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Provinces of South Africa
First-level administrative divisions
First-level administrative divisions
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Provinces of South Africa |
| map | |
| category | Regional state |
| territory | South Africa |
| start_date | |
| current_number | 9 Provinces |
| population_range | 1,355,946 (Northern Cape) – 15,099,422 (Gauteng) |
| area_range | 18178 km2 (Gauteng) – 372889 km2 (Northern Cape) |
| subdivision | Districts |
| Metropolitan municipality |
- Provincial government
- National government Metropolitan municipality South Africa is administered under nine provinces. On the eve of the 1994 general election, South Africa's former homelands, known as Bantustans, were reintegrated into the country, and the four provinces were increased to nine. The borders of Natal and the Orange Free State were retained, while the Cape Province and Transvaal Province were divided into three provinces each, plus North West Province which straddles the border of and contains territory from both these two former provinces. The twelfth, thirteenth and sixteenth amendments to the Constitution of South Africa changed the borders of seven of the provinces.
History
The Union of South Africa was established in 1910 by combining four British colonies: Cape Colony, Natal Colony, Transvaal Colony, and Orange River Colony. The last two were, before the Second Boer War, independent republics known as the South African Republic and the Orange Free State. These colonies became the four original provinces of the Union: Cape Province, Natal Province, Transvaal Province, and Orange Free State Province.
Segregation of the black population started as early as 1913, with ownership of land by the black majority being restricted to certain areas totalling about 13% of the country. From the late 1950s, these areas were gradually consolidated into "homelands", also called "bantustans". Four of these homelands were established as quasi-independent nation states of the black population during the apartheid era. In 1976, the homeland of Transkei was the first to accept independence from South Africa, and although this independence was never acknowledged by any other country, three other homelands Bophuthatswana (1977), Venda (1979) and Ciskei (1981) followed suit.
On 27 April 1994, the date of the first non-racial elections and of the adoption of the Interim Constitution, all of these provinces and homelands were dissolved, and nine new provinces were established. The boundaries of these provinces were established in 1993 by a Commission on the Demarcation/Delimitation of Regions created by CODESA, and were broadly based on planning regions demarcated by the Development Bank of Southern Africa in the 1980s, and amalgamated from existing magisterial districts, with some concessions to political parties that wished to consolidate their power bases, by transferring districts between the proposed provinces. The definitions of the new provinces in terms of magisterial districts were found in Schedule 1 of the Interim Constitution.
On 11 July 2003, the 11th amendment to the fifth constitution renamed the Northern Province to Limpopo. On 1 March 2006, the 12th and 13th amendments altered the boundaries of 7 provinces. On 3 April 2009 the 16th amendment altered the boundaries of the North West and Gauteng provinces.
Government

Main article: Provincial governments of South Africa
South Africa's provinces are governed, in different ways, on a national, provincial and local level.
Nationally, there is the National Council of Provinces, one of the houses of Parliament. Then there is the provincial government and, below that, the administration of district and metropolitan municipalities.
National Council of Provinces
Main article: National Council of Provinces
South Africa has two houses of parliament: the National Assembly, and the National Council of Provinces. The second exists to ensure that the interests of each province are protected in the laws passed by the National Assembly.
Each one of South Africa's nine provinces sends 10 representatives to the National Council of Provinces. Six of these are permanent members of the council, and four are special delegates.
Provincial government
Each province is governed by a unicameral legislature. The size of the legislature is proportional to population, ranging from 30 members in the Northern Cape to 80 in KwaZulu-Natal. The legislatures are elected every five years by a system of party-list proportional representation; by convention, they are all elected on the same day, at the same time as the National Assembly election.
The provincial legislature elects, from amongst its members, a Premier, who is the head of the executive. The Premier chooses an Executive Council consisting of between five and ten members of the legislature, which is the cabinet of the provincial government. The Members of the Executive Council (MECs) are the provincial equivalent of ministers.
The powers of the provincial government are limited to specific topics listed in the national constitution. On some of these topicsfor example, agriculture, education, health and public housingthe province's powers are shared with the national government, which can establish uniform standards and frameworks for the provincial governments to follow; on other topics the provincial government has exclusive power.
The provinces do not have their own court systems, as the administration of justice is the responsibility of the national government.
List
| Province | Name in the most spoken native language | Capital | Largest city | title=Census 2011: Census in brief | url=http://www.statssa.gov.za/census/census_2011/census_products/Census_2011_Census_in_brief.pdf | publisher=Statistics South Africa | location=Pretoria | year=2012 | isbn=9780621413885 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150513171240/http://www.statssa.gov.za/census/census_2011/census_products/Census_2011_Census_in_brief.pdf | archive-date=13 May 2015 | url-status=live | page=30 }} | Population |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (2022) | Density | |||||||||||||
| (2022) | Map | |||||||||||||
| Eastern Cape | iMpuma-Kapa (Xhosa) | Bhisho (Bisho) | Gqeberha (Port Elizabeth) | 168966 km2 | 7,230,204 | 42.8 /sqkm | [[File:Eastern Cape in South Africa.svg | 60px]] | ||||||
| Free State | Freistata (Sotho) | Bloemfontein | 129825 km2 | 2,964,412 | 22.8 /km2 | [[File:Free State in South Africa.svg | 60px]] | |||||||
| Gauteng | eGoli (Zulu) | Johannesburg | 18178 km2 | 15,099,422 | 830.6 /sqkm | [[File:Gauteng in South Africa.svg | 60px]] | |||||||
| KwaZulu-Natal | iKwaZulu-Natali (Zulu) | PietermaritzburgPietermaritzburg and Ulundi were joint capitals of KwaZulu-Natal from 1994 to 2004. | Durban | 94361 km2 | 12,423,907 | 131.7 /sqkm | [[File:KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa.svg | 60px]] | ||||||
| Limpopo | Limpopo (Pedi) | Polokwane (Pietersburg) | 125754 km2 | 6,572,720 | 52.3 /sqkm | [[File:Limpopo in South Africa.svg | 60px]] | |||||||
| Mpumalanga | iMpumalanga (Swazi) | Mbombela (Nelspruit) | 76495 km2 | 5,143,324 | 67.2 /sqkm | [[File:Mpumalanga in South Africa.svg | 60px]] | |||||||
| North West | Bokone Bophirima (Tswana) | Mahikeng (Mafikeng) | Rustenburg | 104882 km2 | 3,804,548 | 36.3 /sqkm | [[File:North West in South Africa.svg | 60px]] | ||||||
| Northern Cape | Noord-Kaap (Afrikaans) | Kimberley | 372889 km2 | 1,355,946 | 3.6 /sqkm | [[File:Northern Cape in South Africa.svg | 60px]] | |||||||
| Western CapeThese statistics do not include the Prince Edward Islands (335 km2, with no permanent residents), which are South African territories in the sub-Antarctic Indian Ocean but part of the Western Cape for legal and electoral purposes. | Wes-Kaap (Afrikaans) | Cape Town | 129462 km2 | 7,433,019 | 57.4 /sqkm | [[File:Western Cape in South Africa.svg | 60px]] | |||||||
| Republic of South Africa | iRiphabhuliki yaseNingizimu Afrika (Zulu) | Pretoria, | ||||||||||||
| Bloemfontein | ||||||||||||||
| Cape TownParliament sits in Cape Town, the Supreme Court of Appeal in Bloemfontein, and the executive branch in Pretoria. | Johannesburg | 1220813 km2 | 62,027,503 | 50.8 /sqkm | [[File:Map of South Africa with provincial borders.svg | 60px]] |
Footnotes:
Provincial acronyms
| Province | HASC | ISO | FIPS | CSS | Conventional |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eastern Cape | ZA.EC | EC | SF05 | 02 | EC |
| Free State | ZA.FS | FS | SF03 | 04 | FS |
| Gauteng | ZA.GT | GP | SF06 | 07 | GP |
| KwaZulu-Natal | ZA.NL | KZN | SF02 | 05 | KZN |
| Limpopo | ZA.NP | LP | SF09 | 09 | LP |
| Mpumalanga | ZA.MP | MP | SF07 | 08 | MP |
| Northern Cape | ZA.NC | NC | SF08 | 03 | NC |
| North-West | ZA.NW | NW | SF10 | 06 | NW |
| Western Cape | ZA.WC | WC | SF11 | 01 | WC |
| Notes |
Former administrative divisions
| Province | Capital | Peak population | Location | Homelands | Capital | Peak population | Location | Mandates | Capital | Peak population | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cape of Good Hope (1910–1994) | Cape Town | 6,125,335 | [[File:Map_of_the_provinces_of_South_Africa_1976-1994_with_the Cape_highlighted.svg | 50px]] | |||||||
| Natal (1910–1994) | Pietermaritzburg | 2,430,753 | [[File:Map_of_the_provinces_of_South_Africa_1976-1994_with_Natal_highlighted.svg | 50px]] | |||||||
| Orange Free State (1910–1994) | Bloemfontein | 2,193,062 | [[File:Map_of_the_provinces_of_South_Africa_1976-1994_with_the OFS_highlighted.svg | 50px]] | |||||||
| Transvaal (1910–1994) | Pretoria | 9,491,265 | [[File:Map_of_the_provinces_of_South_Africa_1976-1994_with_the Transvaal_highlighted.svg | 50px]] | |||||||
| Bophuthatswana (1977–1994) † | Mmabatho | 1,478,950 | [[File:Bophuthatswana in South Africa.svg | 50px]] | |||||||
| Ciskei (1972–1994) † | Bisho | 677,920 | [[File:Ciskei in South Africa.svg | 50px]] | |||||||
| Gazankulu (1971–1994) | Giyani | 954,771 | [[File:Gazankulu in South Africa.svg | 50px]] | |||||||
| KaNgwane (1981–1994) | Louieville | ||||||||||
| Schoemansdal (de facto) | 779,240 | [[File:KaNgwane in South Africa.svg | 50px]] | ||||||||
| KwaNdebele (1981–1994) | KwaMhlanga | 404,246 | [[File:KwaNdebele in South Africa.svg | 50px]] | |||||||
| KwaZulu (1981–1994) | Nongoma (until 1980) | ||||||||||
| Ulundi (1980–1994) | 5,524,774 | [[File:KwaZulu in South Africa.svg | 50px]] | ||||||||
| Lebowa (1972–1994) | Lebowakgomo | 2,740,587 | [[File:Lebowa in South Africa.svg | 50px]] | |||||||
| QwaQwa (1974–1994) | Phuthaditjhaba | 342,886 | [[File:QwaQwa in South Africa.svg | 50px]] | |||||||
| Transkei (1976–1994) † | Umtata | 2,323,650 | [[File:Transkei in South Africa.svg | 50px]] | |||||||
| Venda (1979–1994) † | Thohoyandou | 558,797 | [[File:Venda in South Africa.svg | 50px]] | |||||||
| South West Africa | Windhoek | 1,415,000 |
Footnotes: :† States for which the homeland was quasi-independent.
References
References
- (2018-04-06). "The nine provinces of South Africa - South Africa Gateway". South Africa Gateway.
- (2008). "The identification of possible future provincial boundaries for South Africa based on an intramax analysis of journey-to-work data". ORiON.
- (2017-07-27). "History of South Africa's Bantustans". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History.
- "The Boundaries of a New South Africa".
- (1995). "'The kingdom, the Volkstaat and the New South Africa': Drawing South Africa's new regional boundaries". Journal of Southern African Studies.
- (2018-04-06). "The nine provinces of South Africa - South Africa Gateway". South Africa Gateway.
- "Provincial Government of South Africa".
- ''[[s:Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996. Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996]]'', [[s:Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996/Chapter 6. "Chapter 6: Provinces"]]. Sections 104 and 146.
- http://www.statssa.gov.za/census/census_2011/census_products/Census_2011_Census_in_brief.pdf, p. 25.
- (2012). "Census 2011: Census in brief". Statistics South Africa.
- (2023). "Census 2022: Statistical release". Statistics South Africa.
- "How Many Capital Cities Does South Africa Have?".
- "South African Provinces".
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