Start My Family Tree Welcome to Geni, home of the world's largest family tree.
Join Geni to explore your genealogy and family history in the World's Largest Family Tree.

Trial of Gerrit Coetzee for sodomy: 10 September 1733

view all

Profiles

  • Gerrit Coetzee, b3 (1683 - bef.1764)
    b2 Gerrit gedoop: 31 Jan 1682 b3 Gerrit gedoop: 5 Sep 1683, getroud: Stellenbosch 7 Jun 1722 Susanna Löefke; hertroud: 22 Aug 1751 Johanna van Beulen, weduwee van: Willem Stoltz He farmed "Coetsenberg"...
  • Sara Jacobsz Coetzee, SM/PROG (1654 - 1728)
    ­*Birth Date 1654 *Death Date February 1728 *First Name Sara *Last Name Coetzee *Maiden Name van der Schulp *Gender Female *Birth Location Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Nederland *Death Location Cape Town,...
  • Dirk (Dirck) Coetzee, SV/PROG (bef.1655 - 1725)
    Lived in Kapen1679/05/08 - Arrives in South Africa on board "ASIA" 1679-1683 - Lives in Cape Town for 4 years.1683 until 1725 he lives in Stellenbosch1682 he recieves the farm Coetsenberg from Simon va...
  • Jacobus Coetzee, b1 (bef.1680 - 1738)
    Baptism : Robertson, Delia. The First Fifty Years Project. Believe he was the person in above link b1 Jacobus gedoop: 16 Jun 1680, getroud: Elisabeth Glam, wed.Cubo, dogter van: Lysbeth Lowis, K....
  • Willem Stolts (1694 - 1750)
    Willem Stolts was born in 1692/93 in bondage at the Cape of Good Hope Reference Margaret Cairns, "Willem Stolts of the Cape - 1692-1750", Familia (Willem Stolts of the Cape - 1692-1750) XXVII/1990 N...

Sodomy, race and respectability in Stellenbosch and Drakenstein, 1689 – 1762: the story of a family, loosely defined by Susie Newton-King

This article explores the interacting dynamics of race, class, status and respectability in the emerging colonial society at the Cape of Good Hope in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. It is essentially a case study, which examines the background to the trial and execution of Gerrit Coetzee, the first freeburgher to be accused of sodomy at the Cape. By implication, it raises a number of questions about the rural community in which Gerrit was raised and it re-opens old debates about the degree of colour blindness and the determinants of status in early colonial South Africa. Was Gerrit a victim of racial or social prejudice? Was he excluded, cold-shouldered or otherwise subtly marginalised by his young male peers in Daljosafat, where he lived? Was he driven by prejudice to seek the company of other marginalised individuals and ultimately to engage in suicidally transgressive behaviour? Or was he simply a young man who wrecked his chances by going too far?

See under Photos & Documents for pdf doc

Resources:

//media.geni.com/p13/22/81/68/e9/534448398d539896/276941_243811932355680_794289972_n_original.jpg?hash=ab96f67904eac214cebca0eb09a1111ecf113c3a52c36cbf50834769dc6449a3.1716620399//www.geni.com/images/transparent.gifJump back to
South Africans' Geni Landing Site. WELKOM CUZZINS!
First port of call for South African GENi

See Also Related Geni Project Pages: