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Return to Morogoro - With the South African Horse Through East Africa to France and Flanders, 1914-1918 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R199
Discovery Miles 1 990
You Save: R56
(22%)
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Return to Morogoro - With the South African Horse Through East Africa to France and Flanders, 1914-1918 (Paperback)
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List price R255
Loot Price R199
Discovery Miles 1 990
You Save R56 (22%)
Expected to ship within 5 - 10 working days
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The past is brought to life in this historical epic about a South
African family whose lives collided with the biggest event in
history: The First World War. The central theme is the largely
forgotten east Africa campaign, but by definition a world war has a
wide reach. Five members of one family with deep roots in all four
corners of the country, served in three different theatres of war.
Their lives on active service are all interwoven and inseparable
from the home front. Global events are juxtaposed with everyday
life on a farm in the eastern Orange Free State. Appropriately, the
author constructs linkages that span generations, uncovering
individual experiences of an earlier conflict which had engulfed
South Africa barely a decade before the eruption of the 1914-18
war. As the sons of early pioneers, this generation witnessed
history in the making before writing their own. Riding into action
on horseback or in a flying machine, their paths led from the south
west African desert, through disease-infested jungles in east
Africa to some of the great battles on the western front. Only one
of the five came home unscathed although he crash-landed his
aircraft behind enemy lines and only made it back through his
audacity and brute strength. Another, an intellectual priest, was
left for dead at Delville Wood, and his brother was wounded on
Messines Ridge. The remaining two suffered from debilitating
tropical illnesses. Hazard and hardship lingered on in the form of
Spanish in influenza, mining strikes and the Great Depression. The
war cast a long shadow. Between them, these consciously literate
men left substantial documentary legacies. Using extracts of their
letters from the front, the story is to a large extent told in the
words of those who were there. Context is provided by referencing
existing literature, unpublished memoirs and archival material. It
could be called a military history or a social history, but it is a
truly South African story which contains much new material for
historians, while for the general reader it offers an accessible
insight into an unparalleled period of history.
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