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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:07,579 --> 00:00:11,520 Gladstone's fall from power was to have serious repercussions throughout the 2 00:00:11,520 --> 00:00:14,640 empire, particularly in southern Africa. 3 00:00:15,900 --> 00:00:20,540 The absence of his moral influence cleared the way for a man who would lead 4 00:00:20,540 --> 00:00:23,680 Victoria's empire down a far more perilous path. 5 00:00:25,640 --> 00:00:31,900 Cecil John Rhodes had arrived in South Africa at the age of 17 to work on his 6 00:00:31,900 --> 00:00:33,020 brother's cotton farm. 7 00:00:35,850 --> 00:00:39,830 There was nothing to distinguish Rhodes from thousands of other British 8 00:00:39,830 --> 00:00:43,310 emigrants who left the mother country to seek their fortune in the British 9 00:00:43,310 --> 00:00:44,310 colonies. 10 00:00:47,570 --> 00:00:51,850 But this young clergyman's son would devote most of his life to expanding 11 00:00:51,850 --> 00:00:57,890 British rule and making himself the most dangerous man in Queen Victoria's 12 00:00:57,890 --> 00:00:58,890 empire. 13 00:01:11,530 --> 00:01:15,590 At first, his ambitions were limited to being a successful farmer. 14 00:01:16,090 --> 00:01:21,090 He got along well with his African workers, shared their food and 15 00:01:21,090 --> 00:01:22,870 and respected their values. 16 00:01:24,910 --> 00:01:27,730 Rhodes had an intuitive feeling for the people of Africa. 17 00:01:29,290 --> 00:01:32,680 He... was fascinated in African society. 18 00:01:33,100 --> 00:01:36,020 He would spend whole nights in kraals. 19 00:01:36,260 --> 00:01:40,340 He wanted to understand how they operate. He was quick to learn Zulu so 20 00:01:40,340 --> 00:01:41,340 communicate directly. 21 00:01:41,800 --> 00:01:46,580 He also understood the value that Africans placed on a person's trust. 22 00:01:47,080 --> 00:01:52,340 And he was much mocked by the other cotton farmers because he used to pay 23 00:01:52,340 --> 00:01:53,340 labor in advance. 24 00:01:54,280 --> 00:01:59,020 And that was seen by the people who worked for him as a sign of trust. 25 00:01:59,660 --> 00:02:01,120 And, of course, it built up their loyalty. 26 00:02:03,400 --> 00:02:06,560 But Rhodes was soon lured away from farming. 27 00:02:07,180 --> 00:02:13,960 His arrival in Africa had coincided with a fateful discovery 500 miles away on a 28 00:02:13,960 --> 00:02:17,580 remote farmstead known as Colesburg Kopi. 29 00:02:31,950 --> 00:02:36,770 A Dutch settler noticed his neighbor's children playing kip -kip, or five 30 00:02:36,770 --> 00:02:37,770 stones. 31 00:02:38,110 --> 00:02:43,770 His eye was caught by a stone that shone with a particular brightness, and he 32 00:02:43,770 --> 00:02:45,230 went to take a closer look. 33 00:02:46,730 --> 00:02:52,450 An earlier British visitor had written of this desolate interior, Her Majesty 34 00:02:52,450 --> 00:02:56,930 possesses not in all her empire another strip of land so unlovely. 35 00:02:57,390 --> 00:02:59,610 But as the world would soon discover, 36 00:03:00,330 --> 00:03:03,750 It contained riches beyond the dreams of avarice. 37 00:03:04,770 --> 00:03:11,190 The stone that the settler had spotted would be called the Eureka Stone, and it 38 00:03:11,190 --> 00:03:13,830 led to the richest source of diamonds ever found. 39 00:03:25,570 --> 00:03:29,470 Rhodes dropped everything, packed his bags, and joined the diamond rush. 40 00:03:31,120 --> 00:03:35,780 The farm at Carlsberg Kopi soon became the boomtown of Kimberley. 41 00:03:40,420 --> 00:03:44,340 Roughnecks from the gold fields of California and Australia rubbed 42 00:03:44,340 --> 00:03:49,060 with veterans from the American Civil War, English aristocrats and immigrants 43 00:03:49,060 --> 00:03:54,500 from the ghettos of Europe, all drawn to a hole in the ground, which was growing 44 00:03:54,500 --> 00:03:55,520 bigger every day. 45 00:03:56,200 --> 00:04:00,280 To these men, Kimberley promised instant riches. 46 00:04:01,420 --> 00:04:02,500 but at a price. 47 00:04:04,740 --> 00:04:07,420 Kimberley was an indescribable place. 48 00:04:07,720 --> 00:04:14,040 The noise, the dust, the heat. If you can imagine this settlement of 40 ,000 49 00:04:14,040 --> 00:04:18,579 people in the middle of nowhere, you could see the dust from the diggings 50 00:04:18,579 --> 00:04:20,459 10, 15 miles away. 51 00:04:20,839 --> 00:04:24,940 And as you came nearer, you entered this awful place. 52 00:04:25,690 --> 00:04:30,490 Huts built out of old packing cases, littered with dead animals, the 53 00:04:30,490 --> 00:04:34,850 of dead animals, flies, infestations of flies. 54 00:04:38,770 --> 00:04:41,970 The Wild West was tame compared to Kimberley. 55 00:04:42,190 --> 00:04:47,330 Here there was a bar for every 16 men, and shootings were an everyday 56 00:04:47,330 --> 00:04:48,330 occurrence. 57 00:04:48,810 --> 00:04:51,430 But Rhodes thrived as a diamond digger. 58 00:04:52,010 --> 00:04:55,570 Within a year, he wrote to his mother that he was earning around 100 pounds a 59 00:04:55,570 --> 00:04:59,190 week, enough to make him one of the richest young men in England. 60 00:05:03,930 --> 00:05:10,570 But in 1872, just a few days after his 19th birthday, Rhodes suffered a heart 61 00:05:10,570 --> 00:05:11,570 attack. 62 00:05:13,250 --> 00:05:19,270 His doctors told him the attack was mild, but Rhodes knew that from then on, 63 00:05:19,270 --> 00:05:21,050 was engaged in a race with death. 64 00:05:23,880 --> 00:05:30,860 He chose a curious form of convalescence, an epic trek across the 65 00:05:32,240 --> 00:05:38,500 Some believe that during this journey, Rhodes developed his great love and his 66 00:05:38,500 --> 00:05:39,860 great plan for Africa. 67 00:05:41,940 --> 00:05:47,120 A lot of commentators have said that those nine months that Rhodes spent 68 00:05:47,120 --> 00:05:50,960 Africa by ox wagon go right up into war territory. 69 00:05:51,760 --> 00:05:53,560 had an incredible effect on him. 70 00:05:55,620 --> 00:06:00,880 Rhodes would be continually hearing stories about the African interior from 71 00:06:00,880 --> 00:06:01,880 wandering hunters. 72 00:06:06,020 --> 00:06:12,680 And I believe that it was on that journey that he formed his first 73 00:06:12,680 --> 00:06:19,200 nascent idea of an Africa that was there, ready to be reached, ready to be 74 00:06:19,200 --> 00:06:20,200 taken. 75 00:06:29,070 --> 00:06:32,630 His health restored, Rhodes returned to the diamond fields. 76 00:06:33,770 --> 00:06:38,050 Most of the diggers thought that the diamond mine was exhausted and wanted to 77 00:06:38,050 --> 00:06:39,050 sell their claims. 78 00:06:39,710 --> 00:06:42,330 Rhodes took a gamble and bought them. 79 00:06:42,730 --> 00:06:43,970 His hunch was right. 80 00:06:44,630 --> 00:06:48,530 Beneath the first seam of diamonds was another, even richer. 81 00:06:50,810 --> 00:06:54,010 Rhodes put all the claims under the control of one company, 82 00:06:54,950 --> 00:06:55,950 De Beers. 83 00:06:56,160 --> 00:07:00,020 Within ten years, it would own 90 % of the world's diamond production. 84 00:07:00,820 --> 00:07:04,140 Rhodes would use his wealth to finance his dreams. 85 00:07:05,940 --> 00:07:10,220 Money is power, and what can one accomplish without power? 86 00:07:11,820 --> 00:07:17,380 Rhodes dreamed of creating a vast British colony across the length of 87 00:07:17,380 --> 00:07:21,620 achieve this, he planned to build a railroad from Cape Town to Cairo. 88 00:07:22,190 --> 00:07:25,770 But first he needed to win political support in South Africa. 89 00:07:27,830 --> 00:07:33,070 He was elected to the Cape Parliament, where he courted the Afrikanerbond, the 90 00:07:33,070 --> 00:07:38,550 party of the Dutch farmers or Boers who were consolidating their own power by 91 00:07:38,550 --> 00:07:40,210 taking it from the native Africans. 92 00:07:42,430 --> 00:07:47,350 We're talking at a stage when black people in the Cape voted, provided they 93 00:07:47,350 --> 00:07:49,130 fulfilled certain property. 94 00:07:50,220 --> 00:07:54,660 They sat on juries where they sat in judgment over white people. 95 00:07:55,380 --> 00:07:58,800 This was abhorrent to the Afrikaner bond. 96 00:07:59,860 --> 00:08:05,620 And what Rhodes did was to form a very, very close alliance with them. 97 00:08:07,460 --> 00:08:12,900 Rhodes, who had once prided himself on his lack of prejudice, made a speech in 98 00:08:12,900 --> 00:08:13,900 the new Cape Parliament. 99 00:08:14,980 --> 00:08:19,820 Does this house think... that it is right that men in a state of pure 100 00:08:19,820 --> 00:08:21,020 should have the vote? 101 00:08:21,960 --> 00:08:24,060 Treat the natives as a subject people. 102 00:08:24,420 --> 00:08:25,840 Be the lords over them. 103 00:08:26,620 --> 00:08:30,700 The native is to be treated as a child and denied the franchise. 104 00:08:32,640 --> 00:08:35,240 Following Rhodes' speech, the law was changed. 105 00:08:36,679 --> 00:08:40,980 The vote in southern Africa was removed from all but a handful of native 106 00:08:40,980 --> 00:08:41,980 Africans. 107 00:08:43,280 --> 00:08:48,120 Rhodes, throughout his career, was continually shifting the pieces on the 108 00:08:49,120 --> 00:08:51,100 Consider the Diamond Lines. 109 00:08:51,320 --> 00:08:55,040 If you go back to the beginning of that history, black people owned claims. 110 00:08:55,380 --> 00:08:57,960 They were competitors with whites. 111 00:08:58,820 --> 00:09:05,220 What Rhodes' requirements were was to have a permanent, reliable black labor 112 00:09:05,220 --> 00:09:11,920 force who would be kept within compounds, unable to... 113 00:09:12,520 --> 00:09:16,340 leave at all, inspected every time they came out of the mines. 114 00:09:17,220 --> 00:09:22,960 And the need for a controlled labor force drove Rhodes towards racist 115 00:09:23,860 --> 00:09:28,140 If you try to make any political sense out of Rhodes' career, it makes 116 00:09:28,140 --> 00:09:33,340 absolutely no sense at all. But if you look at it in economic terms, it makes 117 00:09:33,340 --> 00:09:34,340 perfect sense. 118 00:09:34,520 --> 00:09:40,120 The alliances that he was making was for profit and for business, and there's no 119 00:09:40,120 --> 00:09:41,120 argument about it. 120 00:09:47,820 --> 00:09:52,320 The next step in Rhodes' master plan was to expand British territory northward 121 00:09:52,320 --> 00:09:55,960 into those regions David Livingstone had explored years before. 122 00:10:00,220 --> 00:10:05,240 But across his route lay the empire of the Matabele, the people of the Long 123 00:10:05,240 --> 00:10:09,340 Shield, one of the most formidable warrior nations in Africa. 124 00:10:11,340 --> 00:10:18,260 Their king, Lobengula, known as the Eater of Men, maintained a reign of 125 00:10:18,260 --> 00:10:21,540 from his capital at Bulawayo, the place of slaughter. 126 00:10:22,900 --> 00:10:27,400 Gold had been discovered on his land and several European adventurers were after 127 00:10:27,400 --> 00:10:28,400 it. 128 00:10:28,600 --> 00:10:30,880 But Rhodes was after more than gold. 129 00:10:31,360 --> 00:10:33,540 He wanted Lobengula's country. 130 00:10:37,480 --> 00:10:42,460 The story of Rhodes and Lobengula is fascinating and it is foul. 131 00:10:43,680 --> 00:10:45,400 The two men never met. 132 00:10:46,250 --> 00:10:51,170 And yet they had an extraordinarily strong relationship through 133 00:10:55,510 --> 00:10:58,370 Rhodes sent three of his agents to meet Lobengula. 134 00:10:58,810 --> 00:11:03,690 And in a bid to impress the Matabele king, he included among them the brother 135 00:11:03,690 --> 00:11:06,650 -in -law of the great David Livingston, John Moffat. 136 00:11:09,110 --> 00:11:11,830 But Lobengula was in no hurry to see them. 137 00:11:12,280 --> 00:11:16,080 and the men were forced to stay in an enclosure where the king kept his goats. 138 00:11:27,240 --> 00:11:31,820 There was a long, long wait for Rhodes's emissaries. 139 00:11:34,500 --> 00:11:39,320 Rudd particularly writes back about the appalling conditions, the mud, the 140 00:11:39,320 --> 00:11:40,600 flies, the stench. 141 00:11:41,150 --> 00:11:43,090 the impatience that they had there. 142 00:11:45,130 --> 00:11:50,230 They were kept waiting literally for months while Lobengula made up his mind. 143 00:11:53,870 --> 00:12:00,710 And finally, after all this waiting, Lobengula signified that he was willing 144 00:12:00,710 --> 00:12:06,790 to have a grand indaba to discuss whether they would grant a concession 145 00:12:06,790 --> 00:12:08,990 to Rhodes' consortium. 146 00:12:12,620 --> 00:12:16,260 John Moffat presented Lobengula with a document that would grant Rhodes 147 00:12:16,260 --> 00:12:17,540 extraordinary powers. 148 00:12:19,260 --> 00:12:25,140 The complete and exclusive charge over all metals and minerals situated in my 149 00:12:25,140 --> 00:12:30,600 kingdom, principalities and dominions, together with full power to do all the 150 00:12:30,600 --> 00:12:34,780 things that they may deem necessary to win and procure the same. 151 00:12:37,200 --> 00:12:41,460 He eventually signed a document on the understanding... 152 00:12:42,030 --> 00:12:48,650 that he was simply granting prospecting rights to Rhodes' company for his men to 153 00:12:48,650 --> 00:12:50,970 dig ten holes in his territory. 154 00:12:52,150 --> 00:12:55,930 And what Lobengula had signed, he had virtually signed away his country. 155 00:13:02,230 --> 00:13:08,070 Armed with that document, Rhodes was able to go to London seeking a royal 156 00:13:08,070 --> 00:13:09,070 charter. 157 00:13:09,360 --> 00:13:14,100 which would be Britain's endorsement of his rights to that territory. 158 00:13:17,360 --> 00:13:18,820 Rhodes was now famous. 159 00:13:19,440 --> 00:13:23,000 He was widely admired for his immense wealth and achievement. 160 00:13:24,180 --> 00:13:28,000 But many distrusted him as a man who would let nothing, not even the British 161 00:13:28,000 --> 00:13:30,600 government, stand in the way of his ambition. 162 00:13:39,690 --> 00:13:42,710 The Queen was curious about her overmighty subject. 163 00:13:43,290 --> 00:13:46,170 She invited Rhodes to stay at Windsor Castle. 164 00:13:49,690 --> 00:13:56,290 In 1890, when he eventually met Queen Victoria, he charmed her. 165 00:13:57,130 --> 00:14:02,750 There's a wonderful moment where it's said that she said to him, Is it true, 166 00:14:02,870 --> 00:14:04,310 Rhodes, that you're a woman -hater? 167 00:14:05,080 --> 00:14:08,860 to which he replied, How could I possibly hate a sex to which your 168 00:14:08,860 --> 00:14:09,860 belongs? 169 00:14:12,520 --> 00:14:17,600 Rhodes won the queen's approval, and a royal charter authorizing him to exploit 170 00:14:17,600 --> 00:14:19,100 King Lobengula's concession. 171 00:14:20,720 --> 00:14:24,800 It gave him legal rights to recruit a company police force and build forts 172 00:14:24,800 --> 00:14:28,520 throughout the region, the powers of an independent state. 173 00:14:32,560 --> 00:14:35,460 But Rhodes still needed to break the power of Lobangula. 174 00:14:36,100 --> 00:14:42,180 To achieve this, he called on his closest friend, Dr. Leander Starr 175 00:14:42,180 --> 00:14:45,840 gambler, an adventurer, and a ruthless opportunist. 176 00:14:49,800 --> 00:14:54,500 His chance came when Lobangula launched an attack on a weaker tribe in a dispute 177 00:14:54,500 --> 00:14:55,500 over cattle. 178 00:14:58,080 --> 00:15:00,080 Jamison sent a message to Rhodes. 179 00:15:01,390 --> 00:15:05,710 We have the excuse for a row over murdered women and children, and the 180 00:15:05,710 --> 00:15:08,910 of Matabele land would give us a tremendous lift in shares. 181 00:15:11,370 --> 00:15:15,010 Jamison recruited a force of 1 ,400 white mercenaries. 182 00:15:15,490 --> 00:15:22,270 Each man was promised 6 ,000 acres of Lobangula's land and 15 claims to 183 00:15:22,270 --> 00:15:23,270 for gold. 184 00:15:25,450 --> 00:15:29,910 When Rhodes and Jamison between them decided that the time was right to take 185 00:15:29,910 --> 00:15:36,140 Matabele land, Key ingredient, the key weapon for them was the Maxim gun, the 186 00:15:36,140 --> 00:15:37,140 machine gun. 187 00:15:37,580 --> 00:15:40,920 Now, this was a weapon that fired 60 bullets a second. 188 00:15:41,400 --> 00:15:45,020 This had never, never been used in battle before. 189 00:15:45,900 --> 00:15:52,140 And it's extraordinary that a company, a corporation, should possess the most 190 00:15:52,140 --> 00:15:55,260 top -secret weapon, as it were, that the British Army possessed. 191 00:15:55,940 --> 00:15:57,520 But Rhodes had Maxim guns. 192 00:15:59,760 --> 00:16:02,900 The Matabele were mainly armed with spears and clubs. 193 00:16:03,780 --> 00:16:05,720 The result was devastating. 194 00:16:11,740 --> 00:16:17,120 Rhodes' maxing guns just cut through the advancing Matabele, again and again and 195 00:16:17,120 --> 00:16:18,500 again. It was like scything grass. 196 00:16:19,700 --> 00:16:21,320 They didn't stand a chance. 197 00:16:21,760 --> 00:16:24,960 The losses were enormous, 3 ,000 on one day. 198 00:16:25,640 --> 00:16:27,580 It was slaughter. 199 00:16:31,480 --> 00:16:33,900 Lobangula fled Bulawaya with his wives. 200 00:16:35,220 --> 00:16:39,820 A few days later, his abandoned ox cart was found with the king's body lying 201 00:16:39,820 --> 00:16:40,820 nearby. 202 00:16:41,320 --> 00:16:46,140 According to one of his followers, the great king of the Matabele had poisoned 203 00:16:46,140 --> 00:16:47,140 himself. 204 00:16:49,680 --> 00:16:54,560 John Moffat, who had persuaded Lobangula to sign the mining concession, was 205 00:16:54,560 --> 00:16:55,720 stricken by remorse. 206 00:16:56,840 --> 00:16:59,300 The king was a gentleman in his way. 207 00:16:59,960 --> 00:17:01,960 and was foully finned again. 208 00:17:04,800 --> 00:17:10,619 In November 1893, Dr. Jamison hoisted the company flag over Bulawayo. 209 00:17:11,359 --> 00:17:16,480 Rhodes now had personal control over a vast territory that was to be called 210 00:17:16,480 --> 00:17:17,680 Rhodesia. 211 00:17:20,460 --> 00:17:26,119 A few days later, he made his triumphant entry into Lobangula's former capital. 212 00:17:26,780 --> 00:17:31,620 and congratulated his troops on their destruction of what he called a ruthless 213 00:17:31,620 --> 00:17:32,620 barbarism. 214 00:17:33,420 --> 00:17:36,340 John Moffat now had a complete change of heart. 215 00:17:38,140 --> 00:17:41,000 The great Rhodes is prancing around. 216 00:17:41,280 --> 00:17:45,940 Everyone here is bowing down and worshipping him as the wisest of men. 217 00:17:46,340 --> 00:17:48,460 The popular tide is with him. 218 00:17:48,960 --> 00:17:51,500 I suppose there will be a crash some day. 219 00:17:52,090 --> 00:17:56,230 and men will suddenly recollect that there is still such a thing as justice, 220 00:17:56,350 --> 00:17:57,790 even to niggers. 221 00:18:08,990 --> 00:18:12,730 Rhodes' reward was to be elected the Prime Minister of Cape Colony. 222 00:18:13,470 --> 00:18:17,610 He bought a house on the slopes of Table Mountain overlooking the two oceans, 223 00:18:17,770 --> 00:18:19,230 the Indian and the Atlantic. 224 00:18:21,930 --> 00:18:26,890 Here he surrounded himself with his male friends and enlightened them with his 225 00:18:26,890 --> 00:18:29,450 religious and racial theories. 226 00:18:30,170 --> 00:18:33,550 Whites have clearly come out on top in this struggle for existence. 227 00:18:34,270 --> 00:18:38,390 Within the white race, the English -speaking man has proved himself to be 228 00:18:38,390 --> 00:18:43,410 most likely instrument of the divine plan to spread justice, liberty, and 229 00:18:43,410 --> 00:18:45,930 over the widest possible area of the planet. 230 00:18:46,290 --> 00:18:50,010 Therefore, I shall devote the rest of my life to God's purpose. 231 00:18:50,540 --> 00:18:52,540 and help him to make the world English. 232 00:18:56,820 --> 00:19:00,980 Rhodes was master of all he surveyed, but he wanted more. 233 00:19:02,300 --> 00:19:07,520 His lust for power would soon plunge Victoria's empire into its darkest hour. 234 00:19:09,760 --> 00:19:15,620 In 1886, gold was discovered in the Transvaal, a state established by some 235 00:19:15,620 --> 00:19:17,320 the Boers to escape British rule. 236 00:19:21,680 --> 00:19:26,260 Rhodes feared that the Transvaal Boers, enriched by revenues from gold mines, 237 00:19:26,500 --> 00:19:28,880 would become an obstacle to his plans. 238 00:19:29,720 --> 00:19:34,860 If they joined forces with German colonists in the west, they would block 239 00:19:34,860 --> 00:19:35,860 route to the north. 240 00:19:36,140 --> 00:19:41,420 To avoid this, Rhodes formed an alliance with disgruntled miners in the gold 241 00:19:41,420 --> 00:19:46,240 town of Johannesburg and planned an uprising to overthrow the Boers. 242 00:19:48,720 --> 00:19:50,340 Jamison assured Rhodes, 243 00:19:51,310 --> 00:19:54,210 Anyone could take the Transvaal with a dozen revolvers. 244 00:19:56,450 --> 00:20:00,730 So Rhodes devised a plan to take the Transvaal by force, and these were the 245 00:20:00,730 --> 00:20:04,790 elements. That the people of Johannesburg would rise up in 246 00:20:05,630 --> 00:20:12,330 They would call for assistance, and Jamison would respond to that call with 247 00:20:12,330 --> 00:20:16,850 group of mercenaries and Rhodesian police, and as it were, take the 248 00:20:24,560 --> 00:20:30,000 The promised uprising failed to materialize, but Jamison continued with 249 00:20:30,000 --> 00:20:33,560 plan. He rode into the Transvaal at the head of his men. 250 00:20:35,140 --> 00:20:40,000 But the Boers were ready for them. They let the invaders ride on until they were 251 00:20:40,000 --> 00:20:44,020 surrounded, and then picked them off with murderous accuracy. 252 00:20:56,560 --> 00:21:00,680 According to the Boer commander, many of Rhodes' raiders were boys in their late 253 00:21:00,680 --> 00:21:03,420 teens, and many were weeping. 254 00:21:06,780 --> 00:21:11,700 The Jamison raid into the Transvaal was widely regarded as an unprovoked attack 255 00:21:11,700 --> 00:21:15,360 on an independent state, a naked act of aggression. 256 00:21:16,640 --> 00:21:19,000 It sent shockwaves around the world. 257 00:21:20,920 --> 00:21:24,440 Rhodes was forced to resign as Prime Minister of Cape Colony. 258 00:21:25,100 --> 00:21:28,020 and he was summoned to London to answer to the British Parliament. 259 00:21:28,700 --> 00:21:30,500 But he had nothing to fear. 260 00:21:31,020 --> 00:21:34,880 Public opinion in Britain was increasingly anti -Boer. 261 00:21:39,280 --> 00:21:42,960 The Queen expressed the popular mood in a letter to her daughter. 262 00:21:43,640 --> 00:21:47,780 The Boers are a horrid people, cruel and overbearing. 263 00:21:50,100 --> 00:21:52,680 Rhodes had set Britain on a dangerous course. 264 00:21:53,680 --> 00:21:57,960 His violent and unscrupulous methods provoked a reaction that shook the 265 00:21:57,960 --> 00:22:03,220 to its core, and this at a time when the queen was preparing to celebrate the 266 00:22:03,220 --> 00:22:04,980 glories and triumphs of her reign. 267 00:22:12,360 --> 00:22:17,780 1897 was the year of Victoria's Diamond Jubilee, 60 years on the throne. 268 00:22:19,560 --> 00:22:24,160 soldiers and colonial leaders from all over the empire came to London to take 269 00:22:24,160 --> 00:22:25,960 part in a spectacular parade. 270 00:22:26,780 --> 00:22:29,440 It was recorded by the new movie cameras. 271 00:22:29,820 --> 00:22:35,360 The little old woman under the umbrella now ruled over a fifth of the population 272 00:22:35,360 --> 00:22:36,360 of the planet. 273 00:22:38,120 --> 00:22:40,300 A never -to -be -forgotten day. 274 00:22:40,660 --> 00:22:45,420 No one ever, I believe, has met with such an ovation as was given to me. 275 00:22:45,880 --> 00:22:47,800 The cheering was quite deafening. 276 00:22:48,220 --> 00:22:51,260 and every face seemed to be filled with real joy. 277 00:22:53,360 --> 00:22:59,000 But this joy would soon turn to disillusionment, as soldiers who had 278 00:22:59,000 --> 00:23:02,680 streets of London were sent to fight a war in South Africa. 279 00:23:06,640 --> 00:23:11,740 The British dispatched an army to accomplish what Rhodes had failed to do, 280 00:23:11,740 --> 00:23:13,480 an end to Boer independence. 281 00:23:15,720 --> 00:23:18,920 The Boer War began just a year after the Queen's Jubilee. 282 00:23:20,100 --> 00:23:24,800 The British believed it would be short and glorious, but the Boers were well 283 00:23:24,800 --> 00:23:25,800 armed. 284 00:23:30,880 --> 00:23:36,080 One English private wrote in his diary, As soon as we started to advance, the 285 00:23:36,080 --> 00:23:37,160 bullets began to fly. 286 00:23:38,180 --> 00:23:41,000 All of a sudden, a maxim began to play upon us. 287 00:23:41,960 --> 00:23:43,540 That stopped the firing line. 288 00:23:44,030 --> 00:23:48,110 her flat on their faces as they fell, and devil of a move would they make at 289 00:23:48,110 --> 00:23:49,110 all. 290 00:23:54,410 --> 00:24:00,030 The British have gone to war in South Africa very ill -prepared for this type 291 00:24:00,030 --> 00:24:01,030 warfare. 292 00:24:02,190 --> 00:24:06,050 Most of the generals who fought the Boers were used to people armed with 293 00:24:06,050 --> 00:24:06,649 and rifles. 294 00:24:06,650 --> 00:24:07,770 Well, it was a shock for them. 295 00:24:10,220 --> 00:24:12,040 There were instances of surrender. 296 00:24:12,260 --> 00:24:16,660 People couldn't take it any longer. They just threw down their weapons and ran 297 00:24:16,660 --> 00:24:18,340 back. There were cries of cowardice. 298 00:24:24,860 --> 00:24:28,280 Successive defeats shattered the confidence of the British public. 299 00:24:29,020 --> 00:24:31,360 Even the staunch Victoria was shaken. 300 00:24:32,300 --> 00:24:33,800 No news today. 301 00:24:34,100 --> 00:24:36,040 Only lists of casualties. 302 00:24:38,960 --> 00:24:43,240 The war touched her personally when her own grandson, Prince Christian Victor, 303 00:24:43,520 --> 00:24:45,820 was numbered among the dead soldiers. 304 00:24:48,420 --> 00:24:50,660 The British stepped up their war effort. 305 00:24:51,260 --> 00:24:54,180 They shipped a quarter of a million troops to southern Africa. 306 00:24:55,800 --> 00:24:58,300 Slowly the tide turned against the Boers. 307 00:25:00,080 --> 00:25:05,180 The Boer armies were defeated, but their young commandos continued a vicious 308 00:25:05,180 --> 00:25:06,180 guerrilla war. 309 00:25:09,100 --> 00:25:13,940 In retaliation, the British commander -in -chief, General Kitchener, pursued a 310 00:25:13,940 --> 00:25:18,400 war of attrition, burning farmsteads and rounding up women and children. 311 00:25:20,160 --> 00:25:23,880 He interned them in the world's first concentration camps. 312 00:25:26,040 --> 00:25:32,860 Large numbers of birth civilians are exposed to typhus and cholera, and the 313 00:25:32,860 --> 00:25:38,120 result are death camps, which the British press... 314 00:25:38,600 --> 00:25:45,080 and various British liberals take a great interest in and expose as 315 00:25:45,080 --> 00:25:47,820 barbaric methods of warfare. 316 00:25:49,940 --> 00:25:54,800 The mood of the Queen and the public remained stoutly patriotic, but the 317 00:25:54,800 --> 00:25:59,600 disasters of the Boer War fed a growing disillusionment from which the imperial 318 00:25:59,600 --> 00:26:01,760 ideal would never recover. 319 00:26:13,690 --> 00:26:19,070 Cecil Rhodes, the man who had done more than any other to start this war, had 320 00:26:19,070 --> 00:26:20,510 one more battle to fight. 321 00:26:24,150 --> 00:26:27,410 His heart condition made it difficult for him to breathe. 322 00:26:28,230 --> 00:26:32,470 He was carried to his little cottage on the coast in the hope that the fresh sea 323 00:26:32,470 --> 00:26:34,370 breezes would relieve his anguish. 324 00:26:41,750 --> 00:26:47,170 But here, At the age of 48, he finally lost his race with death. 325 00:26:52,630 --> 00:26:58,670 He had left orders that he was to be buried in Rhodesia, at a spot he called 326 00:26:58,670 --> 00:26:59,670 View of the World. 327 00:27:00,430 --> 00:27:04,810 His grave was marked not with a cross, but with a massive stone. 328 00:27:05,650 --> 00:27:10,130 It was, in the words of a British High Commissioner, a haunted... 329 00:27:10,780 --> 00:27:12,440 sinister, pagan place. 330 00:27:18,180 --> 00:27:22,040 Many of the attitudes that Rhodes had embodied were buried with him. 331 00:27:24,060 --> 00:27:30,280 The era of Victoria was over, and with it the unquestioning imperialism she had 332 00:27:30,280 --> 00:27:31,280 come to represent. 333 00:27:38,670 --> 00:27:43,050 Queen Victoria died in the evening of January 22nd, 1901. 334 00:27:43,750 --> 00:27:45,530 She was 81 years old. 335 00:27:46,530 --> 00:27:49,770 On her own instructions, she was dressed in white. 336 00:27:50,190 --> 00:27:52,690 Spring flowers were sprinkled over her body. 337 00:27:55,550 --> 00:27:59,570 Her face was covered by the veil she had worn at her wedding with Prince Albert 338 00:27:59,570 --> 00:28:00,730 60 years before. 339 00:28:04,850 --> 00:28:07,850 Queen Victoria's death was seen by many. 340 00:28:08,350 --> 00:28:09,990 as the passing of an era. 341 00:28:12,250 --> 00:28:17,430 But also in 1901, there were fears that other powers were rising up, which might 342 00:28:17,430 --> 00:28:22,930 start to put pressure on Britain to yield its primacy in the world. 343 00:28:23,530 --> 00:28:29,090 So that the last days of the Queen's reign, there were fears and misgivings. 344 00:28:34,070 --> 00:28:36,470 Rhodes had overstretched the empire. 345 00:28:37,260 --> 00:28:41,340 The Boer republics he had driven Britain to conquer were soon given 346 00:28:41,340 --> 00:28:42,340 independence. 347 00:28:43,020 --> 00:28:47,540 His aggressive spirit was to be replaced by a Gladstonian liberalism. 348 00:28:50,000 --> 00:28:54,680 Those ideals that Prince Albert had instilled in Victoria in the early years 349 00:28:54,680 --> 00:29:00,900 her reign proved in the end to be more enduring than the harsh imperialism of 350 00:29:00,900 --> 00:29:01,900 her final decades. 30812

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