College of Education
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HED4805: South African History of Education
Assignment 1 — Semester 1, 2026
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HED4805
Module Code:
South African History of Education
Module Name:
Assignment 1
Assignment:
15 May 2026
Due Date:
100
Total Marks:
Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for HED4805 — UNISA 2026
,UNISA | HED4805 History of Education — Assignment 1
Question 1: Indigenous People and Technological Knowledge of Southern Africa
1.1 The Concept of “Indigenous” People of Southern Africa
The term “indigenous” in the context of Southern Africa refers to those communities who in-
habited the sub-continent prior to colonial contact and whose distinct cultural, linguistic, and
social identities developed over thousands of years in close relation to their specific natural
environments (South African History Online, 2023). Understanding who qualifies as indige-
nous is more than a demographic question; it carries implications for land rights, heritage
recognition, and the framing of educational history itself (Modibac, 2024).
Historical Origins and the Khoisan Peoples
The Khoisan are widely regarded as the earliest known inhabitants of Southern Africa. The
collective term “Khoisan” functions as an umbrella category encompassing two groups: the
San and the Khoikhoi. <br>The San, sometimes called Bushmen, lived in small nomadic
hunter-gatherer bands across present-day South Africa, Botswana, Namibia, Zimbabwe, An-
gola, Zambia, Lesotho, and Mozambique (EBSCO Research Starters, 2023). Archaeological
evidence suggests that San populations have been present in the southern parts of the conti-
nent for approximately 20,000 years, with subfossil remains indicating continuous occupation
of specific rock-shelter sites over that stretch (EBSCO Research Starters, 2023). Their lan-
guages, distinguished by intricate click consonants, belong to a wholly distinct family from
Bantu tongues and remain among the oldest spoken languages on earth.
The Khoikhoi (meaning “men of men” or “real people” in their own language) branched out
of early San communities after acquiring domestic livestock in what is now modern Botswana
around 2,300 years before the present (South African History Online, 2023). They became
pastoralists, building larger social groupings centred on cattle, goats, and sheep, and migrated
southward to the Cape region. The Khoikhoi were the first indigenous people to make sus-
tained contact with Dutch settlers after 1652. That contact proved catastrophic, involving
dispossession of land, epidemic disease, and the Khoikhoi War of Independence (1799–1803)
(Encyclopedia.com, 2018).
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, UNISA | HED4805 History of Education — Assignment 1
Bantu-Speaking Communities as Indigenous Peoples
The concept of indigeneity in Southern Africa is not limited to the Khoisan. From approx-
imately the 4th century CE, Bantu-speaking communities began migrating into the sub-
continent from West and Central Africa, bringing with them Iron Age technologies, agricul-
tural systems, and complex social structures (Bantu Peoples of South Africa, Wikipedia, 2026).
Within a few centuries they were settled across vast areas and had established kingdoms,
trade networks, and sophisticated governance systems. Groups such as the Nguni, Sotho,
Tsonga, Tswana, and Venda became indigenous to their respective regions through centuries of
continuous occupation and cultural development.
The Nguni kingdoms (including the Zulu and Xhosa) and the Sotho-Tswana confederacies
are among the most historically documented Bantu-speaking communities. They developed
distinct systems of law, agriculture, metallurgy, and political organisation long before Euro-
pean colonists arrived. By the time the British and Dutch established colonial administrations,
these societies had been shaping the sub-continent for well over a thousand years.
Defining Indigeneity: Key Criteria
Scholars and international instruments like the United Nations Declaration on the Rights
of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP, 2007) identify several overlapping criteria for indigeneity:
prior occupation of a territory before colonisation; maintenance of distinct cultural, linguistic,
and spiritual practices; self-identification as indigenous; and a special relationship between
the community and its ancestral land. All of the communities discussed above satisfy these
criteria in the Southern African context.
Key Distinction
Khoisan vs. Bantu-Speaking Indigenous Groups: The San are the oldest in-
habitants and were primarily hunter-gatherers. The Khoikhoi were early pastoralists
descended from the San. Bantu-speaking communities arrived later but have been
present for more than 1,500 years and are equally indigenous. The category “indigenous”
is therefore not a single, fixed group but a layered historical reality.
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