| Primary
Source |
| Imperialism |
Colonial Policy | [P|S|M] |
Deutscher
Kolonial-Atlas mit Jahrbuch (Atlas German Colonies, with Yearbook),
edited by the German Colonial Society, 1918, Deutsch-Südwestafrika
|
Deutsch-Südwestafrika
(p.16)
History : In 1883 merchant Adolf Lüderitz from Bremen signed treaties
with indigenous "captains", by means of which he acquired Angra
Pequena and the adjacent land. Prince Bismarck, via telegram of April 24th 1884,
addressed to the German consul in Cape Town, placed this acquisition under
German protection - with the exception of Walvis Bay. The borders were fixed by
treaties with Portugal in 1886 and with Britain in 1890. Several native
rebellions against German rule have taken place, in 1889 caused by the Briton's
Lewis' intrigues, in 1893 under Hendrik Witboi (the storming of Hornkranz), 1896
of the Kauas Hottentots, 1904 of the Herero and Hottentots (Battles of Waterberg
11. 8. 1904, near Gross-Nabas 1905, under General von Trotha resp. Major
Meister).
Size and Borders : 835,100 square km (150 % the size of the Reich). The
Guano Islands located off the coast (between 24 degr. 37 min. and 28 degrees s.)
and the Walvis Bay area, only half an hour from Swakopmund, are British
possession (p.17) resp. that of the Union of South Africa, which is also our
neighbour to the south and east. In the north we border on Portuguese territory
(Angola). The penhandle reaching to the Zambezi river (upstream of the falls) is
generally called "Caprivi-Strip".
Population : On Jan. 1st 1908 : 8,213 whites, of them 6,215 Germans and
1,446 women. 1909 : 9,410 whites, 6,629 Germans, 1,358 German women, 1910 :
12,936 whites, 10,226 Germans, 2,173 women, 1911 : 13,962 whites, 11,140
Germans, 2,468 adult women. 1912 : 14,816 whites, 12,135 Germans, 4,329 adult
women. 1913 : 14,830 whites, 12,292 Germans, 3058 adult women. (The Deutsche
Kolonialgesellschaft has, in 1898-end 1913, paid subsidies for the transit of
2,036 German women and girls). In 1903 the number of white residents 3,815, of
the Germans 2,173, of women 670. The indigenous population, as far as subjected
to German administration, has been established at 21,600 Herero, 20,000 Mountain
Damara, 14,000 Nama and 8,000 bushmen. The Ovambo, about 60,000, a Bantu tribe
residing in Amboland between the 18th degree southern latitude and the Kunene
are workers highly esteemed on farms, on railway construction sites and
elsewhere. Furthermore, 5,600 Kaffers from the Cape Colony earn their living in
the protectorate, so that the total coloured population of the colony amounts to
minimum 140,000. In and around Rehoboth dwell the Bastards, descendants of Boers
and Hottentot women, 3,300 in number.
Morphology : In it's full extent, Deutsch-Südwestafrika ia a landscape
rising in several, partly steep terrasses up to 1,200 m altitude which from 300
km inland begind to decline into the interior. The width of the coastal desert
(Namib) amounts to several say's journeys; valleys of the greater rivers form
oases. In the interior there are many singular mountain ridges which surmount
the surrounding landcape by several 100 m (gneiss and granite). In the south the
2200 m high Karas Mountain Range, between Rehoboth and Windhuk the Auas Mountain
Range (2,481 m), further north Mt. Omatako (2,680 m). Toward the east the
plateau declines toward the 500 m lower located Kalahari Steppe which has to be
imagined anything but barren and lacking of vegetation.
Irrigation : Of the protectorates rivers only the Oranje and Kunene, and
the Okavango which empties into Lake Ngami have water year round, but they are
not navigable. Also the Fish River, feeding into the Oranje, never totally dries
up. The other rivers feeding into the Atlantic are dry for most of the year and
even during the rainy season they seldom form continuous veins of water (Swakop,
Kuiseb); they are called 'Riviere' in Cape Dutch. There are a number of sources
in Hereroland; here the annual precipitation is higher than in Gross-Namaland.
The question of securing safe supplies of water through the construction of dams
etc. is the most important in the protectorate. Ground water is tapped and
searched for by drilling columns.
Climate : The climate is hot in the summer, but dry and healthy. The
winter is rather moderate; night frosts are not rare in the interior. The
coastal region is continuously cool; within 50 km inward the only form of
precipitation is dew. Wind mostly from the south, in the warmer half of the year
(October-March) also winds from the north, which cause the main rainy season
between January and March. The average annual temperature is 20 degrees Celsius
in Windhuk, in the coolest month, Juli, 19, in the hottest month, January, 25
degrees.
Flora : in the coastal desert vegetation lacks almost totally. Amboland :
tropical vegetation (baobab, palm tree etc.), Damaraland : steppe and thornbush
with oasis-like groves of Ana- and Acacia trees. Namaland : grass
steppe, almost treeless. With irrigation, the cultivation of grain, maize,
potatoes, figs, dates, wine, tobacco etc. possible. In the north, cotton is
growing.
Fauna : sea off the coast a rich fishing ground, water fowl on the
offshore islands (Guano deposits). In the northern parts of the colony a purely
tropical fauna (big game such as elephants, giraffes, predators, apes).
Damaraland is better suited for breeding large size livestock, Namaland for
small size livestock. Results of livestock count : cattle 1913 : 206,000, 1912 :
172,000, 1911 : 144,000, 1910 : 121,000, 1909 : 96,000, 1908 : 73,000, 1903 :
90,385. meat sheep : 1913 : 473,000, 1912 435,000, 1911 : 381,000, 1910 :
344,000, 1909 : 281,000, 1908 : 198,000, 1903 : 182,541; wool sheep 1913 :
54,000, 1912 : 47,000, 1911 : 32,000, 1910 : 29,000, 1909 : 20,000, 1908 :
12,000, 1903 : 4,301; Angora goats 1913 : 31,000, 1912 : 20,000, 1911 : 10,000,
1910 : 8,000, 1909 : 4,500, 1908 : 4,000, 1903 : 3,391; ordinary goats 1913 :
485,000, 1912 : 448,000; 1911 : 385,000, 1910 : 319,000, 1909 : 238,000, 1908 :
156,000, 1903 : 156,000; horses 1913 : 16,000, 1912 : 13,000, 1911 : 12,700,
1910 : 10,600, 1909 : 8,300, 1908 : 6,500, 1903 : 5,265; ostriches 1912 : 1,507,
1912 : 1,277, 1911 : 640, 1910 : 330; pigs 1913 : 7,800, 1912 : 7,200, 1911 :
7,800, 1910 : 5,200, all figures without the livestock owned by the
Schutztruppe.
Agriculture : 1913 : 1331, 1912 : 1,245 farmers, 1911 : 1,141, 1910 :
1,047. The area covered by farms totaled in 1913 13.4 million ha, in 1911 11.75
million ha, in 1910 10.75 million ha. Of these farmers in 1913, 914 were
Germans, in 1912 : 858, in 1911 892, in 1910 793.
Minerals : near Karibib obviously good quality marble. In the region
Otawi, near Gorob and at a number of other places copper deposits which make
exploitation profitable. Total value of the ores/minerals shipped in 1909 about
21 million Mark, in 1910 over 33 million Mark, 1911 only 27 million Mark, 1912
again 37 million Mark. (p.18) Numerous diamonds have been found since July 1908
in the Namib dunes near Lüderitzbucht, most of them of a weight of less than 1
karat, but some up to 3 karat. In the Kaokofeld deposits of gold and iron have
been determined; the exploitation of which is not possible without a railway
line.
Trade : imported are almost all products of the European market,
especially beverages, tobacco, coffee, sugar, canned food, flour, rice,
clothing. Exported are hides, cattle, small animals, copper, diamonds, antlers,
ostrich feathers, resins, dye stuffs, guano (Cap Cross). Value of exports and
imports see table on p.10.
Traffic : navigation : Swakopmund roadsted has been frequented in 1909 by
144 steamers with 523,000 tons, Lüderitzbucht port by 108 steamers with 434,000
tons, 1910 191 resp.195 steamers / 674,000 tons resp. 594,000 tons, 1911
together 411 steamers, 1.25 million tons, 1912 430 steamers with 1.417 million
tons. The vast majority was German, while last year almost one third sailed
under the British flag. Overland Transportation : in the interior, the main
means of transportation for persons and freight is the ox-cart; pulled by 10-20
oxen, it covers a distance of 18 to 35 km a day, pulling a load of 30 to 50
hundredweight. Between Swakopmund and Windhoek a 60 cm-gauge railway operates
since 1902 (382 km), which now has been replaced by the Otawi Line
Swakopmund-Karibib. The Line Swakopmud-Otawi has been opened until Tsumeb in
Sept. 1906 until Tsumeb (570 km, Cape gauge); of this line deriving the Line
Otawi-Grootfontein, constructed in 1908 by the South West Africa Company, 98 km,
60 cm gauge width; two trains weekly; one train daily between Swakopmund and
Karibib, three times a week between Usakos and Tsumeb. Karibib-Windhoek
reconstructed in 1910. Line Luderitzbucht-Keetmanshoop operated since July 1908.
In 1908 finished was the tributary line from Seeheim near Keetmanshoop southward
to Kalkfonein 183 km. Since 1912 line Windhoek-Keetmanshopp 528 km
(north-south-line). These railways altogether transported 5000 whites and 69,000
coloureds.
Postal and Telegraph Service : End 1913 : 110 offices, of which 88 with
telegraph service, 29 with local telephone service; 2,480 km overland telegraph
cables, in total 6,662 km telegraph cables. 1912 : 5,472,600 letters, 248,516
postal money orders over a total amount of 35,093,948 Mark, 143,381 parcels,
1,684,000 newspaper issues, 393,835 telegrams, 2,892,119 telephone calls. Postal
delivery (Germany-SWA) : 5 times weekly. Time of delivery : 20 to 26 days.
Telegram fee per word 2,75 Mark. In addition three radio telegraph stations in
Swakopmund, Windhuk and Lüderitzbucht.
Education : the protectorate has 20 schools for whites with in total 370 boys
and 405 girls. The education of coloureds is taken care of by missionaries of
both confessions.
Administration : seat of the governor (presently Dr. Seitz) Windhuk;
administrative districts Grootfontein, Outjo, Omaruru, Waterberg, Karibib,
Okahandja, Gobabis, Windhuk, Rehoboth, Gibeon, Maltahohe, Keetmanshoop, Aroab,
Warmbad, Bethanien, Luderitzbucht, Swakopmund, Caprivizipfel (seat
Schuckmannsburg).
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Source:
Deutscher Kolonial-Atlas mit Jahrbuch, (Atlas German Colonies, with
Yearbook), edited by P. Sprigade und M. Moisel, Surveys and retrospects
by Dr. Karstedt. Berlin 1918, p.16ff. |
GM
(digitalisation) and AG
(translation)
posted on the web for psm-data;
many thanks to
Staatsbibliothek
zu Berlin / Preußischer Kulturbesitz

Kartenabteilung
Dokument in deutscher
Sprache
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