This manuscript depicts a document declaring war on the Zulu people because, on January 11, after a complete term, the king was unable to comply with the British government's requests.
Guerilla tactics
It is a term used to describe stealth based , hit and run tactics during a war.
King Cetshwayo advised his men to use this strategy instead of confronting British forces on broad plains during the war.
Thousands of Zulu men were killed and gunned by the British empire with advanced gallitin guns as Zulus went to war with primarily spears and shields
a place at the Court of Cety wajTo. Everybody knows that a British resident at such a court means ordinarily a British dictator or a man who speedily furnishes the re
Here, the British administration recommended that one of its citizens sit in the court of King Cetshwayo. This implied that if a single British defendant appeared in such a court, it would be to the Zulu's own detriment.
This journal entry describes the Zulu War from the British government's point of view. It describes how the Zulu people rebelled, which sparked the conflict, and how many Zulu men perished in the conflict as a result of the gallins guns the British army possessed.
In the image above, a fat British man is pictured relaxing while a zulu man scrawls the words "besides, you're not the enemy" on a chalkboard. This image shows how the British colonies sought to rule and control the Zulu people, and how they were required to follow their laws because they would be in charge of them.