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・ Piet Moeskops
・ Piet Mondrian
・ Piet Noordijk
・ Piet Norval
・ Piet Ooms
・ Piet Ouborg
・ Piet Oudolf
・ Piet Paaltjens
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・ Piet Pienter en Bert Bibber
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Piet Retief
・ Piet Retief Commando
・ Piet Retief, Mpumalanga
・ Piet Rietveld
・ Piet Rinke
・ Piet Romeijn
・ Piet Rooijakkers
・ Piet Roozenburg
・ Piet Ruimers
・ Piet Römer
・ Piet Salomons
・ Piet Schrijvers
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・ Piet Soudyn
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Piet Retief : ウィキペディア英語版
Piet Retief

Pieter Mauritz Retief (12 November 1780 – 6 February 1838) was a South African Boer leader. Settling in 1814 in the frontier region of the Cape Colony, he assumed command of punitive expeditions in response to raiding parties from the adjacent Xhosa territory. He became a spokesperson for the frontier farmers who voiced their discontent, and wrote the Voortrekkers' declaration at their departure from the colony.
He was a leading figure during their Great Trek, and at one stage their elected governor. He proposed Natal as the final destination of their migration and selected a location for its future capital, later named Pietermaritzburg in his honour. The massacre of Retief and his delegation by the Zulu King Dingane and the extermination of several Voortrekker laagercamps led to the Battle of Blood River on the Ncome River, the short-lived Boer republic Natalia suffered from ineffective government and succumbed to British annexation.
==Early life==
Retief was born to Jacobus and Debora Retief in the Wagenmakersvallei, Cape Colony, today the town of Wellington, South Africa. His family were Boers of French Huguenot ancestry: his great-grandfather was the 1689 Huguenot refugee François Retif, from Mer, Loir-et-Cher near Blois; the progenitor of the name in South Africa. Retief grew up on the ancestral vineyard ''Welvanpas'', where he worked until the age of 27.
After moving to the vicinity of Grahamstown, Retief, like other Boers, acquired wealth through livestock, but suffered repeated losses from Xhosa raids in the period. These prompted the 6th Cape Frontier War. (Retief had a history of financial trouble. On more than one occasion, he lost money and other possessions, mainly through land speculation. He is reported to have gone bankrupt at least twice, while at the colony and on the frontier.) Such losses impelled many frontier farmers to become Voortrekkers (literally, "forward movers") and to migrate to new lands in the north.
Retief wrote their (Dutch speaking settlers/ Boer) manifesto, dated 22 January 1837, setting out their long-held grievances against the British government . They believed it had offered them no protection against armed raids by the native bantus, no redress against Foreign Government Policies (British), and financially broke them through the Slavery Abolition Act 1833 which freed their slaves; with compensation offered to owners, which hardly amounted to a quarter of the slaves' market value. Retief's manifesto was published in the ''Grahamstown Journal'' on 2 February and ''De Zuid-Afrikaan'' on 17 February, just as the emigrant Boers started to leave their homesteads.

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