The ANGLO-BOER WAR (Used)
The ANGLO-BOER WAR (Used)
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The Anglo-Boer War 1899-1902 – F. Pretorius
From 1899 to 1902, South Africa was convulsed by the conflict between one of the world’s greatest powers — Britain — and the tenacious fighting force of two small Afrikaner republics, the ZAR (Transvaal) and the Orange Free State. Faced with the threat of losing their independence, the Boers rallied with a single minded determination which gained them great sympathy in Europe and the USA.
This book outlines the course of the war, through the formal first stages to the guerrilla struggle of the ‘bitter enders’. Finally it focuses on individual aspects of the war that are often overlooked in a more general approach. The pictorial element and the text engage in a particularly vital interplay, to illuminate the social complexities of a unique and prophetic war. Here are Boer life on commando, the British Tommy’s experience of a hostile veld, and the role of blacks in the warfare — an aspect till recently unprobed.
Prisoners of this war were, overwhelmingly, Boer. Men and boys were scattered abroad to exile on remote islands, while those who collaborated with the British were scorned as ‘hands uppers’ and joiners. Boer women and children comprised the remaining far more serious casualties of the ruthless ‘scorched earth’ policy — over 27 000 deaths were recorded in their concentration camps. Few books on the Anglo-Boer War have been able to offer so many striking colour illustrations, plus numerous black and white photographs, cartoons and sketches that will be fresh in their impact
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