Jan van Riebeeck Statue
Cape Town, South Africa
Location co-ordinates: 33°55'10.77"S 18°25'36.61"E
Cape Town's founder, Jan van Riebeek, is immortalized in an imposing statue on Heerengracht Street.
The figure stands on the spot where Van Riebeeck was thought to have landed in 1652. It was sculpted
by John Tweed and donated to the city by Cecil John Rhodes. He paid the Scottish sculptor John Tweed £1,000 for the work,
partly on the condition that the statue not show Tweed's name and be larger than life-size.
The statue lies on a Cape granite pedestal 4¼ m high designed by an architect friend of Tweed's. This further inflated the cost. On 18 May 1899, Cape Town Mayor Thomas Ball unveiled the bronze statue in the presence of the entire City Council, national politicians, and members of the public, but in the absence of Rhodes, then sojourning in Europe. Due to the development of the harbour and the city's growth, the statue has been overshadowed by skyscrapers. Over time, a large roundabout was developed at the site, once called Heerengracht, and in 1969, a statue of Maria van Riebeeck was laid to the right of her husband's. There is no image that can be said to certainly depict the founder of the Cape refreshment station. In the statue, Van Riebeeck's sword is sheathed, and he carries his walking stick in his right hand. The dress in the statue is historically inaccurate. Overhanging shoulder straps were out of fashion in the mid-17th century, and knee breeches and the jacker Van Riebeeck is wearing only became popular after his departure for Java. Hat feathers were in fashion, but are missing in the statue. Each year on 6 April, Founders Day, wreaths are laid at the statues of Jan and Maria van Riebeeck. In Van Riebeeck's birthplace of Culemborg is a bust of Van Riebeeck, donated by the Cape Town City Council. |