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  1. en.wikipedia.org

    Disestablishments in German South West Africa by century (1 C) D. Disestablishments in German South West Africa by decade (1 C) Y. Disestablishments in German South West Africa by year (2 C) This page was last edited on 5 December 2019, at 11:46 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
  2. en.wikipedia.org

    1907 disestablishments in German South West Africa (1 P) 1908 disestablishments in German South West Africa (1 P) This page was last edited on 6 December 2019, at 08:15 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ...
    • German South West Africa

      German South West Africa (German: Deutsch-Südwestafrika) was a colony of the German Empire from 1884 [1] until 1915, [2] though Germany did not officially recognise its loss of this territory until the 1919 Treaty of Versailles.. German rule over this territory was punctuated by numerous rebellions by its native African peoples, which culminated in a campaign of German reprisals from 1904 to ...

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  4. thecollector.com

    Sep 19, 2023In May 1885, Heinrich Ernst Göring (father of Hermann Göring) was appointed commissioner of German South West Africa.He established his administration at Otjimbingwe in the center of South West Africa. In the following year, different laws were constituted for Europeans and natives, creating a divide that would add fuel to worsening relations between the two peoples.
  5. degruyter.com

    Development and Segregation in German South West Africa (1884-1915) Like European colonialism in general, German colonialism in particular contin-ues to have about it a whiff of the olde-worlde, the quaint, the exotic and the far-away. For most Germans, terms like 'Africa', 'Natives' or 'colonies' invoke images
  6. simple.wikipedia.org

    German South West Africa (German: Deutsch-Südwestafrika, DSWA) was a German colony in Africa from 1884 through 1915.It is now Namibia.From 1891, the capital was Windhoek, the same city as the capital of today's Namibia. It covered an area of 835,100 km 2 (322,434 sq mi).This is over one and half times the size of the German Empire at the time.
  7. en.wikipedia.org

    German South West Africa (German: Deutsch-Südwestafrika) was a colony of the German Empire from 1884 [1] until 1915, [2] though Germany did not officially recognise its loss of this territory until the 1919 Treaty of Versailles.. German rule over this territory was punctuated by numerous rebellions by its native African peoples, which culminated in a campaign of German reprisals from 1904 to ...
  8. If the farmer represented the "key figure" of German South-West African identity, as Brigitta Schmidt-Lauber (1998: 79) assumes, it did so as an ideal without factual basis. Nevertheless, the so-called small or individual settlements -consisting of a single farm - still shape the country to this day (Kaulich 2001:338).
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