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Great Trek

Great Trek

1836–1852 Boer migrations away from the British Cape Colony

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Photo: Discott · Commons · CC BY-SA 4.0 · Resized

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The Great Trek was a northward migration of Dutch-speaking settlers who travelled by wagon trains from the Cape Colony into the interior of modern South Africa from 1836 onwards, seeking to live beyond the Cape's British colonial administration. The Great Trek resulted from the culmination of tensions between rural descendants of the Cape's original European settlers, known collectively as Boers, and the British. It was also reflective of an increasingly common trend among individual Boer communities to pursue an isolationist and semi-nomadic lifestyle away from the developing administrative complexities in Cape Town. Boers who took part in the Great Trek identified themselves as voortrekkers, meaning "pioneers" or "pathfinders" in Dutch and Afrikaans.

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Image: Discott, CC BY-SA 4.0 · Text from Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 4.0

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