Well, it has taken me over a year to complete this book. It seemed like many years to Mostert to research and write this volume. It was one of the most comprehensive books on a nation's history that I have read in many years. It was well written and at times a difficult read. The author has captured all of the beauty and violence that has made the country what it is today ---- good and bad.
What I enjoyed were the many teaching moments that the book provided, such as: Batavia is synonymous with Jakarta, Indonesia; Hottentots was made up term by Europeans unable to say KhoiKoi, the tribe which was driven nearly to extinction by the Dutch and others; Robben Island was principally set as penal colony by the Dutch; the Dutch and its East India Company was the principal European country that invaded South Africa. Africa was a land grab by the European countries on those people who dealt with the acquisition and use of land and territory by means other than European contracts. It deals with the advancement technology against those people who attempted to counter the use of cannon shells and bullets with assegais. It deals with the efforts the Dutch settlers, the London Missionary Society and other Christian organizations to convert heathen savages (in the Christian referrals).
The book principally looks at the British history of conquest of South Africa from its usurpation of the territory from the Dutch to the English loss of the territory to victorious Boers in the early 20th century. The nine wars fought by the indigenous people are the highlight of the book. The author also explains the strategy of European missionaries to convert savage heathens (European terms) to the European model of belief in God.
It started with the Dutch who had no concept of why indigenous people wore animal skins, painted their bodies or wore near nothing at all in the areas of the African heat. The Dutch (Boers) attempted to use the Indian Ocean coast line as way station to on the road to Batavia, India and China. During the early period the Boers attempted to trade with African for meat and water. Some decided to stay and integrate with the tribes that surrounded them. Those Boers who stayed and did not integrate immediately began to subjugate the tribes principally the KhoiKoi, who felt that they could deal with anyway that liked.
The British on the other hand was all about Imperial rule, expansion of the Empire under the guise of God, Queen (at that time) country. Nazis Germany's room the breathe, so to speak. It was all of the Duke of Wellington's men. The very conservative Duke and his military officers were often given the task of administering colonial rule. My view of book is the soldiers were to acquire the land, the British colonists were sent to farm it and the missionaries were sent to convert the tribes so that they would submit to British authority. Unfortunately, the many tribes of South Africa and their many chiefs and concubines made it easy for the British to divide and conquer. The missionaries that came assisted. The trade-off was the teaching of African natives to read and write --- not in their own language, but in English. British missionaries seemed pre-occupied with the tribes multiple wives concept, the lack of clothing in the African climate and the worship of spirits, true Christians. In the end, many Africans considered the clergy tools of an invading force. My opinion is that they are.
One of the biggest areas of contentions was cattle rustling, a US term. Europeans were principally meat eaters. Accusations of cattle theft lead to many skirmishes. The annexation of the land through force for farmers caused Xhosa peoples to leave much of the farm land and grazing areas that had been in their tribes since the millennium.
British laws were passed under colonial rule that essentially made indigenous people foreigners in the own country. Pass laws were enacted to confine Xhosa and other races to the territories were they were forced to move, exploitation of labor for farming and mining (under very poor wages). These were some of the foundations of the apartheid system, where the wealth was controlled by one race and the cheap labour forced from the other.
The breakdown of the tribal family structure left the Xhosa to place faith, not Christian, in salvation from strange sources. It also forced them to believe that destruction of their sources of sustenance was to be their delivery from British and Boer rule.