by  John Laband
                 New Haven: Yale University Press, 2014.  Pp. xii, 344. 
                 Illus., maps, notes, biblio., index.  $40.00.  ISBN: 0300180314
                
	  
               
  
    The “Great Zulu War” in Context 
  
  
    Given the great number of books on the Anglo-Zulu wars, particularly that of 1879, a new work titled Zulu Warriors might seem like more of the same, but that is not the case at all.  In his opening chapter, “The Shadow of Isandhlwana,” Prof. Laband (Laurier University), author of several books on African history, point
    s
     out that Isandhlwana and Rourke’s Drift so dominate accounts of war in South Africa that we fail to see them within the context of much wider Anglo-Boer efforts to curb the power of the indigenous peoples and expand the frontiers of “civilization”
    .
  
  
    The “Great Anglo-Zulu War” was only one of several taking place more or less at the same time.  After some background, 
    Laband takes us through 
    six
     wars between 1876 and 1879 
    involving 
    the British or the Boers and various local nations
    .  These include the 
    Pedi, the
    Xhosa
    , 
    the Zulu, and others.  Laband gives us a look at the varying military institutions of the African peoples, and rather successfully takes their perspective on the events into account
    .  This is particularly
     important because the actions of 
    the 
    indigenous leaders have most often been viewed through the perceptions of the British or the Boers.  
    Laband also reminds the reader that these wars were preliminary to the “Frist Anglo-Boer War,” which arguably shaped the history of southern Africa until well into the twentieth century.
  
  
    This is an excellent work for those interested in South African military history
    , the military institutions of indigenous African nations, or 
    in colonial military operations.
  
  
    
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