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South African Information - Kwazulu-Natal
In the early 19th cent. the area was inhabited primarily by Bantu-speaking
Zulu people. In the 1820s and 30s the British acquired much of Natal from
the Zulu chiefs Shaka and Dingane. Afrikaner farmers ( Boers ) arrived
(see Trek, Great ) in 1837 and, after battles with the Zulu (notably the
Boer victory over Dingane at Blood River in 1838), established (1838-39)
a republic. In 1843, Britain annexed Natal to Cape Colony, and a Boer
exodus followed.
In 1856, Natal became a separate colony. Sugarcane cultivation began
c.1860, and many Indians (mostly indentured laborers) came to work in
the sugar industry. Many Indians remained in Natal after their indenture
expired; by 1900 they outnumbered whites. In 1893, Natal was given internal
self-government; in 1910 it became a founding province of the Union (now
Republic) of South Africa.
In the 1980s and early 1990s, KwaZulu-Natal was wracked by conflict between
the African National Congress and the Zulu-nationalist Inkatha Freedom
Party, under the leadership of Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi ; fighting has
since diminished.
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