, written by American historian and novelist James A. Michener in 1979, is a lengthy epic using fiction to tell the history of South Africa from 13,000 B.C. to 1979 through a diverse, eclectic cast of characters. Primarily focused around the descendants of a young Dutch-Indonesian seaman named Willem van Doorn, the novel seeks to give its readers an understanding (however basic) of how South Africa came into existence as a nation, with a particular focus (through the van Doorns) on the origins of Afrikanerdom, apartheid, and what it means to be a part of a rapidly changing nation by the end of the twentieth century. Alongside the van Doorns are two other families—the Nxumalos and Saltwoods, who represent the black and English communities respectively. Over a period spanning fourteen thousand, nine-hundred and seventy-eight years, many changes have occurred serving to shape South Africa for generations. Beginning with the first hunter-gatherers in the prehistoric period, and ending with the ascendancy and internalized tumble of apartheid, the South African story has much to offer.
Below is a listing of some of the characters found in the novel.
1. Gumsto: A Khoisan hunter-gatherer, he is leader of his small clan and spends most of his days wandering the deserts of what would one day become South Africa. Of an advanced age (he is in his forties), he is a widower who has long desired the beautiful Naoka, aged just seventeen, to be his wife. Alongside his trusted confidante, the elder woman Kharu, they encamp at the lake that will eventually be called Vrijmeer (later, Vrymeer—it means "Lake of Freedom" in Dutch and Afrikaans) thousands of years in the future.
2. Gao: A gifted artist, he paints scenes of the many hunts and battles experienced by the clan. Years later, his work would be discovered by Phillip Saltwood, an American visiting South Africa on business for the Amalgamated Mine Company.
3. Naoka: The most beautiful woman in the clan, she is seventeen and a widow. Gumsto has long wanted to have her as his own.
4. Kharu: Like Gumsto, she is of an advanced age (in her middle thirties) and an elder in the clan. She is Gumsto's second-in-command. When his health fails, she leaves him by a tree near Vrymeer to die in peace.
THOUSANDS OF YEARS OF INTERLUDE, AFTER WHICH COME THESE
5. Nxumalo of Zimbabwe: A high-ranking young nobleman, he resides in the prosperous trading empire of Zimbabwe, famed for its wondrous works of stone. He gains his first contact with the outside world by means of Arab and Portuguese traders frequenting the area in search of spices and other materials. He is the patriarch of the family that eventually takes his name, and migrates southwards alongside his wife, Hlenga, to The Land of the White Waters (Witwatersrand). Three hundred years later, his descendant of the same name will join the Zulu people, and in time, become servants to generations of van Doorns.
6. Old Seeker: A wise witch doctor to whom Nxumalo looks toward for guidance. Gives the young prince a stern warning to never go on board ships with visiting Muslims, and to not trust them, even if they seem nice, as they are known throughout Africa to be in search of slaves to send across the world.
7. Hendrickje van Valkenborch de van Doorn: Already a successful businesswoman of forty-three when introduced, Hendrickje has long been a member of Java's small, but influential, white elite. With a plethora of slaves and other servants at her disposal, she and her husband have made names for themselves during their time in the East Indies as employees of the Dutch East India Company. Originally from Amsterdam, she moved to Java alongside her husband, Titus, for work. Along with her husband, she has two sons, Karel and Willem.
8. Titus van Doorn: Hendrickje's husband and father to Karel and Willem. He is a businessman.
9. Karel van Doorn: A strapping young man of twenty-three when introduced, he is older brother to Willem and keen on making a name for himself in the Dutch East India Company. Although born in Holland, he has spent much of his life on Java with his parents. As an older man he becomes a member of the coveted Lords Seventeen, the Company's semi-obscure board of directors responsible for overseeing general operations and trade. He and Willem have never seen eye-to-eye on much and are not very close. By the time he arrives at the Cape to superintend affairs therein, he and Willem have a final falling-out that seals their estrangement for good. He also does not take kindly to his brother's fraternizing with nonwhite women. Married to Kornelia Danckaerts, sister of Katje, Willem's wife.
10. Willem van Doorn: Patriarch of the South African van Doorn family, he is a fun-loving boy of thirteen when introduced. Of an inquisitive nature, Willem is naturally coolheaded and sincere, even when the things he does earn him the ire of those around him. Unlike his older brother, he was born on Java, and as such, seems more attuned to the mannerisms of the local population. In his later teens he becomes acquainted with Ateh, a young servant girl from the Arab world. After being offered a job with the Company by Jan van Riebeeck, he brings Ateh along with him to the Cape, where their son, Adam, is born, along with another child later on. Eventually, his descendants would play starring roles in some of the key events of Afrikaner history, from the Great Trek to the Boer War. His great-great-great-great-great grandson, Detlev, would become the (ironic) driving force behind the many draconian dictates of apartheid. After he is prohibited from marrying Ateh because of her race, he settles for Katje Danckaerts, one of the many "King's Daughters," girls sent from government-run orphanages to the colonies to increase the number of whites. He is also the first to call himself an Afrikaner—man of Africa.
11. Ateh (later, Deborah of Malacca): In her early teens when introduced, she is an indentured servant from the Middle East who works in the home of Hendrickje van Doorn as a maid. Willem soon becomes friends with her, and before long, they enter into a clandestine relationship that succeeds in producing two children, the oldest of which is a son named Adam, later a point of embarrassment for the van Doorns. Prohibited from marrying the white man she loves (Willem van Doorn), she settles for an Angolan slave named Jango. Through Adam van Doorn and his descendants spring the dreaded Colored relatives of the main family, which ironically becomes of mixed ancestry itself. Changes her name to Deborah after converting from Islam to Christianity.
12. Katje Danckaerts: One of the many King's Daughter's, she is sent to the Cape as a bride for Willem after he is denied Ateh's hand by Company superiors. All of the main van Doorns for the remainder of the novel trace their roots to her.
13. Nicholas Saltwood: Born to working-class parents in the Devonian port city of Plymouth in 1593, he was able to rise above his humble roots to become a successful spice merchant. His success in the spice trade enables him to purchase a large mansion in the village of Salisbury at New Sarum, which becomes the seat of the family on its ascendancy to the aristocracy. Patriarch of the Saltwood family of England and South Africa.
14. Marthinus van Doorn: Son of Willem and Katje, half-brother to Adam. Marries Annatjie and begins the genesis of what later becomes Trianon.
15. Petronella van Doorn de Muhammad: Granddaughter of Willem, she marries Bezel Muhammad, an Arab woodworker of great renown. Some of the most prominent Afrikaner families trace their roots to her and her Arab husband, embarrassing her later descendants. In 1695, she gives birth to a daughter, Fatima, who later grows up to marry longtime outlaw and convicted felon Rupertus "Rooi" van Valck, but not before having a child with him out of wedlock in 1717. Their daughter's name? Seena.
16.Bezel Muhammad: A renowned woodworker of Arab ancestry, he is the son of indentured servants who were brought to the Cape from the Middle East via Madagascar. His oldest child, a daughter, is named Fatima after his maternal grandmother. A common fixture at Trianon.
17. Paul de Pré: Patriarch of the later du Preez family of Cape Town, he is from the Huguenot village of Cais and a successful winemaker. After Marthinus dies in 1702 (the same year Hendrik leaves for a life on the open veld as a Trekboer), Annatjie van Doorn marries him. He leaves them wealthy.
18. Hendrik van Doorn: Son of Marthinus and Willem's grandson, he leaves the family seat at Trianon for a nomadic life on the veld as a wandering Trekboer. It is through him that all connections with Trianon are severed for many years. All van Doorns who see themselves as Afrikaners and maintain their distinctively fearsome culture are his descendants. Those who remain at Trianon will in time become members of the English-speaking, assimilated aristocracy in only a century or so.
19. Fatima Muhammad: Daughter of Petronella and Bezel Muhammad, she is of mixed Arab and Dutch descent. Sometime in the 1710s, the young woman met and developed a relationship with rough-and-tumble outlaw Trekboer Rupertus van Valck, known as "Rooi" because of his bright red hair. With Rooi she has a daughter, Seena, in addition to several other children. Despite being half-white, she bears a striking resemblance to her Arab father and has his swarthy skin color and Middle Eastern features. She will later be referred to as "the dark wife" during the hearing of one of her descendants, Petra Albertyn. She is Willem van Doorn's great-granddaughter.
20. "Mal [Crazy]" Adriaan van Doorn: A second-generation Trekboer nomad and great-grandson of Willem van Doorn, he is Hendrik's son. Unlike his father, he never learnt how to read, though he does carry around the tried-and-true family Bible. During one of his travels along the empty veld, he meets Seena van Valck, a strikingly gorgeous girl of fifteen with exotic Arab features and her father's trademark red hair. Unbeknownst to him, Seena is his cousin! Called crazy because he talks to a pet hyena, Swarts. He and Seena have a son, Lodevicus, who takes on much of his mother's and grandmother's Arabic features.
21. Rupertus "Rooi" van Valck: Descended from criminals shipped from Holland to the Cape as punishment, he continues his family's criminal history by wreaking havoc along the veld alongside a band of rough-and-ready ne'er-do-wells. Father of Seena and husband to Fatima, he has a sharp wit, fiery tongue, and vicious temper, a trait he passes on almost unchanged to his beautiful daughter, Seena.
22. Seena van Valck de van Doorn: Great-great granddaughter of Willem van Doorn, she is renowned in her younger years for her beauty and fiery temper. Like her father in so many ways, she wins the heart of her distant cousin, Adriaan, and together, they have a son, Lodevicus. In her later years she falls out with her son after he begins dating Rebecca Specx, the daughter of a circuit-riding Presbyterian preacher. Killed alongside her husband by the invading Xhosa.
23. Dikkop: Adriaan's friend with whom he discovers Vrijmeer (Vrymeer). He is a Khoi, and possibly a distant descendant of Gumsto. He is one of the reasons Adriaan and his wife fall out with their son and daughter-in-law, who see the friendship he has with the van Doorns as un-Christian due to his being a "Canaanite."
24. Lodevicus "the Hammer" van Doorn: Son of Adriaan and Seena and grandson of Hendrik, he is so called because of his vengeful thirst for Xhosa blood after the murder of his estranged parents, which he takes personally. He hates the "kaffirs" with a passion, and believes with his every being that their sole purpose in life is to serve the Boer people, just as God intended. He eventually becomes moderately wealthy and is able to establish a farm at a place he calls De Kraal (Dutch: "The Fortress"), purchasing a few slaves in the process. Originally married to Rev. Specx's daughter, he later marries Wilhelmina Heimstra after her death. Wilhelmina gives him a son, Tjaart. Considers himself to be fully Dutch in spite of his mixed-race ancestry. When the British take over in 1806, he devises plans to resist the takeover once and for all.
11. Emma van Doorn: Slave of Lodevicus, she is the daughter of Madagascans forcibly brought to South Africa by Muslim traders. When introduced, she is a mere girl of ten who is gifted with a wonderful singing voice that eventually wins the heart of a young English missionary named Hilary Saltwood, descendant of Nicholas. With Hilary she has three children, and is eventually murdered at the young age of twenty-eight by wandering brigands with a cut to the throat. During her time at Golan Mission, she assists Rev. Saltwood with the children's ministry and choir, among other things.
12. Hilary Saltwood: When he is introduced to readers, he is portrayed as a somewhat naïve young man of twenty-five who has just begun his tenure as a missionary in the recently-annexed Cape Colony. Earns the ire of the local Boers for suggesting that slavery is wrong and that nonwhites deserve better treatment. He also becomes the point of controversy at Slagter's Nek and within his own family when he introduces Emma to them. Naturally enough, the Saltwoods are shocked that one of their own would decide to marry a black woman, and this causes contention for the remainder of his marriage. On the return trip back to the Cape, the captain refuses to allow him to officiate Sunday services until the very end. He was supposed to marry a woman named Julie, who had arrived in South Africa as part of a group called the 1820 Settlers.
13. David Saltwood: Hilary's brother, he is the family renegade and eventual patriarch of the family's American branch. Spends his days as a frontiersman in the fledgling United States.
14. Richard Saltwood: Another brother of the good pastor's, he is the patriarch of the main South African branch and was a captain in the British army. Originally stationed in India, he is reassigned to the Cape and visits his brother there. Later becomes commander of Britain's South Africa regiments, and is the grandfather of Frank, who serves in the Boer War.
15. Tjaart van Doorn: Son of Lodevicus and Wilhelmina, he is Willem's great-great-great grandson (on one line; he's far more removed generationally on Bezel and Petronella's line). In middle age, he participates as a leader in the Great Trek of the early 1830s into the interior of South Africa from the Cape as a result of continued British incursions on their rights. Thrice married, he had a total of four children from three women. During the time he is on trek, his first grandchild, a girl called Sybilla, is born, and he later has a son, Jakob, with the lovely Aletta.