Komatipoort

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Komatipoort
A street in Komatipoort
A street in Komatipoort
 Komatipoort shown within Mpumalanga
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Country South Africa
Province Mpumalanga
District Ehlanzeni
Municipality Nkomazi
Established {{#property:P571}}
Area[1]
 • Total 11.71 km2 (4.52 sq mi)
Population (2011)[1]
 • Total 4,683
 • Density 400/km2 (1,000/sq mi)
Racial makeup (2011)[1]
 • Black African 61.0%
 • Coloured 1.2%
 • Indian/Asian 2.8%
 • White 34.4%
 • Other 0.6%
First languages (2011)[1]
 • Afrikaans 30.8%
 • Tsonga 28.4%
 • Swazi 27.7%
 • English 7.6%
 • Other 5.5%
Postal code (street) 1340
PO box 1340
Area code 013

Komatipoort is a town situated at the confluence of the Crocodile and Komati Rivers in Mpumalanga province, South Africa. The town is 8 km from the Crocodile Bridge Gate into the Kruger Park, and just 5 km from the Mozambique border and 65 km from the Swaziland border.

It is a small, quiet town within the Lowveld with some attractive tree lined streets. It is one of the hottest towns in South Africa where temperatures can reach almost 48°C (47.7 °C (117.9 °F) on 12 December 1944) in the height of summer, but also with a perfect winter climate around 24 °C (75 °F).

History

'Komati' takes its name from the Komati River whose original native Swazi name is Nkomazi, translated as "river of cows". It is where the Crocodile and Komati Rivers meet to flow through the 'Poort' (mountain pass) through the Lebombo Mountains into Mozambique.

In the 1890s Komatipoort of those days was a wild and uproarious construction camp for the railway being built from Lourenco Marques (modern Maputo). Conditions weren’t the best with the area gripped by a malaria epidemic; it was in the zone called 'fever country'.

Between 1900 and 1902 during the Anglo/Boer War, the town was used as a base by Major F Von Steinaecker and his group known as 'Steinaecker's Horse'. They were a bunch of mercenaries and bushwhackers and were recruited by the British in order to fight Boer guerrillas in the bushveld.

Near Komatipoort is the site where the former Mozambique's President Samora Machel died in a plane crash in the Lebombo mountain range, the natural barrier between South Africa and Mozambique. At the site of the accident stands the Samora Machel Monument.

The Nkomati Accord was signed in Komatipoort in 1984.

See also

References

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External links

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