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Photograph of Cetshwayo, c. 1875
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Photograph and .
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Details of how the photo was accomplished were published in the 1999 book, Nessie – the Surgeon's Photograph Exposed, that contains a facsimile of the 1975 article in The Sunday Telegraph.
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Photograph and 1875
Cetshwayo and c
Cetshwayo and .
However, an important consideration, which King Cetshwayo appreciated, was that there was a clear difference between defending one's territory, and encroaching on another, regardless of the fact that they are at war with the holder of that land.
Indeed, the Zulu attacks on the British strongpoints at Rorke's Drift and at Kambula, ( both bloody defeats ) seemed to have been carried out by over-enthusiastic leaders and warriors despite contrary orders of the Zulu King, Cetshwayo.
Undoubtedly, Cetshwayo and his war leaders faced a tough and extremely daunting task-overcoming the challenge of concentrated rifled, machine gun ( Gatling gun ), and artillery fire on the battlefield.
* 1879 – Anglo-Zulu War: the Zululand capital of Ulundi is captured by British troops and burnt to the ground, thus, ending the war and forcing King Cetshwayo to flee.
Dinuzulu kaCetshwayo, son of the Zulu king Cetshwayo, was exiled at St Helena between 1890 and 1897.
* 1873 – Cetshwayo ascends to the throne as king of the Zulu nation following the death of his father Mpande.
While the Undi Corps had been led by inkhosi kaMapitha at the Isandlwana battle, the command of the Undi Corps passed to Prince Dabulamanzi kaMpande ( half-brother of Cetshwayo kaMpande, the Zulu king ) when kaMapitha was wounded mopping up British fugitives from Isandlwana.
Frere, on his own initiative, without the approval of the British government and with the intent of instigating a war with the Zulu, had presented an ultimatum on 11 December 1878, to the Zulu king Cetshwayo with which the Zulu king could not comply.
The Transvaal Boers objected but as long as the Zulu threat remained, found themselves between two threats ; they feared that if they took up arms to resist the British annexation actively, King Cetshwayo and the Zulus would take the opportunity to attack.
Shepstone, in his capacity as British governor of Natal, had expressed concerns about the Zulu army under King Cetshwayo and the potential threat to Natal especially given the adoption by some of the Zulus of old muskets and other out of date firearms.
There were incidents involving Zulu paramilitary actions on either side of the Transvaal / Natal border, and Shepstone increasingly began to regard King Cetshwayo, who now found no defender in Natal save Bishop Colenso, as having permitted such " outrages ," and to be in a " defiant mood.
He had concluded that the powerful Zulu kingdom stood in the way of this, and so was receptive to Shepstone's arguments that King Cetshwayo and his Zulu army posed a threat to the peace of the region.
In December 1878, notwithstanding the reluctance of the British government to start yet another colonial war, Frere presented Cetshwayo with an ultimatum that the Zulu army be disbanded and the Zulus accept a British resident.
This was unacceptable to the Zulus as it effectively meant that Cetshwayo, had he agreed, would have lost his throne.
At this time, a battle for the succession broke out between two of Mpande's sons, Cetshwayo and Mbuyazi.
In 1861, Umtonga, a brother of Cetshwayo, and another son of Zulu king Mpande, fled to the Utrecht district, and Cetshwayo assembled an army on that frontier.
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