On this day in history: Castle of Good Hope was completed
On 26 April 1679, the Castle of Good Hope, the oldest surviving colonial building in South Africa, was completed.
Built between 1666 and 1679, The Castle of Good Hope replaced a small clay and timber fort built by Jan van Riebeeck in 1652. This was when he established a maritime replenishment station at the Cape of Good Hope for the Dutch East India Company (VOC).
The main reason for building the castle was to provide protection for the new settlement. It was built in accordance with 17th century European principles of fortification, comprising five strong bastions that allowed the outside walls to be protected by cross-fire.
Construction on the Castle of Good Hope was completed on the 26 April 1679. The five bastions were named after the main titles of William, Prince of Orange. The Western bastions was named Leerdam; followed in clockwise order by Buuren, Catzenellenbogen, Nassau and Orange.
From 1678, the castle became a centre of civilian, administrative and military life at the Cape. The settlement, however, grew and some functions and activities moved away from it.
Today the Castle is the seat of the military in the Cape, and houses the Castle Military Museum and Iziko Museum Cape Town (William Fehr Collection).
Source: SA History