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Ga-Rankuwa

Ga-Rankuwa
Ga-Rankuwa is located in Gauteng
Ga-Rankuwa
Ga-Rankuwa
Ga-Rankuwa is located in South Africa
Ga-Rankuwa
Ga-Rankuwa
Ga-Rankuwa is located in Africa
Ga-Rankuwa
Ga-Rankuwa
 Ga-Rankuwa shown within Gauteng
Coordinates: 25°37′12″S 27°58′48″E / 25.62000°S 27.98000°E / -25.62000; 27.98000Coordinates: 25°37′12″S 27°58′48″E / 25.62000°S 27.98000°E / -25.62000; 27.98000
Country South Africa
Province Gauteng
Municipality City of Tshwane
Area
 • Total 52.18 km2 (20.15 sq mi)
Population (2011)
 • Total 90,945
 • Density 1,700/km2 (4,500/sq mi)
Racial makeup (2011)
 • Black African 99.2%
 • Coloured 0.3%
 • Indian/Asian 0.1%
 • White 0.1%
 • Other 0.3%
First languages (2011)
 • Tswana 69.2%
 • Northern Sotho 8.2%
 • Tsonga 4.2%
 • Zulu 3.8%
 • Other 14.6%
Postal code (street) 0221
PO box 0208
Area code 012

Ga-Rankuwa is a township located about 37 km north of Pretoria. Provincially it falls under Gauteng province, but it used to be under North West Province, as it belonged to Bophuthatswana, ruled by Lucas Mangope, during the apartheid years.

The area around Ga-Rankuwa had been settled by Tswana people since at least the 17th century. Many of these communities were conquered by the invading Ndebele (or Matabele) under Mzilikazi in the early 19th century. When the Boers defeated and drove away the Matebele and claimed ownership of the land of that kingdom, they divided the area into farms and distributed the land among themselves, including the land of many Bakwena-Tswana villages that still existed there. In oral histories gathered among the Bakwena in the early 20th century, elderly Bakwena claimed that the Boers virtually enslaved them. In 1860 thirty families who were an extension of the Bakwena people of Betanie got together and through a combination of selling some of their cattle and from savings from wages accrues from labouring put together one hundred and fifty Pounds towards three hundred Pounds that was used to purchase the Farm Hebron from the Traansvaal Republic Government. This farm at the time extended to an area that consist half of the present Ga-Rankuwa. The balance one Hundred and Fifty Pounds was forwarded by the Berlin Mission Lutheran Church. The other half of Ga Rankuwa consist of land that was similarly purchased by The Bakgatla Ba Mmakau. The Bakwena people through the Bakwena chief, Mamogale, and several German Lutheran missionaries and other missionaries such as those of the Methodist church, began collecting cattle and money from Tswana in the area who were indentured to Boers in order to buy back land that had been taken away from them. Despite many obstacles, Chief Mamogale and the missionaries bought back several farms, and Ga-Rankuwa was one of these farms, and with these lands, Chief Mamogale was able to establish a chiefdom that came to be called the Bakwena Ba Magopa. Oral testimony and written records suggest that the local Veldkornet, Paul Kruger, who would become president of the Transvaal Republic or South African Republic, helped chief Mamogale and the missionaries acquire these lands. They also purchased land near Brits, where Chief Mamogale established his "capital" in the village of Bethanie. Chief Mamogale's descendants continued to be recognized as the chiefs of the Bakwena Ba Magopa and having jurisdiction over Ga-Rankuwa. Chief Mamogale's lands were included in the "Scheduled Native Areas", or "Reserves" under the 1913 Natives Land Act that divided South Africa into white areas and "Native" areas. For several decades of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, these villages engaged in farming and raising livestock, and compared to Africans on white farms they were relatively affluent. In the 1960s, under apartheid, the "Reserves" or "Native Areas" came to be called "homelands," and Ga-Rankuwa was included into the homeland of Bophutatswana.


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