Online Encyclopedia

KURUMAN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 954 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KURUMAN  , a

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town in the Bechuanaland division of Cape Colony, 12o m . N.W. of Kimberley and 85 m . S.W. of Vryburg . It is a station of the
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London Missionary Society, founded in 1818, and from 1821 to 187o was the scene of the labours of Robert Moffat (q.v.) who here translated the Bible into the
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Bechuana tongue . In the
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middle period of the 19th century Kuruman was the
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rendezvous of all travellers going north or south . Of these the best known is David Livingstone . The trunk railway
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line passing considerably to the east of the town, Kuruman is no longer a place of much importance . It is pleasantly situated on the upper course of the Kuruman
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river, being beautified by gardens and orchards, and presents a striking contrast to the
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desert conditions of the surrounding country . Its name is that of the son and heir of Mosilikatze, the founder of the Matabele nation . Kuruman disappeared during his
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father's lifetime and the succession passed to Lobengula (see RuoDESIA:
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History) . In November 1899 the town was besieged by a
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Boer force . The garrison, less than a
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hundred strong, held out for six weeks against over loco of the enemy,"but was forced to surrender on the 1st of
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January 1900 .

In

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June following it was reoccupied by the
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British .

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