Reconstructing the past Using the British Parliamentary Papers: The Anglo-Zulu War of 1... - 2 views
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kaMpande, who was crowned the Zulu king in 1873, mobilized the Zulu army, which had become weak under his father's (Mpande's) rule. Many of the basic principles of the army came from the Zulu king, Shaka. "When faced with [the 1879 British] invasion, the Zulu king could put 30,000 men into the field in an attempt to preserve the Zulu state."
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These Boers wanted to acquire more land and gradually they began moving into the northwestern part of Zululand.17 Cetshwayo's foreign policy prior to 1877 was built on an alliance with the British in Natal, but then in April of that year Sir Theophilus Shepstone, the long-time friend of the Zulu, helped to bring about the annexation of the Transvaal, which made it a British colony. Then the boundary dispute became a British-Zulu question, rather than strictly a Boer-Zulu problem.
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Boer-Zulu problem.18 During this same time period, Lord Carnarvon, the Colonial Secretary in London, sent Sir Bartle Frere to South Africa to put his plan for the federation of African states into effect. Neither Frere nor Carnavon knew much about South Africa, and neither man understood the situation's complexity. They did not comprehend how the people they wanted to unite differed, nor did they understand the traditional history of hostilities among the people of the area
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, the appointed High Commissioner of Native Affairs and Governor of Cape Colony, concluded that the Zulu nation was an obstacle in the path to federation, and he decided that the Zulu king, the Zulu people, and, especially, the Zulu army had to be conquered. Frere began preparing the British government for any future action that he might be forced to take by sending reports to England on how "barbaric" and "uncivilized" the Zulu were, and how they were a threat to the British in Natal.21
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Frere argued that the Zulu king and his army were about to open a full-scale war against the British. He took it upon himself, without consulting with the Colonial Office, to send Cetshwayo an ultimatum. Frere revealed the findings of the Boundary Commission to the king's messengers at the same time he issued the ultimatum, 11 December 1878.27 Frere made numerous demands on the king, designed to be "guarantees for the future and reparation for the
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he was unable to meet the deadline, and Frere refused to extend it. Thus, British troops entered Zululand on 11 January 1879 to carry out Chelmsford's plan of attack