Crucible of Honour: The Battle of Rorke's Drift (The Anglo-Zulu War Book 2)
معرفی کتاب «Crucible of Honour: The Battle of Rorke's Drift (The Anglo-Zulu War Book 2)» نوشتهٔ James Mace، منتشرشده توسط نشر Legionary Books در سال 2017. این کتاب در فرمت epub، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
In January of 1879, three columns of British soldiers and their African allies invaded the Kingdom of the Zulus. The centre column crosses the uMzinyathi River at Rorke’s Drift, seeking a decisive battle with King Cetshwayo’s army. They leave behind a single company of imperial redcoats to guard the drift and supply depot. The men of B Company, 2/24th Regiment go about their daily duties, unhappy at missing out on the invasion, with boredom becoming their greatest adversary. On the morning of 22 January, the column’s main camp at Isandlwana, just ten miles away, comes under attack from the entire Zulu army and is completely destroyed. Four thousand warriors from the king’s elite Undi Corps formed the reserve at Isandlwana, and were denied any chance to take part in the fighting. Eager for glory, they disobey Cetshwayo’s expressed orders and cross into British Natal, seeking their share in triumph and spoils. They converge on Rorke’s Drift, seeing it as an easy prize; its paltry force of 150 redcoats to be easily swept aside. Having received word of the disaster at Isandlwana, and with retreat impossible, the tiny British garrison readies to receive the coming onslaught. Leading them is Lieutenant John Chard, a newly-arrived engineer officer with no actual combat experience. Aiding him is B Company’s officer commanding, the previously undistinguished and half-deaf Lieutenant Gonville Bromhead, along with twenty-four year old Colour Sergeant Frank Bourne, and a former soldier-turned civilian commissary volunteer, James Dalton. The remaining British forces, under Lord Chelmsford’s direct command, are twenty-five miles to the east at Mangeni Falls. With nearly half the column was wiped out at Isandlwana, an impossible distance to cover, and thousands of Zulu warriors standing between them, Chelmsford is unable to come to the aid of the garrison. The defenders of Rorke’s Drift stand alone. On the morning of 22 January 1879, while three columns of British soldiers and their African allies cross the uMzinyathi River to commence the invasion of the Zulu Kingdom, a handful of redcoats from B Company, 2/24th Regiment are left to guard the centre column’s supply depot at Rorke's Drift. Ten miles to the east, the main camp at Isandlwana comes under attack from the entire Zulu army and is utterly destroyed. Four thousand warriors from King Cetshwayo’s elite Undi Corps remained in reserve and were denied any chance to take part in the fighting. Led by Prince Dabulamanzi, they disobey the king’s orders and cross into British Natal, seeking their share in triumph and spoils. They soon converge on Rorke’s Drift; an easy prize, with its paltry force of 150 redcoats to be readily swept aside. Upon hearing of the disaster at Isandlwana, and with retreat impossible, the tiny British garrison readies to receive the coming onslaught. Leading them is Lieutenant John Chard, a newly-arrived engineer officer with no actual combat experience. Aiding him is B Company’s previously undistinguished officer commanding, Lieutenant Gonville Bromhead, along with 24-year old Colour Sergeant Frank Bourne, and a retired soldier-turned civilian volunteer named James Dalton. Unbeknownst to either the British or the Zulus, half of the centre column, under Lord Chelmsford’s direct command, was not even at Isandlwana, but fifteen miles further east, at Mangeni Falls. However, with a huge Zulu force of over twenty-thousand warriors between them and the drift, their ammunition and ration stores taken or destroyed, and an impossible distance to cover, Chelmsford’s battered column cannot possibly come to the depot’s aid, and must look to their own survival. The defenders of Rorke’s Drift stand alone.
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