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South Africa (All cities)
Buy Prime Minister Dr H.F. Verwoerd (1901-1966) Silver & Bronze Memorial Plaques for R119.00
R 119
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South Africa (All cities)
Buy 1966 Prime Minister Dr H.F. Verwoerd / Fifth Anniversary of the Republic for R9.00
R 9
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South Africa (All cities)
Buy South Africa: 1966 Prime Minister Dr H.F. Verwoerd Memorial Plaque for R30.00
R 30
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South Africa (All cities)
Buy Prime Minister Dr. D.F. Milan Birth Centenary 1874-1974 Cased Medal for R9.00
R 9
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South Africa (All cities)
Buy Prime Minister Dr. D.F. Milan Birth Centenary 1874-1974 Cased Medal for R40.00
R 40
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South Africa (All cities)
Buy Dr H.F Verwoerd Eerste Minister 5 Year Republic medallion for R200.00
R 200
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South Africa
     CONTROL BLOCK CANCELLED Centenary of the birth of Daniel F. Malan (1874-1959), prime minister of South Africa.SACC 354 71858    
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Cape Town (Western Cape)
Let Us Be Partners, The Life and Views of Dr. Cedric Phatudi, Chief Minister of Lebowa - H.T. Cooper Know Thy Neighbour Series. Cooper Publishers, . Condition: Good.      
R 120
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South Africa (All cities)
On 4 February 1961, the day regarded by the MPLA as the start of its national revolution, the storm broke. Taken unawares by the shock of the uprisings in Angola, and the subsequent bloody Bacongo insurrection on 15 March 1961, Portugal was to plunge its armed forces, untested since World War I, into an urgent counteroffensive. In January 1961, Angola, one of Portugal's most thriving 'overseas provinces' was in the eye of a storm. A period of sustained growth in the 1950s, a golden decade of Portuguese African history, had led to Angola becoming one of Portugal's most prized possessions. National development plans were embarked on with zeal; new roads, railways, factories, harbors, airfields and settlements were built and exports increased dramatically. While the rest of Africa was in turmoil, Angola and Portuguese Mozambique seemed like oases of peace and progress. Couched between its high-sounding principles and its policy of Luso-Tropicalism, Portugal marched ever onwards to the beat of its own drum, seemingly oblivious to its impending fate. Portuguese Prime Minister, Dr. Salazar, had ruled over Portugal's colonies with an iron fist for over thirty years, enforcing a draconian racial policy on the African territories, whereby the population of the New State was categorized into 'native', white and 'assimilated' groups, and the colonies as a whole, with their burgeoning economies, were bound to the dictates of the European state. The Angolan war has been described as the bloodiest colonial insurgency in the history of Africa south of the Sahara. But it was to become a conflict that Portugal would lose not on the battlefield, but in the hearts of its own citizens. After a thirteen-year war of attrition in Angola, and facing increasing setbacks in two of its other war-torn territories, an enervated Portugal with its weary armed forces would deal the final blow to itself. PAPERBACK, 320 pages
R 260
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South Africa
***PLEASE NOTE WE DELIVER TO CAPE TOWN, JOHANNESBURG AND BLOEMFONTEIN***   Name of collection/ series:   Biographical sketch of Prof Dr J. D. Du Toit (Totius)   Year of issue:   1977   Country code:   R.S.A.   Item code:   FDC 2.22   Signed by: This first day cover was signed by B.J. Vorster. Vorster is known for having been the fourth State President of South Africa.  Vorster was known for his staunch adherence to apartheid, overseeing (as Minister of Justice) the Rivonia Trial in which Nelson Mandela was sentenced to life imprisonment for sabotage, and (as Prime Minister) the Terrorism Act, the complete abolition of non-white political representation, the Soweto Riots and the Steve Biko crisis. 
R 85
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South Africa
***PLEASE NOTE WE DELIVER TO CAPE TOWN, JOHANNESBURG AND BLOEMFONTEIN*** Name of collection/ series: We Fight TB (Dr. Robert Koch) Year of issue: 1982 Country code: R.S.A. Item code: FDC 3.35 Signed by: This first day cover is signed by  Marais Viljoen  (2 December 1915 – 4 January 2007), who was the last ceremonial State President of South Africa  from 4 June 1979 until 3 September 1984. Viljoen became the last of the ceremonial presidents of South Africa when he was succeeded in 1984 by Prime Minister P.W. Botha, who combined the offices in an executive presidency.
R 125
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