History
Archaeological evidence from the Drakensberg mountains
suggests that the Durban area has been inhabited by communities of
hunter-gatherers since 100,000 BC. These people lived throughout the area of
present-day KwaZulu-Natal until the expansion of Bantu farmers and pastoralists
from the north saw their gradual displacement, incorporation or extermination.
Little is known of the history of the first residents, as there is no written
history of the area until it was sighted by Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama,
who sailed parallel to the KwaZulu-Natal coast at Christmastide in 1497 while
searching for a route from Europe to India. He named the area "Natal",
or Christmas in Portuguese.
First European
settlers
The modern city of Durban dates from 1824, when a party of
25 men under British Lieutenant F. G. Farewell arrived from the Cape Colony and
established a settlement on the northern shore of the Bay of Natal, near
today's Farewell Square. Accompanying Farewell was an adventurer named Henry
Francis Fynn."
During a meeting of 35 European residents in Fynn's
territory on 23 June 1835, it was decided to build a capital town and name it
"d'Urban" after Sir Benjamin d'Urban, then governor of the Cape
Colony.
Republic of Natalia
The Voortrekkers established the Republic of Natalia in
1838, with its capital at Pietermaritzburg.
Tension between the Voortrekkers and the Zulus prompted the
governor of the Cape Colony to dispatch a force under Captain Charlton Smith to
establish British rule in Natal, for fear of losing British control in Port
Natal. The force arrived on 4 May 1842 and built a fortification that was later
to be The Old Fort. On the night of 23/24 May 1842 the British attacked the
Voortrekker camp at Congella. The attack failed, and the British had to
withdraw to their camp which was put under siege. A local trader Dick King and
his servant Ndongeni were able to escape the blockade and rode to Grahamstown,
a distance of 600 km (372.82 mi) in fourteen days to raise reinforcements. The
reinforcements arrived in Durban 20 days later; the Voortrekkers retreated, and
the siege was lifted.
Fierce conflict with the Zulu population led to the
evacuation of Durban, and eventually the Afrikaners accepted British annexation
in 1844 under military pressure.
Durban's historic
regalia
When the Borough of Durban was proclaimed in 1854, the
council had to procure a seal for official documents. The seal was produced in
1855 and was replaced in 1882. The new seal contained a coat of arms without
helmet or mantling that combined the coats of arms of Sir Benjamin D’Urban and
Sir Benjamin Pine. An application was made to register the coat of arms with
the College of Arms in 1906, but this application was rejected on grounds that
the design implied that D’Urban and Pine were husband and wife. Nevertheless,
the coat of arms appeared on the council’s stationery from about 1912. The
following year, a helmet and mantling was added to the council’s stationery and
to the new city seal that was made in 1936. The motto reads "Debile
principium melior fortuna sequitur"—"Better fortune follows a humble
beginning".
The blazon of the arms registered by the South African
Bureau of Heraldry and granted to Durban on 9 February 1979. The coat of arms
fell into disuse with the re-organisation of the South African local government
structure in 2000. The seal ceased to be used in 1995.
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