Flashpoints: The Wars That Shaped Us

The Anglo-Zanzibar War: History's Shortest Conflict (38 Minutes)

4 min · 10 de abr de 2026
portada del episodio The Anglo-Zanzibar War: History's Shortest Conflict (38 Minutes)

Descripción

At 9:02 AM on August 27, 1896, British warships opened fire on the Zanzibar Sultan's palace. By 9:40 AM, the war was over. The 38-minute Anglo-Zanzibar War holds a peculiar record, but behind this almost comical brevity lies a serious story of imperial arrogance, succession crises, and the blunt instrument of colonial power. We set the stage in the fragrant, spice-rich sultanate, a British protectorate in all but name. When Sultan Hamad bin Thuwaini died, his nephew Khalid bin Barghash seized the throne against British wishes. The episode details the ultimatums, the frantic fortifications of the palace (a wooden harem building), and the overwhelming bombardment that reduced it to rubble, killing hundreds in minutes. This flashpoint offers a microcosm of late-19th century imperialism. Listeners will see how global power was projected with ruthless efficiency, and how local agency was crushed under the guns of a fleet. It’s a stark lesson in the reality of "gunboat diplomacy," where negotiation was merely a prelude to annihilation. A brutal demonstration of what "influence" really meant. #AngloZanzibarWar #BritishEmpire #Colonialism #ShortestWar #Zanzibar #1896 #Imperialism Hosted by Ibnul Jaif Farabi. Produced by Light Knot Studios (lightknotstudios.com).

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episode The Anglo-Zanzibar War: History's Shortest Conflict (38 Minutes) artwork

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At 9:02 AM on August 27, 1896, British warships opened fire on the Zanzibar Sultan's palace. By 9:40 AM, the war was over. The 38-minute Anglo-Zanzibar War holds a peculiar record, but behind this almost comical brevity lies a serious story of imperial arrogance, succession crises, and the blunt instrument of colonial power. We set the stage in the fragrant, spice-rich sultanate, a British protectorate in all but name. When Sultan Hamad bin Thuwaini died, his nephew Khalid bin Barghash seized the throne against British wishes. The episode details the ultimatums, the frantic fortifications of the palace (a wooden harem building), and the overwhelming bombardment that reduced it to rubble, killing hundreds in minutes. This flashpoint offers a microcosm of late-19th century imperialism. Listeners will see how global power was projected with ruthless efficiency, and how local agency was crushed under the guns of a fleet. It’s a stark lesson in the reality of "gunboat diplomacy," where negotiation was merely a prelude to annihilation. A brutal demonstration of what "influence" really meant. #AngloZanzibarWar #BritishEmpire #Colonialism #ShortestWar #Zanzibar #1896 #Imperialism Hosted by Ibnul Jaif Farabi. Produced by Light Knot Studios (lightknotstudios.com).

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