Malmesbury,Western Cape, South Africa

Malmesbury,Western Cape, South Africa Foto's en ander geskiedkundige informasie oor Malmesbury. The area is especially known for its grain and wine cultivation as well as sheep and poultry farming.

Malmesbury is a town with 37,529 inhabitants in the Western Cape province of South Africa, about 65 km north of Cape Town. The town is the largest in the Swartland (‘black land’) due to the dark "Renosterbos" ('rhino bush'), an indigenous plant that turns black in the warm, dry summers. Malmesbury was named after Sir Lowry Cole's father-in-law, the Earl of Malmesbury. Settlers were encouraged to m

ake their home here because of a tepid sulphur chloride mineral spring that was renowned for curing rheumatism. The first farms were allocated in 1703. When the fifth Dutch Reformed congregation in the Cape was established here, it became known as Zwartlands-kerk (Black Land Church) but was renamed Malmesbury in 1829. The town acquired municipal status in 1860. It no longer attracts the ailing, because it was never developed by the local authority, and in fact today a shopping centre is located on top of the site. Source: Wikepedia

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