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The Battlefields - Legends of the Zulu Kingdom | |||||
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First War of Independence 1880 - 1881In late 1880, emissaries of the Boer
republic made another peaceful attempt
to regain their independence, but when
it, too, came to nought... war was
declared.
The Place of GoldAcross the Vaal River in the Zuid- Afrikaansche Republiek (Transvaal), the Gold Rush that followed discovery of the precious metal in 1886 further undermined the Boer's sense of security. They witnessed a massive influx of 'foreigners' - mostly British - and imagined themselves overrun by these uitlanders in the very near future. President Paul Kruger moved to strip these unwelcome fortune-hunters of any political rights by amending the Voting Act... which led to a failed uprising in 1895. The die was cast, though, and attitudes on both sides continued to harden until the inevitable occurred at 5 p.m. on 11 October 1899. Anglo-Boer War 1899 - 1902The immediate support of kommando
fighters from the Orange Free State
gave the Boer two fronts from which to
threaten the northern triangle of
Natal. They invaded, occupied Newcastle
on 15 October, and pushed southeast for
five days before clashing with British
regiments on
Talana Hill
near Dundee. The Young Lion in AfricaWhen Boer patrols from the Orange Free
State were spotted crossing the
Drakensberg Mountains into Natal near
Winterton, the British dispatched a
camouflaged, armoured reconnaissance
train from Estcourt. Among its
complement was a recent addition to
Britain's war effort... the 25-year-old
Sandhurst-trained cavalryman and
newspaper correspondent, Winston
Churchill.
The Siege of LadysmithAlong with its attendant battles, this tragic chain of events remains a bleak epic in Britain's long history of imperialism. The deliberate massing of regiments in an area encircled by hills offered Boer field-commanders the perfect opportunity to isolate and harass their foe with impunity. To prevent a disaster of humiliating proportions, British officers were directed from the highest quarter to relieve the town at all costs. A High PriceTen days before Christmas 1899, Sir
Redvers Buller's first attempt to cross
the Thukela River near Colenso failed
dismally, and the number of brigade
hospitals hastily erected adjacent to
the battlefield bore testimony to its
outcome. The MahatmaWitness to the grim aftermath of
Spioenkop was visiting lawyer Mohandas
Gandhi, who volunteered his services as
stretcher-bearer alongside thousands of
indentured South African Indians - and
colonised Africans - who played
ancillary roles in Britain's drama. Now or NeverWhen Buller's regiments again failed to
breach enemy lines - within a fortnight
of Spioenkop, at the Battle of
Vaalkrans - Britain launched the most
concerted offensive ever seen in the
Southern Hemisphere prior to the
Falklands War almost a century
later. Beyond the ArenaSensational newspaper reports detailing the 118-day siege incited war-fever around the globe... inspiring more French, German, Italian, Frisian, Russian, Irish-American and other anti- Loyalists to fight alongside the Boer, while the Crown called on additional reinforcements from its colonies in Australia, New Zealand and Canada. Britain finally deployed about half-a- million men in the field... to the estimated 78 000 mustered by the enemy. Prayer and DeliveranceBelieving the tide of war had turned in
their favour, British troops set about
recapturing Dundee which they finally
accomplished after penetrating Boer
defences on 13 May. A week later they
experienced a minor setback at
Scheeper's Nek, south of Vryheid, when
a company of Bethune's Mounted Infantry
surprised a congregation of Boer folk
and Swaziland policemen at prayer. The
church-goers forced the British to
withdraw after a short, sharp
engagement. This Far and No FurtherOn 24 September 1900, Boer commandos
heading east towards the coast were
stopped in their tracks at Fort
Prospect, near Babanango, by a vastly-
outnumbered British garrison.
The War ends...Sporadic fighting continued for eight- and-a-half months... in northern Natal, the Cape Colony and within the two Boer republics... until signing of the Peace Treaty in Vereeniging on 31 May 1902. ...and Recriminations BeginOften described as the 'last of the
gentlemen's wars', the Anglo-Boer War
was also one of controversy and
extreme, lasting bitterness- due mainly
to the concentration camps built by the
British in response to the guerilla
tactics of their enemy.While a total of some 12 000 Boer and
British soldiers died in battle, death
toll estimates among White and Black
civilians in the concentration camps
reached a staggering 42 000. Return of the SpearZulu antipathy towards both British and Boer remained at low intensity throughout the war... with one notable exception. Three-and-a-half weeks before the Peace Treaty was signed, Zulu warriors launched a surprise attack against Boer folk gathered on Zuinguin Mountain between Vryheid and Paulpietersburg... killing 56 at the Battle of Holkrans.
Bambatha and the 'Modern' StruggleAnti-settler feelings among the Zulu
resurfaced in the Greytown district
four years after the Anglo-Boer War,
when Colonial authorities suspended the
powers of Chief Bambatha for 'tax
evasion'. He rebelled... and convinced
a number of fellow traditional leaders
in the region to follow suit.
Fearing for the lives of local Whites,
a police column entered the area to
bring to safety three women and a
child. During their return journey on 4
April 1906, four policemen - plus a
trooper and his dog - were killed by
the Zulu at Ambush Rock. The British
Army was sent in... and Chief Bambatha,
along with his followers, were trapped
and killed in the Mome Gorge. This
effectively put paid to the rebellion
that ultimately claimed some three-and-
a-half thousand lives. A Final Twist...Ironically, the rebellious chief shared his Greytown roots with the birthplace of Boer Commandant-General Louis Botha, who led the second invasion of Natal and went on to become the first Prime Minister of the Union of South Africa in 1910. | |||||
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