Consolidation Waterboer was elected as Griqua
Kaptijn (Captain) at the Kaptijns residence in
Griekwastad, on 20 December 1820, but his rise to leadership had alienated a great many other powerful factions in the remaining Griqua nation. Many of these split off as separate nations, such as the fierce nomadic
Bergenaars. Wars ensued, with both the Bergenaars and the
Koranas. Waterboer formed an alliance with the
Cape Colony to the south, however this alliance frequently faltered in the ensuing conflicts. Eventually Waterboer defeated the Bergenaars, Koranas and other Griqua factions, and consolidated his rulership. He overhauled the administration of what was now
Griqualand West (the defeated factions had moved eastwards to eventually found
Griqualand East) and divided the state into four regions. His capital
Griekwastad and surrounds were under his direct rule and were named "Waterboersland".
Regional wars In 1823, in alliance with the Koks and Barends dynasties, he won the battle of Dithakong, and thereby diverted the great Mfecane migrations from Griqua territory. The next year, he fought and was victorious in a complex conflict near Fauresmith, between Cornelius Kok II and Adam Kok II, in which the Bergenaars were employed by Adam Kok. Waterboer's territory was still threatened by marauding Bergenaar horsemen. In 1827, his capital came under siege, when it was attacked by an army of thousands of Bergenaars, in response to Waterboer's execution of 6 Bergenaar chieftains. Waterboer was eventually victorious but was much weakened by the conflict.
Later life In 1834, he was the first neighbouring state that the
Cape Colony concluded a formal treaty with. He was invited to
Cape Town for the signing of the treaty, which stipulated that, in exchange for payment in money and weaponry, Waterboer would ensure peaceful relations among neighbouring states and that the Cape's border would be secured. He was succeeded by his eldest son
Nicolaas Waterboer after his death in December 1852. ==References==