In the 19th and 20th centuries, southern Africa's white colonists used the word 'Caffre' to characterise the region's black majority as an inferior race of African origins. While this historical context explains why the term 'Caffre' is considered hate speech in post-apartheid South Africa, the word's history dates back to the beginning of Europe's engagement with the region in c. 1500. Based on primary sources in multiple languages, this article explores this deeper history and shows that Europeans imbued the word 'Caffre' with racialising ideas from the start. The Portuguese first racialised the term by linking it explicitly to black skin colour in the 16th century. In the 17th century, Cape Colony officials reinforced its racialisation by creating a 'Hottentot-Caffre' race dichotomy, a racial divide of long-term significance in southern African history. By the end of the 18th century, most European naturalists argued that 'Caffre' identified a people racially distinct from '...
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