The Griquas settled on the outskirts of the Cape Colony since they were neither European nor African. They formed their own communities and spoke Afrikaans. The Griqua surnames were predominantly Afrikaans and are still common in the coloured community today. Many of the Griqua men enlisted to do commando service. However, the Griquas were constantly being removed from their land as the Europeans took preference over them. This caused the Griquas to move away from the Cape colony in search of their own land. This migration was in two main groups, the Kok and Barends families. One of the most influential of these Griqua groups was the Oorlam. In the 19th century, the Griqua controlled several political entities that were governed by
Kapteins (Dutch for "Captain") and their councils, with their own written constitutions. The first Griqua
Kaptein was Adam Kok I, a former
slave who had bought his own freedom. Kok led his people north from the interior of the Cape Colony, likely to escape discrimination, before moving north again. As Voortrekker moved North to Natal and found out the Natal was under British control, they remembered the good lands they had passed through so they moved back over the Drakensberg mountains. He eventually led them beyond the Cape Colony, near the Orange River just west and south of what would eventually become the
Boer Republics of the
Orange Free State and
Transvaal, respectively. This area is where most of the tribe settled, although some remained nomadic. Prior to beginning their migrations, the Griqua had largely adopted what would be known as the
Afrikaans language. Adam Kok I, the first Kaptein of the Griqua and recognised by the British, was originally a slave who had bought his own freedom. He led his people north from the interior of the Cape Colony. Probably because of discrimination against his people, they again moved north—this time outside the Cape, taking over areas previously controlled by San and Tswana people. Adam Kok, head of the Griquas at Nomansland, on the demand of the teacher John Campbell, concocted the name Griqua. They set up a fundamental arrangement of government dependent on pioneers known as kaptyns and officers drawn from the main families. However, Kok had a rival known as Nicholas Waterboer, he ruled the farthest west of Kimberley. He was no threat to Kok until diamonds were discovered there. Kok's successor,
Andries Waterboer, founded
Griqualand West, and controlled it until the influx of Europeans after the discovery of diamonds. In 1834, the Cape Colony recognised Waterboer's rights to his land and people. It signed a treaty with him to ensure payment by Europeans for the use of the land for mining. In 1876, Chief Waterboer was caught and jailed when he tried to free some of his followers from a prison work gang. The diamond fields were named after him. It wasn't until October 18, 1880, that the Cape Parliament's Bill of Annexation became law (SESA 1972). It was passed on August 5, 1879. In 1877, a census of Griqualand West showed that the province had 44,877 people living in it, with 12,374 of them being of European descent. (
Griqua | South African History Online) In the first 15 years of Griqua Philippolis, Adam Kok II, and the most important of his successors, Adam Kok III, constructed a system of private ownership in land. This was a rather novel land regime at the time for all polities in this part of sub-Saharan Africa, and for it to persevere in the face of increasing white interest in the region, the Griqua state — or ‘captaincy’ — needed to be extensive, bureaucratic, and respected: resilient in the face of serious challenge, coherent to both the Cape Colony administration and Boer communities.1 The organisation of this captaincy was key to its success. The Captain sat at the head of his volksraad, a nominated council of varying size and influence. The raad would come to decisions collectively, but the Captain always retained a right of veto. Together, the Captain and raad codified laws and pencilled out their own land titles. The enforcement of these laws was mostly left up to other executive roles, including the veldkornets, who performed a similar magisterial and policing role as the Boer officials of the same title did, and the kommandants, who also acted as police but were mostly in charge of organising military campaigns and commandos. Another important founding father of the Griquas was Barend Barends. He led a group of Griquas to fight against
Mzilikazi at Moordkop in the North West Province. The battle led to the deaths of many Griquas. Barends was no match for Mzilikazi and many of the Griqua soldiers died during this battle. Trudie (Barends' granddaughter) and a few other Griqua became separated from their main group. They subsequently joined and were adopted by
Mzilikazi's [Mthwakazi] people. Trudie remained with the group for a period until the arrival of the missionary Robert Moffat. Moffat arranged for her return to the Cape with traders who regularly travelled between Matabeleland ([Mthwakazi]) and the Cape. While a prominent rumour suggests that the Griqua ancestry within the Ndebele people originates specifically from children Trudie bore and subsequently left behind upon her return to the Cape, this claim remains unproven. A significant population of Griqua had migrated north in two main waves: one earlier group that joined
Mzilikazi's initial movement, and a later wave that migrated as regional conflicts intensified. These communities settled within the
Mthwakazi Kingdom, primarily in the Nyathi area, where they found refuge. The Griqua were highly valued in the kingdom due to the advanced skills they brought, including building dry brick houses, wagon and gun repair, carpentry, textiles, and forging techniques. Furthermore, their presence introduced elements of Christianity to many local people long before the arrival of formal European missions, a fact that challenges the narrative that Christianity only reached
Mthwakazi with the later missionaries. ==Current situation==