Abstract
As the burgher population at the Cape of Good Hope developed over the course of the eighteenth
century, identity and status became increasingly important. Material culture, used for the purpose
of personal adornment, was a prominent means of demonstrating social positions. The growth of
prosperity within the Cape further catalysed this process, having a particular effect on one group
within Cape Dutch society – the burgher class. This article aims to explore the role of burgher
women within Cape Dutch society, and demonstrates how this group used markers of distinction
to denote their social position. By using objects such as clothing, free-burgher women managed
to create an association with a particular status group, and in so doing increased their own social
importance. Association with the higher echelons of society was particularly important to a group
of nouveaux riches burghers who had started to intermarry with the VOC official elite. This article
discusses the role of burgher women in perpetuating the notion of ‘conspicuous consumption’ as
a means of increasing their status and social importance within their role in the Cape Dutch society.