A) For this assignment, you'll be answering five questions - but here's the twist: each answer
must be written in paragraph format. While this might seem like a simple task, the goal here is
to see how well you're engaging with the course content and how clearly, you're able to
communicate your understanding.
1. Provide a brief overview of the living conditions in Cape Town during the early 19th
century.
Living conditions in Cape Town during the early 19th century were shaped by a turbulent political
transition and a growing, diversifying population. The period began with the final British occupation
in 1806, confirmed by the Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1814, which brought a new colonial administration
to the Cape (Pama, 1975, p. 12). The city’s population grew steadily, reaching approximately 15,500
by 1823 and over 20,000 by 1836, placing pressure on existing infrastructure and social services
(Wikipedia, n.d.-a, "Timeline of Cape Town"). The early 1830s, in particular, were a time of relative
prosperity and burgeoning civic life, as illustrated by contemporary sketches of the city's architecture
and daily routines (Pama, 1975, p. 34). Significant social changes included the official abolition of
the slave trade in 1807 and the final emancipation of slaves throughout the British Empire in 1834,
events that would have profoundly reshaped the colony's labour force and domestic life (Siziba, 2018,
p. 72). Public works and cultural institutions also began to emerge, with the establishment of a
permanent municipality in 1839, the founding of the South African Public Library in 1821, and the
South African Museum in 1825, indicating a move towards greater civic organisation and a concern
for public enlightenment (Wikipedia, n.d.-a, "Timeline of Cape Town"). However, this development
was set against a backdrop of persistent challenges, including smallpox outbreaks and the lingering
effects of the colony's frontier wars, which collectively made life in early Cape Town a complex
mixture of colonial ambition, social adjustment, and public health risk (Pama, 1975, p. 56).
2. Explain the key ways in which British colonial rule led to the anglicization of the Cape
prior to the mid-1890s.
British colonial rule drove the anglicisation of the Cape through deliberate policies that established
English as the dominant language of power, law, and education. Upon assuming permanent control
in the early 19th century, the British administration systematically replaced Dutch with English as
the official language of government, the courts, and the civil service, thereby making proficiency in
English a prerequisite for political authority and economic advancement (Siziba, 2018, p. 74). This
linguistic imperialism extended into the educational system, where English became the primary
medium of instruction, systematically marginalizing Dutch and other local languages in the public
sphere (Siziba, 2018, p. 76). The anglicisation project was not merely bureaucratic but also cultural,
as it promoted Anglophone versions of modernity, law, and Christianity as the normative standards
for colonial society (Siziba, 2018, p. 78). This created a two-tiered society where English speakers
held a distinct social and economic advantage, generating deep resentment among the
Dutch-speaking settler community, known as the Boers. This cultural and political marginalisation
was a primary motivation for the Great Trek of the 1830s, as thousands of Boers chose to migrate
inland to escape British rule and establish independent republics where they could preserve their own
language, culture, and way of life (Wikipedia, n.d.-b, "Voortrekkers (youth organisation)"). Thus, by
the mid-1890s, the British policy of anglicisation had successfully entrenched English as the
language of elite power and commerce, but at the cost of alienating a significant portion of the white
settler population.