As usual all errors and omissions are entirely my own.The Battle of IsandlwanaThis was the first major battle of the Anglo-Zulu war and a battle that the British lost. The page is not intended to be a detailed narrative of the war. This ambition I shared with my chum Tony, and so on 4th November we duly headed for Heathrow airport to catch a plane to Johannesburg.Before we move on to the pictures I should add that as usual this page is a vehicle for my photographs, any historical narrative and comments are in support of those pictures. The real cause of the war seems likely to have been the local British High Commissioner and his policies, while the British soldiers followed orders to ‘do or die’.For many years it has been my ambition to visit the battlefields of the Anglo Zulu war and especially Rorke’s Drift and Isandlwana. December 2013 edited December 2013 in Napoleon: Total War My son has an unusual appetite for the Anglo-Zulu war games. Following Lord Carnarvon's successful introduction of federation in Canada, it was thought that similar political effort, coupled with military campaigns, might succeed with the African kingdoms. The Anglo-Zulu War was fought in 1879 between the British Empire and the Zulu Kingdom.
NAPOLEON TOTAL WAR MODS ZULU MOD
Napoleon: Total War mod Early Access 2011. History shows us that the British were the aggressors while the Zulus were defending their homeland. The school boy was, as you may have guessed, none other than myself. Back then my understanding was both very simple and very wrong, the British Redcoats were the good guys and the Zulu warriors were the bad guys.43 years on and my fascination with the film Zulu has grown into an interest in the Anglo-Zulu war and a much more sophisticated understanding of what occurred. This was the feature film, shown at school as our end of term treat way back in 1972. A 12 year old boy watched the big screen, enthralled as a small group of British ‘Redcoats’ fought huge numbers of Zulu warriors and won.