Timeline of South Africa


This is a timeline of the history of the area in present-day South Africa.

Pre-colonial era The Dutch Cape Colony The British Cape Colony The Great Trek The Boer Republics Union of South Africa Apartheid The Rainbow Nation

Pre-colonial era edit

~4 000 000 BP edit

Skull of Mrs. Ples
Skull of the Taung Child

~2 500 000 BP edit

~1 500 000 BP edit

~200 000 BP edit

  • The Border Cave is occupied, with the oldest sedimentary ash and grass bedding found here.

~170 000 BP edit

73 000 BP edit

61 000 BP edit

  • The earliest bone and stone arrows are left here at the Sibudu Cave, along with the earliest needle, and earliest use of heat-treated mixed compound gluing.

~15 000 BP edit

~2 200 BP edit

~200 CE edit

249 edit

~800 edit

~1000 edit

The São Cristóvão and the São Pantaleão of Bartolomeu Dias

1488 edit

1497 edit

  • The Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama circumnavigates the Cape of Good Hope and discovers Natal on Christmas Eve.

1501 edit

1503 edit

1510 edit

1575 edit

1580 edit

1647 edit

  • The Dutch ship Nieuwe Haerlem runs aground at the Cape of Good Hope. Under the leadership of Leendert Janszen, the stranded Dutch seamen stay at the Cape for a year. After their return to the Netherlands, Leendert Janszen and Matthijs Proot were commissioned by the Dutch East India Company (VOC) to write a report on their findings on the feasibility of the Cape as a refreshment station.

1649 edit

  • Leendert Janszen and Matthijs Proot submit their Remonstrantie, which describes their positive findings of the Cape of Good Hope. Jan van Riebeeck, who was on the ship that rescued the two, was asked to comment on the Remonstrantie and responded positively. The Gentlemen Seventeen, the board of the VOC, then decide that a refreshment station should be established at the Cape.

The Dutch Cape Colony edit

Jan van Riebeeck's arrival at the Cape of Good Hope

1652 edit

1655 edit

1657 edit

1658 edit

1659 edit

1660 edit

1663 edit

1664 edit

1665 edit

Castle of Good Hope

1666 edit

1673 edit

1679 edit

1682 edit

  • The Tuynhuys is built which would later become the Cape Town office of the President of South Africa.

1685 edit

  • Cape Governor Simon van der Stel gives settlers land near the Boschendal farm.
  • Groot Constantia is built; becoming the oldest colonial manor house in South Africa.

1687 edit

  • Paarl is established as the third-oldest town in South Africa.

1688 edit

1701 edit

Expansion of the Cape Colony

1706 edit

1713 edit

1751 edit

1755 edit

  • A second smallpox epidemic strikes the Cape Colony.

1761 edit

  • Governor Rijk Tulbagh establishes South Africa's first library.

1767 edit

  • A third smallpox epidemic strikes the Cape Colony.

1773 edit

18th century drawing depicting Wolraad Woltemade's rescue of 14 sailors

1779 edit

1780 edit

1781 edit

  • A French fleet prevents the British conquest of the Cape Colony.
Depiction of a Griqua outspan expedition.

1784 edit

  • The Griqua cross the Gariep (Orange River) to the north under the leadership of Captain Cornelius Kok I.

1786 edit

1789 edit

  • The Second of the Xhosa Wars breaks out.
  • The Merino sheep is imported to the Cape Colony.

1792 edit

Auwal Mosque in Bo-Kaap (Malay Quarter) in Cape Town.

1794 edit

The British Cape Colony edit

The Cape Colony in 1795

1795 edit

  • The United Kingdom captures the Cape Colony from the Netherlands in the Battle of Muizenberg. The Republic of Graaff-Reinet and Republic of Swellendam rebel but are annexed by the British Cape Colony.

1799 edit

1803 edit

  • Peace of Amiens. The United Kingdom transfers the Cape Colony back to the Netherlands.

1804 edit

The Battle of Blaauwberg

1806 edit

  • The United Kingdom conquers the Cape Colony from the Netherlands in the Battle of Blaauwberg, this time definitively.

1807 edit

  • The slave trade to South Africa is abolished, but slavery remains legal.

1808 edit

  • The first-ever recorded cricket match in South Africa takes place.

1809 edit

1810 edit

  • The Khoikhoi woman Saartjie Baartman is exhibited in London out of interest of her physique.

1811 edit

1812 edit

1813 edit

1815 edit

  • Rebellious Boers revolt against the British government at Slagtersnek, but are defeated.
The Zulu King Shaka

1816 edit

  • Five of the Slagtersnek insurgents are hanged in dramatic circumstances.
  • Shaka founds the Zulu Kingdom.

1818 edit

1819 edit

This map illustrates the rise of the Zulu Empire under Shaka (1816–1828) in present-day South Africa. The rise of the Zulu Empire   under Shaka forced other chiefdoms and clans to flee across a wide area of southern Africa. Clans fleeing the Zulu war zone   included the Soshangane, Zwangendaba, Ndebele, Hlubi, Ngwane, and the Mfengu.  .

1820 edit

1822 edit

1823 edit

1824 edit

1825 edit

1828 edit

  • The Zulu king Shaka is killed by his half-brother Dingane, who succeeds him as king.

1829 edit

1830 edit

  • Afrikaans is first written in Arabic.

1832 edit

  • The Matabele king Mzilikazi is driven west by Dingane.

1834 edit

  • Abolition of slavery in the Cape Colony.
  • The Sixth of the Xhosa Wars breaks out.

The Great Trek edit

Map of The Great Trek

1835 edit

1836 edit

  • More Voortrekkers leave the Cape Colony. Mzilikazi sends his army against them, but is defeated at the Battle of Vegkop.
  • The Voortrekkers led by Hans van Rensburg are murdered in what is now Mozambique.

1837 edit

  • Mzilikazi is driven out of the Transvaal by the Voortrekkers led by Hendrik Potgieter. He founds the Kingdom of Mthwakazi in modern-day Zimbabwe.
Weenen massacre
The Battle of Blood River

1838 edit

1839 edit

1840 edit

  • The Voortrekkers support a successful coup by Mpande, the half-brother of the Zulu king Dingane. Dingane flees and is killed. Andries Pretorius crowns Mpande as Zulu king.

1841 edit

1842 edit

  • The United Kingdom conquers the Natalia Republic. Many Voortrekkers leave Natal.

1843 edit

  • The Port Elizabeth Cricket Club is founded, making it the oldest cricket club in South Africa.

1844 edit

1845 edit

1846 edit

1848 edit

1849 edit

1850 edit

  • The Eight of the Xhosa Wars breaks out.
  • Founding of Rustenburg.
  • The first railway line opens in Durban.

The Boer Republics edit

1852 edit

1853 edit

1854 edit

1855 edit

  • Founding of Pretoria, named after Andries Pretorius.

1856 edit

  • An apocalyptic prophecy by the Xhosa girl Nongqawuse leads to the starvation of some 40 000 Xhosa.
  • The first constitution of the ZAR is approved by the Volksraad, but not accepted by all inhabitants.
  • The Republic of Lydenburg splits from the ZAR.

1857 edit

1858 edit

  • The final constitution of the ZAR is approved by the Volksraad.
  • The Republic of Zoutpansberg rejoins with the ZAR.
  • The First Basotho War breaks out between the Orange Free State and the Basotho.

1859 edit

  • Establishment of the Reformed Church in South Africa.

1860 edit

1861 edit

  • The Griqua leave the Orange Free State under the leadership of Captain Adam Kok III.

1862 edit

1864 edit

1865 edit

1866 edit

1867 edit

1868 edit

The Big Hole of Kimberley

1870 edit

  • Griqualand West is annexed by the United Kingdom. The founding of New Rush, later Kimberley. The diamond fields are claimed by the Griqua, the Orange Free State, the ZAR and the Cape Colony.
  • Start of the first major diamond rush, and formation of the short-lived Diggers' Republic in Barkly West.

1871 edit

  • The diamond fields are assigned to the Griqua by Governor Robert William Keate of the Colony of Natal. As a result, Marthinus Wessel Pretorius resigns as State President of the ZAR. Cecil Rhodes leaves for Kimberley.

1872 edit

1873 edit

1874 edit

1875 edit

1876 edit

1877 edit

1878 edit

  • Walvis Bay and the Penguin Islands are annexed by the Cape Colony.
  • Paul Kruger's second peaceful attempt to restore ZAR independence fails.
  • The last of the quagga in the Orange Free State become extinct in the wild.

1879 edit

  • The Anglo-Zulu War breaks out between the United Kingdom and the Zulus. The war is won by the United Kingdom, although they suffer a crushing defeat at the Battle of Isandlwana. The United Kingdom conquers Zululand, and the area is absorbed into the Colony of Natal.
  • Griqualand East is fully annexed into the Cape Colony.
  • Founding of the Afrikanerbond.

1880 edit

The Battle of Majuba Hill.

1881 edit

  • The ZAR defeats the United Kingdom at the Battle of Majuba Hill. The Pretoria Convention ends the First Boer War in favour of the ZAR.
  • South Africa's first stock exchange, the Kimberley Royal Stock Exchange opens on 2 February.

1882 edit

  • Founding of the Republic of Stellaland and State of Goshen.
  • Kimberly becomes the first city in the Southern Hemisphere and the second in the world to integrate electric street lights into its infrastructure.
  • Dutch is recognised as an official language of the Cape Colony.
State President Paul Kruger.

1883 edit

  • Paul Kruger is elected State President of the ZAR.
  • Unification of the Republic of Stellaland and the neighbouring State of Goshen to form the United States of Stellaland.

1884 edit

1885 edit

  • Bechuanaland is annexed by the United Kingdom. Stellaland and Goshen are annexed and added to Bechuanaland.

1886 edit

1887 edit

1888 edit

  • Paul Kruger is elected state president of the ZAR for the second time.
  • Francis William Reitz is elected State President of the Orange Free State.
  • Nieuwe Republiek is annexed by the ZAR.
  • Nedbank is founded as the Nederlandsche Bank en Credietvereeniging voor Zuid-Afrika ("Dutch Bank and Credit Union for South Africa")

1889 edit

  • South Africa becomes the third test-playing nation when it plays against England at Port Elizabeth.

1890 edit

  • Cecil Rhodes is appointed Prime Minister of the Cape Colony.

1891 edit

  • Klein Vrystaat is annexed by the ZAR.

1893 edit

  • Paul Kruger is elected for the third time as state president of the ZAR.
  • Gandhi arrives in Durban.
  • The Excelsior Diamond is discovered at the Jagersfontein Mine. It is the largest in the world until the 1905 discovery of the Cullinan Diamond.

1894 edit

1895 edit

Arrest of Leander Starr Jameson

1896 edit

1898 edit

1899 edit

Second Boer War concentration camp

1900 edit

  • The Orange Free State and the ZAR are conquered by the United Kingdom, but the Bittereinders refuse to give up the fight. The United Kingdom uses the scorched earth tactic of burning down farms and imprisoning Boer women and children in concentration camps. State President Paul Kruger leaves for Europe.

1901 edit

  • Emily Hobhouse sounds the alarm about the concentration camps of the Boer War.

1902 edit

1903 edit

1905 edit

  • The Cullinan Diamond is discovered, the largest gem-quality rough diamond ever found.

1904 edit

1906 edit

  • Start of the first 24-hour weather forecasts in South Africa by Harry Edwin Wood.

1907 edit

  • The Transvaal Colony and the Orange River Colony are given self-governance. Abraham Fischer becomes the first (and only) Prime Minister of the Orange River Colony.

Union of South Africa edit

First Prime Minister of South Africa, Louis Botha.

1910 edit

1912 edit

1913 edit

  • Founding of the National Party.
  • The Natives Land Act is enacted, regulating the acquisition of land by black South Africans. It defined less than one-tenth of South Africa as Black "reserves" from which they were allowed purchase or lease of land. Land outside of this was prohibited.

1914 edit

1915 edit

1918 edit

Second Prime Minister Jan Smuts.
Photograph of Sol Plaatje from his 1915 book Native Life in South Africa

1919 edit

1921 edit

1922 edit

  • The Rand Rebellion by white miners in Witwatersrand is crushed by the South African Army, killing 153.
  • The University of the Witwatersrand is granted full university status.
  • Rhodesian colonists reject admitting Rhodesia as a fifth province of the Union.

1923 edit

1924 edit

1925 edit

1926 edit

The flag of South Africa from 1928 to 1994.

1928 edit

1930 edit

  • White women get the right to vote.
  • The Transvaal University College changes name to the University of Pretoria and is established separately.

1934 edit

1938 edit

1939 edit

1942 edit

1945 edit

Apartheid edit

Apartheid notice board.

1948 edit

1949 edit

1952 edit

1955 edit

1957 edit

1958 edit

Painting of the Sharpeville massacre by Godfrey Rubens.
Albert Luthuli

1960 edit

1961 edit

1962 edit

Human rights activist Nelson Mandela

1964 edit

1965 edit

1966 edit

1967 edit

  • The first ever successful heart transplant is performed by cardiac surgeon Christiaan Barnard.

1971 edit

1973 edit

  • The Carlton Centre opens as the tallest skyscraper in the Southern Hemisphere.

1975 edit

1976 edit

1977 edit

1979 edit

1982 edit

  • Founding of the Conservative Party.
  • South Africa builds its first operational nuclear weapon, code-named Hobo and later called Cabot, with a yield of 6 kilotons of TNT.

1983 edit

1984 edit

1985 edit

  • State President P. W. Botha gives his Rubicon speech in which he refuses to change his position regarding the Apartheid system, including the release of Mandela.
  • Reactor Unit 2 of the Koeberg Nuclear Power Station is synchronised to the grid.

1986 edit

1988 edit

  • The first South African IP address is granted to Rhodes University.

1989 edit

  • State President P. W. Botha suffers a stroke and resigns. F. W. de Klerk is elected State President of South Africa.
  • Founding of the Democratic Party.
  • South Africa ends its nuclear weapons programme and dismantles six fully completed nuclear weapons.

1990 edit

  • State President F. W. de Klerk announces reforms in Apartheid policy. The ban on the African National Congress is lifted and Nelson Mandela is released.
  • The mandate of South West Africa becomes independent as the Republic of Namibia.
  • The .za namespace is introduced.
  • First flight of the Denel Rooivalk attack helicopter.

1992 edit

  • The white people of South Africa approve of De Klerk's reforms in a referendum.
  • 45 people are killed in the Boipatong Massacre, an attack committed by supporters of the Inkatha Freedom Party.

1993 edit

  • Nelson Mandela and F. W. de Klerk receive the Nobel Peace Prize.
  • Communist politician Chris Hani is murdered by a far-right extremist.
  • The Interim Constitution is put into law.
Mandela votes for the first time in his life, at the Ohlange School, Inanda, Durban.
Flag of South Africa

The Rainbow Nation edit

1994 edit

1995 edit

1996 edit

1997 edit

1998 edit

Second President Thabo Mbeki.

1999 edit

2000 edit

2002 edit

  • Mark Shuttleworth becomes the first South African to travel to space as a space tourist; and the first African from an independent country to travel to space.

2003 edit

2004 edit

2005 edit

2007 edit

Third President Jacob Zuma.

2008 edit

2009 edit

  • Jacob Zuma is elected President of South Africa.
  • Mandela Day is launched worldwide to celebrate the idea that each individual has the power to transform the world.

2010 edit

2012 edit

2013 edit

2014 edit

2015 edit

  • Demonstrations take place against the preservation of the statue of Cecil Rhodes at the University of Cape Town.

2016 edit

2017 edit

President Cyril Ramaphosa

2018 edit

2019 edit

2020 edit

2021 edit

  • The Zuma riots, a wave of civil unrest occurs in KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng, killing 354 people.

2022 edit

2023 edit

2024 edit