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	<title>chirundu.com v2.0 &#187; Matabeleland</title>
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		<title>Mzilikazi &#8211; King of the Matabele</title>
		<link>http://www.chirundu.com/mzilikazi-2009-08/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=mzilikazi</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Aug 2009 14:33:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Chirundu Jason</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zim People]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Matabele]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Matabeleland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mzilikazi]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Mzilikazi (Moselekatse), King of the Matabele Mzilikazi was born in 1790, near Mkuze, Zululand [now in South Africa] died on Sept. 9th, 1868 at Ingama in Matabeleland [near Bulawayo, now in Zimbabwe] Also spelled UMSILIGASI, OR MOZELEKATSE, South African king who founded the powerful Ndebele (Matabele) kingdom in what is now Zimbabwe. The greatest Bantu [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Mzilikazi (Moselekatse), King of the Matabele</h2>
<p><strong>Mzilikazi was </strong><strong>born</strong> in 1790, near Mkuze, Zululand [now in South Africa] <strong>died</strong> on Sept. 9th, 1868 at Ingama in Matabeleland [near Bulawayo, now in Zimbabwe]</p>
<p><img src="http://www.chirundu.com/history/images/mzilikazi.jpg" alt="Mzilikazi and Lobengula" /></p>
<p>Also spelled UMSILIGASI, OR MOZELEKATSE, South African king who founded the powerful Ndebele (Matabele) kingdom in what is now Zimbabwe. The greatest Bantu warrior after Shaka, king of the Zulus, Mzilikazi took his Kumalo people more than 500 miles (800 km) from what is now South Africa to the region now known as Zimbabwe, creating en route an immense and ethnically diverse nation. Mzilikazi was a statesman of considerable stature, able to weld the many conquered tribes into a strong, centralized kingdom.</p>
<p>Originally a lieutenant of Shaka, he revolted against the Zulu king in 1823 and withdrew his people northward to safety from their home on the southeast coast of Africa. He traveled to Mozambique and then west into the Transvaal, settling there by 1826. Continued attacks by coalitions of his enemies caused him to move west again to what is now Botswana and, in 1837, northward to present-day Zambia. Unable to conquer the Kololo nation there, Mzilikazi moved his followers, now numbering 15,000 to 20,000, eastward into what is now southwestern Zimbabwe, where he settled Matabeleland (c. 1840). He organized the country in a militaristic system of regimental towns strong enough to repel Boer attacks (1847-51) and to force the Boer government in the Transvaal to conclude a peace with him in 1852.</p>
<p>Mzilikazi was generally friendly to European travelers, but the discovery of gold in Matabeleland in 1867 brought a flood of Europeans that he was unable to control and that eventually led to the downfall of the kingdom.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.chirundu.com/history/images/Mzilikazi2.jpg" alt="Mzilikazi, watercolour sketch by William Cornwallis Harris" /></p>
<p><em>Mzilikazi, watercolour  sketch by William Cornwallis Harris, October 1836</em></p>
<p>The famous image above was painted by William Cornwallis Harris in October 1836. It was redrawn and engraved to serve as the frontispiece to Harris&#8217;s well-known narrative of his proto-safari in southern Africa, first published in 1838, and in that form is considered to be the only portrait of the king (frequently reproduced from that context). For more details on the picture and on Mzilikazi &gt;&gt; <a href="http://www.trin.cam.ac.uk/sdk13/WCH~Mz.html" target="_blank">Click here</a></p>
<h4 class='related-posts-header'>Related Posts</h4><ul class="related-posts-list"><li class="related-post"><a href="http://www.chirundu.com/the-shangani-patrol-2009-08/">The Shangani Patrol</a> </li><li class="related-post"><a href="http://www.chirundu.com/the-last-stand-of-the-shangani-patrol-2010-11/">The Last Stand of the Shangani Patrol</a> </li><li class="related-post"><a href="http://www.chirundu.com/the-pongo-memorial-econd-matabele-war-2010-02/">The Pongo Memorial - The Second Matabele War</a> </li><li class="related-post"><a href="http://www.chirundu.com/aerial-odyssey-bundu-2010-12/">Tales from the Bundu – Aerial Odyssey</a> </li><li class="related-post"><a href="http://www.chirundu.com/john-traicos-zimbabwean-cricketer-2010-05/">John Traicos: Zimbabwean Cricketer</a> </li></ul>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Shangani Patrol</title>
		<link>http://www.chirundu.com/the-shangani-patrol-2009-08/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=the-shangani-patrol</link>
		<comments>http://www.chirundu.com/the-shangani-patrol-2009-08/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 Aug 2009 13:10:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Chirundu Jason</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Allan Wilson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bulawayo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cecil Rhodes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Jameson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lobengula]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Matabele]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Matabeleland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rhodes]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rhodesia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shangani]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shangani Patrol]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zimbabwe]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[PURSUIT OF LOBENGULA by W.D. Gale (1958) Major Allan Wilson With only his burning kraal to signify his recognition of defeat, Lobengula had sought the safety of the boundless veld, and with him were his impis. They had been worsted in their encounters with the white men, but they had not acknowledged their conquest. As [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>PURSUIT OF LOBENGULA<br />
by<strong> W.D. Gale (1958)</strong></h3>
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<td><img src="http://www.chirundu.com/history/images/wilson2.jpg" alt="" width="200" height="288" /></td>
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<td bgcolor="#000000"><strong><span style="color: #ffffff;">Major Allan Wilson</span></strong></td>
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<p>With    only his burning kraal to signify his recognition of defeat, Lobengula had sought    the safety of the boundless veld, and with him were his impis. They had been    worsted in their encounters with the white men, but they had not acknowledged    their conquest.</p>
<p>As    long as they had the unifying influence of their king they would never bow the    knee and they would continue to be a menace to white civilization. It was essential,    Dr. Jameson reasoned, that Lobengula be captured and brought to acknowledge    his victors. And the sooner the better, before he had time to reorganize his    forces and attempt to regain his kingdom.</p>
<p>It    was the worst time of year for such a campaign. The rains had broken, malaria    would soon be rampant and the waterlogged veld would make progress difficult.    Nevertheless the attempt had to be made, unless Lobengula could be induced to    come in to Bulawayo by a message instead of an army. On November 7 Jameson wrote    him the following letter:</p>
<p><em>&#8220;</em><em>I    send this message in order, if possible, to prevent the necessity of any further    killing of your people or burning of their kraals. To stop thus useless slaughter    you must at once come and see me at Bulawayo, when I will guarantee that your    life will be saved and that you will be kindly treated. I will allow sufficient    time for this message to reach you and return to me and two days more to allow    you to reach me in your wagon. Should you not then arrive I shall at once send    out troops to follow you, as I am determined as soon as possible to put the    country in a condition where whites and blacks can live in peace and friendliness.</em><em>&#8220;</em></p>
<p>The    letter, which was written in English, Dutch and Zulu to ensure that it would    be understood, was carried by a Cape Colony native named John Grootboom who    tracked the fugitive king until he found him in the Shiloh area some thirty    miles to the north of Bulawayo. Lobengula had no missionaries or traders to    interpret for him now, but with him was a Coloured man, John Jacobs, with sufficient    education to know how to read and write. He wrote down Lobengula&#8217;s answer:</p>
<p><em>&#8220;</em><em>I    have heard all that you have said, so I will come, but let me to ask you where    are all my men which I have sent to the Cape, such as Moffett and Jonny and    James, and after that the three men &#8211; Gobogobo, Mantose and Goebo &#8211; whom I sent.    If I do come where will I get a house for me as all my houses is burn down,    and also as soon as my men come which I have sent then I will come.</em><em>&#8220;</em></p>
<p>This    ungrammatical ambiguity was no answer. After waiting the two extra days Jameson    decided to send a strong patrol to reconnoitre the country between Inyati and    Shiloh and if possible bring Lobengula back a prisoner. His call for volunteers    met with a good response and the force of 320 men was composed of volunteers    from the Salisbury and Victoria Columns and 150 men of the Bechuanaland Border    Police and Raaff&#8217;s Rangers who had reached Bulawayo ahead of the main body of    the Southern Column.</p>
<p>With    three maxims and two hundred native carriers and with Major Forbes in command,    they rode out of Bulawayo shortly before sunset on November 14.</p>
<p>The    first two days and nights it rained almost continually and the horses, which    were in poor condition after the main campaign, found the sodden country heavy    going. Forbes made for the London Missionary Society&#8217;s station at Inyati, which    had been established before the days of Thomas Baines, and found it a sorry    sight. Its normal occupants had abandoned it at the beginning of the invasion    and it was now occupied by a party of Matabele in charge of a large herd of    cattle. They fled. The Matabele had vented their wrath on the missionaries&#8217;    houses, which had been wrecked in an orgy of destruction. The veld was littered    with torn books, broken furniture and ruined personal belongings.</p>
<p>Leaving    a force of eighty men to garrison the station, Forbes went on with the remainder.    This part of the country had been heavily populated and in the numerous kraals    they found cattle and grain. The grain was a welcome addition to their meagre    diet. The force had left Bulawayo before the arrival of the main Southern Column    with its food supplies, and their rations, small enough when they had started    on the pursuit, were by now almost exhausted. They had kept going with what    they could find in Matabele corn bins, but now this source was almost at an    end. When they reached the last of the kraals and realized that the further    they went the shorter they would be of food, many of the men became discontented.    They considered that the pursuit should be postponed until the food position    was corrected and did not see why they should have to endure hardships that    could be avoided.</p>
<p>Major    Forbes saw their point of view, but knew that if they gave up the chase now    they would never overtake Lobengula. He paraded his force and ordered the malcontents    to step forward. Most of Raaff&#8217;s Rangers and the Salisbury Horse did so, but    the Victoria Column stood firm. The detachment of Bechuanaland Border Police,    being regular soldiers, was not consulted. Forbes thereupon sent a messenger    to Bulawayo asking for food and instructions and received a reply from Dr. Jameson    that reinforcements and wagons carrying more ammunition and what food could    be spared were being sent to Shiloh. There Forbes reorganized his force.</p>
<p>The    new provisions were suflficient to provide three-quarter rations for three hundred    men for twelve days and to see the disaffected section back to Bulawayo. Forbes    composed his new force of Captain Borrow and twenty-two men of the Salisbury    Horse, Major Wilson and seventy mounted and a hundred dismounted men of the    Victoria Column, Captain Raaff and twenty men of the Rangers and Captain Coventry    and seventy-eight men of the Bechuanaland Border Police.</p>
<p>Soon    after leaving Shiloh the scouts found Lobengula&#8217;s wagon tracks and followed    them for eight miles through thick bush. There were other signs that they were    hot on the trail &#8211; camp fires whose ashes were still hot, pots and calabashes    hastily abandoned, the charred remains of two of the king&#8217;s wagons which had    broken down and been destroyed. It was evident that Lobengula and his warriors    were making for the Shangani river.</p>
<p>The    further they went the more difficult conditions became. They were drenched by    storm after storm, and the veld became so waterlogged that the oxen pulling    the wagons carrying their provisions gave up the struggle and collapsed. Forbes    decided that the wagons were a hindrance. Forming a flying column of a hundred    and sixty men, he sent the rest with the wagons to a place called Umhlangeni    to await their return.</p>
<p>The    flying column pushed ahead with greater speed. On the evening of November 30,    Johan Colenbrander, who had been scouting, brought in an induna he had known    when he had lived at the king&#8217;s kraal. The induna said the Matabele had become    dispirited through defeat, starvation, exposure to the constant rain and the    ravages of smallpox and most of them wanted to surrender. But remnants of three    of Lobengula&#8217;s best regiments, the Insukameni, the Ihlati and the Siseba, were    still loyal to the king and were covering his retreat.</p>
<p>On    December 3 the column reached the bank of the Shangani river. They were very    close on the king&#8217;s heels now. Across the river they could see a number of natives    frantically driving the last of their cattle in the wake of an impi. They had    evidently only just crossed, for on the column&#8217;s side was evidence of a Matabele    encampment with the fires still smouldering. But had the king himself crossed    the river or had he gone further along the bank? It was essential to know. Forbes    decided to form a laager on open ground about two hundred yards back from the    river while a small patrol went across the river to reconnoitre the further    bank. He selected Major Allan Wilson, commander of the Victoria Column, to lead    a patrol of twelve men.</p>
<p>When    Wilson and his men had disappeared into the bush on the other side, Forbes interrogated    a captured native. From him he learnt that Lobengula was ill and that with him    were some three thousand warriors from different regiments who were determined    that he should not be taken prisoner. If reports that the Matabele morale was    low were correct, Forbes planned to make a rush the next day, capture the king    and at once turn back for Bulawayo. They had now been out for nine days, their    rations were dwindling and if they were to get back to their wagons and food    supplies in time they would have to move swiftly.</p>
<p>He    expected Wilson and his men to return in a couple of hours, but the afternoon    wore on and darkness came without a sign of the missing patrol. In the meantime    Forbes had received a report that the bulk of Lobengula&#8217;s warriors, under his    chief induna, Mjaan, had turned back and intended to attack the column that    night.</p>
<p>It    was a dark night and rain fell at intervals. At about nine o&#8217;clock an alert    picket heard the sound of horses and aroused the laager. Two men rode in who    told Forbes that the patrol had followed Lobengula&#8217;s wagon spoor for some five    miles and that Wilson considered the prospects of capturing the king were so    good he had decided not to return that night. He wanted Forbes to send more    men and a maxim in the morning. Two hours later Captain Napier and two troopers    reached the laager and reported that the patrol had got close to the bush enclosure    protecting the king and his wagon but had had to retreat to prevent themselves    from being surrounded and had taken up a position in the bush to wait for daylight.</p>
<p>On    neither occasion did Wilson state exactly what he wanted, although Napier said    he thought he expected the rest of the column to cross the river and join him    so that they could make a daylight raid on the enclosure at dawn. This Forbes    refused to do. He expected a Matabele attack on his position, and he could not    endanger his whole force by crossing the river in darkness, cutting off his    retreat and presenting his back to the enemy. He did not want to recall Wilson    since he was obviously in a good position to capture Lobengula, and if this    opportunity were lost it would never recur. He compromised by sending Captain    Borrow and twenty men to reinforce the patrol, and thus made his mistake. The    patrol was now too large to be merely a reconnoitring force and too small for    the dangerous task of trying to capture the king in defiance of the Matabele    impis. But it strengthened Wilson&#8217;s resolve to undertake his suicidal mission.</p>
<p>At    daybreak Wilson and his thirty-two men approached Lobengula&#8217;s enclosure. The    wagon was still there, but when Wilson called on the king to surrender there    was no answer. In the ominous silence they realized that during the night he    had continued his flight. All hope of capturing him had gone.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.chirundu.com/history/images/wilson.jpg" alt="" width="479" height="332" /></p>
<p><strong>Major Allan Wilson (third from left) and some of the men of<br />
his patrol </strong></p>
<p>Then    came the development they had all been expecting and dreading. In the half-light    they heard the clicking of rifle bolts and from behind a tree stepped a warrior    wearing the induna&#8217;s headring. He fired his rifle. It was the signal for a scattered    volley which intensified as more warriors came running through the bush. Most    of the shots went over their heads, but two horses went down. A trooper, Dillon,    ran to them, cut off the saddle pockets carrying ammunition and regained his    horse as Wilson gave the order to retreat to an antheap behind which they had    sheltered the previous night.</p>
<p>They    reached it without losing a man. As horses were shot down their riders jumped    up behind men still mounted or ran alongside holding the stirrup irons. The    volume of Matabele fire steadily increased and the exposed position of the antheap    became untenable. Wilson ordered a retirement into the trees, and as they went    the rearguard, firing with cool accuracy, kept the Matabele at bay. But the    Matabele were in no hurry. They had the white men at their mercy and could take    their time.</p>
<p>Several    men had been wounded and a number of them were dismounted. Wilson grouped these    in the centre and started off slowly for the river in the hope that some at    least might reach the main Column. For nearly a mile they marched without harm,    their progress dogged by warriors keeping pace among the trees. Then they saw    that their path was barred by a line of warriors waiting for them to come closer.    An attempt to break through that barrier would mean sacrificing the wounded.    That was unthinkable. They would face it together.</p>
<p>Three    men, however, got away. An American and two Australians galloped unscathed through    the Matabele line, threw off their pursuers by doubling on their tracks and    reached the bank of the Shangani in safety. Shortly after leaving the patrol    they heard heavy firing and the shouting of hundreds of warriors as they attacked    Wilson and his men. When they reached the river they saw that there was no hope    whatever for the patrol. Heavy rains upstream had swollen the waters of the    river and now it was in flood, and rising every minute. They managed to get    across only with the greatest difficulty.</p>
<p>The    subsequent fate of the Wilson patrol, whose bones now rest beneath their memorial    on the Matopo hill on which Cecil Rhodes lies buried, was gathered afterwards    from Matabele sources. They had selected a clearing among the trees for their    last stand and, some standing, some kneeling, poured a hot fire in all directions.    The Matabele had the advantage of better cover and took time to aim accurately    and make their shots tell. But so calmly and steadily did the patrol fight back    that in spite of the bush and the trees they took a heavy toll of the enemy.</p>
<p>At    one stage in the fight, said the Matabele, they had offered the white men their    lives provided they laid down their arms and surrendered. Their offer was scornfully    rejected. There would be no surrender.</p>
<p>The    patrol used their dead horses as cover, but their number steadily dwindled.    Many were killed outright, and the wounded went on fighting until they lost    consciousness. The fight went on until late in the afternoon. Just before the    end the few surviving white men staggered to their feet, sang a few bars of    &#8220;God Save the Queen&#8221;, shook hands with each other, and waited for the end. It    was not long in coming. The Matabele charged them with their assegais, and gave    no quarter. One last man escaped for a few precious minutes, gained the top    of an anthill a few yards away and shot down several Matabele before a bullet    smashed his hip. He was still firing a revolver as the assegais ended his life.</p>
<p>There were no survivors, and this is the proud epitaph on their memorial. No    one knew of their fate until two months later, when James Dawson, the trader,    was led to the spot by a party of natives and found their skeletons. The trees    all round were scored by bullet marks. The Matabele spoke of them reverently    and had been so impressed by their bravery that they had refrained from mutilating    their bodies and had left them where they fell. Dawson dug a large grave and    gave them temporary burial close to a tree on which he cut a cross and the words,    &#8220;To Brave Men&#8221;. Their bones were later interred at Zimbabwe, since they had    all come from Fort Victoria, and in 1904 removed to the Matopos, to the hilltop    &#8220;consecrated and set apart for ever for those who had deserved well of their    country.&#8221;</p>
<p><img src="http://www.chirundu.com/history/images/laststand.jpg" alt="The last Stand" width="500" /></p>
<p>The    night before this fateful day of December 4, 1893, Lobengula, accompanied by    three of his sons, some of his wives and a few faithful indunas, including Mjaan,    lumbered northwards in his wagon. He no longer feared pursuit, but he was a    broken man, sick in body and soul, and with his kingdom destroyed he had no    will to live. They got to within forty miles of the Zambezi, and there they    ran into a belt of tsetse fly. The oxen perished and in that inhospitable country    they were stranded. Lobengula died towards the end of January, and the evidence    found on his grave site when it was officially discovered and examined in 1946    suggests that he took poison.</p>
<p>So    passed the last of the great native despots of Southern Africa, son of the founder    of the Matabele nation. And as he died one wonders whether he remembered the    prophetic words he had uttered to Thomas Baines more than twenty years before:    &#8220;You may promise fairly now, but in future time when you are strongly established    you may forget your promise and exceed the liberty I have given.&#8221; He knew then    that, inevitably, his way of life was doomed .</p>
<p>When    the reinforcements had left to join Allan Wilson&#8217;s patrol, Major Forbes reorganized    his laager and waited for the expected Matabele attack. It did not come. When    daylight came he prepared to move down to the river bank and cross the Shangani    to the help of Wilson, but as they were nearing the bank they came under fire    from bush some three hundred yards to their left. They were pinned down for    more than an hour, when the enemy fire slackened. They retired slowly until    they reached the shelter of a strip of bush six hundred yards back, where they    were able to dig in while the medical officer attended to five men of the Bechuanaland    Border Police who had been wounded. At intervals during the fighting they had    heard the sounds of battle on the other side of the river, but realized that    the rising Shangani made it impossible for them to go to the rescue.</p>
<p>They    remained in their new position all day, and when darkness fell two troopers    were sent with a verbal message from Forbes to Dr. Jameson telling him that    the Column was retreating to the main drift on the Shangani river and asking    for more food and ammunition. Shortly after dark a storm burst over them and    they spent a miserable night. During the height of the storm their slaughter    oxen, on which they depended for their main food supply, were terrified by the    thunder and stampeded into the bush.</p>
<p>Next    morning the Column began its retreat and the Matabele did not impede its going.    But their main enemy now was the threat of real hunger. Their rations were almost    exhausted and the loss of their slaughter oxen meant that they had no reserve.    Many of the men, also, were suffering from malaria. Their clothes were in rags    and their boots, constantly wet, were falling to pieces. Their horses, also,    were weakened by lack of adequate grazing and were almost useless for work.    The men had to manhandle the maxims across difficult stretches.</p>
<p>Groups    of Matabele were dogging their progress. On December 10 they were struggling    through broken country of rugged hills, thick bush and long grass when they    entered a deep dry gully. It gave good cover for the horses and Forbes decided    to let them rest and graze. After a few minutes they came under a heavy fire.    Warriors had crept up through the grass until they got close to the horses,    and several animals were stabbed to death before the Column could take action.    It was difficult to see the enemy in the long grass and all the troopers could    do was to take pot shots at the smoke puffs rising above the grass. After about    an hour of desultory firing the Matabele withdrew. The Column lost eight horses    but only one man &#8211; a Bechuanaland Border Police sergeant who was shot dead while    sitting near his maxim.</p>
<p>Two    miles further on they reached a small valley lying across their path. The men    manhandling the guns were halfway down a steep bank when a party of Matabele    among rocks on their right flank opened fire. They dragged the guns back to    the top again while the rest of the Column returned the fire, but a heavy thunderstorm    put an end to the fight. Night was coming on and Forbes decided to laager where    they were.</p>
<p>Their    plight was desperate. The Matabele could harass them at will in this difficult    country, made infinitely worse by the rains. Men and horses were steadily becoming    more exhausted from the strain of a forced march on empty stomachs. Their hunger    became so compelling that they were forced to slaughter some of the horses,    which they ate with a seasoning of wild root with a garlic flavour.</p>
<p>It    was Johannes Raaff, drawing on his considerable experience of native warfare,    who found a way out of their predicament. Twenty of the most useless horses    were left behind, and a tree trunk was propped under a bush to resemble a maxim.    The gun carriages were abandoned and the dogs with them were quietly knocked    on the head. With each of the maxims balanced across the saddle of a horse and    a man holding it on either side, they started at about ten o&#8217;clock that night    to move quietly down the slope and along the valley. The men were so worn out    that whenever there was a halt they promptly fell asleep and when dragged to    their feet again went on mechanically. When dawn came they were clear of the    bush and hills and could see the Shangani river in the distance.</p>
<p>Raaff&#8217;s    ruse was effective. The Matabele wasted a good deal of ammunition and several    hours before they found that their victims had escaped. They overtook them the    following day and there was a sharp engagement in which two policemen were wounded.    This was the final encounter. The Column avoided possible ambushes and after    two more days and nights of forced marching, in the last stages of exhaustion    and despair, they were found by two scouts of the relief force which had set    out to look for them. With the relief were Rhodes and Dr. Jameson. Their ordeal    was over. Three days later they reached Bulawayo, and here Johannes Raaff paid    the price of fatigue and exposure. He imprudently ate a heavy meal,was taken    ill and died on January 26, 1894.</p>
<p>With    active campaigning at an end the Matabele drifted back to their villages. One    of them reported that before Forbes&#8217;s Column reached the Shangani, Lobengula    had decided, in a last effort to halt the pursuit, that if they would not stop    for anything else, they might stop for money. He had accordingly sent two messengers,    Petchan and Sehuloholu, with a box of sovereigns and orders to intercept the    Column. They were to say that the king admitted he had been conquered, and that    the white men were to take the money and turn back. The two messengers met the    Column the day before it reached the Shangani, hid in the bush until it went    by and then followed and gave the money to two men in the rear guard. This incident    had not been reported by any member of the Column.</p>
<p>Suspicion    fell on two men, Daniels and Wilson, both officers&#8217; servants who had not been    members of the rear guard that day, though it was possible that they had dropped    to the rear. Soon after the Column&#8217;s return they had been seen to be in possession    of large amounts of gold. Daniels explained that he had won the money at cards    and Wilson said he had brought his money with him. They had both bought farm    rights from various members of the invading forces and had paid for them in    cash.</p>
<p>A    point in favour of the two men was a statement by Sehuloholu that the man to    whom he had given the money could speak his language well. Neither Daniels nor    Wilson knew Sindabele. The only man knowing the language who had been in the    main body of the Column that day was the hospital orderly, and he had never    been in the rear guard.</p>
<p>Indignation    over this report ran high. It was generally considered that had the receipt    of the money, and Lobengula&#8217;s message, been reported Forbes might have been    induced to turn back on reaching the Shangani, and the tragedy of the Wilson    Patrol would have been avoided. The circumstantial evidence against Daniels    and Wilson was too strong to be ignored. They were tried by the Resident Magistrate    and four assessors at Bulawayo, found guilty and sentenced to fourteen years&#8217;    imprisonment with hard labour.</p>
<p>But    the High Commissioner&#8217;s legal experts pointed out that the magistrate&#8217;s powers    did not entitle him to pass sentences of more than three months&#8217; imprisonment.    They also considered that the conviction was against the weight of evidence.    The sentences were afterwards quashed and the men released. The identity of    the Sindebele speaker alleged to have received the money was never established,    nor, beyond the Matabele statements, was it ever proved that there had been    a box of sovereigns, which, of course, could have been part of the payments    for the Rudd Concession. It is inconceivable that the Matabele would have invented    the story, and Lobengula&#8217;s unflattering view that the white men might stop for    money rings true. The whole incident remains a dark blot on the pages of Rhodesia&#8217;s    story.</p>
<p>A    question that intrigued the pioneer population when the fate of Allan Wilson&#8217;s    patrol became known was why so many officers were permitted to accompany him    across the Shangani river. Major Forbes had granted him the privilege of picking    his own men, and it was only natural that the officers of the Victoria Column    &#8211; many of them his own personal friends, men he had known in civilian life &#8211;    should clamour for the honour of helping him to capture Lobengula. Dr. Jameson    paid Allan Wilson a tribute when he reported officially on the Shangani episode.</p>
<p><em>&#8220;Major    Allan Wilson was one of the most gifted leaders of men I have met. Personally    brave to rashness, yet extremely careful and considerate of the men under his    command, it followed that the men would go anywhere with him. It is to this    hero worship of Wilson, so well deserved, that I attribute the large number    of officers who accompanied him on that last fatal reconnaissance.&#8221;</em></p>
<p>Jameson&#8217;s    first task, now that hostilities were finally over, was to secure the complete    surrender of the Matabele and to establish suitable conditions for white and    black to live together in amity. The main need was to impress on the Matabele    the fact that they had been conquered, that their military system could no longer    be allowed to exist and that their impis must be disbanded. The first essential    was to compel them to surrender all the weapons in their possession, especially    their rifles and ammunition, not only to impress on them the fact of their defeat    but also to ensure the safety of the white population. Jameson sent messengers    round the kraals to announce that only those who surrendered their arms would    be allowed to return to their villages and proceed with the cultivation of their    crops.</p>
<p>At    first the response was good but after a few weeks the Matabele seemed to be    holding back. As long as the fate of Lobengula was unknown (and it was not discovered    until a long time afterwards) and as long as the impis with him remained in    the field, there was the hope that he might try to regain his kingdom. And as    long as this hope existed the Matabele wanted to retain their weapons. This    reasoning compelled Jameson to see that a sufficient police force was organized    to maintain law and order and to hold what had been won. His appeal for volunteers    met with a good response and he formed a civil police force of a hundred and    fifty men in addition to four hundred Bechuanaland Border Police who were posted    for duty in Matabeleland. Garrisons were established at Inyati and on the fringes    of the Matopo Hills, and patrols supervised the task of disarmament and took    possession of cattle belonging to Lobengula, which were confiscated by the Company.    These cattle were subsequently returned to the Matabele for custody pending    a final settlement of the cattle question.</p>
<p>But    the men on the spot were not allowed to handle their own affairs. In Britain    the &#8220;Exeter Hall&#8221; party, led by Henry Labouchere, editor of &#8220;Truth&#8221; and a member    of the House of Commons, which had long been vehemently critical of the British    South Africa Company and all its works, was roused to new heights of clamorous    indignation by the invasion of Matabeleland. Jameson&#8217;s order that they would    not be allowed to cultivate their crops until they had surrendered their arms    was seized upon as an example of oppression. The Secretary of State for the    Colonies, Lord Ripon, instructed the High Commissioner, Sir Henry Loch, to notify    the Company that the surrender of arms was to be construed &#8220;in a very liberal    spirit&#8221;.</p>
<p>Jameson was compelled to countermand his instructions for the disarmament of the Matabele.  They therefore buried their rifles and ammunition and assegais and waited for    the day when they would attempt to re-establish their old savage way of life.    That day, when it came less than three years later, subjected the pioneer settlers of Rhodesia to the severest test that could have been devised.</p>
<h3>Further Reading</h3>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://www.chirundu.com/the-last-stand-of-the-shangani-patrol-2010-11/">THE WHITE MEN SANG &#8211; The last stand of the Shangani Patrol</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.chirundu.com/the-pongo-memorial-econd-matabele-war-2010-02/">The Pongo Memorial – The Second Matabele War</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.chirundu.com/mzilikazi-2009-08/">Mzilikazi – King of the Matabele</a></li>
</ul>
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<td width="120" valign="top"><img src="http://www.chirundu.com/images/books/sunshine-storm-rhodesia.jpg" alt="Sunshine and Storm in Rhodesia"></td>
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<h3>Sunshine and Storm in Rhodesia</h3>
<p>By Frederick Courteney Selous (Author) is a  firsthand account of the Second Matabele War (also known as the First Chimurenga). An unabridged reprint of the the 1896 edition.</p>
<p> Originalally published in 1896: Excerpt: CHAPTER III &quot;Now this murder of a native policeman on the night of Friday, 20th March, was the first overt act of rebellion on the part of the Matabele against the Government of the British South Africa Company, and I will therefore relate exactly what occurred. On the evening of the aforementioned day, eight native policemen, acting on instructions of Mr. Jackson, arrived at the town of Umgorshlwini, situated in the hills near the Umzingwani river. Being accompanied by several boys carrying their blankets, etc., they formed quite a little party, and so camped outside the town. They were sitting talking over their fires after the evening meal, when a number of Matabele came up, and ranging themselves in a line in front of them, commenced to dance. These men all carried knob-kerries, and were led by a man named Umzobo, who had held a post of importance at Bulawayo in Lo Bengula&#8217;s time.&quot;</p>
<p><img src="http://www.chirundu.com/images/flag-uk.gif" alt="UK Shoppers" width="25" height="17" align="absmiddle"> Available on <a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1603550593?ie=UTF8&#038;tag=chirunducom-21&#038;linkCode=as2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=19450&#038;creativeASIN=1603550593">Amazon.co.uk</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=chirunducom-21&#038;l=as2&#038;o=2&#038;a=1603550593" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></p>
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<td valign="top"><img src="http://www.chirundu.com/images/books/No-Insignificant-Part-The-Rhodesia-Native-Regiment.jpg" alt="No Insignificant Part: The Rhodesia Native Regiment and the East African Campaign of the First World War" /></td>
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<h3>No Insignificant Part: The Rhodesia Native Regiment and the East African Campaign of the First World War</h3>
<p>The is the first history of the only primarily African military unit from Zimbabwe to fight in the First World War. Recruited from the migrant labour network, most African soldiers in the RNR were originally miners or farm workers from what are now Zimbabwe, Zambia, Mozambique, and Malawi. Like others across the world, they joined the army for a variety of reason, chief among them a desire to escape low pay and horrible working conditions.</p>
<p>Written by Timothy J. Stapleton has been a post-doctoral fellow at Rhodes University, a senior lecturer in history at the University of Fort Hare, South Africa, and a research associate at the University of Zimbabwe. </p>
<p><img src="http://www.chirundu.com/images/flag-uk.gif" alt="UK Shoppers" width="25" height="17" align="absmiddle" /> Available on <a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/0889204985?ie=UTF8&#038;tag=chirunducom-21&#038;linkCode=as2&#038;camp=1634&#038;creative=19450&#038;creativeASIN=0889204985">Amazon.co.uk</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.co.uk/e/ir?t=chirunducom-21&#038;l=as2&#038;o=2&#038;a=0889204985" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /></p>
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<td valign="top"><img src="http://www.chirundu.com/images/books/matabele-campaign.jpg" alt="The Matabele Campaign" /></td>
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<h3>The Matabele Campaign: 1896</h3>
<p>By Robert Baden-Powell is his account of the Campaign in Suppressing the Matabele Rising in the Matabeleland and Mashonsland in 1896.</p>
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<td valign="top"><img src="http://www.chirundu.com/images/books/zulu-matabele-warrior-nations.jpg" alt="Zulus and Matabele: Warrior Nations" /></td>
<td valign="top">
<h3>Zulus and Matabele: Warrior Nations</h3>
<p>Written by Glen Lyndon Dodds who grew up in Matabeleland and covers the rise and fall of the Zulus and Matabele nations. This account begins with the characters who spurred the people to greatness and nationhood, continues with the wars and battles which afflicted them and ends with an assessment of their role in the history of Southern Africa.</p>
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<h4 class='related-posts-header'>Related Posts</h4><ul class="related-posts-list"><li class="related-post"><a href="http://www.chirundu.com/the-last-stand-of-the-shangani-patrol-2010-11/">The Last Stand of the Shangani Patrol</a> </li><li class="related-post"><a href="http://www.chirundu.com/the-pongo-memorial-econd-matabele-war-2010-02/">The Pongo Memorial - The Second Matabele War</a> </li><li class="related-post"><a href="http://www.chirundu.com/zimbabwe-history-rhodesia-april-1900-2010-04/">Zimbabwean History - April 1900</a> </li><li class="related-post"><a href="http://www.chirundu.com/zimbabwean-formula-1-drivers-2009-08/">Zimbabwean Formula 1 Drivers</a> </li><li class="related-post"><a href="http://www.chirundu.com/mzilikazi-2009-08/">Mzilikazi - King of the Matabele</a> </li></ul>]]></content:encoded>
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