AFRICA, UNION OF, AFRICA, AND RHODESIA.) BIBLIOGRAPHY. Place of publication is London, unless otherwise Bibliography. Place of publication is London, unless otherwise stated. The British official publications are voluminous, and, in the absence of a catalogue raisonne, involve lengthy research, since important historical material is contained under unrelated headings. E.g. the circumstances of Hendrik Potgieter's conflict with the Mata bele Zulus in 1836-37 are to be found in the record of the negotiations for the Convention of London in 1883-84. For the general scope of these publications see the annual Dominions and Colonial Office List. The Cape government publications are also valuable and are to be found in the library of the D. and C. office. For accounts of con temporary writers, special subjects, and all purposes, see Mendels sohn (S), South African Bibliography, illus. (191o).
H. C. V. Leibbrandt, Archives of the Cape of Good Hope (Cape Town, 1896-1902) ; The Rebellion of 1815 . . . Slachter's Nek (Cape Town, 1902) . Annexure D., extracts from Court Calendar (1815) gives names, etc., of central and local officials-almost entirely Dutch throughout the colony. G. M. Theal, History and Ethnography of Africa South of the Zambezi, 1505-1795; History of South Africa since 1795 0908). As corrective of Theal's anti-British tendencies, J. Cappon, Britain's Title in South Africa (i901). The author, a Canadian professor, points out that Theal had the assistance of F. W. Reitz, afterwards president of the Free State and state-secretary of the South African Republic in Sir G. E. Cory, The Rise of South Africa from the earliest times to 1857, 6 vols., 4 published up to 1926. W. B. Worsfold, Lord Milner's Work in South Africa, 1902 (1906) gives full account of Milner's relations with the Schreiner ministry and the home government. The Reconstruction of the New Colonies under Lord Milner, 1902-1905 (1913) gives account of part played by Cape Colony in the events leading to the constitution of the Union of South Africa. Both books were written in close collabora tion with Lord Milner. Biographical.-G. C. Henderson, Sir George Grey (1907) ; J. Martineau, Sir Bartle Frere (1895) ; W. B. Wors fold, Sir Bartle Frere (1923) contains private correspondence between Frere and Sir M. Hicks Beach (Lord St. Aldwyn) ; Sir A. Hardinge, Lord Carnarvon (4th earl of) (1925) ; P. A. Molteno, Sir John Molteno (1900) ; B. Williams, Cecil Rhodes (1921) ; Ian Colvin, Sir L. S. Jameson (1922) ; Eric Walker, Lord de Villiers (1925).
(W. B. W.)