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Southern Africa 1806-1828, The Cape Frontier Wars and The Fetcani Alarm
From Musket to Maxim 1815-1914 Series No 30
Author Hugh Driver, Softcovrer, 134 pages, 42 b/w illustrations, 4 b/w photos, 3 maps
In this concise and engaging book, historian Hugh Driver examines the struggle to determine and stabilise the frontier of southern Africas Cape Colony in the aftermath of the British occupation in 1806. In troop movements arising out of the Napoleonic Wars, a close analysis is made of those units deemed appropriate for the inherited bush warfare of the eastern frontier, with an emphasis on Colonel John Grahams controversial method of frontier control implemented in the wake of the Fourth Cape Frontier War of 1811-1812.
Those events leading up to the Battle of Grahamstown in April 1819 notably the inter-Xhosa Battle of Amalinde in October 1818 are then carefully delineated from contemporary sources, before the entire Fifth Cape Frontier War is considered, noting its significance not only at the time, but also in subsequent South African historiography.
The volume then goes on to examine the development and deployment of colonial forces beyond the frontier in the aftermath of the war. This was primarily in response to the so-called Fetcani alarm, which was essentially how the Cape Colony experienced the Zulu-generated Mfecane. It culminated in a British campaign on the Umtata and the highly contentious and much misunderstood Battle of Mbolompo in August 1828, involving the 55th Foot, Cape Mounted Riflemen and Royal Artillery, among other units.
Product Code: 9781915113788 HEL-1510
Manufacturer: Helion & Company
Condition: New
Product Weight: 0.303 kg
Width: 18cm
Depth: 30cm