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Bloody Zululand
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14379 |
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BOOK WORLD
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6 / 1988 |
3,813 Words |
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Byron Farwell Byron Farwell is the author of nine books dealing in whole or
part with Africa, including The Great Anglo-Boer War, Queen
Victoria's Little Wars, and his latest, The Great War in
Africa, 1914-1918. |
LIKE LIONS THEY FOUGHT
The Zulu War and the Fall of the Last Black Empire
in South Africa
Robert B. Edgerton
New York: The Free Press, 1988
320 pp. $22.95
There were seven bloody, brutal battles and uncounted small, sanguinary encounters in the Zulu War of 1879, and Robert B. Edgerton has described them all, or nearly all, in this newest book on the Zulus.
There has been an increasing interest in the Zulus in recent years, fueled by films such as Zulu and Zulu Dawn; the television mini-series on their great king, Shaka; a considerable number of books and magazine articles; and by newspaper accounts of the Zulus' growing influence in South Africa under Gatsha Buthelezi, their present leader. Most accounts of the war, both on film and in print, have described the conflict only from the British side. Edgerton has shown, as best it can be shown, the war as it appeared both to the Zulus and to the British and this has made his account particularly attractive. If his tale is a tad tendentious, it is because the author's sympathies are more with the Zulus than with the British--as perhaps they should be, given the circumstances.
At the beginning of the nineteenth century the Zulus were a small tribe, but under the leadership of a king named Shaka, or Chaka, who developed an efficient army that he taught to fight with assegais (short stabbing spears), they conquered and absorbed all their neighbors and formed a
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