Escaped slaves, rock art and resistance in the Cape Colony, South Africa
Escaped slaves, rock art and resistance in the Cape Colony, South Africa
Escaped slaves, rock art and resistance in the Cape Colony, South Africa
Rock Art Network
Escaped slaves, rock art and resistance in the Cape Colony, South Africa
5 December 2023

Brent Sinclair-Thomson and Sam Challis
Rock Art Research Institute, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa

To cite this article: Brent Sinclair-Thomson & Sam Challis (2020) Runaway slaves, rock art and resistance in the Cape Colony, South Africa, Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa, 55:4, 475-491, DOI: 10.1080/0067270X.2020.1841979
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/0067270X.2020.1841979

Abstract

The protracted colonisation of southern Africa’s Cape created conditions of extreme prejudice and violence. Slaves, the unwilling migrants to the Cape, comprised a mixed group of individuals from the Dutch and British colonies: people with Malay, Malagasy, East and West African heritages. They combined to form the labour force for the colonial project, along with indigenous Khoe-San trafficked within an illegal domestic unfree labour economy. Escaped or ‘runaway’ slaves joined forces with groups of ‘skelmbasters’ (mixed outlaws), who themselves were descended from San-, Khoe- and Bantu-speaking Africans (hunter- gatherers, herders and farmers). Together, they mounted a stiff resistance that held up the colonial advance for many decades from the late eighteenth century until the mid-nineteenth century. Engaging in guerilla-style warfare, they raided colonial farms for livestock, horses and guns. The ethnogenesis of such raiding bands is increasingly coming to the attention of archaeologists encountering the images they made of themselves in rock shelters, as well as the spiritual beliefs that they held in connection with escape and protection. The ‘reverse’ or ‘entangled gaze’ provided by this painted record gives us the perfect opportunity to view something of the slave and indigenous resistance from outside the texts of the colonial written record.

Introduction

Map of southern Africa showing the places mentioned in the text
FIGURE 1
Map of southern Africa showing the places mentioned in the text.
© Sam Challis
Rock paintings occur in both the Winterberg and Maloti-Drakensberg of South Africa (Figure 1) that date to the colonial era owing to the appearance in them of horses and guns, among other things. As opposed to the world-famous ‘traditional’ images of the hunter-gatherer spiritual experience — shaded to create an almost photographic likeness of antelope, for example — these later images differ in subject matter and technique. They are typically painted in a rougher manner than the refined earlier art and with a reduced colour palette, the hues of which are unshaded and ‘poster-like’ (Loubser and Laurens 1994). In some cases the poster-like images of people with horses and guns seemingly raiding livestock appear alongside rough-brush-painted and finger-painted ver- sions with the same subject matter, something we discuss later with respect to Figures 4 and 5. Given the short time frame in which they could have been painted, it is likely that they were made, if not at the same moment, then in rapid succession to one another, speaking to the historically attested heterogeneous nature of raiding bands in these areas. Importantly, the localities where the paintings occur are often the same as those described by colonial travellers and administrators from the late eighteenth to mid-nineteenth centuries as the hideouts of groups consisting of ‘Bushmen, Hottentots and runaway slaves’ (Napier 1849: 226). In this study we examine aspects of the practice of slavery, both official and illicit, in South Africa and resistance to this institution, which was often enacted by running away and joining groups of bandits in the mountains adjacent to the colony. These bandit groups mounted further resistance by stealing livestock from European-owned farms that were in many cases their former places of captivity. Drawing on ethnographic accounts, we are able to demonstrate that rock art in these localities appears to be concerned with those slaves’ understandings of escape.

For this contribution we incorporate by necessity the written record because we are conducting archaeological investigations in the colonial era, but we go beyond this by examining the archive of the colonised, particularly those involved in acts of resistance, in the form of rock art. We follow Worden (1982), Penn (1999) and others in attempting to show the plight and perspective of the oppressed: the ‘reverse gaze’ of Ouzman (2003) or ‘entangled gaze’ of McMaster et al. (2018). That is to say, in the almost unrecoverable archaeological signature of runaway slaves one can trace something in the rock art of a direct voice (in the case of the indigenous) and an indirect voice (in the case of immigrant slaves), as well as the mixing of the two. We begin with the historical background — who the slaves were, immigrant and indigenous; in what ways they became embroiled in events; how they appear in the historical record (in the economy, in resistance, in escaping, in jails); and how they appear in southern African society (in indigenous and newly- formed African groups). The second part of our paper then turns to the rock art itself, which is often found in secluded mountain fastnesses or lookout points where indigenes and unwilling migrants were hiding out.

Following Ross’ (1983: 3) emphasis on the slave experience being one of ‘resistance, not acquiescence’, we stress that in southern Africa a search for large-scale slave rebellion is a misrepresentative of slave treatment, where one finds better evidence of the phenomenon of desertion. Desertion in effect is the rebellion for which some historians are looking (cf. Ross 1983: 5). Escape was only the beginning of the lives of those who offered resistance, but where others (e.g. Ross 1983) perhaps focus on the conditions of slavery and flight of slaves,1 we emphasise the alliances forged between immigrant and indigenous slaves alongside free indigenes (cf. Alpers 2003: 59). Runaway slaves or drosters2 comprised an unavoidable component of the colonial borderlands, being historically visible in recorded raids and materially visible (if less easy to read) in their places of refuge, where they made images of these concerns within their own belief systems. As Penn (1999: 4) adroitly remarks:

fugitive gangs very often represented micro-societies in which oppressed people from a variety of backgrounds – slaves, Khoi, ‘Bastaard-Hottentots’3 and Company deserters — grouped together in units of mutual support, sharing a common consciousness of oppression and developing a tenuous form of multi-ethnic solidarity.’

This phenomenon finds expression elsewhere, and later, as the colonial stranglehold on the Maloti-Drakensberg mountains tightened, in the ethnogenesis of creolised bands of raiders who included painting in a system of ritual observances to ensure escape and protection (Challis 2014, 2016, 2018).

Who were the slaves imported to southern Africa?

Two representations of oppressed individuals in the Cape Colony: (a) Louis van Mauritius, who led a rebellion of 300 slaves in the Cape in 1808, is shown here in the National Heritage Monument sculpture The Long March to Freedom. Reproduced with permission of the artist Barry Jackson and the National Heritage Project Company; (b) ‘Portrait of Júli, a Faithful Hottentot’ by William Burchell (1822: 160)
FIGURE 2
Two representations of oppressed individuals in the Cape Colony: (a) Louis van Mauritius, who led a rebellion of 300 slaves in the Cape in 1808, is shown here in the National Heritage Monument sculpture The Long March to Freedom. Reproduced with permission of the artist Barry Jackson and the National Heritage Project Company; (b) ‘Portrait of Júli, a Faithful Hottentot’ by William Burchell (1822: 160).
© Reproduced with permission of the Library of the University of the Witwatersrand
With the founding of the Cape Colony in 1652, the Dutch East India Company (VOC) forbade Governor Jan van Riebeeck from enslaving the indigenous Khoe, San and Black African populations (Penn 2005: 141). This meant that he had to look elsewhere for a labour force. Although the first two shiploads of slaves delivered to the Cape were from West Africa, later they predominantly came from Madagascar, Mauritius (Figure 2a) and Mozambique, as well as the East Indies (now Indonesia), India and Sri Lanka4 (Armstrong and Worden 1989: 111–112, 122–123; Allen 2010: 54–55, 62).

When we refer to indigenous slaves we use the terms ‘Khoe-San’, who were illegally pressed into unfree labour, and ‘African farmers’ (Xhosa, Zulu, Sotho, Tswana and so forth), whose involvement increased later on in the history of colonial expansion; Morton 1992). Elsewhere, we have explored the effects visible in the subcontinent’s rock art resulting from contact between indigenous hunter-gatherers (San and those ancestral to them), incoming African herders (ancestors of the Khoe) and incoming African farmers (isiNtu language-speakers), as well as contact with colonists and fugitives of European descent (Challis and Sinclair-Thomson in press). Of course, this necessarily entails the entanglement (e.g. Der and Fernandini 2016) of runaway slaves escaping into the hinterland and finding refuge among all the above groups (Alpers 2003; cf. Lightfoot and Martinez 1995). In doing so, we detailed the delicate matter of nomenclature (i.e. ‘San’, ‘Khoe’ and ‘Khoe-San’; see Besten 2011: 188–190) in the writing of southern African history. Suffice to say here that, although linguistically related, the two groups are often self-designated as quite distinct yet, in the archaeological and historical records, they can be difficult to distinguish.

The historical record is muddied by the use of the terms ‘Bushman’ and ‘Hottentot’, which are often equated with ‘San’ and ‘Khoe’ respectively, but their deployment rests unconvincingly on early travellers’ grasp of perceived ethnicity and appearance. Importantly, today the hunter-gatherers of the Kalahari prefer to be known as ‘Bushmen’ (e.g. Barnard 1992), even though this name, like its counterpart ‘Hottentot’, is considered pejorative in the Cape. Unfortunately, terms such as ‘Bastaard-Hottentot’ appear in the archive as a specific colonial category (in this case an exonym that becomes an endonym) that still serve as pointers in our investigations.5

Escape: petit and grand marronage?

Richard Allen (pers. comm. cited in Alpers 2003: 52) draws attention to the distinction made between fugitives who remained close at hand, perhaps waiting for, or living off, their fellow, still bonded, slaves for a short time period (small or petit), and those who escaped more permanently and at a greater (grand) distance as to be able to live in relatively free Maroon societies. Alpers (2003: 59) sees the integration of runaway slaves into frontier societies as a key feature of the period:

‘sometimes individuals and small groups of slaves sought to escape enslavement altogether by seeking shelter with indigenous people … [constituting] an important intermediary point along the continuum from petit marronage to grand marronage.’

We would add to this that it is central to the formation of many such groups, particularly those labelled ‘Banditti’, or ‘skelmbasters’ (skelm from the Afrikaans ‘trouble-maker’ and baster from ‘bastaard’/mixed; Giliomee 1992: 458), whose identity (at least to the settlers) comprised ‘Bushmen, Hottentots and runaway slaves’ (Napier 1849). These three categories were not, however, necessarily distinct, especially as indigenous populations became illegally enslaved.

How Khoe-San became slaves, runaways and mixed Banditti

With colonial expansion, the indigenous Khoe-San came to occupy a position that was akin to slavery, despite this being officially outlawed. Much controversy has centred on whether these individuals ought to be considered ‘true’ slaves or as another category of unfree labour (see, for example, Newton-King 1999; Penn 2005: 140). For instance, Khoe peoples’ movements were far from free, as exemplified in the Caledon Code of 1809, which required them to carry passes and allowed officials to designate individuals, willing or otherwise, as labourers among the settlers (Crais 1990: 206). Nigel Penn (2005: 111) notes that Khoe were forced into servitude in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as Dutch colonists took both their land and their livestock. Crais (1990: 195) links this development of servitude with the growth in the production of commodities, especially beef farming, on the colony’s borders. Penn (2005: 111) argues that although the Khoe at first received some benefits, namely wages and being allowed to retain stock on their employers’ land, this changed from the late eighteenth century with the development of the commando, or militia, system. These militias, consisting of local European farmers and their servants, who were themselves often of Khoe-San descent, became a powerful tool used by the colonists to enforce increasingly unfair obligations on the Khoe who were fast losing any remaining liberties. Because Khoe-San within the Colony were expected to, and relied upon, work, when unemployed they were considered idle or ‘vagabond’. The expression ‘Vagabond Hottentots’ came into use (Burchell 1822: 258) and those so classified were thrown in jail if they could not account for themselves. As Thomas Pringle (1835: 179) observed in his inspection of the Fort Beaufort jail in 1822:

‘Others were merely Hottentots out of service, who had been apprehended by the field- cornets, and sent here until some white man should apply to have them given out to him on contract.’

He also noted that thrown together in the gaol were Xhosa farmers, other Khoe-San as well as wild Bushmen, by which we know Pringle meant those who had not been brought up on farms (Pringle 1835: 179):

‘There were wild Bushmen, too … The offence for which they were in general confined was absconding from the service of the farmers, after having, under the pressure of famine, sold themselves and their children to thraldom for a mess of pottage.’

The Reverend John Philip (1828 Volume 2: 265–266) noted that Khoe-San children were passed from one family to another (for an illicit fee) so that they might not be traced. Thus, was the hunter-gatherer population enslaved:

‘The greater part of the farmers being without slaves, their sole dependence for servants is upon the Bushmen, and other aborigines of the country’ (Philip 1828 Volume 2: 267).

Although the commandos were said to be a retaliatory measure against stock theft by indigenes, they were more often deployed to capture Khoe-San to be used as indigenous slaves in bonded servitude (e.g. Penn 2013). In many cases the men who were caught by a commando were massacred, while the children would be either kept by the members of the commando or sold into slavery (Penn 2013: 193). It is to this internal slave trade that the Khoekhoe leader Klaas Stuurman was referring when he told John Barrow near Algoa Bay that “We have a great deal of our blood to avenge” (Barrow 1801: 93–94).

There are many first-hand accounts from European travellers who encountered this trade. For example, between 1772 and 1776 the Swedish doctor Anders Sparrman met ‘newly captured’ Khoe-San on a farm in the lower Seacow Valley (Sparrman 1785a: 354). He also met an elderly group of Khoe-San who complained that all of their young people were stolen by Europeans, so that now they had to look after themselves and their livestock (Sparrman 1785b: 20). Later on, Sparrman (1785b: 31) encountered a ‘Hottentot’ who was given a gun by the farmer he worked for to go and steal Bushmen to work as slave labourers. Twenty years later John Barrow (1801: 235–236) related how:

‘such of the Bosjesmans as should be taken alive in the expeditions made against them, were to be distributed by lot among the Commandant and his party, with whom they were to remain in a state of servitude during their lives.’

Yet it was not only the European settlers who participated in this system of kill or capture. Groups of Korana and Bergenaars, themselves of mixed ancestry comprising Khoe, San, slaves and Europeans, were known to raid Khoe-San kraals and sell captives as a cheap labour force to the Boers living on the frontier (Leśniewski 2010: 16). The Bergenaars grew in martial strength in the late 1820s as interior African slave traders, taking people from groups of African farmers and hunter-gatherers (and, presumably, herders) whom they bartered with European settlers, which was illegal under colonial law, for arms and ammunition. Their numbers grew as they were continually joined by ‘outlaws and runaways from the Colony’ (Philip 1828 Volume 2: 298).

From the eighteenth until the mid-nineteenth centuries, it seems that Khoe-San were increasingly considered as property as opposed to employees. As Theal (1904a: 207) notes, in 1825 the slave rebel leader Galant described his collaborators, Admiral Slinger, Moses and Andries as Khoe-San, but also said that they ‘were people belonging to’ the farmer Piet van der Merwe. Those able to escape this tightening net entered into various states of marronage, often returning to steal from the farms on which they had been employed. Owing to such stock theft in 1811, Khoe-San labelled ‘Banditti’ by the Commission of Circuit (cf. Newton-King 1999: 63; Sinclair-Thomson 2020) were put in chains and forced to labour on public works in the Graaf-Reinet District (Theal 1901: 338). Eventually, the Khoe-San found themselves in a situation where they were treated worse than legal slaves. This is exemplified in the drunken comments, to a slave, of a farmhand who had killed a Khoe labourer — that while the Khoe had no rights, the slave at least had commercial value and ought therefore to be spared (Ross 1983: 43–44).

The time period with which we are concerned, namely the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, is one in which travellers frequently described encounters with runaway slaves who had turned to banditry (cf. Hobsbawm 1969). Importantly for our purposes, these numerous accounts describe runaway slaves appearing within groups of indigenes, as well as the mixing between these peoples. In 1797, Barrow’s party was joined by three runaway slaves and three Khoe-San whom they found in a notorious raiding spot (Barrow 1801: 96). In the nineteenth century, a ‘Bushman’ named Dragoener was known to have runaway slaves within his group of bandits, raiding settler farms in the Winterberg region (Pringle 1835: 98). While travelling through the Lower Roggeveld in the first decade of the nineteenth century, Lichtenstein (1928: 125–126) heard of a settler family who had been killed by their slaves who were working together with ‘Bushmen’ and suggested that the slave had sought revenge after being mistreated. Travelling through the same region in 1811, Burchell (1822: 258) learnt that farmers often abandoned their houses and took everything with them to avoid being robbed by ‘runaway slaves or Vagabond Hottentots’. A similar circumstance was observed by Thompson (1967: 46) in the Sneeuberg in 1823, where he learnt that runaway slaves and ‘Bushmen’ bandits robbed travellers.

Although the circumstances and strategies of escape were varied, in most cases the fugitives joined groups of indigenous or mixed outlaws. In these situations we must always ask ourselves what options were open to such individuals (Challis 2012). Gener- ally, the best recourse was to flee from the settler farms in order to take advantage of them, i.e. to be ‘compelled to adopt a parasitic existence’ (Penn 1999: 81). Thus, we find recorded examples of bandit groups hiding out in mountain refuges within striking distance of farms for livestock raids. In some instances, the locations of the hideouts of these bandit groups are recorded. These include the Winterberg (Pringle 1835), the Bamboesberg (Barrow 1801), the Stormberg (Collins 1959) and the Drakensberg (multiple primary sources in Wright 1971). These locations typically offer expansive views, thereby allowing bandits to keep an effective lookout for any would-be pursuers (cf. Bernard 2008: 338 for North American Chumash sites of a similar nature). Importantly, these areas also contain rock art that can be reliably dated to the time period under discussion and provides us with the reverse gaze (Ouzman 2003; Challis 2018), a counter- point to the written record (cf. Paterson 2012).

The material culture archive of painted images

Evidence pointing toward the authorship of the images in question stems from several converging factors. First, there is the existence of heterogeneous banditti, as already out- lined. Second, there are specific locations mentioned by colonial authorities as the haunts of those groups, sometimes naming particular people in particular named places. Third, when we visit rock shelters in these locations and find images of horses and guns we know, with a relative degree of accuracy, that they can only have been produced within a certain time frame: beginning with the arrival of these elements with European settlement and ending with the disappearance of the bandits. Fourth, the paintings themselves are not only mixed — some brush-painted (in different techniques), some finger painted — but also display subject matter that pertains to spiritual beliefs concerning escape and protective power. We now turn to these factors in more detail.

Painting from the southern Maloti-Drakensberg rock-shelter: A Traditional Corpus eland depicted with shaded polychrome (oldest dated c. 3000 cal. BP; Bonneau et al. 2017);
FIGURE 3A
Painting from the southern Maloti-Drakensberg rock-shelter: A Traditional Corpus eland depicted with shaded polychrome (oldest dated c. 3000 cal. BP; Bonneau et al. 2017);
© Sam Challis
It is important to note that the rock art images we describe here were likely performed by the aforementioned mixed bands and that their authorship is therefore similarly mixed. This is to say that just because those bands included Khoe-San, the paintings (and sometimes engravings) were not necessarily made by San, or even Khoe, but probably by all members — not least, as we shall see, Nguni-speaking African farmers, as well as those who had multi-ethnic and creole origins. That said, we do find a preponderance of images that are relatable to Khoe-San belief and practice.

That there are rock paintings at all suggests that these bandit groups consisted of at least some Khoe-San members or were, alternatively, drawing on the cultural practices of the Khoe-San as producers of rock art (Blundell 2004; Challis 2012, 2014, 2016). Colonial-era rock art — arguably made by multi-ethnic groups — appears to have some reverence for its Khoe-San antecedents in some subject matter. We do, however, see something of a disconnect between this art and that of the earlier Khoe-San painters (sensu Loubser and Laurens 1994; Challis and Sinclair-Thomson in press). As a result of this disconnect, the painting technique is notably ‘rougher’ and less refined; there is a drop in pigment quality and the manner of depiction is somewhat simplified and performed with a smaller colour palette (Figure 3). We argue that these changes came about as a result of contact, experienced in a variety of iterations that included intermixing in both genetics and ideology, with incoming populations. Change also probably occurred as groups lost their access to traditional resources and the knowledge networks necessary to create images akin to those painted prior to contact.

Painting from the southern Maloti-Drakensberg rock-shelter: An eland depicted in poster-like block colour, likely painted post-contact
FIGURE 3B
Painting from the southern Maloti-Drakensberg rock-shelter: An eland depicted in poster-like block colour, likely painted post-contact.
© Sam Challis
The contact art is not entirely severed from the earlier traditions, however. We notice that certain motifs, including baboons, ostriches and rain-animals, continue to be used albeit within new contexts as they appear alongside images of introduced animals and material culture, such as horses and guns. This is suggestive of at least some continuity in the recognition of these animals, mystical or otherwise, as subject matter pertinent to their changed circumstances. Therefore, although there are various iterations of the dis- connect, in which indigenous groups were forced to adapt to the presence of newcomers, throughout the contact period, perhaps the most stark is that pertaining to European colonisation. Despite these changes, bandit groups, however mixed they were, held onto, and even highlighted, some specific traditional beliefs. Evidence for the art of former slaves is manifest in the rock shelters stretching from the Cape to the Maloti-Drkensberg Mountains along the ever-expanding borders of the colony.6

The location of a band of mixed outlaws comes to us from the record of the famous 1820 settler, poet and abolitionist Thomas Pringle (1840: 77), who noted that by 1824:

‘A band of native banditti had for some time past established themselves among the rocks and woods of the Neutral Ground, composed partly of wild Bushmen from the north-east, partly of tame Bushmen (as they are termed), who had absconded from the service of the Boors; and they were rendered more dangerous and desperate by having been recruited by one or two runaway slaves, and by several deserters from the Cape Corps, who possessed fire-arms.’

The ‘Neutral Ground’ of which Pringle wrote included, at the time, the valley of the Mankazana River in today’s Eastern Cape Province (Pringle 1840: 77). We recently undertook fieldwork in this area where we found rock paintings of horses and guns that can be reliably dated to approximately when Pringle was writing (i.e. from the late eighteenth century, when Europeans first settled the region, until the early nineteenth century, when banditry ceased in the Winterberg). That groups of bandits on the borders of the Cape Colony created rock paintings is well attested (Blundell 2004; Ouzman 2005; Challis 2008, 2012, 2014, 2016, 2018; Sinclair-Thomson in press), yet these particular paintings have not previously been studied within this context. What makes these images all the more compelling as examples of the archaeology of slavery (cf. Stahl 2008: 38) is the historical testament of Pringle reproduced above.

The rock art of bandits

That heterogeneous groups of bandits painted rock art depictions of cattle raids suggests that raiding was a fundamental concern for these groups. If we have learnt anything from the past several decades of southern African rock art research, it is that images are not the mere depictions of what the artists saw around them. Rather, they are representations of what ritual specialists see while travelling through the spirit world, access to which is achieved by altered states of consciousness (Lewis-Williams 1982). In the case of bandit groups, the ritual specialist often performed the role of war-doctor. This position was accorded great importance during times of conflict among many southern African societies (Challis 2012, 2014; Sinclair-Thomson and Challis 2017; and see also below). Consequently, we ought not to view paintings of raids as images of actual events, recorded by artists either for fancy or historical documentation. If paintings can be seen to be both a record of the process, and as a part of the process, undergone by ritual specialists, then we could do worse than look at the role of ritual specialists during times of conflict.

In a recent paper (Sinclair-Thomson and Challis 2017), we examined beliefs across southern Africa concerning the magical ability to influence the trajectory of projectile weapons. This belief has been linked specifically to paintings depicting firearms (Sin- clair-Thomson 2019; cf. Robinson 2013 for examples of ‘polyvalent metaphors’ in the rock art of south-central California). It is argued that the ritual specialists within these groups of bandits would also have exercised this power when in situations of conflict. The creation of images on rock was one such iteration of this practice. Individuals who claimed these supernatural abilities would either have occupied prominent positions within, or headed, these groups and would likely have been sought out by runaway slaves in the hope that they might be offered protection from punitive expeditions (cf. Etherington 2001). At the same time, fugitives would have supplied the bandit group with intelligence concerning their former places of occupation which could have been used to ensure a successful raid (Barrow 1801: 236; cf. Marks 1972).

Indeed, the notion of supernatural protection was likely at the core of the creation of paintings by bandit groups. Southern African rock art research (Jolly 1986; Lewis-Williams 2019) demonstrates that the making of rock art was the domain of ritual specialists. These are the very people who, in their role as war-doctors, also supplied traditional medicines to ensure protection in dangerous situations, including cattle raids and the flight from servitude (Challis 2014, 2018). In one account from the late nineteenth century, the traveller Theophilus Hahn was explicitly told by his Khoekhoe guides that they painted on stone, and on themselves, as a form of protection (Hahn 1881: 140). These beliefs in supernatural protection were cross-cultural and were particularly pertinent to slaves, both immigrant and indigenous. For example, a group of Islamic Malay slaves who fled the Cape Colony and attempted to reach the Xhosa were caught with ‘talismans’ that were meant to guarantee a successful escape. These had been supplied by an imam in the Cape (Ross 1983: 20–21). Immigrant slaves would also approach local Khoe-San to supply them with traditional medicines to ensure supernatural effects, such as the case of a slave from Bengal who acquired some ‘beans’ from a Khoe-San man to stop other slaves from harassing him (Ross 1983: 46). This example is highlighted by Ross (1983: 46) as demonstrating that slaves would approach those most likely to be able to assist them, which we suggest was a common theme among the vast majority of desertions. That is to say, if immigrant slaves were to join a group of Khoe-San bandits, they might recognise the necessity and meaning of painting as a form of protection among other ritual observances.

Paintings made in the nineteenth-century Maloti-Drakensberg by creolised AmaTola ‘Bushmen’. In their dances, derived from the San trance dance, they accessed the protective powers of the baboon, taking on its features and qualities
FIGURE 4
Paintings made in the nineteenth-century Maloti-Drakensberg by creolised AmaTola ‘Bushmen’. In their dances, derived from the San trance dance, they accessed the protective powers of the baboon, taking on its features and qualities.
© Sam Challis
Khoe-San runaways would have drawn on cultural practices, including painting, or at least the residual traces of this practice depending on their level of assimilation into slave society, in order to ensure a successful escape. On the other hand, Khoe-San who were harbouring fugitives would also have engaged in protective practices to ensure the safety of their newly acquired members, as well as to prevent themselves from being enslaved. Yet, as we have seen, many of these individuals did not escape with the intent of grand marronage but rather stayed within the borderlands of the colony from where they sought further retribution against the colonists through the act of stock theft. The fear of (re-)enslavement or death would have motivated recourse to ritual protective practices. The rock art images we discuss depict subject matter related to raids including armed riders and domestic livestock. It is telling that they also include motifs relating to protection during raids as can be seen in the appearance of certain animals, especially baboons and ostriches.

Finger-painted and fine-line horses from the shelter along the Mancazana River that attest to the mixed nature of these bandit groups as described by Pringle (1840: 77). Scale is indicated by the width of the finger painting
FIGURE 5A
Finger-painted and fine-line horses from the shelter along the Mancazana River that attest to the mixed nature of these bandit groups as described by Pringle (1840: 77). Scale is indicated by the width of the finger painting.
© Sam Challis
Baboons are associated with protection across Khoe-San and African farmer societies owing to their use of a particular medicinal plant. The /Xam San of the nineteenth century claimed that the baboon chewed a stick of so-/oa, a root medicine which would alert the user, animal or human, to approaching danger and keep it safe from harm (Challis 2014). Among the Xhosa there is a cognate belief in uMabophe, which is arguably the same root medicine. Like so-/oa, uMabophe was also supplied by ritual specialists to those who wished to exert supernatural influence over projectile weapons, including the aforementioned turning ‘bullets to water’ (Sinclair-Thomson and Challis 2017; in other references the root was burned at its tip and pointed at the adversary in order to confound him). Challis (2012, 2014, 2016, 2018) has argued that the baboon’s association with this protective medicine (as well as its practice of stealing baby goats and sheep) made its potency the ideal to draw upon for groups of hybrid raiders comprised of ‘Bushmen, Hottentots and runaway slaves’ (Napier 1849) and some- thing that acted as a catalyst in their cultural creolisation. The rock art of the AmaTola ‘Bushmen’ of the Maloti-Drakensberg (Figure 4) consequently includes images of live- stock raids, baboons and ritual specialists turning into baboons as they invoke its power. Importantly in the case of the AmaTola (as their Nguni prefix ‘ama’ suggests) there was also a very strong African farmer presence, something that is detectable in the depiction of farmer material culture (e.g. feathered headdresses; Challis 2014, 2016, 2018) and further attests to the inclusion of the baboon and its association with uMabophe.

Another group of ‘Bushmen, Hottentots and runaway slaves’ is recorded in an earlier reference to raiding on the eastern Cape frontier. In fact, it was hypothesised (Challis 2012) that this region was where the Tola-type creolised bands first formed, as loose- knit multi-ethnic fugitives. Survey of the Mancazana area undertaken to test this hypothesis revealed rock shelters that exhibit precisely these phenomena: images of horses, cattle and baboons.

Finger-painted and fine-line horses from the shelter along the Mancazana River that attest to the mixed nature of these bandit groups as described by Pringle (1840: 77). Scale is indicated by the width of the finger painting. Note the baboons painted beneath the black horse
FIGURE 5B
Finger-painted and fine-line horses from the shelter along the Mancazana River that attest to the mixed nature of these bandit groups as described by Pringle (1840: 77). Scale is indicated by the width of the finger painting. Note the baboons painted beneath the black horse.
© Sam Challis
Many of these images are painted with a fine-line unshaded technique, like that of the AmaTola, but there are also others that are finger-painted in a bright orange pigment (Figure 5). Finger paintings of this sort have a distinctly Khoe-speaker inflection and bear a strong resemblance in technique to the art of Korana raiders to the north of the Colony, who were also known to include runaway slaves among their number (Ouzman 2005; cf. Smith and Ouzman 2004). Finger-painted images of people on horse-back with livestock and baboons also appear in another renowned hide-out for runaway slaves in the Western Cape, the mountains of the Bokkeveld. That particular site has been argued to have been created by Khoe farm labourers in the late nineteenth century (Hall and Mazel 2005). We argue, however, that the appearance of baboons in this context suggests that at least some of the Swartruggens (Bokkeveld) art was created by the historically attested mixed groups of raiders, including runaway slaves, known to seek safety in this area throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries (cf. Penn 1999).

Further into the hinterland, as if to mark the fighting retreat of bandit groups as the colonial frontier expanded, we discover sites in mountain rock shelters of the Stormberg and the neighbouring Zuurberg that exhibit yet more features of an indigenous resistance idiom. In the Zuurberg, for instance, is a rock shelter in which are painted images of people with horses and guns (Figure 6a), as well as baboons (yet painted very differently) and ostriches (Figure 6b).

The ostrich was recognised by Khoe-San groups as being particularly adept at escaping from danger. It could outrun most predators and leap over the nets of hunters (Low 2009: 72). Khoe-San would, and still do, tie the tendons from ostrich legs to their own legs to stop fatigue (Low 2009: 72). Ostrich eggshell was also recognised as a medicine that could be ground up and consumed as a fortifying tonic (Engelbrecht 1936: 186). That this bird, as well as ritual specialists transforming into it (Figure 6b), appears in the art of bandits illustrates that these groups were drawing on its powers to ensure their own escape, whether from their former captors or pursuing commandos following raids.

Conclusion

Painting from a shelter in the Zuurberg showing: Figures with guns, one mounted
FIGURE 6A
Painting from a shelter in the Zuurberg showing: Figures with guns, one mounted.
© Sam Challis
The sites, the Khoe-San beliefs and the African farmer idioms that underlie the substance of meaning in the images described in this article have been presented in far greater detail in the works leading up to this (e.g. Challis 2012, 2014, 2016, 2018; Sinclair-Thomson and Challis 2017; Sinclair-Thomson 2019; Challis and Sinclair-Thomson in press). What these previous papers have not focused on is the relationship of rock art to slavery and resistance in the Cape Colony. Although never officially recognised as slaves, from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries the Khoe-San were uprooted from their land and lifeways by European settlers and forced into bondage. This brought them into contact with sanctioned immigrant slaves, imported from elsewhere in Africa and from across the Indian Ocean. Although at first, in the early days of the colony, the immigrant slaves who escaped were less likely to find allies among neighbouring Khoe-San, this changed as the indigenes found themselves increasingly subjugated under the colonial yoke. In defiance of the harsh treatment they received at the hands of their Euro- pean captors, many members of the unfree labour class fled and took refuge in the surrounding mountains. From these fastnesses they raided their former captors and other settlers for livestock and firearms. It was also in these rocky hideouts that they painted their concerns. The rock art of bandit groups is noted for being bound up with beliefs in the ability to call upon the protection of the supernatural. The animals — baboons and ostriches — they painted along with images of livestock and people on horseback with firearms, were heralded for their powers pertaining to escape and protection while raiding. For runaway slaves, whether indigenous, immigrant or indeed a mixture of the two, rock art was one of several crucial ritual observances performed to prevent the likelihood of ever returning to a life of oppression.

Notes

Painting from a shelter in the Zuurberg showing: Ostrich and baboon therianthropes that attest to the artists’ ‘drawing on’ these animals’ potency and qualities for escape and protection
FIGURE 6B
Painting from a shelter in the Zuurberg showing: Ostrich and baboon therianthropes that attest to the artists’ ‘drawing on’ these animals’ potency and qualities for escape and protection.
© Sam Challis
  • 1. Our deinition of ‘slaves’ is explained presently.
  • 2. Nomenclature deriving from High Dutch, Cape Dutch, Farm Dutch (Boeretaal) and Afrikaans all ultimately relates to Dutch occupation of the Cape in 1652 and subsequent colonisation. British colonists after 1795 adopted many such words, for example Boschiesman from which Bushman is derived.
  • 3. The progeny of relations between the immigrant and indigenous Khoe-San slaves were known as ‘Bastaard-Hottentots’ (Newton-King 1999: 117). As children, ‘Bastaard-Hottentots’ were usually raised similarly to their parents in unfree labour, from which they were legally entitled to leave after a certain period. This allowance of freedom, however, was not always observed (Penn 2005: 20) — yet further evidence of conditions from which one might wish to escape.
  • 4. The exact number of slaves from each region is uncertain owing to missing records coupled with illegal slave dealing not sanctioned by the VOC (Armstrong and Worden 1989: 115). What is known is that during the period 1680–1731 48.5% of the 3283 slaves imported to the colony were from Madagascar, while 31.6% were from India and Indonesia. 19.8% were not identified (Armstrong and Worden 1989: 121).
  • 5. Although pejorative, this term is useful for illustrating the interactions between immigrant and indigenous slaves.
  • 6. The precise number of sites is at present unknowable because survey work is still very piecemeal. In our fieldwork in the Stormberg region, we found four painted rock shelters and in the Winterberg region a further five. Two additional shelters were found in the Windvogelberg to the east of the Winterberg, along with a single shelter in the Zuurberg. There are probably many more. This is not even taking into account the 100+ sites with horses in the Maloti-Drakensberg Mountains.

Acknowledgements

We wish to thank our colleagues at the Rock Art Research Institute and Geoff Blundell at the KwaZulu-Natal Museum. We are grateful to Will and Jill Pringle, Denham Pringle and Andrew Pringle, Louw de Beer, Mr and Mrs Bennett and Bruce Rodney for accommodating us on our fieldwork excursions. We thank Jeremy Hollmann and Pieter Jolly for comments on drafts of this article. We further thank the University of the Witwatersrand library for the scanned image of Júli and sculptor Barry Jackson, as well as Sarah Haines at the National Heritage Project Company for the image of Louis van Mauritius. We thank the editors for their invitation to attend the SAA conference session in Albuquerque, New Mexico in 2019 and their attention to detail on our manuscript. Any omissions or errors are entirely our own.

Notes on contributors

Brent Sinclair-Thomson is a PhD candidate at the Rock Art Research Institute, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa. He has a special interest in the rock art of mixed-ethnic bandit groups and how this medium relates to resistance to colonialism, as well as how the interaction between different ethnic groups are manifested and reflected in rock art, particularly the ‘indigenising’ of the gun.

Sam Challis is Head and Senior Researcher at the Rock Art Research Institute, University of the Witwatersrand. His focus is on the interaction between hunter-gatherers, pastoralists and farmers, as well as Europeans, as expressed in rock art around the world. His DPhil focused on the acquisition of horses by creolised raider groups in the nineteenth-century, and his current research pro- gramme in Matatiele aims to redress the imbalance of this neglected former-apartheid region while training local community Field Technicians.

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→ Escaped slaves, rock art and resistance in the Cape Colony, South Africa
by Sam Challis
5/12/2023
→ Markwe Cave, Zimbabwe
by Aron Mazel
30/11/2023
→ Art and Influence, Presence and Navigation in Southern African Forager Landscapes
by Sam Challis
21/11/2023
→ History debunked: Endeavours in rewriting the San past from the Indigenous rock art archive
by Sam Challis
15/11/2023
→ Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and forager theories of disease in nineteenth century southern Africa, and its implications for understanding images of conflict in San rock art
by Sam Challis
10/11/2023
→ Ancient Aboriginal rock carvings vandalised
by Rock Art Network
6/11/2023
→  Two NSW men found guilty of using oily handprints to damage sacred Uluru cave art
by Rock Art Network
3/11/2023
→  Reflecting on the abundance of sheep and baboon paintings in Junction Shelter, Didima Gorge, South Africa
by Aron Mazel
2/11/2023
→  Rock Art Sites Protection and Guides Training In Satpura Tiger Reserve
by Meenakshi Dubey-Pathak
26/09/2023
→  Rock art and frontier conflict in Southeast Asia: Insights from direct radiocarbon ages for the large human figures of Gua Sireh, Sarawak
by Paul Taçon
24/08/2023
→  Beginning of a Rock Art Journey - Recording Paintings in the uKhahlamba-Drakensberg 1979 - 1980
by Aron Mazel
13/06/2023
→  Murujuga's rock art is at risk – where is the outrage?
by Paul Taçon
5/06/2023
→  Identifying the artists of some of Australia's earliest art
by Paul Taçon
15/03/2023
→ Between Monument and Water: Burial rites, location of megalithic monuments and rock art of the Kilmartin Valley, Argyll, Western Scotland (Stage 1 of the Motifs and Monuments Project)
by George Nash
14/03/2023
→ Rock Art Training and Recording Petroglyphs in Laos
by Noel Hidalgo Tan
10/02/2023
→ Unlocking a hidden landscape
by George Nash
01/02/2023
→ 'Powerful Images - Indian rock art from its earliest times to recent times'
by Meenakshi Dubey-Pathak, Pilar Fatás Monforte
29/11/2022
→ Signalling and Performance: Ancient Rock Art in Britain and Ireland
by Aron Mazel, George Nash
21/09/2022
→ Histories of Australian Rock Art Research
by Paul S.C. Taçon, Sally K. May, Ursula K. Frederick, Jo McDonald
07/07/2022
→ Rock Art and Tribal Art: Madhya Pradesh
by Meenakshi Dubey-Pathak
26/07/2022
→ Marra Wonga: Archaeological and contemporary First Nations interpretations of one of central Queensland’s largest rock art sites
by Paul Taçon
20/07/2022
→ David Coulson MBE
by David Coulson
16 June 2022
→  Extraordinary Back-to-Back Human and Animal Figures in the Art of Western Arnhem Land, Australia: One of the World's Largest Assemblages
by Paul Taçon
25 April 2022
→  An online course by SEAMEO Regional Centre for Archaeology and Fine Arts (SPAFA)
by Noel Hidalgo Tan
20 April 2022
→  Cupules and Vulvas in the Alwar area, Rajasthan
by Meenakshi Dubey-Pathak
14 March 2022
→  Color Engenders Life - Hunter-Gatherer Rock Art in the Lower Pecos Canyonlands
by Carolyn Boyd & Pilar Fatás
02 March 2022
→  David Coulson receives RGS Cherry Kearton Award
by David Coulson
07 February 2022
→  Vandalised petroglyphs in Texas
by Johannes H. N. Loubser
06 February 2022
→  Hand Stencils in Chhattisgarh
by Meenakshi Dubey-Pathak
05 February 2022
→  And then they were gone: Destruction of the Good Hope 1 rock paintings
by Aron Mazel
28 January 2022
→  Early masterpieces: San hunter-gatherer shaded paintings of the uKhahlamba-Drakensberg and surrounding areas
by Aron Mazel
8 September 2021
→  Aїr Mountains Safari - Sahara
by David Coulson
17 August 2021
→  The Neolithic rock art passage tombs of Anglesey as brand-new virtual tours
by Ffion Reynolds
21 June 2021
→ More Rock Art Network Articles
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