Recommended Books about the Free State
by Amazon and Explore South Africa
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Boderline
by William Dicey
Borderline is a travelogue, but a travelogue with a difference. The author takes the reader on a fascinating journey down the Orange river, a journey interwoven with historical detail from the places he visits and the history of South Africa as a whole. Augmented by his own photographs and an abundance of other visual material, the title becomes a document of discovery, much like the source material that Dicey himself quotes from - the first European explorers of the South African interior. But unlike these early documents of journeys into the unknown, and their depictions of outlandish animals and men, Dicey's travelogue is a document that touches the very fabric of history. Deriving much of its energy from the frontier days of the Cape Colony and from the people who populated that frontier - the San, the Nama, the Griqua, the Basters, and the coloured people into whom they have merged, Dicey investigates the waves of human occupation and the subsequent fallout as the indigenous people and then the Basters and Griquas were moved off their land around the Orange. This is in fact the story of the river, how it has shaped and in turn been shaped by South African history. |
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Fire in the Sky: The Destruction of the Orange Free State, 1899-1902
by Owen Coetzer
The horrifying story of the official British war policy toward the Orange Free
State in the Anglo-Boer War. All but ignored in most histories, the British
followed a scorched earth policy of total war in which more than 27,000
civilians, mainly women and children, were herded into concentrations camps
where they died in the most barbaric conditions. A shocking expose. |
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