Bechuanaland Protectorate (British)
Substate | Defunct
1885 CE to 1965 CE
The Bechuanaland Protectorate wis a protectorate established on 31 March 1885, by the United Kingdom in southern Africa.
It becomes the Republic of Botswana on September 30, 1966.
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Scottish missionary John Mackenzie (1835–99), a Congregationalist of the London Missionary Society (LMS), who had lived at Shoshong from 1862–76, "believed that the Ngwato and other African peoples with whom he worked were threatened by Boer freebooters encroaching on their territory from the south."
He campaigns for the establishment of what will become the Bechuanaland Protectorate, to be ruled directly from Britain.
Austral Africa: Losing It or Ruling It is Mackenzie's account of events leading to the establishment of the protectorate.
Influenced by Mackenzie, in January 1885 the British cabinet decides to send a military expedition to South Africa to assert British sovereignty over the contested territory.
Sir Charles Warren (1840–1927) leads a force of four thousand imperial troops north from Cape Town.
After making treaties with several African chiefs, Warren announces the establishment of the protectorate in March 1885.
In September this year the Tswana country south of the Molopo River is proclaimed the Crown colony of British Bechuanaland.
Mackenzie accompanies Warren, and Austral Africa contains a detailed account of the expedition.
Bechuanaland means the country of the Tswana and for administrative purposes is divided into two political entities.
The northern part is administered as the Bechuanaland Protectorate and the southern part is administered as the crown colony of British Bechuanaland.
The northern part, the Bechuanaland Protectorate, has an area of 225,000 square miles (580,000 square kilometers), and a population of 120,776.
Batswana trade thrives between 1860 and 1880 due to newly peaceful conditions.
Taking advantage of this are Christian missionaries.
The Lutherans and the London Missionary Society had both become established in the country by 1856.
By 1880 every Batswana major village has a resident missionary, and their influence slowly becomes felt.
Khama III (reigned 1875–1923) is the first of the Tswana chiefs to make Christianity a state religion, and changes a great deal of Tswana customary law as a result.
Christianity will become the de facto official religion in all the chiefdoms by the First World War.
The territory of modern Botswana is coveted by both Germany and Great Britain during the Scramble for Africa.
During the Berlin Conference, Britain decides to annex Botswana in order to safeguard the Road to the North and thus connect the Cape Colony to its territories further north.
It unilaterally annexes Tswana territories in January 1885, then sends the Warren Expedition north to consolidate control over the area and persuade the chiefs to accept British overrule.
Despite their misgivings, the chiefs eventually acquiesce to this fait accompli.
The two Boer republics, the Orange Free State and the Transvaal, are squeezed between the British-ruled Cape Colony to the south and west, Zululand to the east and Matabeleland and Bechuanaland to the north.
There had been a series of skirmishes within the Transvaal between the Boers and indigenous local tribes during the 1870s.
In particular, intensifying struggles between Boers and the Pedi, a Northern Sotho group led by Sekhukune I, over land and labor results in the war of 1876, in which the attacking Boers are defeated, in part because of the firepower bought with proceeds of early Pedi labor migration to the Kimberley diamond fields.
There are also serious tensions between the Transvaal Republic and the Zulus led by King Cetshwayo.
The Zulus occupy a kingdom located to the southeast, bordered on the one side by the Transvaal Republic and on the other by British Natal.
Cetshwayo, a son of Zulu king Mpande and Queen Ngqumbazi, half-nephew of the famous Zulu king Shaka and grandson of Senzangakhona kaJama, had in 1856 defeated and killed in battle his younger brother Mbuyazi, Mpande's favorite, and become the effective ruler of the Zulu people.
He did not ascend to the throne, however, as his father was still alive.
Stories from that time regarding his huge size vary, saying he stood at least between six feet six inches tall (one hundred and ninety-eight) and six feet eight inches tall (two hundred and three centimeters) and weighed close to twenty-five stone (one hundred and fifty-eight kilograms).
His other brother, Umtonga, was still a potential rival.
In 1861, Umtonga had fled to the Boers' side of the border and Cetshwayo had had to make deals with the Boers to get him back.
In 1865, Umtonga did the same thing, apparently making Cetshwayo believe that Umtonga would organize help from the Boers against him, the same way his father had overthrown his predecessor, Dingaan.
Mpande died in 1873 and Cetshwayo had become king on September 1.
As was customary, he has created a new capital for the nation and called it Ulundi (the high place).
Cetshwayo had expanded his army and reintroduced many of the paramilitary practices of Shaka.
He had also started equipping his impis with firearms, although this is a gradual process and the majority have only shields, clubs (knobkerries) and spears (throwing spears and the famous assegais).
Over forty thousand strong, disciplined, motivated and confident Zulu warriors are a formidable force on their own home ground, their lack of modern weaponry notwithstanding.
King Cetshwayo has banished European missionaries from his land, and there are suggestions that he might also have become involved in inciting other native African peoples to rebel against the Boers in the Transvaal.
The Transvaal Boers become increasingly concerned, but King Cetshwayo's policy is to maintain good relations with the British in Natal in an effort to counter the Boer threat.
Bartle Frere sends the British No. 3 Column under Lord Chelmsford to invade Zululand on January 11, with about seven thousand regular troops, a similar number of black African "levees" and a thousand white volunteers.
This results in the Battle of Isandlwana on January 22, 1879, which though a disaster for the British, does not end the war.
With the decisive defeat of Chelmsford's central column, the entire invasion of Zululand collapses and will have to be restaged.
Not only are there heavy manpower casualties to the Main Column, but most of the supplies, ammunition and draft animals have been lost.
As King Cetshwayo had feared, the embarrassment of the defeat will force the policy makers in London, who to this point had not supported the war, to rally to the support of the pro-war contingent in the Natal government and commit whatever resources are needed to defeat the Zulus.
Despite local numerical superiority, the Zulus do not have manpower, technological resources or logistical capacity to match the British in another, more extended, campaign.
The Zulus miss a tremendous opportunity to exploit their victory and possibly win the war this day on their own territory.
The reconnaissance force under Chelmsford, more vulnerable to being defeated by an attack than the camp is strung out and somewhat scattered, it had marched with limited rations and ammunition it cannot now replace, and it is panicky and demoralized by the defeat at Isandlwana.
Near the end of the battle, about four thousand Zulu warriors of the unengaged reserve Undi impi, after cutting off the retreat of the survivors to the Buffalo River southwest of Isandlwana, cross the river and attack the fortified mission station at Rorke's Drift.
The station is defended by only one hundred and thirty-nine British soldiers, who nonetheless inflict considerable casualties and repel the attack.
Elsewhere, the left and right flanks of the invading forces are now isolated and without support.
The No. 1 column under the command of Charles Pearson will be besieged for two months by a Zulu force at Eshowe, while the No. 4 column under Evelyn Wood halts its advance and will spend most of the next two months skirmishing in the northwest around Tinta's Kraal.
The British and Colonials had fallen into complete panic over the possibility of a counter invasion of Natal by the Zulus following the battles of Isandlwana and Rorke's Drift.
All the towns of Natal have 'laagered' up and fortified and provisions and stores laid in.
Bartle Frere has stoked the fear of invasion despite the fact that, aside from Rorke's Drift, the Zulus have made no attempt to cross the border.
Immediately following the battle, Zulu Prince Ndanbuko had urged them to advance and take the war into the colony but they were restrained by a commander, kaNthati, reminding them of Cetshwayo's prohibiting the crossing the border.
Unknown to the inhabitants of Natal, Cetshwayo, still hoping to avoid a total war, had prohibited any crossing of the border in retaliation and was incensed over the violation of the border by the attack on Rorke's Drift.
The British government's reasoning for a new invasion is threefold.
The first is jingoistic to a degree and national honor demands that the enemy, victors in one battle, should lose the war.
The second concerns the domestic political implications at the next parliamentary elections. (However, despite the new invasion, the British Prime Minister Disraeli and his party will lose the 1880 election.)
Finally, there are considerations affecting the Empire: unless the British are seen to win a clear-cut victory against the Zulus, it will send a signal that the British Empire is vulnerable and that the defeat of a British field army could alter policy.
If the Zulu victory at Isandlwana encourages resistance elsewhere in the Empire, then committing the resources necessary to defeat the Zulus will, in the long term, prove cheaper than fighting wars that the Zulu success inspire against British Imperialism elsewhere.
After Isandlwana, the British field army is heavily reinforced and again invades Zululand.
Sir Garnet Wolseley is sent to take command and relieve Chelmsford, as well as Bartle Frere.
Chelmsford, however, avoids handing over command to Wolseley and manages to defeat the Zulus in a number of engagements, the last of which is the Battle of Ulundi, followed by capture of King Cetshwayo.
The British encourage the subkings of the Zulus to rule their subkingdoms without acknowledging a central Zulu power.
By the time King Cetshwayo is allowed to return home in 1883 there will no longer be an independent Zulu kingdom.
The measure of respect that the British had gained for their opponents as a result of Isandlwana can be seen in that in none of the other engagements of the Zulu War had the British attempted to fight again in their typical linear formation, known famously as the Thin Red Line in an open-field battle with the main Zulu impi.
In the battles that followed, the British, when facing the Zulu, had entrenched themselves or formed very close-order formations, such as the square.
Sir Garnet Wolseley now turns to the Pedi in the Transvaal, and they are finally defeated by British troops in 1879.
The British now consolidate their power over Natal, the Zulu kingdom and the Transvaal.