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Living on the margins: an archaeology of 19th century Karoo rural dwelling

The 19th century corbelled houses of the Karoo are an architectural type conventionally attributed to Trek Boer pastoralism. Consequently, mid-20th century scholarship tends to view them as an architecture type that embodies the ideology of whiteness on the frontier. However, recent research emphasi...

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Main Author: Lupuwana, Vuyiswa Thembelihle
Other Authors: Hall, Simon
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Archaeology 2021
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access_status_str Open Access
author Lupuwana, Vuyiswa Thembelihle
author2 Hall, Simon
author_browse Hall, Simon
Lupuwana, Vuyiswa Thembelihle
author_facet Hall, Simon
Lupuwana, Vuyiswa Thembelihle
author_sort Lupuwana, Vuyiswa Thembelihle
collection Thesis
description The 19th century corbelled houses of the Karoo are an architectural type conventionally attributed to Trek Boer pastoralism. Consequently, mid-20th century scholarship tends to view them as an architecture type that embodies the ideology of whiteness on the frontier. However, recent research emphasises that Cape frontiers in the early stages of development were zones of interaction rather than simply boundaries that defined racial and cultural binaries. Consequently, research on corbelled houses of the Karoo has explored that they are a creole architectural type that came about through the frontier processes of the Cape, particularly between people with mixed Khoe and settler ancestry. Specifically, it has been suggested that the domed ‘igloo' form reproduces the basic indigenous architecture of the pastoralist matjieshuis. Kramer (2012) established a timeline for the building of these structures and estimated that they emerged from the 1830s and were built up until the mid-tolate 19th century. Furthermore, Kramer (2012) and Lupuwana (2017) have linked these structures as the dwellings of pastoralists of Baster descent. This thesis broadens the discussion of these corbelled houses and argues that with the closing of the Northern Cape frontier later in the 19th century, this architectural type straddled multiple social and class identities. In order to explore this issue, archaeological and documentary evidence are combined to interrogate the biographies of three corbelled structures built in the 1860/70s on the farm Gorras in the Carnarvon district of the Karoo, during a period of agricultural, pastoralist and mercantile intensification. Architectural additions, spatial change or inertia, combined with household debris indicates different scales of consumption, degrees of material indulgence and the purchasing power of different households.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:56.154Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
publishDateSort 2021
publisher Department of Archaeology
publisherStr Department of Archaeology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/33767 Living on the margins: an archaeology of 19th century Karoo rural dwelling Lupuwana, Vuyiswa Thembelihle Hall, Simon Archaeology The 19th century corbelled houses of the Karoo are an architectural type conventionally attributed to Trek Boer pastoralism. Consequently, mid-20th century scholarship tends to view them as an architecture type that embodies the ideology of whiteness on the frontier. However, recent research emphasises that Cape frontiers in the early stages of development were zones of interaction rather than simply boundaries that defined racial and cultural binaries. Consequently, research on corbelled houses of the Karoo has explored that they are a creole architectural type that came about through the frontier processes of the Cape, particularly between people with mixed Khoe and settler ancestry. Specifically, it has been suggested that the domed ‘igloo' form reproduces the basic indigenous architecture of the pastoralist matjieshuis. Kramer (2012) established a timeline for the building of these structures and estimated that they emerged from the 1830s and were built up until the mid-tolate 19th century. Furthermore, Kramer (2012) and Lupuwana (2017) have linked these structures as the dwellings of pastoralists of Baster descent. This thesis broadens the discussion of these corbelled houses and argues that with the closing of the Northern Cape frontier later in the 19th century, this architectural type straddled multiple social and class identities. In order to explore this issue, archaeological and documentary evidence are combined to interrogate the biographies of three corbelled structures built in the 1860/70s on the farm Gorras in the Carnarvon district of the Karoo, during a period of agricultural, pastoralist and mercantile intensification. Architectural additions, spatial change or inertia, combined with household debris indicates different scales of consumption, degrees of material indulgence and the purchasing power of different households. 2021-08-13T15:55:44Z 2021-08-13T15:55:44Z 2021 2021-08-13T15:54:38Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33767 eng application/pdf Department of Archaeology Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Archaeology
Lupuwana, Vuyiswa Thembelihle
Living on the margins: an archaeology of 19th century Karoo rural dwelling
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Living on the margins: an archaeology of 19th century Karoo rural dwelling
title_full Living on the margins: an archaeology of 19th century Karoo rural dwelling
title_fullStr Living on the margins: an archaeology of 19th century Karoo rural dwelling
title_full_unstemmed Living on the margins: an archaeology of 19th century Karoo rural dwelling
title_short Living on the margins: an archaeology of 19th century Karoo rural dwelling
title_sort living on the margins an archaeology of 19th century karoo rural dwelling
topic Archaeology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33767
work_keys_str_mv AT lupuwanavuyiswathembelihle livingonthemarginsanarchaeologyof19thcenturykarooruraldwelling