W.T. Stead's Controversial Visit to South Africa, 1904
'Frankly I am ashamed of being a Briton for the treatment we have meted out to the Boers as revealed by you and so justly condemned in your pages’ - John Burns to W. T. Stead.
'Frankly I am ashamed of being a Briton for the treatment we have meted out to the Boers as revealed by you and so justly condemned in your pages’ - John Burns to W. T. Stead.
Richard Cavendish describes the relief of Mafeking, following a seven-month siege, on May 16th/17th, 1900.
David Nash argues that opposition to the Second Boer War began the tradition of peace politics that has flourished through the twentieth century.
Donal Lowry shows how the Boers could count on worldwide support in their struggle with Britain with some sympathisers backing them on the battlefield.
J.E. Spence considers the interface between ideological and geopolitical factors in the struggle for supremacy in Southern Africa.
Raphael Mokades - the winner of the 1996 Julia Wood Award - argues that military failure in the Boer War transformed political attitudes in Edwardian Britain.
Frank McDonough looks at recent thinking on the origins of the war of 1899-1902
Iain Smith looks at how teaching history is being turned upside down in South Africa today.
Bartholomew Dias' voyage to the Cape of Good Hope in the late 15th century marked the apex of an extraordinary Portuguese expansion overseas and the start of a fateful European impact on South Africa.
Iain R. Smith looks at the changes in the study of South Africa's past.