Cape Town

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Overview

A lovely historical town in the heart of the wine growing region surrounded by pretty mountains. Less than an hour from Cape Town . Cape Town is one of the largest cities in South Africa and located in the Western Cape Province. It is located in the south-west corner of the country near the Cape of Good Hope, and is the most southern city in Africa. It is a stone's throw from South Africa's world-famous Cape Winelands around Stellenbosch, Paarl and Franschhoek.

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History

When the first Portugese explorers landed on what they called Cape of Good Hope, the area was inhabited by the San, a tribe of hunter-gatheres, and the Khoikhoi, semi-nomadic cattle keepers, collectively known as Khoisan. Bartholomeus Dias was the first to round the Cape in 1487, but preoccupied as he was with reaching the East he paid little attention to the Cape. In the following years the Portugese only used the Cape to take in fresh water. Attempts to trade with the Khoisan often ended in violence and the Cape was feared for its rough weather, so no permanent settlements were made.

It was only when a Dutch ship headed for the East Indies was wrecked before the coast that the first settlement was created. Originally the survivors of the ship wreck just built a fort to inhabit the year it took them to get rescued. This helped the directors of the Dutch East India Company realise that it might not be a bad idea to establish a permanent settlement at the Cape. They didn't intend to colonise the Cape, they just wanted a safe place for their ships to stock up on water, and fresh food. In 1652 Jan van Riebeek was sent to lead the small expedition that was to found the first settlement. He traded with the Khoisan for meat, built the first mud-walled fort close to where the later stone fort still suvives, and planted the garden now know as the Company's Gardens. Because the Europeans (mostly Dutch, but some French Huegenots as well) kept themselves strictly separated from the Khoisan, there soon was a labour shortage. This was solved by importing slaves from Madagascar, India, Ceylon, Malaya and Indonesia.

In the mid 18th century some of the settlers that weren't connected to the East India Company has started to drift away from the settlement to other parts of South Afrika. They were the first Boers to trek away. As with most European colonistions, this proved to be a disaster for the indiginous peoples of the Cape. They were driven away from their lands, killed in conflicts, or succumbed to new European diseases. The survivors were forced into little more than slavery. Because of the shortage of women the Khoisan women, like the eastern slaves, were also used for sex. In time these unions produced the basis of todays coloured population.

By the end of the 18th century, the...more

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When to Go

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Transport

» Getting Around
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General Health and Safety

Although Cape Town has its fair share of violent crimes, you are safe if you keep your wits about you. As a visitor, you are less likely to encounter problems while visiting the townships if you are escorted by a township resident - although, you shouldn't really venture into the townships without a fairly large group of accompaniment. Official township tours for visitors to Cape Town are your safest bet; revealing a very interesting lifestyle to the more curious tourists. Pickpockets and bag snatchers are abound in the CBD, as are conmen and cholos, although, during daylight police make themselves known. Simply put, leave everything you value - especially your papers and tickets - in your hotel room safe if you plan to stroll through Cape Town. At night, make sure you stay on well-lit and crowded streets. Crime is especially high in Cape Town's CBD, Seapoint, Greenpoint, Salt River, Observatory, Mowbray, and the Cape Flats. Glue sniffing children and junkies are a minor problem, called 'strollers' by the locals - these urchins will strip you bare if you do not stay alert. You should try not to...more

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Health & Safety

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Accommodation

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Entertainment

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General Shopping

The V&A Waterfront is the prime tourist destination for souvenirs, though these tend to be typically touristy (i.e. expensive and not necessarily authentic). More authentic curios for better prices can be found every Sunday at the Green Point market outside the Green Point Stadium on Sundays, in walking distance from the V & A Waterfront. Many of these same curios can be purchased during the week in the several multi-story shops at the lower end of Long Street. For the real deal with authentic artefacts complete with provenance and ethnographic background, go to Church Street where there are a couple of shops but be prepared for sticker shock. When buying African Curio, the price at open markets are almost always very negotiable and seldom does the item have a price sticker attached. People with foreign accents are often quoted twice to three times the price they sell to locals, so do negotiate.

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