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PIETERMARITZBURG

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 592 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PIETERMARITZBURG  , the

capital of
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Natal, situated in 29° 46' S., 30° 13' E., 45 M. in a
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direct
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line (71 by
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rail) W.N.W. of
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Durban . It lies, 2200 ft. above the sea, north of the
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river Umsunduzi, and is surrounded by wooded hills . Of these the
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Town Hill, flat-topped, rises 1600 ft. above the town . Pop . (1904), 31,119, of whom 15,087 were whites, 10,752 Kaffirs, and 5280 Indians . The town is laid out on the usual Dutch South
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African plan—in rectangular blocks with a central market square . The public buildings include the legislative council chambers and the legislative assembly buildings, government house, the government offices, college,
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post office and market buildings . The town-hall, a
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fine
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building in a modified Renaissance style (characteristic of the majority of the other public buildings), has a lofty tower . It was completed in 1901, and replaces a building destroyed by fire in 1898 . St Saviour's is the
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cathedral church of the
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Anglican community . The headquarters of the Dutch Reformed Church are also in the town . There are monuments of Queen Victoria and
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Sir
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Theophilus Shepstone, and various war memorials—one commemorating those who fell in
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Zululand in 1879, and another those who lost their lives in the
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Boer War 1899–1902 .

A large

park and botanical gardens add to the attractions of the town . A favourite mode of
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conveyance is by rickshaw . The
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climate is healthy and agreeable, the mean
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annual temperature being 65° F . (55° in
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June, 71° in
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February) . The rainfall is about 38 in. a
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year, chiefly in the summer months (Oct.–Mar.), when the heat is tempered by violent thunderstorms . Pietermaritzburg was founded early in 1839 by the newly-arrived Dutch settlers in Natal, and its name commemorates two of their leaders—Piet Retief and Gerrit Maritz . From the time of its establishment it was the seat of the Volksraad of the Natal Boers, and on the submission of the Boers to the
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British in 1842 Maritzburg (as it is usually called) became the capital of the country . It was given a municipal board in 1848, and in 1854 was incorporated as a borough . Railway connexion with Durban was made in 188o, and in 1895 the line was extended to
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Johannesburg . The borough covers 44 sq. m. and includes numerous attractive suburbs . The rateable value is about £4,000,000 . Various
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industries are carried on, including brick-making, tanning,
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brewing, and cart and wagon building .

See J . F .

Ingram, The Story of an African City (Maritzburg, 1898) .

End of Article: PIETERMARITZBURG
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