The Afrikaner shares ancestry with the
Nguni and
Drakensberger breeds, from which it may have diverged some 655–960 years ago. Anecdotal evidence from Portuguese sailors suggests that herds of Afrikaner-like cattle had been kept by the
Khoikhoi since at least the fifteenth century. Steps were taken to improve the breed after the war. A
stud-book was started in 1912; as numbers were depleted, there was a high degree of inbreeding at this time. and a herd was shipped to the
Gulf Coast in 1932. In 1929, a bull and two cows (one a calf) were gifted to the
King George V by the Africander Cattle Breeders' Society of South Africa. Five of the cattle were sent in 1953 from Texas and Florida to the
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation in Belmont, Australia, for research into their adaptability to the Australian climate. During the first half of the twentieth century, Afrikaners were being bred to reduce the size of their hump, as this was unsightly to farmers used to the taurine cattle shape. The Afrikaner was the most abundant cattle breed in South Africa until the 1970s, when numbers fell as a result of
inbreeding, lowered fertility and decreased reproductive period in cows; crossbreeding with exotic cattle breeds and the introduction of the
Brahman to southern Africa may also have contributed to the decline. Afrikaner cattle have about 4% European ancestry. == Characteristics ==