rival isimbongi court flatterers zulu king cetywayo coronation Shaka. chief tribe. commander Mtweta Empire Dingiswayo confederat


Illustrated travels a record of discovery geography and adventure edited by h w bates assistant secretary of the royal geographical society with engravings from original drawings by celebrated artists cassell petter and & galpin London paris new york. The Zulu formed a powerful state in 1816 under the leader Shaka. Shaka, like all the Zulu chiefs before him, gained a large amount of power over the tribe. A commander in the army of the powerful Mtweta Empire, he became leader of his mentor Dingiswayo's paramountcy and united what was once a confederation of tribes into an imposing empire under Zulu December 11, 1878, agents of the British delivered an ultimatum to 14 chiefs representing Cetshwayo. The terms required Cetshwayo to disband his army and accept British authority. Cetshwayo refused, and war followed at the start of 1879. During the war, the Zulus defeated the British at the Battle of Isandlwana on January 22. The British managed to get the upper hand after the battle at Rorke's Drift, and win the war with the Zulu defeat at the Battle of Ulundi on July 5. Absorption into Cape Colony After Cetshwayo's capture a month after his defeat, the British divided the Zulu Empire into 13 "kinglets". The subkingdoms fought amongst each other until 1883 when Cetshwayo was reinstated as king over Zululand. This still did not stop the fighting and the Zulu monarch was forced to flee his realm by Zibhebhu, one of the 13 kinglets, supported by Boer mercenaries. Cetshwayo died in February 1884, possibly poisoned, leaving his son, the 15 year-old Dinuzulu, to inherit the throne. In-fighting between the Zulu continued for years, until Zululand was absorbed fully into the Cape Colony. The Zulu are the largest South African ethnic group of an estimated 10-11 million people who live mainly in the province of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Small numbers also live in Zimbabwe, Zambia, and Mozambique. Their language, isiZulu, is a Bantu language.


Size: 5025px × 3350px
Photo credit: © Alan King engraving / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: -fashioned, 1800, 19th, 2d, academic, adult, age, antique, antiquity, book, bw, bygone, century, ceremony, cetyway, cetywayo, chief, classical, commander, confederation, copy, coronation, costume, court, dingiswayo, drawing, dress, duplicate, educational, empire, engrave, engraved, engraver, engraving, etching, ethnic, expression, figure, flatterers, formal, front, frontispiece, graphic, hand, hegemony, heritage, historic, historical, history, illustration, image, imperial, isimbongi, king, late, legend, legendary, lifelike, majestic, majesty, male, man, margin, master, meeting, monotone, mtweta, national, native, nineteenth, notable, obscure, observe, obsolete, original, outfit, period, pictorial, picture, portrait, pre, press, previous, print, printed, printing, prior, proof, publication, publicity, queen, rare, real, realism, realistic, reference, replica, represent, representation, repro, reproduce, reproduction, retro, review, rival, romantic, shaka., social, standard, steel, studio, style, subject, teach, time, title, tool, topic, topical, tract, traditional, tribe., true, unusual, version, victoria, victorian, visual, zulu