@article{Wassermann_2011, title={COOPERATION AND CONFLICT – THE BRITISH ARMY, THE NATAL GOVERNMENT AND THE PROSECUTION OF NATAL REBELS DURING THE ANGLO-BOER WAR}, volume={36}, url={https://scientiamilitaria.journals.ac.za/pub/article/view/53}, DOI={10.5787/36-2-53}, abstractNote={The Natal Afrikaner rebels hardly feature in the historiography of the Anglo-Boer<br />War of 1899–1902. The Times History of the War in South Africa dismisses their<br />rebellion in one sentence, while the Natal Mercury of 25 April 1900 correctly points<br />out that the number of rebels and the scale of the rebellion are rather insignificant when<br />compared with that of the Cape Colony. In the latter, where in contrast to Natal,<br />Afrikaners formed the bulk of the white population, the dynamics of the rebellion was<br />very different. The large number of Afrikaners resident in the Cape Colony acted as a<br />magnet for the Republican forces and as a result, large numbers of Afrikaners took up<br />arms against Britain. From their side, the British authorities acted with a vengeance<br /&gt;towards the Cape rebels, executing and imprisoning large numbers.}, number={2}, journal={Scientia Militaria - South African Journal of Military Studies}, author={Wassermann, Johan}, year={2011}, month={Aug.} }