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The War between the Zulus and the White Colonists

While Kimberley was exploiting its newly discovered wealth, the Colony of Natal was developing along somewhat different lines. Here, the fearsome Zulu nation had grown to menacing proportions. Under African law, black refugees fleeing from Zulu power were given sanctuary in buffer reserves. Outside those reserves, British law held sway. Black Africans in the reserves were under the rule of the chiefs.

The late-nineteenth century was a period of further colonial expansion, a pressure which the Zulus tried to withstand. At the beginning of 1879 a force of 1,800 British troops equipped with modern weapons invaded Zululand. Under King Cetshwayo, the Zulu ‘impi’ (army) of 20,000 warriors, mostly carrying spears and clubs delivered a resounding defeat on the unprepared British at Isandhlwana. Over 1,300 British soldiers were killed.


Cetshwayo, King of the Zulus

The British defeat in what was termed the First Anglo-Zulu War resulted in a much stronger force invading Zululand the following year; and this time the Zulu King Cetshwayo was defeated. One month later he was captured and exiled to Cape Town. In 1882, Cetshwayo visited England where he was granted an audience with Queen Victoria. He was promised reinstatement as king, but in 1883, upon his return to Zululand, Cetshwayo was appointed ‘king’ over a buffer reserve considerably smaller than his original kingdom. Cetshwayo died in February 1884, possibly poisoned.

Natal had the ideal climate for the cultivation of sugar cane, a labour-intensive activity. Indentured labourers were imported from India, many of whom remained in the country at the end of their contracts. They became the forebears of today’s significant and influential Indian population, which remains mainly resident in the coastal area of Natal.

South Africa: History in an Hour

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