-
loading
Ads with pictures

Observer stalag iv


Top sales list observer stalag iv

South Africa
The Observer Stalag IV B by Dave Katzeff **SIGNED COPY** A first edition card cover published by the author in 1972 Colour card covers are in good condition, cloth stapled spine has faded slightly but not torn at all, a very nice example of this book. Postage within South africa will be R40-00 Overseas buyers can contact us for a postal quote Abe #06937
R 800
See product
South Africa
                                    THE OBSERVER STALAG IVB REPRODUCTION OF A HAND-PRINTED WWII South African PRISONER OF WAR  NEWSPAPER AND ITS STORY, covers show wear but internally very good. Stalag IV-B  was one of the largest  prisoner-of-war camps  in  Germany  during  World War II. 
R 300
See product
South Africa (All cities)
By Ian Knight. 2001. Hard cover with dust cover; 290 pages. Very good condition; as new. Under 1kg. On the afternoon of 1 June 1879, in a muddy gully in the heart of Zululand, the ambitions of France's Bonaparte dynasty came to a tragic and violent end. A patrol of British troops, in the vanguard of an invading column, was ambushed by the Zulu, and fled, leaving three men dead on the field. Among them was Prince Louis Napoleon, the exiled heir to the Imperial throne in France, the last of the Bonapartes. What curious combination of circumstances had brought the Prince Imperial to southern Africa, wearing the uniform of - of all things - a British office? His was a romantic and melancholy story. Chased out of France after the debacle of the Franco-Prussian War, the Emperor Napoleon III had sought refuge with his family in England, where they were befriended by Queen Victoria. Napoleon's son, Louis, had grown to manhood in exile, succeeding on his father's death to the title of Napoleon IV, and awaiting a call to reclaim his throne, which might never have come. Raised in the shadow of the reputation of the great Napoleon, he hungered for military glory, and by special dispensation was allowed to train as a British officer. As a foreign Prince, however, and a Bonaparte, there was never any hope that he might serve in the British army, but when the Anglo-Zulu War broke out in 1879 he was allowed to go to Africa as an observer, attached to General Lord Chelmsford's staff. The war seemed to offer him the perfect chance for military experience without European political repercussions, and with a minimum of danger. This was not to be.   
R 185
See product

Free Classified ads - buy and sell cheap items in South Africa | CLASF - copyright ©2024 www.clasf.co.za.