the process along to where there has been agreement on the ...
-
[80]
[PDF] General Assembly Security Council - UN PeacemakerThe agreement, signed by Angola, Cuba, and South Africa, concerns the question of Namibia, and the UN Security Council's role in implementing UNSCR 435/78.
-
[81]
Diplomacy and the Angola/Namibia Accords - jstorThe Angola/Namibia accords, signed in 1988, ended two decades of fighting, implemented UN resolution 435 for Namibia's independence, and provided for Cuban ...
-
[82]
Clashes Stall Peace Plan in Namibia : At Least 126 Killed as Police ...Apr 3, 1989 · Du Rand said Sunday night that at least 120 guerrillas and six police officers had died in two days of clashes. On Saturday, authorities said 38 ...
-
[83]
Security Council resolution 643 (1989) [Namibia] - RefworldOct 31, 1989 · 3. Expresses its firm determination to implement resolution 435 (1978) in its original and definitive form in order to ensure holding of free ...
-
[84]
Operation Merlyn, 1989 - War In AngolaThe death toll stood at 312 PLAN insurgents killed, with 18 SWA policemen, 2 members of the SADF, and 3 members of the SWATF having being killed, a total of 23.<|separator|>
-
[85]
29 Apr 1989 : - A total of 312 SWAPO terrorists had been killed and ...Apr 29, 2025 · 29 Apr 1989 : - A total of 312 SWAPO terrorists had been killed and 40 captured during their incursion since 1 April.
-
[86]
NAMIBIA: parliamentary elections National Assembly, 1989Elections were held for all the seats of the Constituent Assembly. Under the terms of the transitional provisions of the 1990 Constitution, this same body ...
-
[87]
[PDF] CIVIC EDUCATION IN NAMIBIA5 The Constitution was adopted on 9 February 1990, annually celebrated as Constitution Day to keep the constitution ... Namibia embraces a multi-party system ...
-
[88]
Namibia Achieves Independence After 75 Years of Pretoria's RuleMar 21, 1990 · Finally in 1988, South Africa agreed to give up Namibia as part of a United States-brokered accord that also provided for the withdrawal of ...
-
[89]
1998 Human Rights Report - Namibia - State DepartmentPresident Nujoma and the SWAPO party received just over 70 percent of the vote in the December 1994 presidential and National Assembly elections, which, despite ...