The Treaty of Vereeniging ends the Second Boer War
On 31 May 1902, representatives of the Boer leadership and the British government concluded the Treaty of Vereeniging, ending the war. The Boer republics accepted British sovereignty, while Britain promised eventual self-government, reconstruction assistance, and limited protections concerning property and language. The agreement closed nearly three years of costly conflict that had begun with conventional battles and ended with guerrilla resistance, scorched earth, and concentration camps. Its significance reached far beyond the battlefield: the settlement shaped the political future of South Africa, influenced relations between British and Afrikaner elites, and left a legacy of bitterness, memory, and racial exclusion that would continue into the twentieth century.