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South Africa
South-africamap
RepSouthAfrica
Country
Continent: Africa
Capital: Pretoria (executive)
Bloemfontein (judicial)
Cape Town (legislative)
National Language: 11 official languages, though English and Afrikaans are used the most often
Government: Unitary dominant-party parliamentary constitutional republic
Status in OTL: Active
SouthAfrica

This flag was adopted by the Union of South Africa, which remained a part of the British Empire from 1910 to 1961. The flag remained in use throughout apartheid until 1994. It was the flag of South Africa as of the break-points of Southern Victory, Worldwar, and In the Presence of Mine Enemies

RepSouthAfrica

The flag of the Republic of South Africa, which was founded in 1961 when the government, under the height of apartheid, completely separated from British rule. This flag was adopted following the end of apartheid in 1994 and served as the flag of the South Africa that was home to the "Rivington Men" of The Guns of the South.

The Republic of South Africa is a country located on the very south of Africa. Its rich resources (most notably diamonds) have led it become an ethnically diverse part of the world, which in turn has led it become a very conflicted country. In addition to native peoples, such as the Zulu and the Xhosa, the country was a colony first of the Dutch and then the British Empires. Many Indians settled in South Africa in the late 19th century, and Mohandas Gandhi lived there for 21 years. In the early 20th century, South Africa gained limited independence as a British dominion. It instituted a rigid legal separation of the races called Apartheid (African-Dutch for "separateness") in 1948. This system, condemned as inhumane by much of the outside world, placed Whites, a fairly small part of the population, at the top of a racial hierarchy. Despite international disapproval, the system stayed in effect until the 1990s.

South Africa in The Guns of the South[]

South Africa was the home of the time-traveling Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging organization. Their tampering with history allowed the Confederate States to win the Second American Revolution in 1864. However, their head-on confrontation with Robert E. Lee after the war foiled their ultimate aim in this interference - i.e. to create a history in which South Africa would remain white-ruled.

South Africa in In the Presence of Mine Enemies[]

By the close of the 20th century, the Union of South Africa was the only independent country in Africa; the rest of the continent had been divided up among Germany, Italy, Spain and Portugal after their victory in World War II. The "Aryan-dominated" Union of South Africa was an ally of the Greater German Reich, not a conquest.[1][2]

South Africa in Noninterference[]

Apartheid came to an end with a revolution at the turn of the 21st century, when South Africa's blacks overthrew their white oppressors.

South Africa in "Notes from the General Secretariat"[]

In his response to Professor Kroonstad of South Africa, Kelvin R. Throop (in the guise of "Beals Becker") disputed Kroonstad's proposal that South Africa deserved special status in the U.N. simply because humans developed in what is now South Africa. Further, the Apartheid regime convinced Becker that very little evolution had taken place in the area for some time. Becker concluded by pointing out that the original humans were almost certainly black.

Becker's valediction was "Primevally, Beals Becker".[3]

South Africa in Or Even Eagle Flew[]

After the outbreak of World War II, pilots from South Africa made their way to the United Kingdom to join the RAF. Some of these apprentice pilots were at the Croydon OTU with American pilots Amelia Earhart, Red Tobin, Andrew Mamedoff, and Shorty Keough.[4]

After their training ended in July 1940, the pilots all celebrated. A drunken South African flyer named Piet attempted to kiss Earhart. She responded by headbutting him in the bridge of his nose. Tobin, Keough, and Mamedoff intervened and drove Piet off.[5]

South Africa in Southern Victory[]

South Africa had been a British Colony in the 19th century. The United Kingdom's absolute rule over the colony came after it defeated the Zulu Nation in 1879

By the early 20th century, South Africa was now a self-governing dominion within the British Empire. During the Great War, South Africa, like Argentina, was one of the two main suppliers of food goods to the British Isles. In 1917, the Empire of Brazil entered the war on the side of the Central Powers, threatening the supply lines between South Africa and the UK, forcing the entire Empire to seek a full armistice.

In the war's aftermath, Britain was still considered the major power in South Africa.

South Africa in Worldwar[]

South Africa was a British Dominion during World War II. When the war began it aligned itself with the Allies, though elements of the white Afrikaner population favored Nazi Germany. During the Race's invasion of Tosev 3 in 1942, South Africa was quickly conquered by the Race along with the rest of Africa. The nation's laws of racial segregation were nullified under the Race's rule, as the aliens found the Tosevite habit of discrimination by skin color to be completely irrational. Consequently, most South Africans, particularly the black population, accepted the Race's overlordship with relative docility in comparison to many of the Lizards' other colonial subjects. South Africa was recognized as a Race colony after the Peace of Cairo in 1944.[6]

Following the arrival of the Colonization Fleet in 1962, South Africa was heavily colonized by the Race, and many animals from Home were released into its rich ecosystems. By that point white-based resistance against the Race, though serious enough to merit headlines in the United States, had largely been crushed. Several of the locals engaged in ginger smuggling, as did some members of the Race's garrison, including Gorppet.

See also[]

References[]

  1. In the Presence of Mine Enemies, pg. 26
  2. See Inconsistencies (In the Presence of Mine Enemies).
  3. Analog: The Magazine of Science Fiction and Fact, Vol CV, No 8, August, 1985, pg. 174.
  4. Or Even Eagle Flew, pg. 35, loc. 428, ebook.
  5. Ibid., pgs. 42-45, loc. 492-508.
  6. See the Colonization map.
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