Great Trek

Great Trek
Emigration of some 12,000–14,000 Boers (see Afrikaners) from Cape Colony (South Africa) between 1835 and the early 1840s, in rebellion against British policies and in search of fresh pasturelands.

The trek, regarded by Afrikaners as the origin of their nationhood, enabled the settlers to establish temporary military supremacy over the Xhosa, to penetrate into Natal and the Highveld, and to expand white settlement north to the Limpopo River. See also Andries Pretorius.

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▪ South African history
Afrikaans  Groot Trek 

      the emigration of some 12,000 to 14,000 Boers (Boer) from Cape Colony in South Africa between 1835 and the early 1840s, in rebellion against the policies of the British government and in search of fresh pasturelands. The Great Trek is regarded by Afrikaners as a central event of their 19th-century history and the origin of their nationhood. It enabled them to outflank the Xhosa peoples who were blocking their eastward expansion, to penetrate into Natal and the Highveld (which had been opened up by the tribal wars of the previous decade), and to carry white settlement north to the Limpopo River.

      The migrating Boers, called Voortrekkers (Afrikaans: “Early Migrants”), left in a series of parties of kinfolk and neighbours, with an almost equal number of mixed-race dependents, under prominent leaders. Though they all crossed the Orange River, they were soon divided as to their ultimate destination—some wanted an outlet to the sea in Natal, and others wished to remain on the Highveld. In both areas, after initial setbacks, they were able to defeat powerful African military kingdoms through the skilled use of horses, guns, and defensive laagers (encampments), though in later years they were to find the problems of maintaining control over Africans and establishing stable politics more intractable.

      In Natal the Voortrekkers established a short-lived republic, but, after its annexation by the British in 1843, most rejoined their compatriots across the Drakensberg, where, except for a short period, the British government was reluctant to pursue them. In 1852 and 1854 the British granted independence to the trekkers in the Transvaal and Transorangia regions, respectively. In Transvaal several warring little polities were established, and factional strife ended only in the 1860s. In Transorangia the trekkers established the Orange Free State, which, under the double threat posed by the Sotho and the proximity of imperial power, settled down in more unified fashion after the British withdrawal in 1854.

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Universalium. 2010.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Great Trek — Trek Trek, n. [Written also {treck}.] [D. Cf. {Track}, n.] The act of trekking; a drawing or a traveling; a journey; a migration. [Chiefly South Africa] To the north a trek was projected, and some years later was nearly carried out, for the… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Great Trek — This article is about the migration in southern Africa. For other uses, see Trek (disambiguation). Trekboers in the Karoo …   Wikipedia

  • Great Trek — (1863–1867)    Often dated to 1837, the Great Trek was an overland migration over a number of years of Dutch speaking Afrikaners, or Boers as they were then called, away from the British controlled Cape Colony and into the interior of what is now …   Encyclopedia of the Age of Imperialism, 1800–1914

  • Great Trek — /greɪt ˈtrɛk/ (say grayt trek) noun South African History a mass migration of settlers of Dutch origin from the Cape of Good Hope to the north and east, about 1835–46 …  

  • Great Trek — the northward migration 1835 37 of large numbers of Boers, discontented with British rule in the Cape, to the areas where they eventually founded the Transvaal Republic and Orange Free State …   Useful english dictionary

  • Trek — Trek, n. [Written also {treck}.] [D. Cf. {Track}, n.] The act of trekking; a drawing or a traveling; a journey; a migration. [Chiefly South Africa] To the north a trek was projected, and some years later was nearly carried out, for the occupation …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Trek — The word trek has entered the English language as one of few words derived from Afrikaans. It means a long, hard journey, and is derived from the Middle Dutch trecken (meaning to pull or haul). Trek may also refer to:* The Great Trek, a migration …   Wikipedia

  • trek — /trɛk / (say trek) noun 1. an overland journey, especially a difficult one, as the Great Trek undertaken by migrating South Africans by ox wagon. 2. a physically challenging journey, undertaken for sport or recreation. 3. a journey of… …  

  • great — greatness, n. /grayt/, adj., greater, greatest, adv., n., pl. greats, (esp. collectively) great, interj. adj. 1. unusually or comparatively large in size or dimensions: A great fire destroyed nearly half the city …   Universalium

  • trek — see TRACK * * *    The word for a long and difficult journey derives from Afrikaans. It originally applied to the Voortrekkers, the Dutch settlers in South Africa who made long journeys by ox wagon during the Great Trek of the 1830s, when they… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

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