'A very remarkable people, the Zulu', the British Prime Minister, Benjamin Disraeli, said on hearing of a fresh disaster in the war of 1879, 'They defeat our generals; they convert our bishops; they have settled the fate of a great European dynasty'. Remarkable indeed, to have taken on the full might of the British Empire at its height, and won, if not the war, at least some of the battles. This book explains who the Zulus were, and how they achieved the fame as warriors which they enjoy to this day.
By the end of the nineteenth century the fame of the Zulu was world-wide, and their army was one of the few non-European military organisations to have become the subject of serious historical study. Their very name is still synonymous with bravery, discipline and military skill. This excellent addition to Osprey's Men-at-Arms series tells the story of the Zulu's at war, from their rise to unrivalled power under the fearsome Shaka to the final devastating defeat against the British at Ulundi, detailing Zulu weapons and tactics, and the famous battles in which they fought.
Mention of the Zulu War of 1879 inevitably conjures up images of the redcoats at Isandlwana and Rorke's Drift; it is often forgotten that the limited number of Imperial troops available led to the raising of several thousand local troops from Natal, Cape Colony and beyond. Typified by hard-riding white frontiersmen and lightly armed African infantry, these units made up for the British Army's severe shortage of cavalry scouts and local knowledge. Ian Castle's concise study of their organisation, uniforms, weapons, and campaign service covers a far wider range of units than ever previously published; it is illustrated with rare photographs and vivid colour plates.
In the late 1870s the British Imperial administration in the Cape colony in southern Africa began to view the Zulu kingdom as a challenge to their authority.To contain this perceived threat, they engineered a war. The early campaigns went terribly wrong, with the decisive Zulu victory at Isandlwana. Ultimately however, the British won the war. The Zulus, primarily reliant on their skill with the stabbing spear, had no real defence or retaliation against the massed firepower of professional British soldiers. Ian Castle examines the British-Zulu war and its two key battles, Isandlwana and Khambula, with excellent black and white photographs accompanying the clear and detailed text.
Имхо, хуже рапидшары. Скорость вообще никакая. Да и вообще, многие любители книг уже обзавелись премиум-аккаунтами на рапидшаре.Всем любителям и НЕ любителям Rapidshare, было бы хорошо узнать лучше ли qfile и почему?
За пять часов попыток выгрузить Crusades, максимум что получилось это 500кб со скоростью меньше 0.5кб потом все обрываетсятам ограничение на скачку за час не более 50 Мб, тогда как на rapidshare 30 Мб
_http://rapidshare.de/files/2603891/ess001-crs.rar.htmldemetrios said:Исходя из этого уж совсем наглая просьба-перезалить на родную рапидшару Essential Histories, 019 The Hundred Years' War 1337-1453 и Essential Histories, 001 The crusades
_http://rapidshare.de/files/2606942/maa145-rss1.rar.htmldemetrios said:и первую часть войн роз тоже на рапиду