Battle in Africa 1879-1914
Battle in Africa 1879-1914
Battle in Africa 1879-1914
LE
IN
HOWARD WHITEHOUSE
Illustrated by
Peter Dennis
Series Editor
Paddy Griffith
FIELD
BOOKS
Contents
2 Africa before Partition
4 The Scramble for Africa
6 Strategic Concepts
8 Collecting an Army
10 Command
12 Collecting Supplies
14 Strategic Mobility
16 Reconnaissance and Signais
18 March Security
20 The African Response
22 Closing with the Enemy
24 Tamai
Sierra
EQi
Cor
est
the
19t1
neg
and
Afr
the
wel.
in t
Ara
esta
king
1861
Lua
dom
leac
enor
Con
his
ed 1
Zan:
A
sevE
Tek
Can
Battle in Africa
NORTH EAST AFRICA
In Egypt ambitious modernisation
plans based on the Suez canal brought
bankruptcy, and control by an international debt commission. This in turn
produced discontent and a military
rebellion. The Khedive Ismail was
deposed in 1879 but his successor his son Tawfiq - fell into the power
of the radical army off icer Arabi
Pasha.
The Sudan had been conquered by
Egypt in the 1820s and Khedive
Ismail had pushed his military expansion still further, extending down the
Red Sea and on to Kismayu (1865-75).
Corruption and religious grievances,
however, provoked a rebellion against
the Egyptians. Muhammad Ahmad, the
self-proclaimed Mandi ('Saviour'), led
the Sudanese in a series of victories
(1881-85).
Suez Canal
Zande '.
Bunyor
Bugnda
N 0 . Tippu
/)6 Tib
Luba
Lunda
'
Msiri '
Chokwe
Angola
Gon~o
between Germany and France ) the Europeans stood together in observing their drawing-room accords. The result was
a sudden, unanimous spate of conquests throughout Africa
which left only Liberia and Ethiopia free from European
control by 1914.
Africa in 1914
British
French
Portuguese
THE BI
North E
governn
Europea
after a
1882 a 1
Wolseley
iant can
Aboukir
and stor
Tel El K
ferociou:
whole of
under Br
In the
rebellion
Egyptian
the mass,
and the f
only a fe
Digna wo
the Mand
the
Britis
Italian
Tamai. G
could not
relief exp
Belgian
Abu Klea
was too l~
another R
Spanish
Independent was aband
Mandi's su
repeatedly
The French also took Dahomey
but disastr
(1892-4), but found great difficulties
against the Baule of the Ivory Coast,
Egypt in 1
who resisted from 1891 to 1911. Mean- quest of tl
Firket in 1
while the French expanded their
man two y
Gabon base - probing north east into
Ubangi-Shari as far as Lake Chad by
killed in 1l
suppressed
1900. They also engaged in the conquest of Madagascar following the
indecisive war of 1883-5. Fever and
Portuguese
rough terrain delayed Duchesne's
ive occupat
invasion of 1895, but a flying column campaigns
beat the Hovas at Tsynainondry and
Cubango re;
took their capital. The rising of the
DI risings, c
'Red Plaids' in 1896 was suppressed,
:1902) is the
and Gallieni undertook the military
Jntil 1915,
unification of the island (1897-1904).
troops were
The leading French colonial officer of ~uanhama,
his day, he was nevertheless unable to ruthority ov
prevent frequent local risings against )ique the Pr
European rule.
epeated de:
2hikunda in
nore succes
vhere G ungc
:aptured Loi
vas put dow
Battle in Africa
THE BRITISH EMPIRE
North East Africa The revolutionary
government of Arabi Pasha threatened
European investments in Egypt, so
af ter a bombardment of Alexandria in
1882 a British expedition under
Wolseley was despatched. In a brilliant campaign he feinted towards
Aboukir then seized the Suez Canal
and stormed the entrenchments of
Tel El Kebir, covering Cairo. His
ferocious pursuit secured him the
whole of Egypt which was to remain
under British control until 1922.
In the Sudan, however, the Mandist
rebellion was rapidly gaining strength.
Egyptian authority had collapsed after
the massacre of Hicks Pasha's army
and the fall of El Obeid (1883) leaving
only a few besieged garrisons. Osman
Digna won those on the Red Sea for
the Mandi, but was defeated twice by
the British in 1884 - at El Teb and
Tamai. General Gordon, in Khartoum
could not hold out and was killed. The
relief expedition beat the Mandists at
Abu Klea and Abu Kru in 1885, but
was too late to save him. After
another Red Sea expedition, the Sudan
was abandoned by the British to the
Mandi's successor, the Khalifa. He
repeatedly overcame internai revolts,
but disastrously failed to invade
Egypt in 1889. The Egyptian reconquest of the Sudan got under way at
Firket in 1896 and ended at Omdurman two years later. The Khalifa was
killed in 1899; a Mandist revival was
suppressed in 1908, and the Dinka and
Strategic Concepts
Campaigns were planned either for conquest or for punish- 1899 campaign to relieve Ladysmith.
Callwell a
E Callw
ment. When the intention was occupation, force was allied B To capture the enemy's capital. The three Asant
to political initiatives and schemes for 'pacification'. campaigns were ail directed towards Kumasi, the Frenc wrote his
When the object was simply to 'discipline' a recalcitrant invasion of Madagascar towards Tananarive.
Principles
people, a policy of despoilation was often preferred - the C To defeat the enemy army. Although Chelmsford's 187 recognised
torch was cheaper than the sword. The French 'Razzia' campaign was aimed at the Zulu capital, Ulundi. th of continel
especially raised desolation into a fine art - but the theft essential object was to destroy the Zulu army threatenin relevance
or killing of herds, destruction of orchards and use of rap- Natal.
he put for
ver
acious irregulars (and regulars too!) for reprisai pillaging D To take the enemy's leaders, or other symbols of so wa insightful 1
eignty - eg the Asante 'Golden Stool'. The French
message, b
were methods common to ail the European powers.
against Samori was ended by his capture; and pursuit c broad arra:
Some aims of European campaigns were:
A To relieve a besieged outpost - a limited objective Ceteshwayo, Lobengula and Behanzin of Dahomey wa was that si
less upon c
which could none the less involve huge forces, eg Buller's deemed necessary for genuine victory in each case.
sound logis
ose. The c
The French School Whereas the soidLegionnaires with prisoners.
iers of the Queen were subordinate to
Anatomy o
civilian masters within each colony,
campaign i
the French empire in Africa was
land was a
largely the consequence of decisions
but when h
made entirely by military men. Thus
could provo
'The French School' emphasised the
Relief Exp
role of the soldier as administrator,
8th August
and of strategy as part of an overall
was given
policy of 'pacific occupation'. In the
by Septemt
1840s Marshal Bugeaud had proposed a
Pausing uni
strategy of mobile light columns for
troops, stol
Algeria, supported by the settlement
Assuan by
of veterans in military villages. Fifty
October, W
years later Gallieni advanced a theory
'thence to E
of colonial warfare, based on his
mobilisatioi
experiences in Senegal and Western
was far slo
Camel Reg
Sudan, which called for his pupils among them the future Marshals
September,
Joffre and Lyautey - to throw away
November
Dongola, ar
their textbooks and rely on experience.
m un
o -December.
would grow by attracting tribesmen to siegecraft were also applied to
In Tonkin (1891-6) and then in
tain fighting - encircling centres of was still Si(
markets and amenities rather than by
Madagascar, Gallieni's 'pacifications'
opposition by pincer movements,
simply sending punitive columns or
Sarras to K
were based on a firm military blow
establishing outposts. As an 'organispulling the noose tight, then assault- than 9 mile
followed immediately by the creation
ing the starving and demoralised
ation on the march', peaceful occupElaborate s
of markets, schools and clinics for
enemy. Lyautey's ideas were not
ation was to accompany, rather than
the complet
the beaten foe - ail under the authalways as effective as he claimed,
to follow, the Army of Africa.
On 28th Jar
ority of the 'cercles militaires'
however, since in South Oranais and Df the arm)
Lyautey's warfare therefore used
( military administrators). This system
Morocco (1903-25) he said much aboullate to save
broad fronts rather than supporting
was popularised by Lyautey in his
'native politics' and working with
columns,
but
it
retained
Bugeaud's
carly by th(
article on the 'Role Coloniale de
g
local authorities, but actually still
l' Armee' (1900). Lyautey proposed
belief in boldness, planning and
ay. Despitr
relied heavily upon the Razzia and
arrors, the
what he called the 'oil-stain' approach, mobility - 'In Africa one defends
straightforward firepower.
oneself by moving'. The principles of
ing example
whereby French 'zones of influence'
stion. Kitch
a decade la
the army and the prestige of the
monarchy' led directly to the Italian - ie almost
Wolseley's
catastrophe of Adowa. On a local
level, equally, commanders had to
devise and implement their own pol7 Sarraswater be
icies. Alliances with tribal leaders
was the c
could bring warriors, scouts and
supplies - and a useful element of
telegraph
here. Bey
'divide and rule' for the future.
Frederick Lugard even admitted that k ' into the
many of his treaties were fraudulent _
- but he made them anyway, and
8A Korti
became a successful exponent of
across th
I mperial policy in both East Africa
Jakdul (9
Politics. The role of any commander
and Nigeria. Sometimes, however,
make the
always had a political dimension. He
treaties could backfire - eg the
desert co
had to follow, interpret or disregard
Witbois Hottentots used guns and
Jakdul wr
the directives of distant ministers
know-how they had obtained from the support f
who had little idea of 'events on the
ground'. Orders from Rome demanding Germans in their insurrection against ing the jc
Menelik, Emperor of Ethiopia, gives
the Germans themselves.
on audience to an Italien Emissary.
' Any sacrifice to save the honour of
Battle in Africa
Callwell and the British School Major
C E Callwell, a British artilleryman,
wrote his classic 'Small Wars, Their
Principles and Practice' in 1896. He
recognised that the accepted theories
of continental warfare had but little
relevance to imperial campaigning, so
he put forward his own clear and
insightful thesis to fill the gap. His
message, based on analysis of a
broad array of colonial campaigns,
was that successful strategy depended
less upon complex maneouvre than on
sound logistics and boldness of purpose. The conduct of small wars, wrote
Collecting an Army
To engage in colonial warfare, a European power needed
an army. Since African campaigns were expensive, and
frequently unpopular, there was a strong preference for
keeping this army small - making for the cheapest possible
'effective use of force.'
MOBILISATION SEQUENCE: How
colonial authorities might provide
troops 1 Local Garrisons and other troops'on
the spot' might be few in number, if
the war was a consequence of an
African initiative. Europeans were
often taken by surprise, eg at the
start of Abushiri's revoit the German
' Defence Force' in East Africa comprised 600 Sudanese, 50 Somalis and
350 Zulus - a diverse collection of
men, vastly outnumbered by the
Swahili rebels. Even when local forces
were large - such as the 14,750 regular British troops in South Africa in
1899 - they rnight be inadequate to
deal with the threat.
2 New recruits and alliances would
rapidly be sought. Hastily-formed
units would be drilled and organised,
while the 'enemies of the enemy'
would be approached and offered loot,
privileges and a chance to settle old
scores. The British force that defeated the Sekukuni was mainly made up
of their traditional foes the Swazis.
3 Nearby possessions of the same
European nation might be asked to
help, if local resources were inadequate, eg the French in Morocco could
call on Algeria; the British in the
1896 Asante campaign employed
Hausa infantry from Nigeria. In the
wake of the disaster at Isandhlwana,
the garrison of peaceful St Helena
was rushed to Natal. 'Naval Brigades'
from warships might also be formed.
4 An expedition from Europe would be
despatched if the war was considered
a really serious motter - often this
meant a 'black mark' against the men
on the spot who had apparently failed
to cape with the crisis. The British
government frequently sent units from
India to help in its African wars they were geographically close,
experienced in small wars, and free
from the unwelcome scrutiny of the
opposition in parliament.
5 Reinforcements were sent only
when the war was going very badly when a home government was forced
to ward off a potential blow to its
prestige. Buller failed to beat the
Boers with 47,000 men, so thousands
more were sent - bringing numbers up
to 180,000 in February 1900. The
Germons eventually deployed 20,000
regulars to defeat 8,000 Herero
warriors (many unarmed), and then
1,500 Hottentots, taking four years to
do it.
8
Eura
igioc
well
ofter
than
or Hi
and s
far le
craft
whicl
Locall)
poor gent Hausa
Snga
army. !
some n
troops
often c
men of
believei
brutal <
they ev
dedicati
usually
amply
the api),
armies
success(
The con
Force'
indeed.
ition of
off icers
Angola ,
and Boe
Krupp g
small fo
of numb
the Gan
pack gur
Maxim 8
Command
Command in Africa demanded a mixture of military skill,
political acumen, imaginative improvisation and robust
health. Successful leadership depended less on the application of set procedures than on the ability to devise and
i mplement a plan which worked. The effective rule was
that there were no rules. Command could devolve onto
very junior officers - in the farthest reaches of the Congo
or Tchad it was possible for a young subaltern or captain
to become the sole authority for the colonial power,
wielding immense local influence. This responsibility could
become the springboard to promotion and a great reputation; for example the rise of Marshal Joffre dated from
1894 when, as an obscure engineer officer, he found him -
M
of
Red
Chin
ing 1
He 1
Wols
serie
to pl
comi
ular
was
infar
Wols
Nile
teen
he w
Soutt
and t
disas
Battle in Africa
The commander and his orders
The first duty of a soldier is to obey
his orders, and this was never more
true than in the Victorian era. At
Amba Alagi in 1895 Major Toselli
knew his detachment of 2,150 ltalian
askaris was outnumbered ten or fifteen
to one by Ras Makonnen - yet his
orders did not permit retreat. He
chose to make a stand and died, with
most of his command, because obedience was more important than initiative. During the Boer War the
energetic Lord Dundonald was repeatedly put 'on the carpet' for exceeding
his orders, while a brilliant flanking
action by the King's Royal Rifle
Corps - which could have prevented
the disaster at Spion Kop - was recalled when it was on the verge of
success because Buller had not
ordered it.
However, some officers chose to
Collecting Supplies
Armies cannot even begin to wage war unless they have
provisions and transport. In Africa neither was easily
available locally, so they had to be brought. An Italian
describing the quays of Massowa evoked the same scenes
that were familiar in French Algiers, British Cape Town
and a dozen other ports. He spoke of the disembarkation
of battalions, the issue of baggage, the shortage of barges
and labourers... 'they had to disembark the men, extract
Battle in Africa
Tents
- etcetera A Victori.an army
required a vast assortment of tackle
to operate in Africa. Tents - from
two-man triangular models, through
the 18-man British bell-tent, to huge
marquees - were needed in large
numbers. Spare uniforms and boots
were required, although troops expected to serve in tatters. Soap, candies,
tobacco and firewood were necessities.
Luxuries which were usually appreciated sometimes proved a nuisance. In
1885 Brackenbury spent days sorting
out coffee-grinders and beer taps f rom
more vital equipment for his River
Column.
Strategic
Mobility
Moving an army in Africa involved massive effort, effective organisation and resourceful improvisation. Some of
the available Transport Officers were placed in charge of
convoys, others handled the complex detail of servicing
the Lines of Communication. A route of march had to be
devised that was practical on the ground as well as on the
map. Basic survival needs - food, water and healthy camp
grounds - had to be made available, and the rugged terrain
had to be carefully considered. In desert conditions the
' Night March' might be used to allow rest through the
heat of the day - although this entailed risks resulting
Day
Flyir
forc(
Som(
ous (
Infar
even
own
the r
ing i
(irrel
Boats
trave
mighl
Gyass
tropic
suppl(
great
Niger
boats
carne
exped
sectic
Cavalry
3f
20 - 25
Wagons
2-2Z
12 - 20
1
2
3
4
5
6
Comments
Distance
(in miles)
llam - 6pm
16
Leave Greytown, climb a hill 8 miles long.
5am - l0am
11
Cross river Mooi then 'ail down hill', followed
by Christmas dinner of foundered bullocks
'not fit for a dog'.
3pm
8pm
12
To the Tugela river.
5am
4pm
Cross the Tugela, camp on far bank.
4am - Sam
8
Hait for breakfast and dinner, then3pm - 7.30pm
To Sandspruit.
10
Rest day at Sandspruit.
- 5am - 5pm
17
Up a steep hill to Helpmakaar.
Total: 74 or 12.3 miles per day average.
Time
Rails
reliai
and e
lines
the n
the 1.
were
exter
Alger
300 r
trans
Niger
1880:
while
open
ded 1
Battle in Africa
Flying columns were fast-moving
forces carrying their own supplies.
Some of them really did enjoy enormous mobility - eg British Mounted
Infantry units of the second Boer War
eventually met the Commando on its
own terms. French Sahariens harnessed
the mobility of the desert Arab: working in tandem with bodies of Goumiers
(irregular horse and foot) and Turcos,
Abu Hamed. It was laid at the unusually rapid rate of 2-21 miles per day,
thanks to the excellent planning of the
Canadian engineer Lt Girouard and the
skilled work of his highly-motivated
'Railway battalion'. The Uganda railway, by contrast, took five years to
cover 580 miles - delayed in part by
the regularity with which platelayers
were eaten by lions. Once a line was
in service, the trains could move
between 200 and 400 miles in a day
provided progress was not slowed by
breakdowns, trackwork or
administrative delays.
Cairo
AubrE
of Af
colurr
illas.
riskec
Samp:
exact
at am
were
dos ur
Benso
Suc
were
in kra
dinner
under:
an abi
not th
etique
Battle in Africa
The heliograph, shown here being used
in 1879, replaced the heliostat - with
a fixed mirror - which was adopted by
the British Army in 1875. It was
carried by all major, and many minor
forces throughout our period. Use of
the instrument reached its Peak of
efficiency during the Boer War, when
speeds of up to 16 words per minute
were attained.
Runners and riders often carried despatches, although they were slow by
comparison with heliograph or wire. A
1914 manual gave despatch riders'
speeds as 'Ordinary - 5mph; Rapid 7 to 8 mph; Urgent - 10 to 12 mph',
and unmounted messengers may have
been able to sustain only half of that.
However, human messengers did have
advantages of adaptability over their
farter mechanical counterparts.
Gordon used volunteers to carry despatches out of besieged Khartoum
(although nobody wanted to come
back with a reply!). One resourceful
Arab irregular brought news to a
French force by joining a charge of
Moroccan cavalry, then dropping his
rifle and leaping over the amazed
French fine.
It was usual to send at least two
men separately to carry each message.
March Security
Rear point
NCO and 3 scouts
Rear guard
1 platoon from company H
1 squad, compony H
NCO and 2 scouts
20 yards
Pairs of vedettes
Support.
remainder of A company
50 yards
jefi 4fite
Cam
defec
uiren
Reserve
D
A squat
can cov
A botta
can cov
El Mou
ing cols
French
Morocc
convoy
lies for
was div
attempt
were at .
the secc
escorted
the 2nd
Morra al
hait of E
Legionna
were atti
some 5,01
Arabs. Ti
pany's mc
column in
men. Vaut
Lt Selcha i
ed square,
his soldier
charge to
with half (
w
ounded, f
sergeant r
off anothei
the remnar
at 5.30 the
and the Mc
their booty
were killed
officers die
Si
ckness cla
did wounds,
al officer
was difficuli
quinine
African conditions usually called for innov couic
ations 1
many more animais and vehicles than
were needed in Europe - eg a British the
carcel
ight
also or
battalion needed four carts and Pive m
he
ln a
voiding n
wagons at home, but seventeen ox
~lean water
wagons for Natal service in 1879.
)Peration
When a spanned ox-wagon took up 60 4\agrat s. Ir
yards of column, only thirty of them 2001 r (1896
in single file would cover a mile. In
, d Y atm
vas 1=%, In
any march, also, a column would
1.-874 ex
peditic
'stretch' up to 25% - or much more
it fell into disorder. Likewise a permiin1Y
six out o
tles
amongst
anent camp needed more acreage tha
a one-day hait,if the force was to rounds - des !'
gh speed. Th
stay healthy,
ampaign (189;
Battle
in Africa
El
Supports
c.1,000 yards
A squadron of cavalry
can cover 3,500 yards
A battalion of infantry
con cover 2,500 yards
O
0
Pickets
c.aoo
Sentry squads
or 'Cossack ports '
yards
c.400 \ rds
40 yards p
Sentries or Vedettes
n:
Stra
al a:
com
poor
invo
each
ing
They
mobi
ent i
Zulu
days
mov(
locus
and
recal
A Zu
Reiigi
ing A
Europ
viewe
witch
the st
power
to uni
massi
Benin
exerc.
Europ
effort
conqu
as a1
ions:
gasca
movei
the M
ces o:
focus
Sever
promi
Battle in Africa
Strategy and supply. The organisational aspects of a m paigning - supply,
communication etc. - tended to be
poor in African armies. Zulu logistics
involved Udibi boys travelling with
each lmpi - 12 - 15 year olds carrying grain, water and sleeping mats.
They helped the army to be light and
mobile, but they did not always prevent it from starving: at Kambula the
Zulu force had not eaten for three
days. Equally the Ethiopian army
moved from valley to valley like
locusts, eating up local stores of food
and then moving on. Babikr Bedri
recalled serving with Nejumi's starv -
The Mandi
21
22
Battle in Africa
R E D S E A
March 13th
00.45 Enemy starts a sporadic dropping fire, with ' excursions
and alarums to keep the regulars from sleeping. This
continues all night: 1 man killed, 5 wounded.
06.00 At daybreak a 9 pounder and a Gardner are run out
to disperse enemy concentrations at about 1,300 yards.
Breakfast.
07.00 Stewart arrives with the cavalry.
07.30 Stewart sends Mounted Infantry ahead to reconnoitre
enemy position.
08.00 The entire force advances, with Graham accompanying
Davis' 2nd Brigade. General Buller follows 800 yards
to the right rear with his 1st Brigade, the cavalry
deployed behind Davis' square. Ahead a series of low
ridges can be seen within a mile; a broken plateau
slopes upwards to the high ground. Graham has been
told that the bulk of Osman Digna's forces will be
concealed in a deep khor - a dry watercourse - across
the front of the ridgeline. The morning is bright and
clear, and very stili.
08.20 The 2nd Brigade halts to dress its ranks because the
rocky terrain has disordered the square. This gives
the 1 st Brigade, which has started late, a chance to
close up to 700 yards distance. The Mounted Infantry
are reinforced by two squadrons of cavalry and some
Ethiopian irregulars. The Scouts become hotly engaged, Captain Humphreys reports a ravine filled with
' Dervishes ' .
08.30 The squares advance: the ravine is 900 yards ahead.
Some 5-600 Sudanese can be seen clustered beyond
the riverbed. They open an irregular, inaccurate fire.
09.00 As the 2nd Brigade cornes within 200 yards of the
Khor, the Mandists make a series of minor assaults.
These are beaten off by rifle fire.
Battle in Africa
26
the ranks - especially at the corners and tare had to be taken to ensure
that all parts of the square moved at
thesame speed. Often two mutuallysupporting squares were employed:
smaller squares were easier to
control and if - as at Tamai - things
went wrong, all was not totally lost.
Once the Africans attacked, a
square would appear to be engulfed in
assailants. At Bida (1897) 507 Hausa
constables with six Maxims and seven
guns fought two actions against the
Emir of Nupe's 30,000 men, losing one
off icer and seven men for perhaps a
thousand Fulani. In contrast, at El
Tb, (1884) an Egyptian force of 3,500
men fell into complete confusion, and
was almost annihilated when attack d
by a Mandist force only a quarter of
its strength.
Battle in Africa
Posture
Loins
pursued and cut down, and their livestock and wives plundered.
Control by chiefs was largely
unnecessary, which was fortunate
since it was almost impossible to
apply once action had been joined.
Their role lay more in deciding the
initial direction and timing of the
offensive. They rarely used defensive
methods in open battle: if they did
choose to stand their ground they,und
would usually employ fortifications to
increase their chances - bush Zarebas
or Bomas, timber stockades or earthworks. In open battle, defensive
tactics depended rather on fierce
counter-attacks, as the enemy'
assault lost cohesion - eg Shaka's
defence at Gqokli Hill, 1818 - or on
the use of chosen ground for concealment, as we have seen at Tamai.
Effective firearms modified these
traditional tactics sornewhat, by
making assaults more difficult and
more costly. Some African leaders,
such as the Fulani Emirs, proved
hidebound when confronted by this
development. Others adapted successfully to new conditions and gave the
European invader serious problems.
Chest
E
cc
Ti
inl
18
wr
ch
fei
sel
me
cri
Lt.
wr
op(
for
sib
the
rai
fle
Tua
blo
Boer
the i
firep
In th
dos 1
Zulw
sting
men,
The i
the c
posit.
ren r
more
ish tl
emph
egic
tende
conce
hidde
Boers
Mage
la Re
base
bomb
Battle in Africa
Tuareg warfare epitomised the fighting style of all the desert nomads. In
1860 a Frenchman, Henri Duveyrier
wrote that "To see a Tuareg war
charge is to feel complete and utter
fear creep through one's body. Great
serried squadrons of tall, blue-veiled
men, mounted on fast white camels
crashing forward like a vast roller."
In 1896 a French military explorer,
Lt. Hourst, visited the Tuareg and
wrote of their raiding. In these secret
operations less than 100 men, chosen
for their skills, might go "gliding
silently between the encampments of
the enemy..." If the subjects of the
raid were alerted, their men would
flee but the women remain: "No
Tuareg would stain his hands with the
blood of a defenceless woman."
Boer Shelter-trench.
The Boers made extensive use
of fieldworks which voried
in type from the elaborate
style shown here, to shallow
scrapes in the ground.
Boer tactics traditionally relied upon
the mobility of their ponies and the
firepower of their expert marksmen.
In the 1830s and '40s Boer cornmandos had defeated the Ndebele and
Zulus by provoking their warriors, by
stinging attacks with mounted riflemen, into assaulting a wagon-laager.
The Afrikaners could then shoot down
the charging enemy from a secure
position, while their wives and children reloaded the weapons. Against the
more sophisticated and cautious British the advantage of mobility was
emphasised still further, at a strategic level. Battle plans, however,
tended to be defensive, relying on
concealed single guns and carefully
hidden trenches. At Modder River the
Boers lined the river bank, while at
Magersfontein the innovative Koos de
la Rey chose to dig trenches at the
base of a line of hills. Lord Methuen
bombarded the hilltops, and hit
nobody.
Defensive methods suited the independent Afrikaner citizen-soldiers
very well. Without the organisation
needed to handle complex manoeuvres
and with an inordinate fear of flank
or rear attacks, the major Boer
armies of 1899 were at their best in
static sharpshooting. More cohesive
small units, however, had a greater
range of choices. Select bands like
the volunteers who stormed Majuba
Hill, the "Zarps" of the Johannesburg
police, or the fierce 'Bitter Ender'
Commandos of 1900-2, could assault
British positions in rushes covered by
their comrades. The guerillas also
revised the cavalry charge, by galloping at the enemy in an open order
line, firing rapidly from the saddle
and enveloping the flanks. High
morale and tight unit control were
the essence of this late-war raiding.
African Leadership
Leadership was an essential factor in African resistance to
the European invader. In societies where there were few
established structures of power, or where authority was
i mbued with religious significance, a dynamic leader was
necessary to focus the fforts of the people. Where
leadership was aggressive and charismatic, the colonial
advance could be slowed and even beaten back. Where
weak or unpopular leaders were in charge, resistance was
likely to be disorganised or disputed. The military power
of the Zulus and Ndebele was hardly reflected in their
indecisive leadership, and the Fulani states proved very
brittle in face of the British approach. By contrast a
Dynamism was the crucial element in
African leadership - the key ingredient that made ail the difference
between a sustained resistance and
early collapse. In Senegal Lat Dior
expressed this in no uncertain terms:
'as long as I live, be well assured, I
shall oppose with ail my might the
construction of this railway... even
were I to go to rest, my horse
' Malay' would give you the same
answer'.
Personal energy could express itself
in overtly 'heroic' leadership. such as
the chivalrous Wad El Nejumi leading
his men to victory at Shaykan (1883)
and Khartoum (1885), and then to
destruction at Toski (1889). Others,
like Samori and Rabeh of Sennar,
built empires by the force of arms.
Most characteristic of Africa at this
period were those who simply survived, against great odds, to fight again.
Hendrik Witbooi (1838-1905) led a
small Hottentot band into the
Kalahari in 1904-5 to renew a guerrilla war against the Germans that had
ended ten years earlier. Mkwawa,
victor of Lugalo in 1891, held out
Lou
on August 31st and in the afternoon and evening of September lst, to determine a policy in the face of Kitchener's army. The Khalifa's lieutenants argued the pros and
cons of each option in turn:
OPTION
1 Abandon Omdurman, retire to the Kordofan deserts
to wage guerilla warfare.
ADVANTAGES
Uses techniques successful
in 1881-5; stretches enemy
supply lines.
DISADVANTAGES
Means abandoning the tapital - and the Mandi's sacred
tomb.
RESULT
Not chosen - the proposer
thrown into jail!
Not chosen.
Case
Boer
Janua
The B
positi
of 23r
Botha,
the 24
1 To l
TugelE
2 To v
3Toc
4 To a
5 Wire
In th
attack
be pie(
initiati
the hil
signific
Battle in Africa
The Origins of successful African
leaders were frequently similar. Most
began life as sons of moderate-toimportant local families; received
better than usual educations, and
showed 'promise' during their youth.
El Raisuni (c 1870-1925) was a
Koranic scholar and lawyer who
became a major bandit Caid in the
Rif mountains of Morocco. Using
education, cunning and the prestige of
descent f rom an important Moroccan
saint, Raisuni's career encompassed
- but it also meant that conservative military establishments often failed to exploit fully the most recent
developments.
Battle in Africa
Artillery used in Africa ranged from
A British artillery battery at regulation
light, portable mountain guns to enorintervals. 20 yards was allowed between
mous naval pieces capable of sending
guns. Where incoming artillery fire was
501b shells several miles. During the
expected on the battery position, the
ammunition wagons would be further in
period 1879-1914 the development of
the rear, or in cover.
ordnance saw major improvements,
such as reliable breech loading,
Ammunition
Crew Horses
Guns
smokeless powder, new and powerful
wagons
Limbers
explosives - the French Melinite and
the British Lyddite. There were also
quick-firing (QF) guns like the French
M1897 75mm cannon, which could lire
20-30 rounds per minute. The 37mm
Pom Pom - a tiny QF gun - fired a
lib shell every two seconds. A survey
of the 1899 British Rifled Breech
Loading (RBL) equipment which replaced the Rifled Muzzle Loaders
(RML) of the 1880s gives us some
ranges:
12pdr RBL - 3,800 yards with shrapnel
15pdr RBL - 4,100 yards with shrapnel
(Both the above ranges were increased
Ji h
$01 1
by 1,800 yards when better fuses were
introduced around 1900.)
4.7" QF naval gun - 10,000 yards with HE or shrapnel
5" howitzer (501b Lyddite shell) - 4,800 yards
The Africans get firearms. Before the
arrivai of Europeans, African weapons
had consisted of spears - from light
javelins to huge, leaf-blades - bows,
axes, clubs, knives and swords. Firearms, traded for slaves, made some
people very powerful. Yet although
certain chiefs could field thousands of
gunmen - one Nyamwezi headman had
20,000 in 1883 - most were archaic.
Inlaid Berber muskets and West
African 'Dane guns' were joined by a
vast influx of old European muskets,
especially the Tower 'Brown Bess'.
Realising that these weapons could
not compare with modern rifles, several African leaders sought out contacts who could give them something
better. Menelik acquired 25,000 rifles
between 1882 and 1887, and many
more from Russian and French agents
in the 1890s: before Adowa he had
over 80,000 modern rifles - Martini,
Gras, Lebel and Remington models some of them supplied by the Italians
themselves. In West Africa Samori
Toure developed his armed strength
by careful study of new weapons.
From 1876 to 1885 he used French
Chassepots, then replaced them with
Gras rifles and the Kropatschek repeater - his blacksmiths could make
excellent replicas of these. From 1888
he began to acquire magazine rifles,
and had 6,000 by 1893. He even managed to infiltrate spies into French
munitions factories in Senegal, to
learn new methods of manufacture.
In 1890 the European powers
agreed to stop selling modern arms to
Africans. This was only partially
successful, but did at least ensure
34
Per gun
13 pdr 16
30
24
108
72
4
4
133
133
stores
333
120
46
48
144
8
Battle in Africa
Infantry Firepower: an 'ideal'
situation, where a massed attack in
the open is met by fresh, steady
European troops:
Company of 100 men
Battle in Africa
Cavalry Late Victorian theory emphasised that cavalry was for scouting,
pursuit and dismounted firepower; but
the cavairymen themselves preferred
to think in terms of the 'arme
blanche' and the traditional knee-toknee mounted charge. The basic
precepts of the charge had changed
little in a century, as follows: -
Assault force
I MPACT! The force hits the target if it is still there - and hopes to
break it.
MELEE! Both sides Jose formation.
Supports enter the fray - possibly f rom
a flank.Their good order is likely to
prove decisive.
Horrible Disasters
The possibility of disaster dogged every action taken by
any European commander. One error, one failure to
perceive what was going on, could mean the destruction of
his command, blazing headlines in the papers and angry
questions in the government - things to be feared far
more than death itself. Disasters demanded explanations,
scapegoats, revenge. In 1904 the Portuguese sent 2,000
men to avenge the loss of 300 at Cuamoto in Angola. The
Battle in Africa
Adowa ( March lst 1896) was an
overwhelming Italian disaster which
arose out of the combination of several lesser mistakes, none of which
was necessarily catastrophic in itself.
Baratieri, governor of Eritrea, had an
army of 56 guns and 17,700 men,
including 10,596 Italians. Provisions
were short and many of the new
arrivais from Italy were green - but
morale was high. The Ethiopian army
was known to be on the verge of retreat through hunger and Baratieri had
been honour bound, by Prime Minister
Crispi, to press forward. After a
council with his brigadiers, he decided
on a night march to a mountain
position overlooking Menelik's camp.
The Ethiopians would then be forced
either to attack or withdraw ignominiously.
Things went wrong from the start.
Baratieri and his senior Brigadier,
Arimondi, mistrusted each other.
1,200 native troops were absent due
to a telegraphic error. Worst of ail,
the maps confused the hill designated
as the left of the chosen fine with
another four miles out of position.
Thus when General Albertone reached
the correct place after a moonlit
march of six hours, his guides assured
him he still had further to go. Since
he had arrived before Arimondi's
centre brigade was in sight, Albertone
believed he was wrong and continued
the march. At 5.45 his vanguard ran
into a huge body of Ethiopians and
battle was joined. The Italians held
their ground for several hours, but
then the left flank battalion was
overrun by some 15,000 enemy. The
Stormberg Junction ( December 1899)
was an astonishing example of how a
difficult operation - a night attack could turn into a complete fiasco. Lt
Col Gatacre planned to attack Boer
positions on the heights above Stormberg and seize the railway junction.
He intended to move 2,700 men to
Molteno by rail on 9th December,
then cover the ten miles to Stormberg
on foot overnight and make a frontal
assault at dawn. This was changed to
a flank attack - adding several miles
to the march - af ter erroneous information was received that the Boer
position was strengthened by wire.
The execution proved disastrous; after
lengthy delays Gatacre left Molteno
with only part of his force, and got
lost. After hours of marching through
rocky terrain arguing with his guides,
he eventually reached the enemy outposts. Unfortunately he believed them
to be six miles distant, so he blundered into them unexpectedly. The
infantry charged up a steep crag,
were shelled by their own guns and
fell back. An irate farmer started fir -
Italian movements
Glorious Victories
' Glorious Victory!' What better to read about on the down
train f rom Epsom or in a cale by the Seine? It was these
taxpayers
from
grumbling
and
victories
that
kept
governments from crumbling. Victorian myth thrived on
heroism - and in victory heroism was combined with glory,
honour, and the chance of rapid promotion for the
off icers. In this section we look at some of the occasions
40
Battle in Africa
Tsynainondry was a French victory in
September 1895, which showed how a
campaign could be won less by
fighting than by survival in extreme
tropical conditions. Faced with more
than 340 miles of Madagascar's
swamp and jungle, and virulent
diseases that killed 10% of his force
in two months, General Duchesne
decided to abandon his lines of
communication, his 5,000 'Lefebvre
chariots' (metal carts), and the bulk
of his command. He chose 4,000 men,
gave them 3,000 mules, twelve guns
and food for three weeks, then led
them towards Tananarive. Hacking
through the rain forest, men dying by
the side of the track, the force fell
foui of the traditional Malagasy
weapons of forest and fever. When it
reached Tsynainondry, however,
though weak from hunger, it was stil!
able to fight. The Hova royal army,
the Foloalindahy, was entrenched on a
mountainside, but the Foreign Legion
simply marched over it. The greatest
opposition proved to be a herd of
stampeding pigs which 'ran out of a
village and attacked the legionnaires'.
second sortie trom the laager recaptured the kraal and lined the rim of
the dead ground below. As the Zulus
began to retreat, Buller led a relentIess pursuit with his mounted
volunteers, harrying the beaten Impi
for several miles.
41
Guerrilla Warfare
For some African peoples guerrilla warfare was a natural
recourse once full-scale war had failed. For others,
however, it was the standard first response to any invasion
by a strong intruder. The essential requirements were
threefold:1 Mobility: the guerrilla needs greater effective mobility
than his adversary, be it by horse, camel or fleetness of
foot.
2 Intelligence: Information from civilians or scouts on
enemy actions is essential, as is disinformation to the foe
about one's own.
3 Logistic support: Guerrillas cannot live without access
to food, clothing, weapons, ammunition, horses &c.
The Hottentots of Namibia proved
steadfast and successful adversaries
to the Germans. More sophisticated in
their understanding of the Europeans
than most African peoples, they used
traditional fieldcraft skills to outmanoeuvre and outwit their foes. With
captured rifles, ammunition and
horses, the bands of Hendrik,
Cornelius and Morenga waged an
effective guerrilla war between 1904
and 1907. Cornelius began in April
1905 with a series of lightning raids
against German outposts, then outran
pursuing columns and joined Morenga
in the Karras hilis. In March 1906,
however, he surrendered,leaving 'the
robber chieftain' Joseph Morenga
alone in the field. Morenga was a
skilled strategist who used scouts to
inforrn him of German plans, so that
he could avoid their converging
columns. When he fought, it was from
ambush: in one of a series of successful traps, he pinned four companies of
the Field Force against the Orange
River at Hartebeestmund (October
1905). Stationing his men on islands in
the river and in the dunes beyond the
north bank, Morenga laid down a
crossfire that inflicted 43 German
casualties at no cost to his own band.
Battle in Africa
The Boer Commandos channelled their
efforts into guerrilla warfare from
the middle of 1900 onwards. Independent commandos, loosely co-ordinated
by such senior leaders as Botha, De
La Rey, De Wet and Smuts, operated
throughout the Free State and Transvaal, and even into the Cape. Rail
lines were torn up, telegraphs cut,
convoys seized, small ports overrun.
Sustained by the charity of the Dutch
population, and by what they could
forage or capture, the Bitter-Enders
fought on in the hope that 'something
would turn up'. Between October 1900
and September 1901 they cut the rail -
Siege Wartare
Siege warfare as a distinct form of action was relatively
rare in African conflicts. Fortresses were regarded as
refuges rather than as strategic strongpoints, and assaults
upon them traditionally followed the usual rules of the
battlefield, rather
than more specialised engineering
44
The Boer State-Artillery load the 6 " Creusot gun ' Creechy'
during the bombardment of Mafeking. Inset is a typical shelter
or ' bombproof ' occupied by the inhabitants of towns under fire
during the Boer War.
Battle in Africa
The Europeans Besieged As a siege
approached, the commander of a
garrison had a number of issues to
address. If he resolved them effectively he would prolong resistance, and
probably ensure success:1 Preparation of the Position: Earthworks would be dug, thorn or wire
entanglements laid, buildings converted to hospitals, HQs & strongpoints.
Gordon made improvised landmines at
Khartoum, while at Kimberley a civilian engineer designed and built a 4.1"
gun - 'Long Cecil' - in 24 days.
2 Organisation of the Defence: Arrangements for reserves and dividing the
works into sectors of responsibility;
civilians placed under military orders
and told off as guards and workmen.
Dealing with civilians posed special
headaches: at Kimberley the garrison
Battle in Africa
The Wounded faced a serious ordeal,
despite radical improvements in the
standards of treatment since the
Crimean and American Civil Wars.
General anaesthesia now made operations less grim, but the care of
casualties remained a difficult, painful business. The wounded were sorted
out by 'triage' for attention immediately, later or - for some - never.
Abdominal wounds, for instance,
almost inevitably proved fatal and
condemned the recipient to the third
category.
A central principle of surgery was
the massive 'debridement' of dead
tissue around a wound - a brutal
process aimed at the prevention of
gas gangrene. Likewise limb wounds
Zulus Present
800
c20,000
2,000
4,000
24,000
18,000
11,000
5,000
Zulu Loss
80(10%)
2,200(11%)
500(12.5%)
2,200(9%)
1,200(6.5%)
1,200(11%)
350(7%)
Sending the News Home was a feverish activity, as newsmen raced to get
a 'scoop' and beat their rivais to the
presses. After Ulundi Archibald
Forbes rode alone across still-hostile
country 300 miles in 50 hours to send
his despatch. The telegraph could
transmit the message rapidly, bringing
joy or sorrow to the European public.
The news of the relief of Mafeking
was known in London on 18th May
1900, leading to exuberant 'Mafeking
night' celebrations that were
remembered by a whole generation.
Further Reading
The literature covering these African campaigns is
extremely patchy. The larger British 'Small Wars' are very
well covered, with a wide variety of Victorian accounts
and more recent books. The French colonial wars have
also produced a large body of work, although little of it is
available in English translation. Likewise, there is much
material in Italian on the wars of Menelik, but no recent
English volume. The German, Belgian and Portuguese
campaigns are very sparsely covered indeed. What follows
is a list of useful 'starting points' for the reader.
GENERAL
RHODESIA/ZIMBABWE
T O Ranger "Revoit in Southern Rhodesia 1896-7" (London,
1967); F C Selous "Sunshine and storm in Rhodesia" (London
1896).
PORTUGUESE AFRICA
James Duffy "Portuguese Africa" (Harvard, 1961); Eric
Axelson "Portugal and the Scramble for Africa 1875-91"
(New York, 19--).
BELGIAN AFRICA
Ruth Slade "King Leopold's Congo" (London, 1962); R O
Collins "The Southern Sudan" (Yale, 1962).
A Adu Boahen "Africa Under Colonial Domination 1880 1935" (UNESCO 'General History of Africa', London 1985,
Vol VII) Thorough work, very strong on the African viewpoint; Basil Davidson "Africa in Modern History" (London
1978); W L Langer "The Diplomacy of Imperialism" (New
York, 1956); R Oliver & A Atmore "Africa since 1800"
( Cambridge, 1972); R Robinson & J Gallagher "Africa and
the Victorians" (London 1961).
MILITARY
EGYPT/SUDAN
EAST AFRICA
PERIODICALS
"The Journal of African History" is the most important
academic journal for the topic. "Soldiers of the Queen" is
the excellent publication of the Victorian Military Society.
"Savage and Soldier" is a wargames-oriented magazine
devoted to the colonial wars of the 19th century.
WARGAME RULES
Larry Brom "The Sword and the Flame" is a fast-paced
game of 'small wars' with a tongue-in-cheek feel; M Blake
and I Colwill "The Colonial Skirmish Rules" gives a fairly
detailed approach to man-to-man combat; Howard
Whitehouse "Science versus Pluck, or too much for the
Mandi" provides historical roleplay and large scale actions
in the Sudan campaigns.
Battle in Africa is a uniquely vivid analysis of colonial campaigning in the lateVictorian and Edwardian eras. Author Howard Whitehouse guides the reader
systematically through each stage of an African campaign,from the formulation
of strategy to the fate of the wounded, and from the collection of supplies to the
tactics of guerrilla warfare. He also offers a long-overdue comparative
approach, which describes the Belgian, German and Italian experiences as well
as the better-known French and British ...` and he' gives a rare emphasis to the
perceptions of the indigenous African enemy . lllustrated throughout by
Qeter Dennis` - who is himself a keen student of these campaigns - in an
appropriately period' style.
Also available in this series: Battle in the Civil War, Generalship and Tactics in
America 1861-65.
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