Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Prince and Afrikaners: The Royal Visit of 1925

View through CrossRef
For three months in 1925, Prince Edward (Prince of Wales) conducted an extensive tour through the Union of South Africa. While royal visits to dominions and colonial dependencies in the interwar years were promoted by the British government as a means of cohering the empire at crucial moments of dominion devolution, a special purpose of the South African royal progresses was to effect a reconciliation between the ruling white ‘races’ (whites of British descent and Afrikaners) and reconcile Afrikaners to the imperial tie. This article explores the complex and unexpected ways in which Afrikaners engaged with the young ‘ambassador of empire’ at the midpoint of a tumultuous decade in South African politics. Originally proposed by the renowned South African politician and imperial statesman, Jan Smuts, the tour took place when government was led by Afrikaner nationalists and included avowed republicans. Notwithstanding lingering resentments over the South African War (1899–1902) and Boer rebellion (1914–15), the Prince’s visit was reckoned a success in softening anti-British prejudices of Afrikaners, boosting Englishspeakers’ morale, and saving South Africa for the Empire. Probing beneath breathless newspaper narratives of dour Afrikaners charmed into loyalty by a glamorous Prince, this chapter explains the apparent volte-face in Afrikaner elite and popular attitudes. Unlike the iconic royal visit of 1947 when nationalist dissent was openly expressed, discontents in 1925 were sublimated or masked by gestures of deference and satire. The article offers alternative perspectives on a pivotal decade in the fashioning of modern monarchy and on Afrikaner cultural politics.
Winchester University Press
Title: The Prince and Afrikaners: The Royal Visit of 1925
Description:
For three months in 1925, Prince Edward (Prince of Wales) conducted an extensive tour through the Union of South Africa.
While royal visits to dominions and colonial dependencies in the interwar years were promoted by the British government as a means of cohering the empire at crucial moments of dominion devolution, a special purpose of the South African royal progresses was to effect a reconciliation between the ruling white ‘races’ (whites of British descent and Afrikaners) and reconcile Afrikaners to the imperial tie.
This article explores the complex and unexpected ways in which Afrikaners engaged with the young ‘ambassador of empire’ at the midpoint of a tumultuous decade in South African politics.
Originally proposed by the renowned South African politician and imperial statesman, Jan Smuts, the tour took place when government was led by Afrikaner nationalists and included avowed republicans.
Notwithstanding lingering resentments over the South African War (1899–1902) and Boer rebellion (1914–15), the Prince’s visit was reckoned a success in softening anti-British prejudices of Afrikaners, boosting Englishspeakers’ morale, and saving South Africa for the Empire.
Probing beneath breathless newspaper narratives of dour Afrikaners charmed into loyalty by a glamorous Prince, this chapter explains the apparent volte-face in Afrikaner elite and popular attitudes.
Unlike the iconic royal visit of 1947 when nationalist dissent was openly expressed, discontents in 1925 were sublimated or masked by gestures of deference and satire.
The article offers alternative perspectives on a pivotal decade in the fashioning of modern monarchy and on Afrikaner cultural politics.

Related Results

Analiza prikaza afrikanerskog identiteta u povijesnim romanima Karela Schoemana iz postkolonijalne perspektive
Analiza prikaza afrikanerskog identiteta u povijesnim romanima Karela Schoemana iz postkolonijalne perspektive
This dissertation analyzes the narrative strategies in five novels by the South African author Karel Schoeman, specifically the way in which they undermine key historiographical st...
[RETRACTED] Keanu Reeves CBD Gummies v1
[RETRACTED] Keanu Reeves CBD Gummies v1
[RETRACTED]Keanu Reeves CBD Gummies ==❱❱ Huge Discounts:[HURRY UP ] Absolute Keanu Reeves CBD Gummies (Available)Order Online Only!! ❰❰= https://www.facebook.com/Keanu-Reeves-CBD-G...
The Formation and Development of Prince Portraits : With a Special Focused on the Portrait of Prince Yeonying
The Formation and Development of Prince Portraits : With a Special Focused on the Portrait of Prince Yeonying
The Portrait of Prince Yeonying was the official prince portrait, or yejin 睿眞, that was commissioned by the king. Prince Yeonying (1694~1776) attended to his prince portrait in per...
Mary Prince, The History of Mary Prince (1831)
Mary Prince, The History of Mary Prince (1831)
Mary Prince was born into enslavement in 1788 in Bermuda. As narrated in her first-person slave narrative, The History of Mary Prince, published in 1831, over the course of her lif...
Die Britse imperialisme, die Anglo-Boereoorlog en die ontstaan van Apartheid
Die Britse imperialisme, die Anglo-Boereoorlog en die ontstaan van Apartheid
Historical events are not beforehand cast in stone, and this is also the case with the Afrikaners' eventual choice for apartheid and an authoritarian system. In this paper the auth...
The association between visit-to-visit blood pressure variability and subclinical carotid atherosclerosis
The association between visit-to-visit blood pressure variability and subclinical carotid atherosclerosis
Purpose Recent study demonstrated that visit-to-visit variability in blood pressure was strong predictor of stroke. However, the role of visit-to-visit variabilit...

Back to Top