Monday, May 13, 2024

Battlefield tour: Rorke’s Drift & Isandlwana

Battlefield tour. Visiting Rorke’s Drift and Isandlwana in KwaZulu-Natal South Africa πŸ‡ΏπŸ‡¦ Incredibly interesting.  Highly recommended!

Rorke’s Drift has its place as the greatest defence in British military history, taking place just days after the self-same British army had suffered a devastating defeat at the hands of the Zulu at Isandlwana.

From Isandlwana a reserve group of 4 000 Zulu soldiers advanced on the nearby trading post and mission at Rorke's Drift. Major Spalding was in charge of the small garrison of 139 soldiers.
Under furious attack, which continued into the night, the British were able to hold out until the next morning when the Zulu retreated. In what is still considered the greatest military defence in history, 10 of the defenders were awarded the Victoria Cross.

Fugitives’ Drift Lodge is renowned for its flagship battlefield tours to Isandlwana and Rorke’s Drift.


The Battle of Isandlwana was the first engagement in the Anglo-Zulu War, on 22 January 1879. It remains the greatest triumph in the Zulu nation’s military history – and an ignominious defeat for the British Empire. It is perhaps the only engagement in history in which the assegai, knobkierie and ox-hide shield annihilated the rifles and cannon of a trained European army. 

Underestimating the Zulu impis, British commander Lord Chelmsford did not order the encampment he established on 20 January at Isandlwana to entrench and form defensive positions. Little did he know that 20 000 warriors were advancing on his position. 

The Zulu army, under indunas (commanders) Ntshingwayo kaMahole Khoza, Mavumengwana kaNdlela Ntuli and Dabulamanzi kaMpande (the half-brother of King Cetshwayo kaMpande), had outmanoeuvred Chelmsford with the intention of attacking his rear.  

When a British scouting party detected their position in the Ngwebeni Valley, Dabulamanzi decided to go on the offensive. 

With the Zulu in pursuit, the scouting party sent a messenger to warn Lieutenant-Colonel Pulleine, the officer commanding the camp at Isandlwana, that an attack was imminent. When they reached the camp, the Zulu arranged their force into the traditional ‘horns and chest of the buffalo’ formation to encircle the British. 

Pulleine decided to meet the Zulu head-on and sent out 6 companies. Until noon the British appeared to be holding their own, but then matters changed dramatically.  

Some have blamed a shortage of ammunition – a newly designed ammunition box for the (then state-of-the-art) Martini-Henry breech-loading rifles required a special key to open, and these keys were allegedly in short supply – but as other historians have pointed out, a soldier facing 20 000 Zulus might be tempted to take a rifle butt to a recalcitrant ammunition case...  

It is more likely that Pulleine blundered by spreading his men too thinly along too wide a perimeter. 

In the afternoon, when Pulleine realised his force was about to be encircled, he ordered a retreat to the camp. The battle continued for another 3 hours until the Zulu overran the camp and killed most of the British and colonial contingent. The Zulu would eventually lose the war – and their kingdom, which was annexed to the Colony of Natal – but Isandlwana will be remembered forever as their moment of triumph against a rapacious enemy. 

The British did manage to pull a victory of sorts from the ashes of this crippling defeat – when some Zulu regiments moved on from Isandlwana to attack the fortified mission station at Rorke’s Drift, the 150 British and colonial troops manning the station managed to hold off an army of 4 000 warriors.  

A total of 11 Victoria Crosses were awarded among the defenders of the mission station after the Battle of Rorke’s Drift, a record 7 of them to soldiers of the 2/24th Foot Regiment. None should be called undeserved, but the unusually large number was in part a reaction to the catastrophe at Isandlwana, and the need to restore imperial pride.

Fugitives’ Drift Lodge is renowned for its flagship battlefield tours to Isandlwana and Rorke’s Drift. . 



No comments:

Post a Comment

South Africa Tour

South Africa Tour Day 1 to 47

South Africa Tour I will go on a virtual tour through beautiful South Africa during lockdown 2020...