Abrahams Gabeba, « The Grand Parade, Cape Town: Archaeological Excavations of the seventeenth century Fort de Goede Hoop », Fortifications of the Cape Peninsula, vol. 48, no 157, , p. 3–15 (DOI10.2307/3888871, JSTOR3888871)
Erik Green, « The Economics of Slavery in the Eighteenth-Century Cape Colony: Revising the Nieboer-Domar Hypothesis », International Review of Social History, vol. 1, , p. 39–70 (DOI10.1017/S0020859013000667, S2CID20909315, lire en ligne)
G. Marquardt, « Colonial Genocide and Reparations Claims in the 21st Century: The Socio-Legal Context of Claims under International Law by the Herero against Germany for Genocide in Namibia, 1904-1908, Jeremy Sarkin (Westport, CT: Praeger Security International, 2009), ix + 308 pp., cloth $75.00, Kindle eBook $54.00 », Holocaust and Genocide Studies, vol. 24, no 3, , p. 491–493 (ISSN8756-6583, DOI10.1093/hgs/dcq057, lire en ligne)
G. Marquardt, « Colonial Genocide and Reparations Claims in the 21st Century: The Socio-Legal Context of Claims under International Law by the Herero against Germany for Genocide in Namibia, 1904-1908, Jeremy Sarkin (Westport, CT: Praeger Security International, 2009), ix + 308 pp., cloth $75.00, Kindle eBook $54.00 », Holocaust and Genocide Studies, vol. 24, no 3, , p. 491–493 (ISSN8756-6583, DOI10.1093/hgs/dcq057, lire en ligne)
jstor.org
Abrahams Gabeba, « The Grand Parade, Cape Town: Archaeological Excavations of the seventeenth century Fort de Goede Hoop », Fortifications of the Cape Peninsula, vol. 48, no 157, , p. 3–15 (DOI10.2307/3888871, JSTOR3888871)
Thomas Widloka, « Unearthing Culture: Khoisan Funerals and Social Change », Anthropos, vol. 93, nos 1/3, , p. 115–126 (JSTOR40465783)
leidenuniv.nl
openaccess.leidenuniv.nl
Jan-Bart Gewald, « The Herero genocide: German unity, settlers, soldiers, and ideas » [archive du ] (consulté le ) : « When the war finally ended in 1908 no less than 80% of the Herero had lost their lives. The majority of the Herero who remained in Namibia, primarily women and children, survived in concentration camps as forced labourers employed on state, military and civilian projects (Pool 1979; Nuhn 1989; Bley 1971:142–169; Drechsler 1966:132-167; Gewald 1999:141-230). »
Erik Green, « The Economics of Slavery in the Eighteenth-Century Cape Colony: Revising the Nieboer-Domar Hypothesis », International Review of Social History, vol. 1, , p. 39–70 (DOI10.1017/S0020859013000667, S2CID20909315, lire en ligne)
Adam A. Blacker, « From Boondoggle to Settlement Colony: Hendrik Witbooi and the Evolution of Germany's Imperial Project in Southwest Africa, 1884-1894 », Central European History, vol. 50, , p. 22 (lire en ligne)
Erik Green, « The Economics of Slavery in the Eighteenth-Century Cape Colony: Revising the Nieboer-Domar Hypothesis », International Review of Social History, vol. 1, , p. 39–70 (DOI10.1017/S0020859013000667, S2CID20909315, lire en ligne)
Nigel Penn, « The Northern Cape frontier zone, 1700 - c.1815 », University of Cape Town, University of Cape Town, (lire en ligne, consulté le )
web.archive.org
Jan-Bart Gewald, « The Herero genocide: German unity, settlers, soldiers, and ideas » [archive du ] (consulté le ) : « When the war finally ended in 1908 no less than 80% of the Herero had lost their lives. The majority of the Herero who remained in Namibia, primarily women and children, survived in concentration camps as forced labourers employed on state, military and civilian projects (Pool 1979; Nuhn 1989; Bley 1971:142–169; Drechsler 1966:132-167; Gewald 1999:141-230). »
Johan S. Malan, trad. Kuno Franz Robert Heinrich Budack, Die Völker Namibias, p. 120, Éditions Klaus Hess, Göttingen, 1998 (ISBN3-933117-10-0). Cité in « Menschen in Namibia », Musée de Swakopmund(de), Swakopmund, novembre 2002 (brochure de présentation de l'exposition permanente).