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keitumetse02

WO 32/7773: Overseas: South Africa (Code 0(AU)): Zulu War: General Wolseley on Disposit... - 3 views

  • WO 32/7773: Overseas: South Africa (Code 0(AU)): Zulu War: General Wolseley on Disposition of Forces to Capture
keitumetse02

https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/27906028.pdf?refreqid=excelsior%3Adb4d0250e20cd39e4941... - 1 views

    • keitumetse02
       
      Great Britain's pointless conflict with the Zulus has come to an end whereby Zulus were fighting over their lands and rights to self-determination.
    • keitumetse02
       
      Mortality is another term for death. It's the state of being subjected to death.
keitumetse02

THE ZULU WAR on JSTOR - 5 views

    • keitumetse02
       
      Great Britain's pointless conflict with the Zulus has come to an end whereby Zulus were fighting over their lands and their right to self-determination. Mortality is another term for death. It's the state of being subjected to death.
keitumetse02

Imperial Strategy and the Anglo-Zulu War of 1879 - 3 views

  • IMPERIALSTRATEGY
  • but a second battle on that same day at a smallmission station named Rorke’s Drift made these events more remarkable st
  • 120 men decided to stand and fight rather than flee the advancingimpithat had justwiped out their comrades.
    • gumedehp
       
      the British due their capability the British warrior split into half to fight powerful against the Zulu warriors, the Zulu's was lacking of the new techniques. that leads them to be defeated by British European.
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • British Empire provides an example of greedycapitalists dispossessing indigenous peoples in their search for new markets andraw materials,1yet w
    • gumedehp
       
      the British were so cruel and desperate because of their desperation of the minerals like gold. the acted greedy to get what they want by invading other kingdoms to take over.
  • That an army of this size had slipped pastBritish reconnaissance on the open veldt of South Africa to mount such a successfulattack was remarkable in itself,
    • gumedehp
       
      during their first war of isandlwana the Zulus defeated British. The two war happened on a same day.
  • On22 January1879,
    • gumedehp
       
      after the British invaded Zululand in South Africa, it has led to a formation of a war called isandlwana or Impi yasesandlwana,it was between the British and the Zulu,s.
  • O’CONNOROn22
  • January1879
  • after the British invaded Zululand in South Africa, it has led to a formation of a war called isandlwana or Impi yasesandlwana,it was between the British and the Zulu,s.
  • he British due their capability the British warrior split into half to fight powerful against the Zulu warriors, the Zulu's was lacking of the new techniques. that leads
  • IMPERIALSTRATEGY AND THEANGLO–ZULUWAR OF1879DAMIANP. O’CONNOROn22 January1879, the British army suffered its worst colonial defeat of thenineteenth century when 1,500 men armed with the most modern weapons thenavailable were wiped out at the battle of Isandlwana by a Zulu army––animpi––of25,000 warriors armed only with spears. That an army of this size had slipped pastBritish reconnaissance on the open veldt of South Africa to mount such a successfulattack was remarkable in itself, but a second battle on that same day at a smallmission station named Rorke’s Drift made these events more remarkable still. Here,120 men decided to stand and fight rather than flee the advancingimpithat had justwiped out their comrades. At bayonet point, they fought a last-round defenseagainst 4,000 Zulu warriors which earned them a victory and eleven VictoriaCrosses––the highest number of the highest award for bravery ever bestowed on asingle day in British military history. In 1964, this remarkable battle was immor-talized in Cy Enderfield’s classic filmZuluwhich, among other things, providedMichael Caine with his first screen role and generated an interest in the Anglo–ZuluWar of 1879 which has scarcely abated today. Indeed, the historiography on theevents of this war is now remarkably complete; we know more about the militaryevents of this war than perhaps any other. Still open to question, however, is whythose famous Redcoats were fighting Zulus at all, and the search for an answer tothis question has led to some conclusions that were not at all obvious.It has often been posited that the British Empire provides an example of greedycapitalists dispossessing indigenous peoples in their search for new markets andraw materials,1yet whenever one looks into the particular circumstances of anepisode of expansion, it is very difficult to isolate a viable economic motive. This isDamian P. O’Connor is a doctoral research student at the University of East Anglia, UnitedKingdom.1. See for example, A. Duminy and C. Ballard, eds.,The Anglo-Zulu War: New Perspectives(Pietermaritzburg: University of Natal Press, 1981); R. L. Cope,Ploughshare of War: TheOrigins of the Anglo-Zulu War of 1879(Pietermaritzburg: University of Natal Press, 1999);</spa
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