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The Last of the 24th by Richard Thomas Moynan. The painting is based on an account of the last survivor of the battle if Isandlwana fighting from a small cave in the hill’s crag before finally being overwhelmed.
Birmingham zulus ready to kick the racists off the terraces again
[iGhost] /e:go:stee/
:Trouble or being in trouble
e.g. uzongena eGhostini. (you’ll get in trouble)
e.g. leya level iGhost. (that level is troubling)
[uyiGhost] /u:yee:go:stee/
:Extremely good at or legendary
e.g. Person 1 : Her fashion show was epic
Person 2 : uyiGhost (she is legendary)
Some practice with shading and stuff with a favorite boi of mine-
Zulu Woman - Bobson Sukhdeo Mohanlall
Bobson Studio was founded by Bobson Sukhdeo Mohanlall in Durban, South Africa, in 1961. The studio catered mainly to a Zulu clientele, who posed in their own beadwork and costumes for formal portraits that were also made into postcards, which could be sent to distant relatives and friends. Bobson used two cameras during this time, a Yashica Matt 120mm and a Rolliflex 120mm. The studio became the city’s most famous portrait studio, and attracted clients countrywide. Many of the clients belonged to the Ndwandwe people, a subgroup of the Zulu who live in the region known as Valley of a Thousand Hills, between Durban and Pietermaritzburg, the major cities of the KwaZulu-Natal province. In the late 1960s and early 1970s Bobson Studio began to offer color portraits, which best captured the vivid dress of the clients.
Today, the art historical value of Bobson’s archive has become apparent. In the field of African studio photography, a topic of growing interest, Bobson is South Africa’s finest example, and is apparently the earliest African studio archive in color. The archive also forms a unique documentary record of the Ndwandwe beadwork in use at the time, and how African “tradition” coexisted with international, urban style.
March 29th 1879: Battle of Kambula
On this day in 1879, the Battle of Kambula occurred, marking a decisive moment in the Anglo-Zulu War. The war in South Africa began in 1878 after the murder of several British citizens by Zulus and the Zulu king’s refusal to hand over the perpetrators for trial. However, authorities in Britain had long been seeking pretense to launch an assault on the Zulu Kingdom to consolidate British rule in the area. The indigenous Zulu warriors had some initial success against the European invaders, including at the battle of Isandlwana in January 1879, though this victory was offset by defeat at Rourke’s Drift. Wary of the enemy, British forces in the Zulu Kingdom led by Evelyn Wood fortified an area near Kambula. On March 29th the Zulu army launched an attack on the British position, but their advance was halted by a British mounted force. The Zulu forces continued their attack, and 11,000 fighters charged head-on into a hail of British fire. They sustained heavy losses, but the Zulu army successfully exerted pressure on the British stronghold and forced the defenders to retreat. Despite putting up a considerable attack, the Zulu forces were eventually forced to retreat under British fire. The battle was a decisive British victory, with the defenders losing 29 soldiers and the Zulu up to 3,000. Kambula also severely weakened the Zulu forces, allowing the British to ultimately defeat the Zulu and imprison their king in July. British victory spelled the end of the independence of the Zulu nation in South Africa.