During the Anglo-Boer War women were not only the victims of the concentration camp system and the scorched earth policy - they were also mothers, housewives, farm managers, breadwinners, fandraisers and agitators and after the war humanitarians.During the last three months before the war the women in towns and on the farms of the two Republics had to contend with the effect that the possibility of a war had on the economy of the two republics. Prices of food and other commodities rose sharply and the Governments of the two republics had to intervene. They also suffered cash flow problems. Regulations made it difficult to collect the salaries of government officials while banks were closing their doors and it became impossible to withdraw m...
Mobilisation on the Australian ‘home front’ during the Second World War enabled some women to move t...
The “Ossewa-Brandwag” (OB or Oxwagon Sentinel) was a mass-movement of Afrikaners following a non-pa...
Purpose - There exists no detailed account of the 40 Australian women teachers employed within the “...
The treatment received by the civilians from the British military during the Anglo-Boer War was an i...
• Opsomming: Voor die uitbreek van die Suid-Afrikaanse Oorlog in Oktober 1899, het baie Uitlander-...
The South African War of 1899-1902 served as the culmination of a century-long conflict between two ...
In this article, the variety of experiences of Natal Afrikaner women as British subjects who were r...
The main objective of the study is to explore the response of women to the Armed Struggle in Chiping...
The main objective of the study is to explore the response of women to the Armed Struggle in Chiping...
The main objective of the study is to explore the response of women to the Armed Struggle in Chiping...
During the South African/Anglo-Boer War(1899-1902), the British established concentration camps in r...
The Ossewa-Brandwag (OB) was a mass-movement that originated as a result of the euphoria created by...
The “Ossewa-Brandwag” (OB or Oxwagon Sentinel) was a mass-movement of Afrikaners following a non-par...
The destiny of ordinary women, children and farm workers that stayed behind on the farms when war br...
In the 1970s the phenomenon of black concentration camps in the Anglo-Boer War began receiving atten...
Mobilisation on the Australian ‘home front’ during the Second World War enabled some women to move t...
The “Ossewa-Brandwag” (OB or Oxwagon Sentinel) was a mass-movement of Afrikaners following a non-pa...
Purpose - There exists no detailed account of the 40 Australian women teachers employed within the “...
The treatment received by the civilians from the British military during the Anglo-Boer War was an i...
• Opsomming: Voor die uitbreek van die Suid-Afrikaanse Oorlog in Oktober 1899, het baie Uitlander-...
The South African War of 1899-1902 served as the culmination of a century-long conflict between two ...
In this article, the variety of experiences of Natal Afrikaner women as British subjects who were r...
The main objective of the study is to explore the response of women to the Armed Struggle in Chiping...
The main objective of the study is to explore the response of women to the Armed Struggle in Chiping...
The main objective of the study is to explore the response of women to the Armed Struggle in Chiping...
During the South African/Anglo-Boer War(1899-1902), the British established concentration camps in r...
The Ossewa-Brandwag (OB) was a mass-movement that originated as a result of the euphoria created by...
The “Ossewa-Brandwag” (OB or Oxwagon Sentinel) was a mass-movement of Afrikaners following a non-par...
The destiny of ordinary women, children and farm workers that stayed behind on the farms when war br...
In the 1970s the phenomenon of black concentration camps in the Anglo-Boer War began receiving atten...
Mobilisation on the Australian ‘home front’ during the Second World War enabled some women to move t...
The “Ossewa-Brandwag” (OB or Oxwagon Sentinel) was a mass-movement of Afrikaners following a non-pa...
Purpose - There exists no detailed account of the 40 Australian women teachers employed within the “...