SchmerhornRichard, Comparative Ethnic Relations: A Framework for Theory and Research (New York, 1970) pp. 68–70, WilsonWilliam J., Power, Racism and Privilege: Race Relations in Theoretical and Sociological Perspective (New York, 1973) pp. 3–25; Van den BerghePierre, Race and Racism: A Comparative Perspective (New York, 1967) pp. 21–37. BantonMichael, Race Relations (New York, 1967) pp. 68–76.
2.
De VilliersRene, “Afrikaner Nationalism” in Oxford History of South Africa, vol. II, South Africa 1870–1966, eds. ThompsonLeonardWilsonMonica (New York and Oxford, 1971) pp. 365, 406.
3.
Group Areas Act no. 41 of 1950, clause 2, subsection (1) paragraphs (a) and (c), reproduced in BrookesEdgar H., ed. Apartheid: A Documentary Study of Modern South Africa (New York, 1968) pp. 131–132.
4.
Quoted in Adamastor (Pseudonym), White Man Boss: Footsteps to the South African Volk Republic (London, 1950) pp. 160, 164–165. Van den Berghe, South Africa: A Study in Conflict (Berkeley, 1967) p. 53.
5.
SimonsH.J.SimonsR. E., Class and Colour in South Africa 1850–1950 (Baltimore, 1969) pp. 120–121; KahnE. J., The Separated People: A Look at Contemporary South Africa (New York, 1966) pp. 51–53; St. JohnRobert, Through Malan's Africa (Garden City, N.Y., 1954) pp. 40–41; MarquardLeo, The Peoples and Policies of South Africa (4th ed., London, 1969) p. 72.
6.
George Masselman, “Dutch Colonial Policy in the Seventeenth Century,”Journal of Economic History, 21: (December, 1961) 456–459; HaleyKenneth D. B., The Dutch in the Seventeenth Century (London, 1972) pp. 17–25.
7.
GoonewardenaK. W., “A New Netherlands in Ceylon: Dutch Attempts to Found a Colony During the First Quarter Century of Their Power in Ceylon,”Ceylon Journal of Historical and Social Studies, 2: (July, 1959) 205; BoxerCharles R., The Dutch Seaborne Empire 1600–1800 (London, 1965) p. 216–220.
8.
Van der ChijsJacobus A., ed., Netherlandsh-Indisch Plakaatboek, 1602–1811 (17 vols. Batavia, 1885–1900), I, 238–239; Boxer, Dutch Sea-borne Empire, pp. 221–222.
9.
Masselman, “Dutch Colonial Policy,” pp. 467–468.
10.
van Treslong PrinsP. C. Bloys, “Fragment-Genealogie Van der Stel”De Nederlandsche Leeuw, (1930), Column 5; StapelF. W., “Adriaen van der Stel”Niew Nederlandsch Biografisch Woordenboek, vol. 9 (1933) p. 1070; BoesekenAnna J., Simon van der Stel en sy Kinders (Cape Town, 1964) pp. 3–4, 268–269, Southern African Dictionary of National Biography, 1966 ed. compiled by RosenthalEric, p. 391.
11.
The books surveyed were the following: (a). Specialized: BoesekenA. J., Simon Van der Stel en sy Kinders (Cape Town, 1964), FoucheLeo ed. Dagboek Van Adams Tas (1705–6) (London, 1914), ThealG. M., William Adriaan Van der Stel and Other History Sketches (Cape Town, 1913) SpilhausM. Whiting, South Africa in the Making 1652–1806 (Cape Town, 1966). (b). General and Biographical Dictionaries: WalkerErick, A History of Southern Africa (new ed.London, 1957), WilsonMonicaThompsonLeonard eds. Oxford History of South Africavol. I. (New York & Oxford, 1969), GieS. F. N., Geskiedenis Van Suidafrikavol. I (Stellenbosch, 1928), MullerC. F. J. ed., Five Hundred Years: A History of South Africa (Pretoria and Cape Town: Academica, 1969), RosenthalEric, ed. Southern African Dictionary of National Biography, 1966 edition; de KockW. J., ed., Dictionary of South African Biography, vol. I, 1968. (c). Seconary and Elementary School Textbooks: BoesekenA. J., History for the Senior Certificate (Cape Town, 1960); CoetseeA. G., Geskiedenis Vir die Senior Sertifikaat Transvaal Leerplan (Cape Town, 1960); DoddAnthony Dennis, History for Transkei Schools (Cape Town, 1965); de K. FowlerC., Geskiedenis Vir die Kaaplandse Senior Sertifikaat en Matriek (Cape Town, 1965); Vander WaltHendrik Roelof, History for Standard V Natal Syllabus (Ladysmith, 1959); WatersMary W., Great Men and Great Deeds for Bantu Children, Standards 5 and 6, (4 rev. ed., Cape Town, 1959); CorneliusMarthiaiusVan SchoorE., Geskiedeais Vir die Oranje Vrystaat Skool (Cape Town, 1960); Van JaarsveldFlons A., Van Van Riebeeck tot Vierwoerd 1652–1966 (Johannesburg, 1971); MullerJ. J., History and Geography for Standard VI Syllabus of the Department of Coloured Affairs (Cape Town); VenterJacobus P., Adventures into History for Standard 4 (3rd ed., Cape Town, 1970).
12.
ThealGeorge M., Belangrijke Historische Documentenvol. 3, (London, 1911), p. 11; GeylPieter, The Netherlands in the Seventeenth Century (2 vols., New York, 1964), vol. 2, p. 357; AdriaanWillem, Van der Stel and Other Historical Sketches (Cape Town, 1913) p. 175; WalkerEric, A History of Southern Africa (Cape Town, 1957), p. 48; KolbePieter, Caput Bonae Spei Hodiernum, Das ist, etc. (Nurnberg, 1719) p. 591.
13.
FoucheLeo, “Foundation of the Cape Colony 1652–1708,” in the Cambridge History of the British Empire, vol. 8; South Africa Rhodesia and the High Commission Territories, ed. WalkerEric (London, 1963) p. 129.
14.
Fouche, “Foundation of the Cape Colony,” p. 138.
15.
Boeseken, “Simon Van der Stel,”Dictionary of South African Biography, ed. de KockW. J., 1968, I, 81, 815; Southern African History of National Biography, 1966 ed., p. 391.
16.
MaraisJohannes S., The Cape Coloured People 1652–1937 (Johannesburg, 1957), pp. 9, 10, 12, 23, 32, 72 and ThompsonLeonard M., “Afrikaner Historiography and the Policy of Apartheid,”Journal of African History (1962), III, 137.
17.
South African Institute of Race Relations, A Survey of Race Relations in South Africa, 1971 compiled by Muriel Horrell, Dudley Horner & John Kane-Berman (Johannesburg, 1972), pp. 9–10.