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File:Map of South Africa with provincial borders 1910-1976.svg, File:Kaart van die provinsies van Suid-Afrika 1910-1976 met Afrikaanse byskrifte.svg Licensing I, the copyright holder of this work, hereby publish it under the following licenses:
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English: Map of South Africa showing the provinces as they were from 1910 to 1976, with the Cape of Good Hope Province highlighted. Based on File:Map of South Africa with provincial borders 1910-1976.svg.
Map of the provinces of South Africa, 1910–1976. Map of the provinces of South Africa, 1976–1994. This article lists the administrators of former South African provinces. It includes officials who headed various provinces in the period from 1910 to 1994, when South Africa was administratively divided into four provinces:
Five Hundred years: a history of South Africa, CFJ Muller, 3rd rev., Pretoria Academica, 1981; Reader's Digest Illustrated Guide to Southern Africa 5th Edition ISBN 0-947008-17-9, 1985; Who did what in South Africa, Mona De Beer, Craighall, South Africa, AD Donker, 1988; 1990s. Institut für Afrika-Kunde; Rolf Hofmeier, eds. (1990). "Südliches ...
In 1949, the Union passed a law bringing South West Africa into closer association with it including giving South West Africa representation in the South African parliament. Walvis Bay , which is now in Namibia , was originally a part of the Union of South Africa as an exclave as it was a part of the Cape Colony at the time of Unification.
The first census in South Africa in 1911 showed that whites made up 22% of the population. This declined to 16% in 1980, [31] 8.9% in 2011 and 7.65% in 2022. [32]: 21 Coloured South Africans replaced Whites as the largest minority group around 2010. Maps of ethnoracial groups of South Africa
English: Blank map of South Africa, with the provincial boundaries as they were from 1976 (when Griqualand East was transferred from the Cape to Natal) to 1994 (when entirely new provinces were established). Projection: Lambert Conformal Conic with standard parallels at 25.5° S and 31.5° S.