Europeans arriving in the
Cape in the seventeenth century found an established population of goats kept by
Khoikhoi peoples. These were small, with short speckled coats; it was thought that they had been brought to the area by peoples migrating southwards down the eastern coast of Africa. In following centuries, goats kept by
Boer farmers in the
Eastern Cape derived from stock acquired from Khoikhoi and
Bantu peoples, possibly with some influence from the
Angora or from European or Indian stock. A variety of types and colours was described in the 1830s; by the end of the century the Boer was a large and powerful goat with a convex profile and lop ears, bearing some resemblance to the
Anglo-Nubian. A census in the Cape Colony in 1891 found head.
Selective breeding for specific qualities began in about 1930, initially for foraging ability and for meat quantity and quality, later also for coat colour – specifically for the white body with red-brown head that now characterises the breed. A
breed society, the Boer Goat Breeders' Association or , was started in
Somerset East in 1959. The Boer has been exported to many countries of the world, in all five inhabited continents. In 2025 it was reported to
DAD-IS by 72 countries, of which 30 reported population data; populations of or more were reported by Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Namibia and South Africa; the total population world-wide was estimated at . == Characteristics ==