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Orange River Convention

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British. The Boers were asked to send a delegation to a meeting with the British special commissioner Sir George Clerk in August 1853. This meeting was aimed at establishing some form of self-governance in the Orange River Sovereignty. When they could not agree, the Boers sent two members of their original delegation to England to try to convince the government to alter their decision.
222:. The British came out victorious and one of the boundary lines created after this battle was called the Warden line. This line divided territory between the British and the Basotho and stretched from Cornetspruit and the Orange River through Vechtkop to Jammerbergdrift on the Caledon River. This action led to a conflict between the two groups where 226:
defeated the British in a battle known as Battle of Viervoet in 1851. The British government retracted their decision for annexation, claiming it was too expensive and difficult to maintain. In addition, the Boers wanted independence and threatened to side with Moshoeshoe I in a war against the
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or what the boundaries between the Basotho and the Orange Free State would be. The convention was signed in a building now known as the First Raadsaal by Sir George Clerk, on behalf of the British government, and twenty-five representatives of the
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On 30 January 1854, a royal proclamation was signed abandoning and renouncing all dominion in the Orange River Sovereignty. On 23 February 1854, the Orange River Convention officially recognised the independence of the area which was called the
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people. The first two presidents of the Orange Free State Republic were later sworn into office in this building which later became a prominent symbol in Apartheid era education in South Africa.
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seeking autonomy from British control. However, the expanding interests of the British colonial government soon caught up with the Boers when they annexed
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and the Orange River Convention included British recognition of Boer independence claims, and both claims were challenged during the
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in 1845. After settling across the Orange River, relations between the Boers and different groups between the Orange River and the
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Rosalie Schaffer, 'Succession to treaties: South African practice in the light of current developments in international law'
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and the Orange River was annexed on 3 February 1848 and was officially proclaimed as the
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were permitted access to gunpowder and firearms while Africans were not. Both the
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Convention whereby the British formally recognised the independence of the Boers
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By signing the convention, the British renounced control not only over the
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Doing Canada proud: The Second Boer War and the Battle of Paardeberg
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British government and representatives of the communities in the
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were extremely strained; particularly between the Boers and the
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First Raadsaal where the Bloemfontein Convention was signed
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had the right to govern themselves independently of
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Index

Bloemfontein
Orange River Sovereignty
Orange River Sovereignty
English
Orange River Convention (1854)
Wikisource
Afrikaans
convention
British
Boers
Orange
Vaal
Orange River Sovereignty
Boer Republic
Orange Free State
Great Trek
Boers
Cape Colony
Natal
Caledon River
Basotho
Sir Harry Smith
Vaal River
Orange River Sovereignty
Henry Douglas Warden
Bloemfontein
Andries Pretorius
Battle of Boomplaats
Moshoeshoe I

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