Please click the
icon to follow us on Facebook. Sir Henry Bartle Frere outlined an
ultimatum for King Cetshwayo of thirteen points created around the
increasing difficulties with the British, the Afrikaners, and the Zulu all
working to cohabitate the southeast corner of Africa .
Many of the points were the surrender of Zulus who had committed crimes
across the border and were sought for trial in Natal courts. Other points
outlined a system of social change for the Zulus, including marriage
rights, treatment of Zulus converted to Christianity, and the disbanding
and modification of their army. Still others insisted on a British
Resident adviser to determine Zulu law such as exile and any legal
activity involving a European. The ultimatum was drastic, and both Frere
and Cetshwayo knew it was unacceptable. The month deadline passed, and
Frere ordered Lieutenant General Frederick Augustus Thesiger, 2nd Baron
Chelmsford, to invade with 15,000 men.
As British troops crossed the Tugela River into the Zulu kingdom, they
were met with a delegation led by King Cetshwayo himself. Chelmsford was
shocked to see a diplomatic approach from Cetshwayo. The Zulu were a
warlike people, Cetshwayo's great-grandfather Shaka had revolutionized
their army and conquered neighboring tribes to build a powerful kingdom as
Europeans began to arrive. They had subordinated the Swazis, and Cetshwayo
had impressed the Europeans diplomatically enough to seize ceded land. He
flexed these skills in strong diplomacy again to Chelmsford, stating
(through translation as well as from a legal stance provided by Anglican
Bishop Colenso, who sought peace among the troubled nations) that the
invasion was illegal, and he demanded to speak with the Britons' queen,
inviting her to his capital at Ulundi.
The action was unorthodox, but Chelmsford's civility forced him to comply.
He made camp along the river and sent messages to Frere. The latter was
outraged at Chelmsford's failure to follow orders, but by then the
invasion had come to the notice of Sir Michael Hicks Beach, Secretary of
State for the Colonies, who forbade it. Frere argued that, without the
Zulus standing down their army, confederation as had been seen in Canada
could not take place. Hicks Beach replied that, without diplomacy,
confederation would only be by war.
Word returned to London about the request, and Parliament debated the
matter of recognizing officially the Zulus rather than treating them as an
uncivilized power on the verge of colonization. While a trip for the aged
queen was out of the question, Victoria recognized the generosity of the
king. She requested Frere recalled as a troublemaker, and Prime Minister
Disraeli agreed. Frere begrudgingly left Africa, and the more local John
Molteno of Cape Town established a new government based in organizing
southern Africa diplomatically. The Boers were granted their constitution
for Transvaal thanks to Frere's actions upon his return to London, heading
off a potential war and saving his legacy.
Over the next decades, unionism would gradually take root as Molteno's
policies of economic stimulus brought railways and manufactured goods to
the Zululands and protectorates of the Orange Free State and Transvaal.
Zulu were given precedence over the rebellious Xhosa, and local chiefs
were rewarded for development of their lands. Rampant exploitation as seen
by Rhodes and others gradually died away as ideals of workers' rights and
freedom from taxation grew, such as the Demonstration Rallies of 1906. The
fight for rights and equality became a model for other colonies,
specifically India whose leader Mohandas Gandhi witnessed the actions
while supporting advances by Indian immigrants there as a young lawyer.
Though true equality is a difficult political point to reach, the Union of
South Africa has shown great strides in establishing a complicated
federation of native kingdoms, former British, Dutch, and German colonies,
and districts stretching from Cape Town to Lusaka. In 1962, the young and
popular Rolihlahla Mandela (pictured) was named Prime Minister, the first
African to do so, but certainly not the last.