The Dead Warrior Society

THERE WILL BE BLOOD: Cecil Rhodes and the Birth of Rhodesia

56 min · 8. juni 2026
episode THERE WILL BE BLOOD: Cecil Rhodes and the Birth of Rhodesia cover

Beskrivelse

If you want to support the show - Dead Warrior Society merch is now available at our website https://deadwarriorsociety.com/collec... [https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqbHU3clV0MnI3ZmZ3dHRhemlhQXEyM25nT2hFQXxBQ3Jtc0ttd3hMdUZYOUdvR3B3dnlGM201MXlIbjdaZTJ4bklBb0tDQWpnMDNHMnVFUUFFM0ZMcU1mWW1na1ItT2dyTm1XQml3Sm1CTTJQWFIxU2duU09scFBPUTVDVnFUUVJuZFRFWllkWENNcDFJaUhXYlhnRQ&q=https%3A%2F%2Fdeadwarriorsociety.com%2Fcollections%2Fall&v=RqICpkl7eBA] ------------ Before the Bush Wars of the 1970s changed the face of modern unconventional warfare, an empire had to be carved out of the African interior. But the architect of that empire wasn't a battlefield general or a decorated military strategist—he was an asthmatic, Oxford-educated diamond tycoon operating with the cold, calculating ruthlessness of a Wall Street robber baron. In Part 1 of our deep dive into the history of Rhodesia, the Dead Warrior Society goes back to day dot: the 19th-century Mineral Revolution. We trace the explosive friction between the British Crown, the fiercely independent Boer republics, and native African kingdoms like the powerhouse amaNdebele under King Lobengula. This episode untangles how Cecil Rhodes used the massive corporate wealth of De Beers to bankroll a private paramilitary force (The Pioneer Column), secure ambiguous tribal treaties, outmaneuver rival European empires, and ultimately construct a sovereign nation in his own image. From the terrifying automatic firepower of the first Maxim guns to the legendary, mud-slicked last stand of the Shangani Patrol, we explore how corporate hubris and raw ambition set the stage for a century of brutal conflict.

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episode THERE WILL BE BLOOD: Cecil Rhodes and the Birth of Rhodesia cover

THERE WILL BE BLOOD: Cecil Rhodes and the Birth of Rhodesia

If you want to support the show - Dead Warrior Society merch is now available at our website https://deadwarriorsociety.com/collec... [https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqbHU3clV0MnI3ZmZ3dHRhemlhQXEyM25nT2hFQXxBQ3Jtc0ttd3hMdUZYOUdvR3B3dnlGM201MXlIbjdaZTJ4bklBb0tDQWpnMDNHMnVFUUFFM0ZMcU1mWW1na1ItT2dyTm1XQml3Sm1CTTJQWFIxU2duU09scFBPUTVDVnFUUVJuZFRFWllkWENNcDFJaUhXYlhnRQ&q=https%3A%2F%2Fdeadwarriorsociety.com%2Fcollections%2Fall&v=RqICpkl7eBA] ------------ Before the Bush Wars of the 1970s changed the face of modern unconventional warfare, an empire had to be carved out of the African interior. But the architect of that empire wasn't a battlefield general or a decorated military strategist—he was an asthmatic, Oxford-educated diamond tycoon operating with the cold, calculating ruthlessness of a Wall Street robber baron. In Part 1 of our deep dive into the history of Rhodesia, the Dead Warrior Society goes back to day dot: the 19th-century Mineral Revolution. We trace the explosive friction between the British Crown, the fiercely independent Boer republics, and native African kingdoms like the powerhouse amaNdebele under King Lobengula. This episode untangles how Cecil Rhodes used the massive corporate wealth of De Beers to bankroll a private paramilitary force (The Pioneer Column), secure ambiguous tribal treaties, outmaneuver rival European empires, and ultimately construct a sovereign nation in his own image. From the terrifying automatic firepower of the first Maxim guns to the legendary, mud-slicked last stand of the Shangani Patrol, we explore how corporate hubris and raw ambition set the stage for a century of brutal conflict.

8. juni 202656 min
episode Why Did the Aztec Empire Surrender to 500 Conquistadors? (Episode 6) cover

Why Did the Aztec Empire Surrender to 500 Conquistadors? (Episode 6)

Visit our website for a full list of books and reading materials as well as upcoming merch.  www.deadwarriorsociety.com ----- Did Montezuma actually surrender to Cortés, or has one of history’s most consequential encounters been fundamentally misunderstood?  In this episode of Dead Warrior Society, we dive deep into the first meeting between Moctezuma II and Hernán Cortés and confront one of the hottest debates in conquest historiography. Was Montezuma a coward, a brilliant but trapped ruler, or a man operating within a sacred-political framework that was collapsing in real time? Drawing on primary sources, indigenous codices, and historians like Ross Hassig and R. C. Padden—while also engaging critically with revisionist arguments from Matthew Restall—this episode explores whether allowing armed Spaniards and their Tlaxcalan Confederacy leaders allies into Tenochtitlan was, within a Mexica framework, a sign of submission.  We examine Montezuma’s apparent paralysis, his seizure by the Spaniards, the controversial question of surrender, and whether the collapse of the empire can be reduced to a single cause at all.  We also revisit the massacre at Cholula, challenging monocausal interpretations and arguing instead that conspiracy, fear, factional politics, Tlaxcalan pressure, and preemptive violence may all have converged at once. From there, the episode pushes into even deeper territory, asking whether the conquest can be understood not only as a geopolitical struggle but as a metaphysical one—a war in which the Christian God and Huitzilopochtli were believed by their followers to be in direct conflict, with human actors carrying out a larger cosmic drama.  Along the way, we tackle omens, sacrifice, diplomacy, imperial ideology, and the question of whether revisionist historians have overcorrected by discarding too much of the primary record. If you’re interested in the fall of the Aztec Empire, the meeting of Montezuma and Cortés, conquest historiography, religion and warfare, or long-form deep history in the spirit of hardcore historical analysis, this episode is for you. Let me know in the comments—did Montezuma surrender, or was he buying time in a game he no longer controlled? Subscribe to Dead Warrior Society for more deep dives into the history of war, empire, and the forces—human and otherwise—that shape civilizations.

4. maj 202643 min
episode They Tried To Eat the Conquistadors cover

They Tried To Eat the Conquistadors

Be sure to visit the DWS website for more at  www.deadwarriorsociety.com _____ In this episode of the Dead Warrior Society, we dive into the brutal clash between the Spaniards and the Tlaxcalans and challenge one of the most persistent myths in the history of Mesoamerican warfare. You’ve heard it before: that native armies fought to capture, not kill. That their goal was ritual, not destruction. But what if that’s wrong? Drawing on firsthand accounts and battlefield realities, this episode breaks down what actually happened when the Spaniards marched into Tlaxcalan territory outnumbered, surrounded, and under constant attack. This was not a controlled effort to take prisoners. This was a fight to the death. We examine the intensity of the combat, the use of ranged weapons, the collapse of the “ritual warfare” narrative under pressure, and the sheer difficulty of maintaining formation against overwhelming force. If the Tlaxcalans were trying to capture the Spaniards, the evidence doesn’t hold up under scrutiny. Instead, what we see is something far more familiar—and far more dangerous: a determined effort to kill a foreign enemy that refused to break. This episode takes a hard look at revisionist interpretations and asks a simple question: When men are being cut down in front of you… are you really trying to take prisoners?

23. apr. 202639 min
episode Why Cortés Destroyed His Own Ships cover

Why Cortés Destroyed His Own Ships

Check out the DWS website for upcoming merch as well as a reading list https://deadwarriorsociety.com/ [https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqbXZGcHlBdFJIZzhESTVTdjIyemZ3OVVQdndBUXxBQ3Jtc0ttZzFKU0ZncndnYkZFbmZvcG9nSGFfMmhXc1pFcVJqNG8zaVFZMDF6RWZZMkNyRlZEckdBLUlzaldQNzFIbEd6ZHhTUW56SHdOM3psQS1GdGQtQmwzVFA2Q0JuekJSWHBDU3B6MFRNM0ZhSkphbFVnNA&q=https%3A%2F%2Fdeadwarriorsociety.com%2F&v=cCv85JNVLlY] ------ When Hernán Cortés landed on the Mexican coast, he wasn't just leading a band of explorers—he was launching one of history’s most effective Unconventional Warfare (UW) campaigns. While Spanish steel and gunpowder were formidable, the true "force multiplier" was the ability to leverage indigenous resistance. By identifying and mobilizing oppressed groups like the Totonacs and Tlaxcalans, the Spanish transformed a small expeditionary force into a massive insurgent coalition aimed at toppling the Mexica hegemony. This episode of the Dead Warrior Society explores that tactical collision, detailing how Cortés operated in a "denied area" by building a guerrilla network of indigenous allies. The campaign was as much theological as it was physical. We examine the influence of Temalacatl, the forgotten military commander who reshaped the empire's devotion into a weapon of war, and the escalating struggle between the Christian God and Huitzilopochtli, where every hostage and broken idol carried cosmic weight. Through a combination of insight, nerve, and political cunning, these few hundred men utilized a campaign of fear to bend an entire civilization to their will. This deep dive follows our previous episode on the initial landing, moving past the first tense communications with Montezuma’s ambassadors and into the heart of the strategic maneuvering. https://rangertrainingcompany.com/pro... [https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqa09LTUlWOW5TX3JiUVZlTmVVcjgxWlU0YnJWUXxBQ3Jtc0tudHRyalg3X3pLWXdxeFFtUnd4djQ3Q0wyZlNRQ1lKSXdZQXZMNWJFSndiS015NWNoS3B0M2huY2YxZnJjeVlWU0FOS2I4MTM3Z3pHc19Zd0RaTkhDOVF5VFFyM1RzWnAwQWhpdzhuMTRYRHQ3QkJGUQ&q=https%3A%2F%2Frangertrainingcompany.com%2Fproducts%2Fcombat-coat&v=cCv85JNVLlY] Code: DEADWARRIOR for 15% off

14. apr. 202659 min
episode Cortés and the Spaniards Come Face to Face with the Aztec cover

Cortés and the Spaniards Come Face to Face with the Aztec

Be sure to visit our website for upcoming merch. If you are interested in the books and sources used for this series, check out my recommended reading list on the website.  https://deadwarriorsociety.com/ [https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqbHRvY0dxNDBXcWo3SHFuVjhkUjdQR3QwNHZ3QXxBQ3Jtc0trbGhkYkJKS2Y1czNqQ2h6T1YzYnVfZHpqVGZjT3hzNmpMU1NaLW56bHN5Q0RQb1RnZGY0cTd3djk5amNFb0c0RzE2UE9wQ05RZ1BzbGhZRlpFSjhOYzJhQUYxblhLWjZLOWhFX2ZnbzNyQ1ROVzM5MA&q=https%3A%2F%2Fdeadwarriorsociety.com%2F&v=3o9VRsQ7vK0] ----- The moment Hernán Cortés set foot on the shores of Mexico, history didn’t just change, it fractured. Was Montezuma a calculating ruler playing a dangerous diplomatic game… or a man confronting something far more terrifying? In this episode of the Dead Warrior Society, we dive deep into one of the most controversial debates in history: did the Aztecs really believe the Spaniards were gods? Drawing from sources like Bernal Diaz, the Codex Florentino, and Hugh Thomas, we explore a world where nothing was secular; where omens, prophecy, sacrifice, and cosmic cycles dictated reality itself. While modern historians argue that Montezuma was a rational actor engaged in high-stakes diplomacy, the accounts left behind tell a much darker story. One of fear, confusion, and a possible psychological collapse at the highest level of the Aztec Empire. At the same time, Cortés is fighting a completely different battle. With no legal authority, mutiny brewing, and the threat of execution hanging over his head, he launches one of the most audacious political and military gambits in history, transforming a rogue expedition into a conquest under the banner of God and King. What unfolds is not just a meeting of two civilizations, but a collision between two entirely different ways of understanding reality. One built on faith, ritual, and cosmic order, the other on ambition, law, and ruthless opportunism. This episode follows the Spaniards as they make first contact with the Aztec Empire at San Juan de Ulúa, navigate early diplomacy with Montezuma’s emissaries, and begin laying the groundwork for alliance, intimidation, and eventual conquest. As tensions rise, we examine the psychological and religious crisis gripping Montezuma, the strategic maneuvering of Cortés, and the growing divide between traditional historical accounts and modern revisionist interpretations like those of Matthew Restall. We also explore the founding of Veracruz and the moment Cortés effectively breaks from Velazquez, setting the stage for a campaign that will spiral far beyond its original intent. This isn’t a simple story of conquest. It’s a story about fear, belief, power, and the moment two worlds collide and neither side truly understands the other until it’s far too late. https://rangertrainingcompany.com/pro.. [https://www.youtube.com/redirect?event=video_description&redir_token=QUFFLUhqbDVOUjJZZmZEaE9aZngtZXRDb3hJUTByVWxIQXxBQ3Jtc0tuZFY5ejVuVGViSWgzQ3M1RlpLTDd1Q1dZQzZ6X3p4MF93MW4wb3FZS3F0QkR3MUtXVktDUUZUTVZDOFlrVDhKd3NOUlpYRGhZc2N0eEQ0cTJQTm5wZmRxVWRQenVaaXFWSnhHYUNCY1M2SFVTVmVMcw&q=https%3A%2F%2Frangertrainingcompany.com%2Fpro..&v=3o9VRsQ7vK0].  DEADWARRIOR for 15% off

29. mar. 202644 min