- Jean Pierre Pellissier
Jean Pierre Pellissier (
1808-09-28 ,St. Arey ,France -1867-06-11 ,Bethulie ,South Africa ) was a missionary from theParis Mission Society to Southern Africa.He arrived inCape Town on 5 September 1831, where he stayed at Wamakersvallei (Wellington ) for two months, to learn Dutch, and from where he departed toKuruman to do mission work among theTswana people (Zeerust). Local infighting between rival tribes caused him to move to the area north of theOrange River in 1833, to a site where theLondon Mission Society had an unsuccessful attempt to start a mission station among theKhoi people. He later named the mission station Bethulie (meaning Eloah – house of God). The land of the mission station was transferred to the Paris Mission Society in 1836. Besides his mission work, Jean Pierre Pellissier made a great contribution towards practical education and medicine among the local people. This resulted into one of the best developed mission stations in southern Africa beyond the Orange River for that period. In 1861 he was officially acknowledged as a medical practitioner by the local Government of theOrange Free State .
=Sources=
*Elsevier, Amsterdam. (1976) Ensiklopedie van die Wereld part 8; C.F. Albertyn (Edms) Bpk, Stellenbosch. ISBN 0949948225
*Pellissier, S.H. (1956) Jean Pierre Pellissier van Bethulie; J.L. van Schaik, Bpk, Pretoria.
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