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andiswa2023

Image on Guns in Africa from Google:Internet Source - 0 views

shared by andiswa2023 on 26 Apr 23 - No Cached
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    Guns assumed a more dominant place on the battlefield, but the military system of Zulu eschewed the gun in favor of motivated spearmen.
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    Machine guns were mostly used during wars.
andiswa2023

Machine Guns in the 1800s.PDF - 2 views

shared by andiswa2023 on 22 Apr 23 - No Cached
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    Some machine guns have in practice sustained fire almost continuously for hours; other automatic weapons overheat after less than a minute of use. Because they become very hot, the great majority of designs fire from an open bolt, to permit air cooling from the breech between bursts. They also usually have either a barrel cooling system, slow-heating heavyweight barrel, or removable barrels which allow a hot barrel to be replaced. Although subdivided into light, medium, heavy or general-purpose, even the lightest machine guns tend to be substantially larger and heavier than standard infantry arms. Medium and heavy machine guns are either mounted on a tripod or on a vehicle; when carried on foot, the machine gun and associated equipment require additional crew members.
andiswa2023

Guns Gale primary Sources.pdf - 1 views

shared by andiswa2023 on 26 Apr 23 - No Cached
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    A group of women have spent the rest of their lives living in danger of attacks from men in the 1800s.
andiswa2023

Guns,Race & Skill in 19th century Southern Africa.pdf - 0 views

shared by andiswa2023 on 24 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • Wars. During the early nineteen
  • overcame conservative opposition and helped tr
  • technically free. Liberals also encouraged the spread
  • ...26 more annotations...
  • anity among Africans. Partly through the en
  • missionaries, more Africans took up firearm
  • sons, most prominently to gain security and to
  • began to grow scarce, in the middle of the cent
  • began to grow scarce, in the middle of the ce
  • LOGY AND CULT
  • LOGY AND CULTURE OCTOBER 2004 VOL. 45 upper hand in colonial politics. Settler perceptions of the threa
  • upper hand in colonial politics. Settler perceptions of the threat posed by armed Africans persuaded British conservatives to portray Afri
  • skilled with firearms, even as they otherwise characterized Afri
  • racially inferior. The common perception that Boer frontiersm
  • superior marksmen
  • superior marksmen had, by the end of the nineteenth century,
  • historians use sources to assess technological skill? It is an issue of fundamental importance because skill exists at the intersection of the human and the material. Even so, historians tend to overlook the methodological challenge, shortchanging analysis in their discussions of skill. Historians of industrialization in Europe and North America, for example, have written about the ways in which the loss of skill related to the loss of worker pow
  • n the best available study on that specific subject, The Skulking Way of War: Technology and Tactics among the New England Indians^ Patrick Malone describes how European settlers introduced guns to New England, pointing out that Native Americans adapted them most adroitly to the local environment. The Native Americans learned to shoot well and combined that capability with their skills in forest warfare to gain a temporary military advantage, until English colonists learned how to fight with guns in forests, too.3 Malone's study is based largely on colonial sources, though, and he does
  • consider the possibility that English descriptions of Native Americans' skill with guns might have aimed at portraying them as more dangerous than they really may have been, which would have furthered the colonials' aims to dispossess them.
  • ith weapons, a facility that enabled them to resist colonialism for a while. The Xhosa were both good and bad marksmen, while the Mfengu were skilled and dangerous. The Sotho were "indifferently armed and were poor shots" before the 1870s, when they became "crack marksmen." The Zulu never integrated firearms completely into their military tactics, but by the Anglo-Zulu War of 1879 some Zulu shot well because, according to a British government source, they had received instruction from redcoat deserters
  • Contradictory views of skill are not unique to historians of firearms and colonialism. Little in the historiography of technology goes beyond labor historians' concern with worker de-skilli
  • were debated extensively in southern Africa in the nineteenth century. Everyday practice as it related to firearms, as well as the representation of everyday practice, was highly ideological, as may be seen in the efforts of those who wished to regulate the spread of guns. Nineteenth-century settler politicians often made highly politicized claims about skill and
  • an muskets, and so were favored more by hunters than by soldiers.10 OCTOBER 2004 VOL. 45 In the early nineteenth century, military and civilian firearms incorporated a number of technical improvements. Percussion locks came into wide service by the 1840s.11 At around the same time, improvements in ammunition persuaded most soldiers and civilians to replace their smoothbores with more accurate rifles.12 And, finally, by the 1860s design improvements in breech-loading firearms made it possible for most soldiers and civilians to switch from muzzle loaders to breechloa
  • . Hunting could even provide a better income than cattle farming. The naturalist William Burchell, who traveled in the interior in 1812, observed how Africans became involved in a cash economy as European trade networks reached into the interior.14 Many African hunters worked for European traders, who employed them as trackers and supplied them with guns and ammunitio
  • t. By hunting, this people would obtain food in a manner so much more agreeable than by agriculture, that grain would probably become but a secondary resource; but the evil would remedy itself, and the more eagerly they pursued the chase, and the more numerous were the guns and the hunters, the sooner would the game be destroyed or driven out of the coun
  • orated in this fashion sterloop, the star barrel.20 Cape and American guns both demonstrate a hybrid vigor in design, as local needs interacted with traditional patterns. In eastern North America hunters tended to use smaller- caliber firearms because they hunted smaller animals, like deer, while westerners, who might encounter bison, elk, or grizzly bears, preferred larger calibers, though rarely as large as the southern African four-bore.21 Cape gunsmiths and their American counterparts alike were sensitive to both the needs of local hunters and recent technological developments. They refitted flintlock muskets with percussion locks, and in so
  • ca's emerging capitalist economy, frequently using their wages to buy guns. African gun ownership concerned both British and Boer settlers, who saw firearms not only as tools of civilian life on the frontier but also as instruments of political power. It also concerned British and Boer officials, who incorporated disarmament into their plans to despoil Africans of their land. While developing plans to disarm, dispossess, and disenfranchise Africans, British settlerpoliticians argued that whites should take care to maintain their skills with arms - not to denude the environment of animals but to defend against attacks by dangerous Africans.
  • male citizen could vote, provided he possessed a certain amount of property. Guns had been subject to.a variety of sporadically enforced regulations since the seventeenth century. In the 1870s, permits to purchase firearms could be issued by unsalaried justices of the peace as well as by salaried resident magistrates. Rules for issuing permits were spelled out in the colony's Circular No. 4 of 1874, which instructed resident magistrates to issue gun permits only to Africans who were "fit" to possess guns without defining how, exactly, they were to determine fitness. Justices of the peace received no such instructions, and many settlers felt that they were too liberal in issuing permits.33 Permissive policies were defended by prominent liberals. The Cape Colony's secretary for native affairs, Charles Brownlee, observed that Africans wanted to know "why if they are really British subjects we should be so anxious that they should not possess gu
  • ife and property of its subjects."56 Communities that were coming under British rule needed to be disarmed. That was the civilized way to diminish risk and increase security. Frere wrote that "a wise government cannot permit any portion of the population, whose attachment to the government is in the least doubtfu
  • LOGY AND CULTURE OCTOBER 2004 VOL 45 remain generally possessed of arms." In the eighteenth century this had been government policy in Scotland. In the nineteenth century it had been policy in Ireland. In India during the Mutiny Lord Canning had disarmed sepoys suspected of disloyalty. It did not matter that the loyal and the disloyal were treated alike, because the government could not determine, at any given point, exactly who was who. General disarmament was the only practical policy. Even if it proved difficult to confiscate all weapons, if people got out of the habit of carrying guns in public disarmament would eventually be achieved. Based on this rendition of history, Frere proclaimed that the Pea
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    Guns were also a means for killing game animals. Firearms designers were spurred on by rivalries during War. Firearms became much more effective. Guns were not the focus of attention at all times, but awareness of guns and the actions that could be performed with guns certainly permeated the consciousness of many South Africans.
andiswa2023

Suggestions for the adoption & adaption of the single Bard Machine Gun for various Bran... - 2 views

shared by andiswa2023 on 26 Apr 23 - No Cached
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    Machine guns were the best weapon in every way for land service.With regard to Captain Gardner's single barrel,the value of machine-guns,recognized at once a marvellous increase of power to each branch of services.
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    This is not relevant for the topic you have (incorrectly) worked upon. You were assigned to the subject of Christian missions.
andiswa2023

The Development of Machine Guns.pdf.Jstor - 7 views

shared by andiswa2023 on 18 Apr 23 - No Cached
  • rdenf elt, Gardner, and other modern rifle-caliber guns. Machine guns have been rapidly developed in the past few years, and the question of naval machine-gun armaments daily assumes increasing importance. The demand for naval machine guns has been brought about partly by the very decided advance effected in their construction ? more particularly in regard to those of rifle caliber?and partly by the introduction of powerful torpedo boat
  • . The heavy weapons are intended partly for ship defense and partly for the armament of the small cutters, life-boats, etc., of a man-of-war. The medium weapons would be the most generally useful, as they can be employed for a variety of pur poses, but are more particularly intended for mounting in the
  • edium rifle-caliber machine guns comprise those which can be conveniently placed in the tops and smaller boats of a ship, and which do not require animal transport on shore, but can be drawn or carried by the men of the gun detachment. The Gardner two-barrel and Nordenfelt and Gatling five-barrel guns are representatives of this section. Lastly, are those rifle caliber machine guns which are exceptionally light, such as the Gardner singl
andiswa2023

Suggestions for the adoption & adaption of the single Bard Machine Gun for various Bran... - 6 views

shared by andiswa2023 on 22 Apr 23 - No Cached
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    Machine guns were the best weapon in every way for land service .
andiswa2023

Image of Guns from Google, Internet source - 1 views

shared by andiswa2023 on 26 Apr 23 - No Cached
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    African military systems on the African continent in the 1800. Developments were to result in significant development to African military systems.
andiswa2023

Towards_a_postmissionary_revie.pdf - 1 views

shared by andiswa2023 on 09 May 23 - No Cached
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    And this? Why add it so late?
ntswaki

A Detailed Snapshot of Zanzibar Slavery History - UnitedRepublicofTanzania.com - 3 views

  • It starts when one discovers events like when their own nation is battling with another: the prisoners are not killed, but rather tied with rope and taken to the town, where they are told, ‘You stay here as our slaves.”
    • ntswaki
       
      this article explains the beginning of the slave trade in zanzibar and also it highlights the struggle that they went through in the past, also it tries to show the important concept of slave trade in zanzibar.
  • Slaves on plantations or agricultural slaves generally worked between 6 to 11 a.m. and between 2 and 5 p.m. Sick slaves were not allowed to work, and the master oversaw their care until they recovered. In the event of the death of a slave, the master covered the costs of the funeral. However, the master did not attend all of the slaves’ funerals. He was only involved in the burials of concubines, home-born slaves, their offspring, and slaves who occupied key positions.
    • ntswaki
       
      This part of the article explains on how people that worked in the planation were being treated during the slave trade and also the fact that they didn't get any special treatment of working
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    Good.
phomeleloselala5

LeBlanc: Military handguns of the 1800s - 1 views

  • LeBlanc: Military handguns of the 1800sLarry J LeBlanc, Courier Outdoors WriterOct. 26, 2022Updated: Oct. 26, 2022 9:50 a.m. Facebook Twitter Email Comments This 1851 Colt Navy with powder, balls and percussion caps was the state of the art of it's day.Larry J. LeBlanc
asanda

Diigo - Consul ELTON FROM GALE IN SOUTHERN AFRICA.pdf - 6 views

    • asanda
       
      THIS PRIMARY SOURCE IS ABOUT THE WARS AND TRADE OF GUNS IN SOUTHERN AFRICA. IT IS THE CONFLICT OR TRANSFORMATION OF SOUTHERN AFRICA IN NINETEENTH CENTURY BEFORE 1890 WHEN SOUTHERN AFRICA BEGAN TO HAVE GUNS AND HAVE ACCESS TO TRADE IT. IT TALKS ABOUT COLONASATION OF AFRICA, POLITICAL, CIVILASATION, ETC., THAT HAPPENED AFTER THEY GET ACCESS TO THE GUNS. BY THE TRADE OF GUNS THE EARNED LOT OF MONEY BY THE AMATONGA WHO EMIGRATE TO NATAL IN SEARCH OF WORK WHICH WAS SPENT BY THE ORDER OF THEIR CHIEFS. THEIR COMBINATION AS THE GUN, RUM, PERMITTED AND LEAD TRADE SOUTH OF THE ZULU COUNTRY, AND AMONGST THE AMATONGA, PERMITTED FOR THE FUTURE WITHOUT A CHECK WITHIN THE TOWN OF LOURENCO MARQUES BY THE PORTUGUESE GOVERNMENT,IT IS, I FEAR, MY LORD, BUT A SORRY LOOK OUT FOR THE CIVILIZATION OF THE NATIVE RACES OF SOUTH EAST AFRICA.
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