Kruger, Kommandos & Kak

Author: Ash> Chris  

Publisher: 30 Degrees South Publishers‎

Publication year: 2014

E-ISBN: 9781928211228

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9781920143992

Subject: K History and Geography

Keyword: 历史、地理

Language: ENG

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Description

The second Boer War is the most important war in South African history; indeed, without it, South Africa would likely have not existed. But it's also one of the least understood conflicts of the era. Over a century of Leftist bleating and insidious, self-serving revisionism, first by Afrikaner nationalists and then by the apartheid regime, has left the layman with a completely skewed view of the war. Incredibly, most people will tell you that the British attacked the Boers to steal their gold, and that when the clueless, red-jacketed Tommies advanced under orders of bumptious, incompetent British generals they were mowed down in their thousands. Others think of the conflict in terms of 'Britain against South Africa' and many believe that the Boers actually won the war; the marginally more enlightened explain away the Boer defeat by claiming it took millions of British troops to beat them, or that it was only the 'genocide' of the concentration camps which forced the plucky Boers to throw in the towel. It's all bosh. This book will take everything you thought you 'knew' about the war and turn it on its head. From Kruger's expansionist dream of an Afrikaans empire 'from the Zambesi to the Cape', to the murder and devastation wrought on Natal by his invading commandos, to the savage massacres of thousands of blacks committed by the 'gallant' bitter-einders, the reader will have his eyes opened to the brutal realities of the conflict, and be forced to reassess previously held n

Chapter

Introduction

Chapter 1: Making of the Transvaal

Chapter 2: All about gold

Chapter 3: Warmongering and the Bond

Chapter 4: The road to war

Chapter 5: Arrogance, over-confidence and the Kruger raid

Chapter 6: Opening shots

Chapter 7: Black Week and Black Month

Chapter 8: Guerrilla war or terrorism?

Chapter 9: Methods of barbarism

Chapter 10: The concentration camps

Chapter 11: We rely on your generals

Chapter 12: The superhuman Boer

Chapter 13: Hidebound by tradition

Chapter 14: Who was fighting the white man’s war?

Chapter 15: A hopeless cause?

Afterword

Notes

Appendix I Constant changes to the voting rules in the Transvaal

Appendix II Imperial Divisional Commanders, October 1899–June 1901

Appendix III Imperial Brigade Commanders, October 1899–June 1901

Appendix IV Locally raised Imperial South African units

Bibliography

Index

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