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Khoisan

Khoisan /ˈkɔɪsɑːn/ KOY-sahn, or Khoe-Sān (pronounced [kxʰoesaːn]), is a catch-all term for the indigenous peoples of Southern Africa who traditionally speak non-Bantu languages, combining the Khoekhoen (formerly "Hottentots") and the Sān peoples (formerly "Bushmen"). Khoisan populations traditionally speak click languages and are considered to be the historical (pre-Bantu) communities throughout Southern Africa, remaining predominant until European colonisation in areas climatically unfavorable to Bantu (sorghum-based) agriculture, such as the Cape region, through to Namibia, where Khoekhoe populations of Nama and Damara people are prevalent groups, and Botswana. Considerable mingling with Bantu-speaking groups is evidenced by prevalence of click phonemes in many especially Xhosa Southern African Bantu languages.

Khoisan
San man of Namibia
Total population
~ 400,000[1] (c. 2010)
Regions with significant populations
Namibia, Botswana, South Africa
Languages
Xhosa,[2] Khoe-Kwadi languages, Kx'a languages, Tuu languages
Religion
Mainly Christian and African Traditional Religion (San religion)
Related ethnic groups
Tswana, Xhosa, Coloured, Griqua, Hadzabe

Many Khoesān peoples are the direct descendants of a very early dispersal of anatomically modern humans to Southern Africa before 150,000 years ago. (However, see below for recent work supporting a multi-regional hypothesis that suggests the Khoisan may be a source population for anatomically modern humans.)[3] Their languages show a vague typological similarity, largely confined to the prevalence of click consonants. They are not verifiably derived from a common proto-language, but are today split into at least three separate and unrelated language families (Khoe-Kwadi, Tuu and Kxʼa). It has been suggested that the Khoekhoeǁaen (Khoekhoe peoples) may represent Late Stone Age arrivals to Southern Africa, possibly displaced by Bantu expansion reaching the area roughly between 1,500 and 2,000 years ago.[4]

Sān are popularly thought of as foragers in the Kalahari Desert and regions of Botswana, Namibia, Angola, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Lesotho and Northern South Africa. The word sān is from the Khoekhoe language and refers to foragers ("those who pick things up from the ground") who do not own livestock. As such, it was used in reference to all hunter-gatherer populations who came into contact with Khoekhoe-speaking communities, and was largely referring to the lifestyle, distinct from a pastoralist or agriculturalist one, and not to any particular ethnicity. While there are attendant cosmologies and languages associated with this way of life, the term is an economic designator rather than a cultural or ethnic one.

Name edit

The compound term Khoisan / Khoesān is a modern anthropological convention in use since the early-to-mid 20th century. Khoisan is a coinage by Leonhard Schulze in the 1920s and popularised by Isaac Schapera.[5] It entered wider usage from the 1960s based on the proposal of a "Khoisan" language family by Joseph Greenberg.

During the Colonial/Apartheid era, Afrikaans-speaking persons with partial Khoesān ancestry were historically also grouped as Cape Blacks (Afrikaans: Kaap Swartes) or Western Cape Blacks (Afrikaans: Wes-Kaap Swartes) to rather inaccurately distinguish them from the Bantu-speaking peoples, the other indigenous African population of South Africa who also had significant Khoe-San ancestry.[6]

The term Khoisan (also spelled KhoiSan, Khoi-San, Khoe-San[7]) has also been introduced in South African usage as a self-designation after the end of apartheid in the late 1990s. Since the 2010s, there has been a "Khoisan activist" movement, demanding recognition and land rights from the government and white minority which owns large parts of the country's private land.[8]

 
San man collecting devil's claw

History edit

Origins edit

 
Approximate area of the origin of L0d and L0k haplogroups in southern Africa, dated to before 90,000 years ago by Behar et al. (2008).[9]

It is suggested that the ancestors of the modern Khoisan expanded to southern Africa (from East or Central Africa) before 150,000 years ago, possibly as early as before 260,000 years ago,[10][11] so that by the beginning of the MIS 5 "megadrought" 130,000 years ago, there were two ancestral population clusters in Africa, bearers of mt-DNA haplogroup L0 in southern Africa ancestral to the Khoi-San, and bearers of haplogroup L1-6 in central/eastern Africa ancestral to everyone else.[citation needed] This group gave rise to the San population of hunter gatherers. Their nearest living relatives are postulated to be the Hadzabe people from north-central Tanzania; and Mbuti pygmies from the eastern Congo. A much later wave of migration, around or before the beginning of the Common Era,[12] gave rise to the Khoe people, who were pastoralists.[13] This group carried DNA from Eurasian as well as some Neanderthal groups.

Due to their early expansion and separation, the populations ancestral to the Khoisan have been estimated as having represented the "largest human population" during the majority of the anatomically modern human timeline, from their early separation before 150 kya until the recent peopling of Eurasia some 70 kya.[14] They were much more widespread than today, their modern distribution being due to their decimation in the course of the Bantu expansion. They were dispersed throughout much of southern and southeastern Africa. There was also a significant back-migration of bearers of L0 towards eastern Africa between 120 and 75 kya. Rito et al. (2013) speculate that pressure from such back-migration may even have contributed to the dispersal of East African populations out of Africa at about 70 kya.[15]

Recent work has suggested that the multi-regional hypothesis may be supported by current human population genetic data. A 2023 study published in the journal Nature suggests that current genetic data may be best understood as reflecting internal admixtures of multiple population sources across Africa, including ancestral populations of the Khoisan.[3]

Late Stone Age edit

 
Schematic representation of the "out of South Africa" migration of the post-Eemian Middle to Late Stone Age (after 100 kya) inferred from mtDNA haplogroup L0 in modern African populations (Rito et al. 2013).[15]

The San populations ancestral to the Khoisan were spread throughout much of southern and eastern Africa throughout the Late Stone Age after about 75 ka. A further expansion dated to about 20 ka has been proposed based on the distribution of the L0d haplogroup. Rosti et al. suggest a connection of this recent expansion with the spread of click consonants to eastern African languages (Hadza language).[15]

The Late Stone Age Sangoan industry occupied southern Africa in areas where annual rainfall is less than a metre (1000 mm; 39.4 in).[16] The contemporary San and Khoi peoples resemble those represented by the ancient Sangoan skeletal remains.

Against the traditional interpretation that finds a common origin for the Khoi and San, other evidence has suggested that the ancestors of the Khoi peoples are relatively recent pre-Bantu agricultural immigrants to southern Africa who abandoned agriculture as the climate dried and either joined the San as hunter-gatherers or retained pastoralism.[17]

With the hypothesized arrival of pastoralists & bantoid agro-pastoralists in southern Africa starting around 2,300 years ago, linguistic development is later seen in the click consonants and loan words from ancient Khoe-san languages into the evolution of blended agro-pastoralist & hunter-gatherer communities that would eventually evolve into the now extant, amalgamated modern native linguistic communities found in South Africa, Botswana & Namibia (e.g. in South African Xhosa, Sotho, Tswana, Zulu people.)[18]

Today these groups represent the quantitative majority of extant admixed ancient Khoe-San descendants by the millions.[19]

Historical period edit

The Khoikhoi enter the historical record with their first contact with Portuguese explorers, about 1,000 years after their displacement by the Bantu. Local population dropped after the Khoi were exposed to smallpox from Europeans. The Khoi waged more frequent attacks against Europeans when the Dutch East India Company enclosed traditional grazing land for farms. Khoikhoi social organisation was profoundly damaged and, in the end, destroyed by colonial expansion and land seizure from the late 17th century onwards. As social structures broke down, some Khoikhoi people settled on farms and became bondsmen (bondservants) or farm workers; many were incorporated into existing Khoi clan and family groups of the Xhosa people. Georg Schmidt, a Moravian Brother from Herrnhut, Saxony, now Germany, founded Genadendal in 1738, which was the first mission station in southern Africa,[20] among the Khoi people in Baviaanskloof in the Riviersonderend Mountains. Early European settlers sometimes intermarried with Khoikhoi women, resulting in a sizeable mixed-race population now known as the Griqua. The Griqua people too would migrate to what was by that time the frontierlands of the Xhosa native reserves and establish Griqualand East, which contained a mostly Xhosa population.

 
A Khoikhoi settlement in Table Bay, as depicted in an engraving in Abraham Bogaert's Historische Reizen, 1711

Andries Stockenström facilitated the creation of the "Kat River" Khoi settlement near the eastern frontier of the Cape Colony. The settlements thrived and expanded, and Kat River quickly became a large and successful region of the Cape that subsisted more or less autonomously. The people were predominantly Afrikaans-speaking Gonaqua Khoi, but the settlement also began to attract other Khoi, Xhosa and mixed-race groups of the Cape.

The so-called "Bushman wars"[year needed]were to a large extent the response of the San after their dispossession.[citation needed]

At the start of the 18th century, the Khoikhoi in the Western Cape lived in a state dominated by the Dutch. By the end of the century the majority of the Khoisan operated as 'wage labourers', not that dissimilar to slaves. Geographically, the further away the labourer was from Cape Town, the more difficult it became to transport agricultural produce to the markets. The issuing of grazing licences north of the Berg River in what was then the Tulbagh Basin propelled colonial expansion in the area. This system of land relocation led to the Khoijhou losing their land and livestock as well as dramatic change in the social, economic and political development.[21]

After the defeat of the Xhosa rebellion in 1853, the new Cape Government endeavoured to grant the Khoi political rights to avert future racial discontent. The government enacted the Cape franchise in 1853, which decreed that all male citizens meeting a low property test, regardless of colour, had the right to vote and to seek election in Parliament. The property test was an indirect way by the British Cape Government (who took over from the Dutch in 1812) to retain a racist based system of governance because on average only white people owned property adequate to meet the test.[22]

In the Herero and Namaqua genocide in German South-West Africa, over 10,000 Nama are estimated to have been killed during 1904–1907.[23][24]

 
San family in Namibia

The San of the Kalahari were described in Specimens of Bushman Folklore by Wilhelm H. I. Bleek and Lucy C. Lloyd (1911). They were brought to the globalised world's attention in the 1950s by South African author Laurens van der Post in a six-part television documentary. The Ancestral land conflict in Botswana concerns the Central Kalahari Game Reserve (CKGR), established in 1961 for wildlife, while the San were permitted to continue their hunter-gatherer lifestyle. In the 1990s, the government of Botswana began a policy of "relocating" CKGR residents outside the reserve. In 2002, the government cut off all services to CKGR residents. A legal battle began, and in 2006 the High Court of Botswana ruled that the residents had been forcibly and unconstitutionally removed. The policy of relocation continued, however, and in 2012 the San people (Basarwa) appealed to the United Nations to force the government to recognise their land and resource rights.

Following the end of Apartheid in 1994, the term "Khoisan" has gradually come to be used as a self-designation by South African Khoikhoi as representing the "first nations" of South Africa vis-a-vis the ruling Bantu majority. A conference on "Khoisan Identities and Cultural Heritage" was organised by the University of the Western Cape in 1997.[25] and "Khoisan activism" has been reported in the South African media beginning in 2015.[8]

The South African government allowed Khoisan families (up until 1998) to pursue land claims which existed prior to 1913. The South African Deputy Chief Land Claims Commissioner, Thami Mdontswa, has said that constitutional reform would be required to enable Khoisan people to pursue further claims to land from which their direct ancestors were removed prior to 9 June 1913.[26]

Discoveries edit

In 2019, scientists from the University of the Free State discovered 8,000-year-old carvings made by the Khoisan people. The carvings depicted a hippopotamus, horse, and antelope in the 'Rain Snake' Dyke of the Vredefort impact structure, which may have spiritual significance regarding the rain-making mythology of the Khoisan.[27]

Violence against the Khoisan edit

Herero and Namaqua Genocide edit

In the Herero and Namaqua genocide, about 10,000 Nama, a Khoekhoe group, and an unknown number of San people were killed in an extermination campaign by the German Colonial Empire between 1904 and 1908.

Forced relocation in Botswana edit

In Botswana, many of the indigenous San people have been forcibly relocated from their land to reservations. To make them relocate, they were denied access to water on their land and faced arrest if they hunted, which was their primary source of food.[28] Their lands lie in the middle of the world's richest diamond field. Officially, the government denies that there is any link to mining and claims the relocation is to preserve the wildlife and ecosystem, even though the San people have lived sustainably on the land for millennia.[28] On the reservations they struggle to find employment, and alcoholism is rampant.[28]

Languages edit

 
Green: The modern distribution of the Khoisan languages spoken by Khoi and San peoples, plus the Sandawe language of the Sandawe people and Hadza language of Tanzania.

The "Khoisan languages" were proposed as a linguistic phylum by Joseph Greenberg in 1955.[29] Their genetic relationship was questioned later in the 20th century, and the term now serves mostly as a convenience term without implying genetic unity, much like "Papuan" and "Australian" are.[30] Their most notable uniting feature is their click consonants.

They are categorized in two families, and a number of possible language isolates.

The Kxʼa family was proposed in 2010, combining the ǂʼAmkoe (ǂHoan) language with the ǃKung (Juu) dialect cluster. ǃKung includes about a dozen dialects, with no clear-cut delineation between them. Sands et al. (2010) propose a division into four clusters:

The Khoi (Khoe) family is divided into a Khoikhoi (Khoekhoe and Khoemana dialects) and a Kalahari (Tshu–Khwe) branch. The Kalahari branch of Khoe includes Shua and Tsoa (with dialects), and Kxoe, Naro, Gǁana and ǂHaba (with dialects). Khoe also has been tentatively aligned with Kwadi ("Kwadi–Khoe"), and more speculatively with the Sandawe language of Tanzania ("Khoe–Sandawe"). The Hadza language of Tanzania has been associated with the Khoisan group due to the presence of click consonants.

Physical characteristics and genetics edit

Charles Darwin wrote about the Khoisan and sexual selection in The Descent of Man in 1882, commenting that their steatopygia, seen primarily in females, evolved through sexual selection in human evolution, and that "the posterior part of the body projects in a most wonderful manner".[32] Historically, some females were observed by anthropologists to exhibit elongated labia minora, which sometimes projected as much as 10 cm below the vulva when standing.[33] Though well documented, the motivations behind this practice and the voices of the women who perform it are rarely explored in the research.[34]

In the 1990s, genomic studies of the world's peoples found that the Y chromosome of San men share certain patterns of polymorphisms that are distinct from those of all other populations.[35] Because the Y chromosome is highly conserved between generations, this type of DNA test is used to determine when different subgroups separated from one another, and hence their last common ancestry. The authors of these studies suggested that the San may have been one of the first populations to differentiate from the most recent common paternal ancestor of all extant humans.[36][37] [needs update]

Various Y-chromosome studies[38][39][40] since confirmed that the Khoisan carry some of the most divergent (oldest) Y-chromosome haplogroups. These haplogroups are specific sub-groups of haplogroups A and B, the two earliest branches on the human Y-chromosome tree.[needs update]

Similar to findings from Y-chromosome studies, mitochondrial DNA studies also showed evidence that the Khoisan people carry high frequencies of the earliest haplogroup branches in the human mitochondrial DNA tree. The most divergent (oldest) mitochondrial haplogroup, L0d, has been identified at its highest frequencies in the southern African Khoi and San groups.[38][41][42][43] The distinctiveness of the Khoisan in both matrilineal and patrilineal groupings is a further indicator that they represent a population historically distinct from other Africans.[44]

Some genomic studies have further revealed that Khoisan groups have been influenced by 9 to 30% genetic admixture in the last few thousand years from an East African population who carried a Eurasian admixture component.[45] Furthermore, they place an East African origin for the paternal haplogroup E1b1b found in these Southern African populations,[46] as well as the introduction of pastoralism into the region.[47] The paper also noted that the Bantu expansion had a notable genetic impact in a number of Khoisan groups.[46] On the basis of PCA projections, the East African ancestry identified in the genomes of Khoe-Kwadi speakers and other southern Africans is related to an individual from the Tanzanian Luxmanda.[48]

Centre edit

On 21 September 2020, the University of Cape Town launched its new Khoi and San Centre, with an undergraduate degree programme planned to be rolled out in coming years. The centre will support and consolidate this collaborative work on research commissions on language (including Khoekhoegowab), sacred human remains, land and gender. Many descendants of Khoisan people still live on the Cape Flats.[49]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Their total numbers are estimated at roughly 300,000 Khoikhoi and 90,000 San: 200k Nama people (2010): Brenzinger, Matthias (2011) "The twelve modern Khoisan languages." In Witzlack-Makarevich & Ernszt (eds.), Khoisan languages and linguistics: proceedings of the 3rd International Symposium, Riezlern / Kleinwalsertal (Research in Khoisan Studies 29). 100k Damara people (1996): James Stuart Olson, « Damara » in The Peoples of Africa: An Ethnohistorical Dictionary, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1996, p. 137. 50-60k San people in Botswana (2010): Anaya, James (2 June 2010). Addendum – The situation of indigenous peoples in Botswana (PDF) (Report). United Nations Human Rights Council. A/HRC/15/37/Add.2..
  2. ^ Parkinson, Christian (2016-06-14). "The first South Africans fight for their rights". BBC News. Most [Khoisan people] now speak Afrikaans as their first language.
  3. ^ a b Ragsdale, Aaron P.; Weaver, Timothy D.; Atkinson, Elizabeth G.; Hoal, Eileen G.; Möller, Marlo; Henn, Brenna M.; Gravel, Simon (2023). "A weakly structured stem for human origins in Africa". Nature. 617 (7962): 755–763. Bibcode:2023Natur.617..755R. doi:10.1038/s41586-023-06055-y. PMC 10208968. PMID 37198480.
  4. ^ Barnard, Alan (1992). Hunters and Herders of Southern Africa: A comparative ethnography of the Khoisan peoples. New York, NY; Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  5. ^ Schapera, Isaac (1930). The Khoisan peoples of South Africa: Bushmen and Hottentots. Routledge.
  6. ^ Christopher, A. J. (2002). "'To Define the Indefinable': Population Classification and the Census in South Africa". Area. 34 (4): 401–408. doi:10.1111/1475-4762.00097. JSTOR 20004271.
  7. ^ The hyphenated spelling Khoe-San or Khoi-San is recent (post-1990). Note that this usage is distinct from the occasional usage of Khoi-San for the Khoe-speaking subset of the San, e.g. "the Ai-San, the Kun-San, the Au-ai-san, the An-San, the Matsana-Khoi-San, and the Bushmen of Otave" in John Noble, Illustrated Official Handbook of the Cape and South Africa (1893), p. 395. Spellings Khoi-San and Khoe-San in Mohamed Adhikar, Burdened by Race: Coloured Identities in Southern Africa (2009), p. 148.
  8. ^ a b Khoisan march to Parliament to demand land rights, ENCA, 3 December 2015. Pelane Phakgadi, Ramaphosa meets aggrieved Khoisan activists at Union Buildings, Eyewitness News, 24 December 2017. Illegitimate Khoisan leaders are trying to exploit new bill, IOL, 17 April 2018.
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Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • The Khoisan-speaking Peoples
  • The Khoisan
  • Home of the Southern African San
  • from Web Resources for African Languages
  • Africa's Khoe-San were first to split from other humans
  • Khoisan people represent 'earliest' branch off human family tree, By Ian Steadman, 24 September 2012.
  • Traditional and Khoi-San Leadership Act, 2019 (in English and Afrikaans)

khoisan, other, uses, disambiguation, khoisa, redirects, here, genus, moth, khoisa, moth, ɔɪ, ɑː, sahn, khoe, sān, pronounced, kxʰoesaːn, catch, term, indigenous, peoples, southern, africa, traditionally, speak, bantu, languages, combining, khoekhoen, formerly. For other uses see Khoisan disambiguation Khoisa redirects here For the genus of moth see Khoisa moth Khoisan ˈ k ɔɪ s ɑː n KOY sahn or Khoe San pronounced kxʰoesaːn is a catch all term for the indigenous peoples of Southern Africa who traditionally speak non Bantu languages combining the Khoekhoen formerly Hottentots and the San peoples formerly Bushmen Khoisan populations traditionally speak click languages and are considered to be the historical pre Bantu communities throughout Southern Africa remaining predominant until European colonisation in areas climatically unfavorable to Bantu sorghum based agriculture such as the Cape region through to Namibia where Khoekhoe populations of Nama and Damara people are prevalent groups and Botswana Considerable mingling with Bantu speaking groups is evidenced by prevalence of click phonemes in many especially Xhosa Southern African Bantu languages KhoisanSan man of NamibiaTotal population 400 000 1 c 2010 Regions with significant populationsNamibia Botswana South AfricaLanguagesXhosa 2 Khoe Kwadi languages Kx a languages Tuu languagesReligionMainly Christian and African Traditional Religion San religion Related ethnic groupsTswana Xhosa Coloured Griqua HadzabeMany Khoesan peoples are the direct descendants of a very early dispersal of anatomically modern humans to Southern Africa before 150 000 years ago However see below for recent work supporting a multi regional hypothesis that suggests the Khoisan may be a source population for anatomically modern humans 3 Their languages show a vague typological similarity largely confined to the prevalence of click consonants They are not verifiably derived from a common proto language but are today split into at least three separate and unrelated language families Khoe Kwadi Tuu and Kxʼa It has been suggested that the Khoekhoeǁaen Khoekhoe peoples may represent Late Stone Age arrivals to Southern Africa possibly displaced by Bantu expansion reaching the area roughly between 1 500 and 2 000 years ago 4 San are popularly thought of as foragers in the Kalahari Desert and regions of Botswana Namibia Angola Zambia Zimbabwe Lesotho and Northern South Africa The word san is from the Khoekhoe language and refers to foragers those who pick things up from the ground who do not own livestock As such it was used in reference to all hunter gatherer populations who came into contact with Khoekhoe speaking communities and was largely referring to the lifestyle distinct from a pastoralist or agriculturalist one and not to any particular ethnicity While there are attendant cosmologies and languages associated with this way of life the term is an economic designator rather than a cultural or ethnic one Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Origins 2 2 Late Stone Age 2 3 Historical period 2 4 Discoveries 3 Violence against the Khoisan 3 1 Herero and Namaqua Genocide 3 2 Forced relocation in Botswana 4 Languages 5 Physical characteristics and genetics 6 Centre 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksName editThe compound term Khoisan Khoesan is a modern anthropological convention in use since the early to mid 20th century Khoisan is a coinage by Leonhard Schulze in the 1920s and popularised by Isaac Schapera 5 It entered wider usage from the 1960s based on the proposal of a Khoisan language family by Joseph Greenberg During the Colonial Apartheid era Afrikaans speaking persons with partial Khoesan ancestry were historically also grouped as Cape Blacks Afrikaans Kaap Swartes or Western Cape Blacks Afrikaans Wes Kaap Swartes to rather inaccurately distinguish them from the Bantu speaking peoples the other indigenous African population of South Africa who also had significant Khoe San ancestry 6 The term Khoisan also spelled KhoiSan Khoi San Khoe San 7 has also been introduced in South African usage as a self designation after the end of apartheid in the late 1990s Since the 2010s there has been a Khoisan activist movement demanding recognition and land rights from the government and white minority which owns large parts of the country s private land 8 nbsp San man collecting devil s clawHistory editOrigins edit Further information Peopling of Africa Haplogroup L0 and Proto Human language Phonemic diversity Further information Klasies River Caves Boomplaas Cave and Blombos cave nbsp Approximate area of the origin of L0d and L0k haplogroups in southern Africa dated to before 90 000 years ago by Behar et al 2008 9 It is suggested that the ancestors of the modern Khoisan expanded to southern Africa from East or Central Africa before 150 000 years ago possibly as early as before 260 000 years ago 10 11 so that by the beginning of the MIS 5 megadrought 130 000 years ago there were two ancestral population clusters in Africa bearers of mt DNA haplogroup L0 in southern Africa ancestral to the Khoi San and bearers of haplogroup L1 6 in central eastern Africa ancestral to everyone else citation needed This group gave rise to the San population of hunter gatherers Their nearest living relatives are postulated to be the Hadzabe people from north central Tanzania and Mbuti pygmies from the eastern Congo A much later wave of migration around or before the beginning of the Common Era 12 gave rise to the Khoe people who were pastoralists 13 This group carried DNA from Eurasian as well as some Neanderthal groups Due to their early expansion and separation the populations ancestral to the Khoisan have been estimated as having represented the largest human population during the majority of the anatomically modern human timeline from their early separation before 150 kya until the recent peopling of Eurasia some 70 kya 14 They were much more widespread than today their modern distribution being due to their decimation in the course of the Bantu expansion They were dispersed throughout much of southern and southeastern Africa There was also a significant back migration of bearers of L0 towards eastern Africa between 120 and 75 kya Rito et al 2013 speculate that pressure from such back migration may even have contributed to the dispersal of East African populations out of Africa at about 70 kya 15 Recent work has suggested that the multi regional hypothesis may be supported by current human population genetic data A 2023 study published in the journal Nature suggests that current genetic data may be best understood as reflecting internal admixtures of multiple population sources across Africa including ancestral populations of the Khoisan 3 Late Stone Age edit Further information Kalahari Debate and Sangoan nbsp Schematic representation of the out of South Africa migration of the post Eemian Middle to Late Stone Age after 100 kya inferred from mtDNA haplogroup L0 in modern African populations Rito et al 2013 15 The San populations ancestral to the Khoisan were spread throughout much of southern and eastern Africa throughout the Late Stone Age after about 75 ka A further expansion dated to about 20 ka has been proposed based on the distribution of the L0d haplogroup Rosti et al suggest a connection of this recent expansion with the spread of click consonants to eastern African languages Hadza language 15 The Late Stone Age Sangoan industry occupied southern Africa in areas where annual rainfall is less than a metre 1000 mm 39 4 in 16 The contemporary San and Khoi peoples resemble those represented by the ancient Sangoan skeletal remains Against the traditional interpretation that finds a common origin for the Khoi and San other evidence has suggested that the ancestors of the Khoi peoples are relatively recent pre Bantu agricultural immigrants to southern Africa who abandoned agriculture as the climate dried and either joined the San as hunter gatherers or retained pastoralism 17 With the hypothesized arrival of pastoralists amp bantoid agro pastoralists in southern Africa starting around 2 300 years ago linguistic development is later seen in the click consonants and loan words from ancient Khoe san languages into the evolution of blended agro pastoralist amp hunter gatherer communities that would eventually evolve into the now extant amalgamated modern native linguistic communities found in South Africa Botswana amp Namibia e g in South African Xhosa Sotho Tswana Zulu people 18 Today these groups represent the quantitative majority of extant admixed ancient Khoe San descendants by the millions 19 Historical period edit Further information Hottentot Khoikhoi Nama people Damara people and Khoe languages Further information San people ǃKung and Kxʼa languages The Khoikhoi enter the historical record with their first contact with Portuguese explorers about 1 000 years after their displacement by the Bantu Local population dropped after the Khoi were exposed to smallpox from Europeans The Khoi waged more frequent attacks against Europeans when the Dutch East India Company enclosed traditional grazing land for farms Khoikhoi social organisation was profoundly damaged and in the end destroyed by colonial expansion and land seizure from the late 17th century onwards As social structures broke down some Khoikhoi people settled on farms and became bondsmen bondservants or farm workers many were incorporated into existing Khoi clan and family groups of the Xhosa people Georg Schmidt a Moravian Brother from Herrnhut Saxony now Germany founded Genadendal in 1738 which was the first mission station in southern Africa 20 among the Khoi people in Baviaanskloof in the Riviersonderend Mountains Early European settlers sometimes intermarried with Khoikhoi women resulting in a sizeable mixed race population now known as the Griqua The Griqua people too would migrate to what was by that time the frontierlands of the Xhosa native reserves and establish Griqualand East which contained a mostly Xhosa population nbsp A Khoikhoi settlement in Table Bay as depicted in an engraving in Abraham Bogaert s Historische Reizen 1711Andries Stockenstrom facilitated the creation of the Kat River Khoi settlement near the eastern frontier of the Cape Colony The settlements thrived and expanded and Kat River quickly became a large and successful region of the Cape that subsisted more or less autonomously The people were predominantly Afrikaans speaking Gonaqua Khoi but the settlement also began to attract other Khoi Xhosa and mixed race groups of the Cape The so called Bushman wars year needed were to a large extent the response of the San after their dispossession citation needed At the start of the 18th century the Khoikhoi in the Western Cape lived in a state dominated by the Dutch By the end of the century the majority of the Khoisan operated as wage labourers not that dissimilar to slaves Geographically the further away the labourer was from Cape Town the more difficult it became to transport agricultural produce to the markets The issuing of grazing licences north of the Berg River in what was then the Tulbagh Basin propelled colonial expansion in the area This system of land relocation led to the Khoijhou losing their land and livestock as well as dramatic change in the social economic and political development 21 After the defeat of the Xhosa rebellion in 1853 the new Cape Government endeavoured to grant the Khoi political rights to avert future racial discontent The government enacted the Cape franchise in 1853 which decreed that all male citizens meeting a low property test regardless of colour had the right to vote and to seek election in Parliament The property test was an indirect way by the British Cape Government who took over from the Dutch in 1812 to retain a racist based system of governance because on average only white people owned property adequate to meet the test 22 In the Herero and Namaqua genocide in German South West Africa over 10 000 Nama are estimated to have been killed during 1904 1907 23 24 nbsp San family in NamibiaThe San of the Kalahari were described in Specimens of Bushman Folklore by Wilhelm H I Bleek and Lucy C Lloyd 1911 They were brought to the globalised world s attention in the 1950s by South African author Laurens van der Post in a six part television documentary The Ancestral land conflict in Botswana concerns the Central Kalahari Game Reserve CKGR established in 1961 for wildlife while the San were permitted to continue their hunter gatherer lifestyle In the 1990s the government of Botswana began a policy of relocating CKGR residents outside the reserve In 2002 the government cut off all services to CKGR residents A legal battle began and in 2006 the High Court of Botswana ruled that the residents had been forcibly and unconstitutionally removed The policy of relocation continued however and in 2012 the San people Basarwa appealed to the United Nations to force the government to recognise their land and resource rights Following the end of Apartheid in 1994 the term Khoisan has gradually come to be used as a self designation by South African Khoikhoi as representing the first nations of South Africa vis a vis the ruling Bantu majority A conference on Khoisan Identities and Cultural Heritage was organised by the University of the Western Cape in 1997 25 and Khoisan activism has been reported in the South African media beginning in 2015 8 The South African government allowed Khoisan families up until 1998 to pursue land claims which existed prior to 1913 The South African Deputy Chief Land Claims Commissioner Thami Mdontswa has said that constitutional reform would be required to enable Khoisan people to pursue further claims to land from which their direct ancestors were removed prior to 9 June 1913 26 nbsp Bosjemans frying locusts aquatint by Samuel Daniell 1805 nbsp San woman in Namibia 1984 photograph nbsp Bushman camp 2005Discoveries edit In 2019 scientists from the University of the Free State discovered 8 000 year old carvings made by the Khoisan people The carvings depicted a hippopotamus horse and antelope in the Rain Snake Dyke of the Vredefort impact structure which may have spiritual significance regarding the rain making mythology of the Khoisan 27 Violence against the Khoisan editHerero and Namaqua Genocide edit Main article Herero and Namaqua genocide In the Herero and Namaqua genocide about 10 000 Nama a Khoekhoe group and an unknown number of San people were killed in an extermination campaign by the German Colonial Empire between 1904 and 1908 Forced relocation in Botswana edit See also Ancestral land conflict in Botswana In Botswana many of the indigenous San people have been forcibly relocated from their land to reservations To make them relocate they were denied access to water on their land and faced arrest if they hunted which was their primary source of food 28 Their lands lie in the middle of the world s richest diamond field Officially the government denies that there is any link to mining and claims the relocation is to preserve the wildlife and ecosystem even though the San people have lived sustainably on the land for millennia 28 On the reservations they struggle to find employment and alcoholism is rampant 28 Languages editMain article Khoisan languages nbsp Green The modern distribution of the Khoisan languages spoken by Khoi and San peoples plus the Sandawe language of the Sandawe people and Hadza language of Tanzania The Khoisan languages were proposed as a linguistic phylum by Joseph Greenberg in 1955 29 Their genetic relationship was questioned later in the 20th century and the term now serves mostly as a convenience term without implying genetic unity much like Papuan and Australian are 30 Their most notable uniting feature is their click consonants They are categorized in two families and a number of possible language isolates The Kxʼa family was proposed in 2010 combining the ǂʼAmkoe ǂHoan language with the ǃKung Juu dialect cluster ǃKung includes about a dozen dialects with no clear cut delineation between them Sands et al 2010 propose a division into four clusters Northern ǃKung Sekele spoken in Angola around the Cunene Cubango Cuito and Cuando rivers but with many refugees now in Namibia North Central ǃKung Ekoka spoken in Namibia between the Ovambo River and the Angolan border Central ǃKung spoken around Grootfontein Namibia west of the central Omatako River and south of the Ovambo River Southeastern ǃKung Juǀʼhoan spoken in Botswana east of the Okavango Delta and northeast Namibia from near Windhoek to Rundu Gobabis and the Caprivi Strip 31 The Khoi Khoe family is divided into a Khoikhoi Khoekhoe and Khoemana dialects and a Kalahari Tshu Khwe branch The Kalahari branch of Khoe includes Shua and Tsoa with dialects and Kxoe Naro Gǁana and ǂHaba with dialects Khoe also has been tentatively aligned with Kwadi Kwadi Khoe and more speculatively with the Sandawe language of Tanzania Khoe Sandawe The Hadza language of Tanzania has been associated with the Khoisan group due to the presence of click consonants Physical characteristics and genetics editFurther information Haplogroup A P305 Haplogroup A L1085 and Haplogroup L0 Charles Darwin wrote about the Khoisan and sexual selection in The Descent of Man in 1882 commenting that their steatopygia seen primarily in females evolved through sexual selection in human evolution and that the posterior part of the body projects in a most wonderful manner 32 Historically some females were observed by anthropologists to exhibit elongated labia minora which sometimes projected as much as 10 cm below the vulva when standing 33 Though well documented the motivations behind this practice and the voices of the women who perform it are rarely explored in the research 34 In the 1990s genomic studies of the world s peoples found that the Y chromosome of San men share certain patterns of polymorphisms that are distinct from those of all other populations 35 Because the Y chromosome is highly conserved between generations this type of DNA test is used to determine when different subgroups separated from one another and hence their last common ancestry The authors of these studies suggested that the San may have been one of the first populations to differentiate from the most recent common paternal ancestor of all extant humans 36 37 needs update Various Y chromosome studies 38 39 40 since confirmed that the Khoisan carry some of the most divergent oldest Y chromosome haplogroups These haplogroups are specific sub groups of haplogroups A and B the two earliest branches on the human Y chromosome tree needs update Similar to findings from Y chromosome studies mitochondrial DNA studies also showed evidence that the Khoisan people carry high frequencies of the earliest haplogroup branches in the human mitochondrial DNA tree The most divergent oldest mitochondrial haplogroup L0d has been identified at its highest frequencies in the southern African Khoi and San groups 38 41 42 43 The distinctiveness of the Khoisan in both matrilineal and patrilineal groupings is a further indicator that they represent a population historically distinct from other Africans 44 Some genomic studies have further revealed that Khoisan groups have been influenced by 9 to 30 genetic admixture in the last few thousand years from an East African population who carried a Eurasian admixture component 45 Furthermore they place an East African origin for the paternal haplogroup E1b1b found in these Southern African populations 46 as well as the introduction of pastoralism into the region 47 The paper also noted that the Bantu expansion had a notable genetic impact in a number of Khoisan groups 46 On the basis of PCA projections the East African ancestry identified in the genomes of Khoe Kwadi speakers and other southern Africans is related to an individual from the Tanzanian Luxmanda 48 Centre editOn 21 September 2020 the University of Cape Town launched its new Khoi and San Centre with an undergraduate degree programme planned to be rolled out in coming years The centre will support and consolidate this collaborative work on research commissions on language including Khoekhoegowab sacred human remains land and gender Many descendants of Khoisan people still live on the Cape Flats 49 See also editBantu peoples of South Africa Boskop Man Early human migrations Ethnic groups in South Africa Indigenous peoples of Africa San religionReferences edit Their total numbers are estimated at roughly 300 000 Khoikhoi and 90 000 San 200k Nama people 2010 Brenzinger Matthias 2011 The twelve modern Khoisan languages In Witzlack Makarevich amp Ernszt eds Khoisan languages and linguistics proceedings of the 3rd International Symposium Riezlern Kleinwalsertal Research in Khoisan Studies 29 100k Damara people 1996 James Stuart Olson Damara in The Peoples of Africa An Ethnohistorical Dictionary Greenwood Publishing Group 1996 p 137 50 60k San people in Botswana 2010 Anaya James 2 June 2010 Addendum The situation of indigenous peoples in Botswana PDF Report United Nations Human Rights Council A HRC 15 37 Add 2 Parkinson Christian 2016 06 14 The first South Africans fight for their rights BBC News Most Khoisan people now speak Afrikaans as their first language a b Ragsdale Aaron P Weaver Timothy D Atkinson Elizabeth G Hoal Eileen G Moller Marlo Henn Brenna M Gravel Simon 2023 A weakly structured stem for human origins in Africa Nature 617 7962 755 763 Bibcode 2023Natur 617 755R doi 10 1038 s41586 023 06055 y PMC 10208968 PMID 37198480 Barnard Alan 1992 Hunters and Herders of Southern Africa A comparative ethnography of the Khoisan peoples New York NY Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press Schapera Isaac 1930 The Khoisan peoples of South Africa Bushmen and Hottentots Routledge Christopher A J 2002 To Define the Indefinable Population Classification and the Census in South Africa Area 34 4 401 408 doi 10 1111 1475 4762 00097 JSTOR 20004271 The hyphenated spelling Khoe San or Khoi San is recent post 1990 Note that this usage is distinct from the occasional usage of Khoi San for the Khoe speaking subset of the San e g the Ai San the Kun San the Au ai san the An San the Matsana Khoi San and the Bushmen of Otave in John Noble Illustrated Official Handbook of the Cape and South Africa 1893 p 395 Spellings Khoi San and Khoe San in Mohamed Adhikar Burdened by Race Coloured Identities in Southern Africa 2009 p 148 a b Khoisan march to Parliament to demand land rights ENCA 3 December 2015 Pelane Phakgadi Ramaphosa meets aggrieved Khoisan activists at Union Buildings Eyewitness News 24 December 2017 Illegitimate Khoisan leaders are trying to exploit new bill IOL 17 April 2018 Behar Doron M Villems Richard et al 2008 The Dawn of Human Matrilineal Diversity The American Journal of Human Genetics 82 5 1130 1140 doi 10 1016 j ajhg 2008 04 002 PMC 2427203 PMID 18439549 Both the tree phylogeny and coalescence calculations suggest that Khoisan matrilineal ancestry diverged from the rest of the human mtDNA pool 90 000 150 000 years before 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southern African populations American Journal of Physical Anthropology 167 3 656 671 doi 10 1002 ajpa 23694 ISSN 0002 9483 PMC 6667921 PMID 30192370 Vicente Mario Lankheet Imke Russell Thembi Hollfelder Nina Coetzee Vinet Soodyall Himla Jongh Michael De Schlebusch Carina M 2021 12 07 Male biased migration from East Africa introduced pastoralism into southern Africa BMC Biology 19 1 259 doi 10 1186 s12915 021 01193 z ISSN 1741 7007 PMC 8650298 PMID 34872534 Oliveira Sandra Fehn Anne Maria Amorim Beatriz Stoneking Mark Rocha Jorge Genome wide variation in the Angolan Namib Desert reveals unique pre Bantu ancestry Science Advances 9 38 eadh3822 doi 10 1126 sciadv adh3822 ISSN 2375 2548 PMID 37738339 Swingler Helen 23 September 2020 UCT launches milestone Khoi and San Centre UCT News University of Cape Town Retrieved 4 January 2021 nbsp Text may have been copied from this source which is available under a Attribution 4 0 International CC BY 4 0 licence Bibliography editBarnard Alan 2004 Mutual Aid and the Foraging Mode of Thought Re reading Kropotkin on the Khoisan Social Evolution amp History 3 1 3 21 Coon Carleton The Living Races of Man 1965 Diamond Jared 1999 Guns Germs and Steel New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 31755 8 Hogan C Michael 2008 Makgadikgadi at Burnham A editor The Megalithic Portal Lee Richard B 1979 The ǃKung San Men Women and Work in a Foraging Society Cambridge Cambridge University Press Smith Andrew Malherbe Candy Guenther Mat and Berens Penny 2000 Bushmen of Southern Africa Foraging Society in Transition Athens Ohio University Press ISBN 0 8214 1341 4 Thomas Elizabeth Marshall 1958 1989 The Harmless People Thomas Elizabeth Marshall 2006 The Old Way A Story of the First People External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Khoisan The Khoisan speaking Peoples The Khoisan Home of the Southern African San Khoesan languages from Web Resources for African Languages Africa s Khoe San were first to split from other humans Khoisan people represent earliest branch off human family tree By Ian Steadman 24 September 2012 Traditional and Khoi San Leadership Act 2019 in English and Afrikaans Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Khoisan amp oldid 1207335275, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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