More Than Just a Public Execution: Martial Law, Crime and the Nature of Colonial Power in British Kaffraria

More Than Just a Public Execution: Martial Law, Crime and the Nature of Colonial Power in British Kaffraria

Author: 
Webb, Denver A.
Publisher: 
Taylor & Francis
Date published: 
2013
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
South African Historical Journal
Source: 
South African Historical Journal, Vol. 65, Issue 2, June 2013, pp. 293-316
Abstract: 

This article starts with a hanging and ends with the passing of a colony. It uses the first judicial public execution in King William's Town in 1858 to explore how colonial processes played themselves out at local level. It examines three interrelated themes: the ad hoc nature of the establishment of colonial hegemony in British Kaffraria, especially with regard to the administration of law in dealing with ‘grave’ crimes; how the influx of white settlers, particularly German mercenaries, placed pressure on the rudimentary colonial legal system and resulted in further improvised measures to deal with them; and how efforts to establish more substantial institutions of government and attempts to foster a sense of Kaffrarian identity ultimately foundered on the incorporation of British Kaffraria into the Cape Colony.

Language: 

CITATION: Webb, Denver A.. More Than Just a Public Execution: Martial Law, Crime and the Nature of Colonial Power in British Kaffraria . : Taylor & Francis , 2013. South African Historical Journal, Vol. 65, Issue 2, June 2013, pp. 293-316 - Available at: https://library.au.int/frmore-just-public-execution-martial-law-crime-and-nature-colonial-power-british-kaffraria-4