The Dead Warrior Society
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.
50 episodios
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