Jan Kamp Explained

Jan Kamp
Birth Date:12 December 1862
Birth Place:Enschede, The Netherlands
Death Place:Potchefstroom, South Africa
Nationality:South African
Spouse:Margaretha Maria Elizabeth Herman
Children:4
Known For:Journalist, teacher, lecturer, writer and promoter of the Afrikaans language.

Jan Kamp (12 December 1862 - 25 July 1924) was a journalist in the Netherlands and South Africa, a school teacher, and a university professor in literature. He emigrated to South Africa where he became a promoter of the academic use of the Afrikaans language.

Roots

Kamp was born on 12 December 1862[1] in Enschede, The Netherlands, the son of Hermen Kamp and Gezina Luijerink. He received training as a teacher and later studied at the Rijksuniversiteit Utrecht, the Netherlands. In South Africa, he married a Dutch immigrant Margaretha Maria Elizabeth Herman who gave him four children.

Journalist

While still in the Netherlands, Kamp was one of the editors of the newspaper De Standaard (Dutch for The Standard). In the later years as a lecturer he was at the same editor of Het Westen (Dutch for The West), and Ons Vaderland (Our Fatherland, 1915)[2] and Het Volk (The Nation), all local newspapers.

Teaching

In South Africa Kamp taught at schools in Pretoria, Rustenburg, and Nigel. While he was a lecturer in his later years, he always stayed involved in Schools.[3] Kamp was on the committee that founded Potchefstroom Gimnasium, an Afrikaans High School in Potchefstroom in 1907.[4]

Lecturer

In 1905 he started to work at the Theologian Centre of the Reformed Church in Potchefstroom. In 1912 he became a Professor there specialising in literature and continued until his death in Potchefstroom on 25 July 1924.[5] [6] [7]

Publications by Kamp

Afrikaans language

As a lecturer he appreciated Afrikaans poems and stories and helped young students to better their Afrikaans.[10] [11] When on the committee for Potchefstroom Gimnasium he also was in favour of it becoming an Afrikaans medium School.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: This day in history. 16 July 2018.
  2. Web site: Geskiedenis . History . K’Rant . 16 July 2018.
  3. Web site: Sages en legends . Myths and Legends . van der Schyf . P. . May 2003 . Potchefstroom University for Christian Higher Education.
  4. Web site: Potchefstroom Gimnasium . 29 June 2018 . 18 July 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180718115115/http://www.gimmies.co.za/hoofblad.htm . dead .
  5. Hexham . I. . The students at the theological College and its literary department, 1899-1919 The students and the theological college and its literary department 1899-1919 . In die Skriflig . 1978-06-01 . 12 . 18 . 1018-6441 . 10.4102/ids.v12i46.1131 . 7180991722. free .
  6. Dutch Calvinism and the Development of Afrikaner Nationalism . JTOR . 722119 . Hexham . Irving . African Affairs . 1980 . 79 . 315 . 195–208 . 10.1093/oxfordjournals.afraf.a097205.
  7. Web site: Totalitarian Calvinism.
  8. Web site: Tydskrif vir letterkunde . Magazine for literature) . Rudolph, C. . 1967.
  9. Web site: De niewe taalgids . The new language guide).
  10. Dutch language speakers' contributions to the maintenance and recognition of Afrikaans 1870-1920 . 16 July 2018 . September 2014. Steyn, J.C. . Tydskrif vir Geesteswetenskappe (Journal for Humanities) . 54 . 3 . 425–445.
  11. Web site: geskiedenis van Afrikaanse kultuur . History of Afrikaans culture) . Kannemeyer, J.C. . Academia . June 1984.