Silver Medallion South African Administrators SA Historical Mint Set

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!!! SILVER IN YOUR HANDS !!!

A UNIQUE OFFER

THE SOUTH AFRICAN

HISTORICAL MINT MEDALLIONS

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S A HISTORICAL MINT

SILVER MEDALLIONS

A COLLECTION

OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN ADMINISTRATORS

TOTAL SILVER WEIGHT

606.2 GRAMS

HISTORY IN YOUR HANDS

A SET OF SILVER MEDALLIONS

WORTH HAVING

A BEAUTIFUL

COLLECTION

SET FOR YOU TO OWN

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NOW

Actual coins and multiples where applicable - coin image may be generic where necessary

BUY THESE SILVER MEDALLIONS

THE HISTORIC REPRESENTATION OF THE VARIOUS ADMINISTRATORS OVER A PERIOD OF SOUTH AFRICA'S

FASCINATING HISTORY

SILVER VALUE

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R 9 550

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DESCRIPTION

Details: Applies to all

Medallions  Mass: 15.13 grams  Diameter: 28.00 mm Metal Content: Sterling Silver

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HISTORICAL EVENTS AT THE TIME OF THESE ADMINISTRATORS

European contact

The first European settlement in southern Africa was established by the Dutch East India Company in Table Bay (Cape Town) in 1652. Created to supply passing ships with fresh produce, the colony grew rapidly as Dutch farmers settled to grow crops. Shortly after the establishment of the colony, slaves were imported from East Africa, Madagascar and the East Indies.

The first British Settlers, known as the 1820 Settlers, arrived in Algoa Bay (now Nelson Mandela Bay) on board 21 ships, the first being the Chapman. They numbered about 4 500 and included artisans, tradesmen, religious leaders, merchants, teachers, bookbinders, blacksmiths, discharged sailors and soldiers, professional men and farmers.

Conflict

From the 1770s, colonists came into contact and inevitable conflict with Bantu-speaking chiefdoms some 800 km east of Cape Town. A century of intermittent warfare ensued during which the colonists gained ascendancy over the isiXhosa-speaking chiefdoms.

In 1795, the British occupied the Cape as a strategic base against the French, controlling the sea route to the East.

In the 1820s, the celebrated Zulu leader, Shaka, established sway over a vast area of south-east Africa. As splinter Zulu groups conquered and absorbed communities in their path, the region experienced a fundamental disruption. Substantial states, such as Moshoeshoe’s Lesotho and other Sotho-Tswana chiefdoms were established.

This temporary disruption of life on the Highveld served to facilitate the expansion northwards of the original Dutch settlers’ descendants, the Boer Voortrekkers, from the 1830s.

Occupation

In 1806, Britain reoccupied the Cape. As the colony prospered, the political rights of the various races were guaranteed, with slavery being abolished in 1838.

Throughout the 1800s, the boundaries of European influence spread eastwards. From the port of Durban, Natal settlers pushed northwards, further and further into the land of the Zulu. From the mid-1800s, the Voortrekkers coalesced in two land-locked white-ruled republics, the South African Republic (Transvaal) and the Orange Free State.

The mineral revolution

South Africa’s diamond mining industry dates back to 1867, when diamonds were discovered near Kimberley in what is today known as the Northern Cape. The Kimberley diamond fields, and later discoveries in Gauteng, the Free State, and along the Atlantic coast, emerged as major sources of gem-quality diamonds, securing South Africa’s position as the world’s leading producer in the mid-twentieth century.

Gold

The discovery of the Witwatersrand goldfields in 1886 was a turning point in South Africa’s history. The demand for franchise rights for English-speaking immigrants working on the new goldfields was the pretext Britain used to go to war with the Transvaal and Orange Free State in 1899

Source:https://www.gov.za/about-sa/history

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This offer expires on the3RD APRIL 2023- and/or subject to availability.

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