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Christoffel Lötter

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Christoffel Lötter
Born
Christoffel Lötter

1744
Drakenstein, Paarl
Died1825
Farm Blaaukrantz, Somerset-East
OccupationFarmer
SpouseSusanna Sophia Jacobs
Children11
RelativesCasparus Jacobus Lötter

Christoffel Lötter was a Trekboer (Pioneer Farmer) in the Graaff-Reinet district during the British first annexation of the Cape in 1795, and was a representative of his community in the first negotiations between Graaff-Reinet leaders and Mr Frans Reinhard Bresler, who was sent by the British Commander General James Henry Craig.

Lineage

Matthias Lötter, Gold- and Silversmith from Augsburg, Germany, arrived at the Cape in December 1733, aboard the van Alsem with other Dutch East India tradesmen and soldiers.[1]

Early life

Christoffel was born into a family of well-known master Gold and Silversmiths from Augsburg who had worked in Amsterdam during the Dutch Golden Age. Unlike his brothers, Johannes Casparus and Willem Godfried, who became Silversmiths at the Cape, Christoffel became a livestock farmer, trekking between the Cape and as far as Somerset East on the Cape Frontier.

Family life

Christoffel and his wife of French Huguenot descent had 11 children.[citation needed]

Military

Commando during First, Second and Third Xhosa wars.[citation needed]

Government

When the British annexed the Cape in 1795, Lötter represented the community in negotiations for a peaceful takeover of the local government.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ "Matthias Lötter (1690 - 1752) - Genealogy".

https://en.m.wikisource.org/wiki/History_of_South_Africa_from_1795_to_1872/Chapter_1

This page was last edited on 24 June 2022, at 09:53
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