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The If Man : Dr Leander Starr Jameson, the Inspiration for Kiplings Masterpiece

Author :  Chris Ash

Product Details

Country
South Africa
Publisher
30 degrees South,South Africa
ISBN 9781920143589
Format HardBound
Language English
Year of Publication 2012
Bib. Info 328 p.: ill., ports., maps.
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Product Description

A rollicking biography of Dr Leander Starr Jameson hero, rogue and rascal of Empire and the man who inspired Kipling to write his masterpiece, If The famous poem by Rudyard Kipling is based on the life of Jameson, and the suffering he endured as a result of the doomed raid that he and his Rhodesian and Bechuanaland policemen carried out against Paul Kruger 's Transvaal Republic in 1896. In this engaging biography in the style of Wilbur Smith-meets-Louis l Amour Ash recounts the life of this colonial statesman known as Dr Jim or simply The Doctor . He was an enigmatic man; when he died The Times estimated that his astonishing personal sway over his followers was equalled only by that of Parnell, the Irish patriot. During the fervour of the South African diamond rush Jameson established a small medical practice in Kimberley in 1878; it was here that he met and forged a lifelong friendship with Cecil John Rhodes. Jameson 's thirst for adventure, coupled with Rhodes 's dream of expanding the British Empire from the Cape to Cairo, led under Royal Charter to the British South Africa Company to the occupation of Mashonaland in 1890, with Jameson having laid the groundwork in his political dealings with Lobengula, king of the Matabele. And so began Jameson 's rollercoaster adventure: from Administrator of Mashonaland, to the invasion of Portuguese East Africa (Mozambique), the Matabele War and the infamous Jameson Raid and his subsequent trial and incarceration in London.Despite the raid, Jameson had a successful political life. He died on 26 November 1917 in London. His body was laid in a vault at Kensal Green cemetery where it remained until the end of the First World War. Ian Colvin wrote in 1923 that Jameson 's body was then ... carried to Rhodesia and on 22 May 1920, laid in a grave cut in the granite on the top of the mountain which Rhodes had called The View of the World in the Matopos Hills near Bulawayo], close beside the grave of his friend.

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