        
The Cape Winelands Cultural Landscape
Property names are listed in the language in which they have been
submitted by the State Party.
South
Africa (Africa)
Date of Submission: 24/06/2004
Category: Cultural
Submission prepared by:
Western Cape Department of Cultural Affairs and Sport - Cape Town
Coordinates:
18°34' E / 34°16' S
Ref.: 1922
Themes
Description
Together with three soil types - granite, shale and sandstone - the
mediterranean dimate of the Western Cape, Influenced by maritime
conditions and mountainous terroir, is viticulturally ideal for growing
good grapes.
Historic overview of the wine industry In the Cape
The first vines at the Cape were planted in 1655 in the Company Garden to
provide the Dutch East Indica Company (DEIC) fleets with fresh produce,
water and wine for their long voyages to the East Indies and Europe. After
the small land grants along the Amsel (now the Liesbeeck) River on the
slopes of Table Mountain were made to the first 49 Free Burghers in 1657,
more vines were planted. Barely two years later, on 2 February 1659, the
first wine was produced at the Cape. By 1680 more than 100,000 vines were
planted in the Constantia valley by Governor Simon van der Stel. After the
French king Louis XIV revoked the Edict of Nantes, 150 Huguenots and their
families were brought to the Cape and from 1688 were given land grants,
primarily In the Upper Berg River. They brought with them the knowledge of
viticulture, which helped to promote and advance the prosperity of the
Cape. From 1761, Constantia was regularly exporting red and white wines to
Europe.
When the British took control of the Cape in 1795, the wine trade and
brandy production boomed
and a dramatic rise in wine export occurred during the first half of the
19`h century. However, by
1861 Great Britain and France entered into a trade agreement and the
subsequent lowered Import tariffs on French wine imported into Britain
negatively impacted on Cape wine exports. To
make things worst, the phylloxera louse (Phylloxera vastatrix) created
havoc In the Cape winelands from 1885 after decimating vineyards in
Europe.
After the South African War (1899-1902), vineyards were re-established
with vines grafted onto phylloxera-resistant rootstocks imported from the
United States of America. In 1906, the first South African wine
co-operatives were formed in' response to the depression in the wine and
spirit industry. Regulations for cultivation and prices were established,
followed by a quota system to curb over-production. This was followed by
the formation of the Ko-operatiewe
W,ynbouwers Vereniglng van ZuiurAfrika Beperkt (KWV) In 1918. In 1924 an
American doctor,
Jack Winshaw, and a local farmer began producing natural wine. In 1935
Stellenbosch Farmers' Wineries was registered as a public company,
followed In 1945 by the establishment of the Distillers Corporation. The
dawn of a democratic South African society at the end of the 20th century
also heralded the abolishment of the over-controlled wine industry.
Development of a Cape vernacular architecture
From the outset and following the example of the indigenous Khoikhoi, the
European settlers and slaves at the Cape were dependent on the
availability of local materials. A limited amount of building materials,
such as hard timber and tiles, were imported from Madagascar, Mauritius,
the East Indies and the Netherlands. Sun-dried bricks were produced to
build walls, trees on the slopes of the mountains were felled and
hand-sawed into beams, rafters, doors and window frames, while the
readily-available reeds of the Cape fynbas was used as thatching material.
The Cape Iimekilns were filled with shells from the beaches or, further
Inland, with limestone to produce time for building purposes. Bamboo was
planted to supplement the shortage of timber for construction purposes.
Some of the characteristic elements of the Cape vernacular architecture
were established during the visit to the Cape in 1685 of a High
Commissioner of the DEIC who gave instructions to the then Governor that
all new buildings of the Company at the Cape had to be constructed with
local stone at least up to window-sill height, had to be plastered and
then whitewashed to protect it from the notorious Cape winter weather
(there was not enough timber available to produce hard-baked bricks) and
low walls were to be built to connect buildings to create an enclosed
farmstead that resembled a Dutch "hofstede". This was the origins of the
ring-walled farmsteads and DEIC outposts that dots the Cape landscape. By
1692 land was granted to both Free Burghers and freed black slaves. Even
the Governor applied these instructions and he added the latest
mathematical and scientific principles from Europe to personally set out
one such an outpost of the Company, Vergelegen, It was also here that his
son, Willem Adriaan van der Stel, experimented with a wide variety of
exotic fruits and vegetables, sourced from all over the globe, that laid
the basis of the commercial agricultural development in South Africa.
Following the prosperity that the 18th century brought to the Cape,
farmsteads, originally simple and basic utilitarian, acquired gables - the
earliest dated from the mid 18th century. Many of the 63,000 slaves and
political exiles brought to the Cape prior to 1815 were skilled craftsmen
and women and were instrumental in the development, interpretation and
decoration found in the Cape's vernacular architecture, reflecting the
cultural diversity and unique stylistic influences of Africa, Europe and
Asia. In most cases structures have the personal signatures of unknown
individuals who meticulously worked on the elements that make up the whole
- sometimes sophisticated, sometimes naive. The Cape vernacular
architecture even triggered a Revival Cape Dutch movement during the 20th
century throughout Southern Africa. |