On 22nd January 1879 a force of 20,000 Zulus overwhelmed and destroyed the British invading force at Isandlwana, killing and ritually disemboweling over 1200 troops. That afternoon, the same Zulu force turned their attention on a small outpost at Rorke¿s Drift. The battle that ensued, one of the British Army¿s great epics, has since entered into legend. Throughout the night 85 men held off six full-scale Zulu attacks at the cost of only 27 casualties, forcing the Zulu army to withdraw. Eleven Victoria Crosses were awarded for bravery shown on that night, the largest number for any one engagement in history. But as Adrian Greaves¿s new research shows there are several things about the myth of Rorke¿s Drift that don¿t add up. While it was the scene of undoubted bravery, it was also the scene of some astonishing cases of cowardice, and there is increasing evidence to suggest that the legend of Rorke¿s Drift was created to divert attention from the appalling British mistakes which caused the earlier defeat at Isandlwana.
And yet, against incredible odds, the British managed to defend their station. In this riveting history, Colonel Snook brings the insights of a military professional to bear on this fateful encounter at the start of Anglo-Zulu War.
These and other revelations make A Handful of Heroes, Rorke’s Drift a fresh and important addition to the bibliography of this legendary Zulu War engagement. “Though the book reviewed here should not be your first dip into the history ...
Greaves , Adrian , Crossing the Buffalo : The Zulu War of 1879 ( London : Weidenfeld & Nicolson , 2005 ) . Greaves , Adrian , Fragments and Snippets from the Anglo - Zulu War of 1879 ( Tenterden : Debinair Publishing , 2015 ) .
The small garrison based at Rorke's Drift in South Africa is forever immortalised in British history as one of the Army's most glorious moments.
John Connolly stated that he was born at Castletown, Berehaven, County Cork in Ireland in 1859, the son of a fisherman named John Connolly, although his service papers record that he was born at Trevethin, Pontypool, Monmouthshire.
But what if the Zulus had defeated the British at Rorke’s Drift and invaded Natal? . . . In the first ever alternate history of the Anglo-Zulu War, historian John Laband asks that question.
The Terrible Night at Rorke's Drift
A gripping and vivid account of one of the British army's most famous battles
In this thrilling blow-by-blow account, Chris Peers draws on firsthand testimonies from both sides to piece together the course of the battles as they unfolded.
Fought on the night of 22/23 January 1879 and immortalised in the film epic Zulu, Rorke's Drift represented one of the most glorious, if subsequently controversial episodes in British military history.