Encyclopaedia Africana

MERENSKY, ALEXANDER ANTON BERCHTHOLD

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Alexander Anton Berchthold Merensky (June 8, 1837-May 22, 1918) was a missionary responsible for extensive station foundation in all of South Africa. Merensky came from a lower-middle-class family and spent most of his childhood in the Schindler orphanage in Berlin. Under the influence of the famous Rev. Gustav Knak, Merensky decided to become a missionary. He joined the Berlin Missionary Society and after three years of study, including study of surgery and nursing, left for South Africa in 1858.

PHOTO CAPTION:MERENSKY, ALEXANDER ANTON BERCHTHOLD. SOURCE: EA LIBRARY

On his arrival, Merensky and the Rev. Heinrich Grützner were instructed to establish a mission station in Swaziland. Due to the hostile attitude of the Swazi king, Mswati, the two missionaries were forced to leave a very promising field of labour. However, they received permission from the Transvaal Republic to commence mission work among the Bakapa of Chief Maleo.

In 1860 they founded the station Gerlachshoopthe, the first mission station of the Berlin Society north of the Vaal River. A year later Merensky obtained the permission of Chief Sekwati, paramount chief of the Bapedi, to commence with mission work in his territory. Between 1861 and 1865 the stations Khalathlolu, Patemetsane, and XaRatu were founded. Systematic mission work among a major African tribe was getting well underway when Sekwati’s successor, chief Sekhukhuni I, turned against his converted subjects. Merensky decided to leave the territory taking his 130 converts with him.

At the beginning of 1865, he founded another station, near Middleburg in the Transvaal known as Botshabelo (city of refuge). Botshabelo became a small state within a state, and although Merensky’s converts had to obey the laws of the Transvaal government in Pretoria they also had to obey the local laws of Botshabelo. By 1876 Botshabel was the biggest and most flourishing station in the Transvaal. Due to the importance of the station, Merensky was appointed the first superintendent of his Society. Merensky found himself shortly thereafter in the role of mediator, overseeing negotiations between the Transvaal and Sekhukhuni in 1876-1877.

The Berlin Society, like Merensky, had a strict, paternalistic attitude towards the Africans and suppressed all forms of African autonomy in church matters. Botshabelo later became a model for German missionary endeavors in the African colonies. After the British annexation of the Transvaal in 1877 Merensky’s pro-British attitude angered the Boers.

This coupled with his autocratic behavior towards his fellow missionaries resulted in the Berlin Society recalling him to Germany in 1882, In Germany Merensky played a leading role in the opening phases of German colonialism, In 1891 he returned to Africa and under his guidance the first German mission station in German East Africa was founded. Alexander Merensky played important roles not just as a missionary, but as a physician, diplomat, geographer, and author.

WERNER VAN DER MERWE

Editor’s Note

This website features a collection of articles largely from previously published volumes of the Encyclopaedia Africana, specifically the Encyclopaedia Africana Dictionary of African Biography, which highlights notable individuals from various regions of Africa. Please note that in these volumes, some names of people, towns, and countries were spelled differently than they are today. We have retained these historical spellings to preserve the integrity of the original publications. In some instances, the current spellings are also provided for easy reference.
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