Historical Encounters: A Journal of Historical Consciousness, Historical Cultures, and History Education (Dec 2023)

War on the frontier

  • Mario Draper,
  • Martin Kerby,
  • Margaret Baguley

DOI
https://doi.org/10.52289/hej10.201
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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This article explores current historical thinking regarding the ‘small wars’ fought on the frontiers of European empires during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. By drawing on a variety of examples ranging from South Africa to Bolivia and Australia to the Congo, the authors identify three major themes - the expansionist aims of imperial governments often being shrouded in a veneer of benevolence, the brutal fighting that occurred when Indigenous populations challenged the loss of traditional lands, and the speed with which the ostensibly ‘civilised’ European colonists discarded battlefield norms when they waged what were in effect wars of annihilation. In a challenge to the thematic or narrow temporal boundaries that have traditionally dominated scholarship, the authors avoid characterising these wars in discrete national terms. For though every frontier conflict possessed its own unique character, there are broad similarities that can be explored through an analysis of European thinking regarding these ‘small wars’ and the violence and destruction that accompanied them.