Inicio > Humanidades > Historia > Historia regional y nacional > Historia de África > THE RIGHT OF CONQUEST MADNESS IN MATABELELAND
THE RIGHT OF CONQUEST MADNESS IN MATABELELAND

THE RIGHT OF CONQUEST MADNESS IN MATABELELAND

THE RIGHT OF CONQUEST MADNESS IN MATABELELAND

Jonathan Maphenduka

34,41 €
IVA incluido
Disponible
Editorial:
Kiye Media
Año de edición:
2020
Materia
Historia de África
ISBN:
9781733423717
34,41 €
IVA incluido
Disponible

Selecciona una librería:

  • Librería Samer Atenea
  • Librería Aciertas (Toledo)
  • Kálamo Books
  • Librería Perelló (Valencia)
  • Librería Elías (Asturias)
  • Donde los libros
  • Librería Kolima (Madrid)
  • Librería Proteo (Málaga)

There are several unexplained episodes in the invasion and destruction of the Matabele Kingdom by the British South Africa Company in 1893, in the face of at least two treaties of friendship with the United Kingdom.In one episode, A lighting and tragic campaign, which began in October 1893, the Matabele warriors lost 6000 men in one battlefield alone against less than 500 British troops (all told) who lost their lives during the entire war and uprising that followed in 1896.Nevertheless, the Matabele Warriors, primarily armed with primitive weapons, did give a good account of themselves against heavy odds, and this led to British xenophobia against them, which is manifest to this day. The Matabele Kingdom became the only one in Southern Africa to be denied British protection even though the Kingdom went begging for it, and Britain had signed two treaties of friendship with Mzilikazi and Lobengula. This book is a historical and political satire that seeks to highlight some of the war crimes which were committed by the invading British forces using devastating precision and heavy weaponry. The devastating Maxim gun and artillery were used in the Anglo-Matabele war for the first time in Africa to 'smash and teach the Matabele a lesson of their life”.One of the episodes involves the removal of three sons of King Lobengula 'to be educated' by Cecil John Rhodes in his Cape Colony domain.The three princes, Njube, Nguboyenja and their sibling Mpezeni, were taken away from their people by force and never allowed to return home alive. Mpezeni, drowned in Port Elizabeth on arrival in 1898. No one knows how it happened.Nguboyenja and Njube died in 1908 and 1910, respectively, from a mental disease which resulted from being forced to endure the life of a prisoner.The official explanation for their removal from their home environment is that they were taken to be educated by the arch-enemy of the Matabele Monarchy, Cecil John Rhodes.Another notable episode was the deposition of Lobengula’s heir to the throne, Nyamande who had been installed in 1896 to succeed his father. When he refused to be deposed to the level of a senior chief in the district of Bulawayo, following the end of the 1896/7 rising, he was in January 1897 restricted to his rural home where he died a recluse. 3

Artículos relacionados

  • Kulubnarti I
    William Y. Adams / William YAdams
    Sudan Archaeological Research Society. Publication Number 18In 1998 and 1999 volumes II and III of the reports on the University of Kentucky excavations at Kulubnarti were published by the Sudan Archaeological Research Society as numbers 2 and 4 in its monograph series. Kulubnarti III was also available through British Archaeological Reports in its International Series no. 814....
    Disponible

    104,23 €

  • The Creole Elite and the Rise of Angolan Protonationalism
    Jacopo Corrado
    This book is about Angolan literature and culture. It investigates a segment of Angolan history and literature, with which even Portuguese-speaking readers are generally not familiar. Its main purpose is to define the features and the literary production of the so-called ’creole elite’, as well as its contribution to the early manifestations of dissatisfaction towards colonial ...
  • Traditionalists, Muslims, and Christians in Africa
    Prince Sorie Conteh
    As is the case for most of sub-Saharan Africa, African Traditional Religion (ATR) is the indigenous religion of Sierra Leone. When the early forebears and later progenitors of Islam and Christianity arrived, they met Sierra Leone indigenes with a remarkable knowledge of God and a structured religious system. Successive Muslim clerics, traders, and missionaries were respectful o...
  • Shajara ya Mwana Mzizima 4
    Alhaji Abdallah Mohammed Tambaza
    This is the fourth part in the series of the history of Dar es salaam. This book is about Kariakoo, the first area where Africans were allowed to live and stay. It traces the history of the area before independence and up till the 1970’s.Kitabu hiki ni mfululizo wa vitabu vya kumbukumbu ya sehemu na watu mashuhuri katika jiji la Dar es Salaam. Kitabu hiki ni cha tatu ambacho ki...
    Disponible

    41,51 €

  • Britain, the Royal Air Force and relief flights to Biafra, 1968-1969
    Onianwa Oluchukwu Ignatus
    In this intriguing new book, Onianwa Oluchukwu Ignatus investigates Britain’s decision to engage the Royal Air Force (RAF) in the relief operations during the Nigerian Civil War. The main area badly ravaged by the conflict being the Republic of Biafra was declared 'a frontier of need.' Humanitarian concerns and mounting public pressures, both in Britain and other Western countr...
  • We Rest Here Content
    Robin Smith
    We Rest Here Content is not the history of the Imperial Light Horse Regiment - that was written by the regiment’s Intelligence Officer, Lieutenant George Fleming Gibson and published in 1937 as The Story of the Imperial Light Horse in the South African War 1899-1902. We Rest Here Content approaches the subject of the I.L.H. from a different viewpoint. It looks at all the known ...
    Disponible

    75,50 €