Results Monuments to visit Capetown

SLAVE LODGE

Monuments & Buildings
4.6/5
57 review
Open - from 09h00 to 17h00 Opening hours

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Corner Adderley and Wale Streets, Capetown, South Africa Show on map
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2025
Recommended
2025

A museum of cultural history housed in a historic building, a good place to discover the heritage of slaves in Cape Town.

The Slave Lodge is one of the oldest buildings in the city. Built in 1679, it housed over 9,000 slaves brought by the Dutch East India Company to serve as labour for the colony. From 1810 onwards, the building was converted to serve as a government office and later as the Supreme Court. It was first restored in 1960 to become the Museum of Cultural History and renamed Slave Lodge in 1998. Today, the collective memory attempts to highlight the heritage of slaves in Cape Town, a heritage that has long been obscured in the country's history. The focus is on the roots and ancestry of the Cape's mixed-race people. The route of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) slaves from Indonesia, India, Sri Lanka, Madagascar and Mozambique is compared to the transatlantic route to the plantations in America. In an alcove, on an interactive light column, inside rotating rings, are inscribed names given to the slaves by their owners: Welcome, Fortune, September, Titus, Cupid, Solomon or Moses... For generations, these slaves, once they arrived at the Slave Lodge, were sold like ordinary goods under a fig tree located at the back of the building, now on Spin Street. Finally, a multimedia room immerses the visitor in this dark and oppressive world. To better understand their daily life, go to Groot Constantia, an agricultural estate where they were largely exploited. The temporary exhibitions are interesting.

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4.6/5
57 reviews
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Visited in december 2024
Des descriptions poignantes et détaillées des atrocités de l'esclavage. Il s'agit d'un musée à ne pas manquer au Cap. Il vous brisera le cœur mais, en même temps, il vous fera changer d'avis et modifiera votre attitude à l'égard de vos semblables.
Visited in november 2024
Très beau musée. On y traite explicitement de la situation des esclaves du Cap. Le plus grand propriétaire d'esclaves était la VOC, la Compagnie des Indes orientales unies, qui amenait les esclaves de ses autres territoires d'outre-mer comme l'Indonésie, la Malaisie, etc.
Quelques informations sur l'histoire du Cap.

Deux étages, prévoir 2h, vraiment à voir.
Visited in november 2024
J'aurais aimé que ce musée ne soit pas nécessaire, car ce qui a été fait aux premiers habitants est horrible. Cela dit, c'était très instructif et émouvant.
Visited in november 2024
Très perspicace.
Visited in october 2024
... un musée important à Capetown et - avec Roben Island - un "must" pour comprendre l'histoire et le présent de l'Afrique du Sud.

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