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Bubonic plague crept across the veld in the bodies of burrowing and crop-devouring rodents.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eIn \u003ci\u003eSegregated Species\u003c\/i\u003e, Jules Skotnes-Brown argues that racial segregation and pest control were closely connected in early twentieth-century South Africa. Strategies for the containment of pests were redeployed for the management of humans and vice versa. Settlers blamed racialized populations for the abundance of pests and mobilized metaphors of pestilence to dehumanize them. Even knowledge produced about pests was segregated into the binary categories of \"native\" and \"scientific.\" Black South Africans critiqued such injustices, and some circulated revolutionary rhetoric through images and metaphors of locusts. \u003c\/p\u003e\u003cp\u003eUltimately, pest-control practices played an important role in shaping colonial hierarchies of race and species and in mediating relationships among human groups. 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This book is the first study of the South African armed forces as an institution and of the complex roles that these forces played in the wars, rebellions, uprisings, and protests of the period. It deals in the first instance with the evolution of South African defense policy, the development of the armed forces, and the people who served in and commanded them. 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The Zulus had sufficient manpower not only to withstand that level of casualties but also to complete their encirclement of the British forces, and as the British line disintegrated the firefight gave way to the close-quarter fighting at which the Zulus excelled; not one man of the 1\/24th and 2\/24th Foot survived. The British forces surrounded and crushed at iSandlwana included Captain W.E. Mostyn's company of the 1\/24th Foot, which was initially deployed in advance of the British camp but was later withdrawn to form part of the firing line; their opponents included the iNgobamkhosi ibutho, many of whose warriors left first-hand accounts of the battle.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003eWhile iSandlwana demonstrated the strengths of the Zulu tactics, it also demonstrated their weaknesses - for the casualties inflicted by the British foreshadowed the carnage they would reap once the British wholeheartedly embraced close-order tactics and defended positions. 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