Online Encyclopedia

MAFEKING

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 299 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MAFEKING  , a

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town in the
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British Bechuanaland division of the Cape, 87o m . N.E. of Cape Town and 492 M . S.S.W. of
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Bulawayo by
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rail, and 162 m. in a
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direct
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line W. by N. of
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Johannesburg . (Pop . 1904), 2713 . It is built on the open veld, at an
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elevation of 4194 ft., by the banks of the Upper Molopo, is 9 m . W. of the western frontier of the
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Transvaal and 15 M . S. of the
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southern boundary of the Bechuanaland
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protectorate . The Madibi goldfields are some 10 m. south of the town . Mafeking is thus an important trading and distributing centre for Bechuanaland and the western Transvaal . Here are, too, the chief railway workshops between Kimberley and Bulawayo . The headquarters of the administration for the Bechuanaland protectorate are in the town .

The chief buildings are the town-

hall,
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Anglican church, Masonic temple, and hospital . Mafeking was originally the headquarters of the Barolong tribe of
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Bechuana and is still their largest station, the native location (pop . 286o) being about a mile distant from the town . It was from Pitsani Pothlugo (or Potlogo), 24 M. north of Mafeking, that Dr Jameson started, on the 29th of December 1895, on his
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raid, into the Transvaal . On the outbreak of the Anglo-
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Boer war in 1899 Mafeking was invested by a Boer force . Colonel R . S . S . Baden-Powell was in command of the defence, which was stubbornly maintained for 217 days (Oct . 12 to May 17), when a
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relief column arrived and the Boers dispersed (see TRANSVAAL:
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History) . The
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fate of the town had excited the liveliest sympathy in England, and the exuberant rejoicings in
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London 'on the
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news of its relief led to the coining of the word maficking to describe the behaviour of crowds on occasions of extravagant demonstrations of a
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national kind . In September 1904 Lord Roberts unveiled at Mafeking an obelisk bearing the names of those who fell in defence of the town .

R . S . S . Baden-Powell's Sketches in Mafeking and

East Africa (19o7) and Lady Sarah Wilson's South
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African Memories (1909)
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deal largely with the siege of Mafeking .

End of Article: MAFEKING
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