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2 - A Comparative History of Latvia and South Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 April 2024

Jennifer Keahey
Affiliation:
Arizona State University
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Summary

Latvian hymn Latvju himna

Through a hundred years of moaning, Caur simtgadu vaidiem,

under the pressure of the abusers zem varmāku spaidiem

on this radiant day, our tongue still rings clear. šo baltdien vēl dzidri mūsu mēle te skan.

This land is ours. From God and Fortune Tā zeme ir mūsu. Tā Dieva un Laimas

a dowry brought ancient Latvians together. latvju tautai sensenis līdzdotais pūrs.

This land is ours. Tā zeme ir mūsu.

It will no longer be given to strangers. To nedos vairs svešiem.

— Latvian freedom song, penned by Vilis Plūdons in 1922 and translated by author

Ancestral origins

South Africa

In 1999, UNESCO added three paleo-archaeological sites to its World Heritage list. Situated in South Africa, these offer crucial evidence into the origins of our species, for their artefacts show that early hominids began living in Southern Africa more than three million years ago and that human ancestors domesticated fire more than a million years in our past (UNESCO, 1999). In northwest South Africa, the Cradle of Humankind World Heritage Site (2020) claims that our ‘collective umbilical cord lies buried’ in Africa, where the earliest hominids emerged about seven million years ago, invented stone tools more than two million years ago, and evolved into modern humans around 200000 BCE. Although archaic humans, such as the Neanderthal, have been found in other parts of the world, the genetic and fossil evidence points to an African genesis of anatomically modern humans (Relethford 2008). As genetic findings indicate a degree of interhominin mixing, modern human ancestry is mostly, although not entirely, African in origin.

Given its placement at the confluence of two oceans, Southern Africa is a biodiverse and heterogeneous land. Khoekhoe and Sān peoples comprise its original inhabitants (Besten, 2009). Among the most diverse peoples on earth, the gather-hunter Sān historically lived in ethnically defined areas, where they moved according to the seasons in symbiosis with water, plant, and animal life. Sān societies spoke numerous unrelated languages, some of which remain in use (Barnard, 2019). Khoekhoe societies either displaced or broke away from the Sān around 2,300 years ago when these peoples accepted animal husbandry as a way of life (Smith, 2009).

Type
Chapter
Information
Decolonizing Development
Food, Heritage and Trade in Post-Authoritarian Environments
, pp. 24 - 44
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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