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Keetmanshoop

Keetmanshoop, Namibia

Area xxx km² (xxx mi²)
Established 14 April 1866
Population 16,800
Population Density xxx/km² (xxx/mi²)
Administrative Division Karas
Mayor Andreas Biwa
Time Zone South African Standard Time: UTC+1
Latitude and Longitude Latitude: 26.58°S Longitude: 18.13°E

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Keetmanshoop ("the hope of Keetman" in Afrikaans) is the traffic junction and the economic centre for the whole south of Namibia. Before the arrival of Europeans, the area was known as Nu-gouses, which means "Black Marsh" and indicated the presence of a spring in the area. In 1860 the Rhenish Mission Society founded a mission there to spread their faith to the local Nama. The first missionary, JG Schroder arrived in Keetmanshoop on April 14, 1866, which is now marked as the founding date of Keetmanshoop. The mission station was named after the German trader Johann Keetman who supported the mission financially. They found that even though some Africans converted to Christianity, taking away their tribal beliefs was another matter.

The Keetmanshoop Museum is located in the Rhenish Mission Church, a building dating back to 1895. The church was declared a national monument in 1978 and is a well-known landmark. Its unique combination of Gothic architecture cast in African stone makes it one of the architectural masterpieces in the country and a popular tourist attraction.

The town is situated near two quiver tree forests and the Naute Dam and is an important center of the Karakul sheep farming community.








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