The Great Depression and World War Two
The NP remained in power alone till 1933, when the effects of the Great Depression forced a coalition government with the pro-reconciliation faction under the former Boer War general Jan Smuts. This coalition ruled till the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939. When the Second World War broke out, certain small factions of Afrikaners were decidedly pro-Hitler and had even formed tiny Nazi parties, none of whom received any significant electoral support. A bare majority of the South African...
Second Roman Invasion Bc
The following year, 54 BC, Caesar however launched yet another invasion of Britain. This time he landed a force several times larger than his first expedition, including some 2,000 cavalry. He hoped to land his forces and march quickly into the heart of the Celtic territory and inflict a defeat upon the scattered tribes before they could unite into one army. However, he chose his landing beaches poorly. To compound his problems, a storm forced him to spend ten days dragging all his ships onto...
Wars of Independence
The successful war of independence against Britain in North America in 1776, and the French revolution in 1789, finally provided the spark for a series of wars of independence in South America in a series of clashes dating from 1810 to 1825, the South American continent was piecemeal broken up into independent units, ending finally in 1825, when Spain formally surrendered control of the last part of its territory on the continent. The fathers of the South American wars of independence were the...
Pax Romana Bc Ad
At the end of the century of civil strife 133 BC - 30 BC , Rome was finally united under one ruler. Thereafter ensued what became known as the Pax Romana, the Peace of Rome, which lasted for well on 200 years, from 30 BC to 235 AD. This time was also to mark the racial undoing of the Empire, caused by the long term effects of the inclusion of foreign lands and peoples under the aegis of the Roman Empire, and significantly by the bypassing of a law set down by the first Romans prohibiting mixed...
The Napoleonic Wars 1
The outbreak of the Napoleonic Wars in Europe saw Britain's land empire expand once again through a series of conquests of French or French allied territories. This expansion was linked to the great British naval victory over the French fleet at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805 the destruction of the French fleet led to the British navy establishing its mastery of the seas, a situation which would remain unchanged until the early 20th century. A British naval fleet, operating out of the new...
The Thirty Years War House Of Habsburg Defeated
The spread of the Protestant rebellion against Catholicism spread to the Austrian Empire. In 1618 a Protestant rebellion became a European wide conflict known as the Thirty Years' War. This conflict was fought mainly on German soil, after a Catholic king of Austria had been deposed by Protestant rebels. A third of all of Germany's population was killed in this battle between Catholic and Protestant. Ultimately the House of Habsburg were defeated at the end of the Thirty Years' War, and by the...
Battle of Little Bighorn
The Battle of Little Bighorn was fought between a regiment of the US 7th Cavalry led by Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer and a force of Sioux and Cheyenne Amerinds on 25 June 1876, in what is now the state of Montana. Gold had been discovered in the nearby Black Hills in 1874 this had led to the inevitable massive and overnight influx of White prospectors into what was Amerind land immediately the Sioux and Cheyenne chiefs, Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, and Gall, organized raiding...
The Afsluitdyk
Despite the deprivations caused by the First World War, the Dutch recovered well, and continued to expand directly afterwards. By the second decade of the 20th Century the Dutch had become masters at containing the sea. Huge areas of land had even been reclaimed from the sea, leading to almost a third of the country actually being below sea level, cut off behind massive dikes for which the country has, like windmills, become famous. Much of the land that lies below sea level is still kept dry...
Napoleon Bonaparte And Unification
The ideals of the French Revolution spread to Switzerland after 1789. Swiss revolutionaries also rose up against the almost feudal system of Lords and Princes who ran the confederation of Swiss cantons. The Swiss revolutionaries were however suppressed by the Swiss nobles, which led to the French revolutionaries sending a French army into Switzerland to help the Swiss revolutionaries. With French intervention, the Swiss revolutionaries managed to stage a comeback, and a Swiss republic based on...
Fascism Benito Mussolini
Italy however ended the war in social and economic chaos, with a strong Communist Party continuously on the verge of provoking a full scale rebellion, as had happened in Russia. A former socialist by the name of Benito Mussolini then became active in politics as leader of a party called the Fascists. That name was derived from the symbol of the old Roman rulers, a bundle of sticks bound together to symbolize unity and an ax head protruding from the stick to symbolize authority, called a fasces...
Ivan The Great Refuses To Pay Tribute To Mongols
The Mongols were then further weakened by renewed internal dissension, with a new Mongol warlord, Tamerlane, conquering much of the original Mongol empire in Russia in 1395. After Tamerlane's death, his empire was broken into four independent khanates Astrakhan', Kazan', Crimea, and Sibir. So divided, the Mongols were at last weakened to the point where the Muscovite principality, under the leadership of Ivan III, took the opportunity in 1480, to refuse to pay the annual tribute to the Horde....
Most Hungarians Not Descendants Of Magyars
Although the original Magyars had been mixed race Asiatics and had been largely killed or dispersed by the German armies, small numbers remained in Hungary and other countries in Eastern Europe. Partly as a result of the absorption of these already mixed race Asiatics into a portion of the Slavic population in Eastern Europe, the Hungarians began to call themselves Magyars - although for the majority of Hungarians, this is not an accurate reflection of their racial roots. The original Magyars...
White Expansion Voyages of Discovery and Settlement
When the White explorations of Africa, North America, Australia, New Zealand, Central and South America, India, China and Japan, are reviewed by most historians, very often the most important factor which gave rise to this era is deliberately ignored the staggering disparity in technology between the White explorers and the native peoples is the only reason why it was the Whites who explored and colonized the rest of the world, and not the other way round. That this is so will come as no...
South America and Spanish and Portuguese Voyages of discovery
After the Spaniard Christopher Columbus landed in the West Indies in 1492, Spain and Portugal started disputing areas of influence on the Southern American continent. The dispute was eventually settled by the pope, who in 1493, drew up defined areas of influence for the two nations - ostensibly with the idea of spreading Christianity to the natives in those territories. In time the Portuguese territory became known as Brazil, hence the lingua franca of that country to this day is Portuguese,...
The Real Reason For The Fall Of Rome Fewer Than Percent Of The Population Were
For centuries historians have endlessly debated the reasons why the power of Rome waned. Most explanations have centered on arguments that the civilization's morals collapsed - that the Empire exhausted itself due to over exertion - or that it declined economically. The truth behind the disappearance of the Roman Empire is in fact much simpler and stunningly obvious - the facts are that the people who created the Empire, the original Romans, mainly Indo-European tribes, vanished, absorbed into...
Druids Challenged By Christianity
Before the Romans brought Christianity to Britain, the dominant religion had been a variant of the Celtic religions - nature worship and the existence of holy men, or druids, were the dominant characteristics. The druids had, by some accounts, less than savory practices, although the full nature of their activities have been lost in the passage of time. With the invasion of the British Isles by the Germanic tribes, Christianity, which was the trademark of the Roman-ised Britons of the era, was...
The Mayflower
The great English religious settlements in North America started in 1620 with the arrival of the Pilgrims, who sailed from the English city of Plymouth in the ship, the Mayflower, landing in Massachusetts Bay in 1620. These White Protestant extremists - Puritans who held that the Anglican Church of England was still too close to the Catholic Church - set up a Puritan community, forming the Massachusetts Bay Company in 1628. Other religious colonies were established in Rhode Island 1636 , where...
Reconstruction Abandoned
This campaign of violence was eventually to be one of the reasons why the Northern States abandoned the Reconstruction campaign, and how formerly disenfranchised Whites were once again granted the vote. Once they had succeeded in taking over the southern legislatures again, the Whites proceeded to dominate through sheer weight of numbers. The original Klan was officially dissolved by its leader, Nathan B. Forrest, in 1869, but individual groups continued with their campaign of violence. Finally...
The Battle Of Troyes Whites Unite To Defeat The Asiatics
The threat of the Hunnish army finally forced the ever squabbling Romans and Visigoths into a united front. A Roman army, under the last of the Western Empire's properly Roman generals, Aetius, joined up with a Visigoth army under their king, Theodoric I, and together they met the Hunnish army in central France near the present day city of Troyes in 451 AD. In a day long battle, both sides inflicted heavy casualties on the other, with the Visigoth king, Theodoric, being killed in the fighting....
Expulsion Of Mixed Race Peoples By Philip Ii
The Moors had occupied Spain for over 700 years, so it was inevitable that they would have mixed with the local population over whom they ruled. In this way a not insignificant amount of Moorish - in reality mixed race Arabic Black - blood entered a few Spanish families in the southernmost parts of Spain and Portugal. The Gothic Spaniards did however recognize this as an issue, and in 1609, the Spanish king, Philip III, ordered the physical expulsion of some 250,000 Moriscos or Christianized...
French Revolution
The French revolution of 1789 was to serve as the spark to San Domingo's population pressures. A decree by the new French national assembly in Paris of 15 May 1791, gave the right to vote for a government in San Domingo to the White and mixed race population on the island. The White settlers on the island immediately protested, with the governor general of the island, the aptly named Blanchelande, sending a message to Paris warning that the implementation of such a form of government would...
Battle of Cholula
After three days in the city, the Whites were informed of a plot by the local Amerinds to ambush and kill them when they were off guard. Cortes responded by summoning all the nobles of Cholula and locking them in a room, leaving the Cholulans leaderless. Then the Whites, along with their Tlaxcalans allies, set about attacking the still forming Cholulan armed forces. The presence of the guns and horses won the day, and it is estimated that some 3,000 of the city's residents were killed. As the...
The First Crusade Ad
The First Crusade had as its explicit aim the capture of the city of Jerusalem in Palestine from the Muslims. In this aim it was successful - and the White Christians managed to hang on to an outpost in Palestine for very nearly two hundred years before finally being driven out by the Muslims. The First Crusade did not attract any kings and very few nobles - most were middle class French speakers - which was why Whites in Palestine were referred to as Franks. The First Crusade suffered however...
New Indoeuropean Invasions Alans And Vandals
Roman rule in Spain was only ended in 409 AD when bands of Germanics the Alans, the Vandals, the Suebians and others, crossed the Pyrenees and overthrew the Romanised Spaniards, setting up their own kingdoms. These Indo-European invaders were followed in quick order by an invasion of Visigoths under their leader Adolf brother in law of Alaric, the Goth who had sacked Rome in 410 AD . The Visigoths quickly routed everyone in Spain, and established an empire in that country which included a...
Blacks Repatriated From England
Slavery was formally abolished in 1772 in England by this time approximately 15,000 Black slaves had been imported into that country. In 1787, a society for the abolition of the slave trade was formed with Member of Parliament William Wilberforce as its parliamentary spokesman - almost immediately a policy of repatriation was started, the second one in Britain's history the first total expulsion of Blacks having taken place under Queen Elizabeth I . The abolitionists - as the opponents of...
France and the Continent
A treaty signed between the French king and the pope in 1516, placed the Catholic Church in France in a subservient role to the monarchy, while similar treaties with the rulers of other countries in Europe also slowly ate at the power of the pope, creating the political conditions under which theologians could start differing with the Catholic dogma without fear of being seized by the church police. Thus although the Reformation is formally classed as having begun with the rebellion led by the...
Rhodesia 1
The country known in history as Rhodesia now called Zimbabwe was created in 1888, when a Black tribal chief in the area, one Lobengula, granted a mining concession to the British Empire builder Cecil John Rhodes. Rhodes, who also served as the prime minister of the British Colony at the Cape, formed the British South Africa Company to settle the new region. He considered it not only valuable for its mineral wealth but also for its strategical position with the creation of a British colony to...
Goths Sack Rome For The First Time
For a few years the Emperor Theodosius held off the Goths. After his death however, the Visigoths regathered their strength under a capable leader named Alaric and invaded Italy itself, sacking the city of Rome in 410 AD. A peace treaty was struck between city leaders and Alaric, in terms of which the Visigoths were given a large piece of land in southern France in order to placate their territorial demands. How the Goths conquered the city of Rome in 410 AD. The immense aqueducts which carried...
Pearl Harbor 1
In terms of the Japanese plan, a swift campaign would see their troops take Burma, Malaya, the East Indies, and the Philippines in quick succession the only thing that stood between them and these possessions was the presence of the US Pacific fleet based at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii. It was decided to try and cripple the American fleet with a surprise air attack on the morning of 7 December 1941, in order to prevent the Americans from interfering with the Japanese invasions. The American military...
Chapter The Hellenes Classical Greece
The Greek peninsula, and its northern borders, the Balkans, had previously been settled by the original European peoples during the Neolithic Age. These peoples had created the Old European civilizations, which were some of the most advanced in Europe at the time. From approximately 5000 BC onwards, the Indo-European peoples had started flooding westwards, at first conquering but then integrating with these original Old European peoples. This massive influx of peoples brought about the fall of...
First World War Great Loss Of Life And Kaiser Deposed
As a result of colonial competition, inter-European rivalry and growing nationalism, Europe became increasingly divided. By 1907, the continent was split into two camps the Triple Alliance of Germany, Austria, and Italy, and the Triple Entente of Russia, France, and Britain. The creation of these alliances contributed to the outbreak of World War I 1914-1918 . The course of that catastrophic war, which saw millions of Germans killed, is related in a later chapter. Suffice to say here that it...
The Republic of South Africa
In 1961, the South African government declared itself a republic and formally withdrew from the British commonwealth - the aspirations of Afrikaner independence had once again been fulfilled. The White Republic of South Africa was noted for many things, not the least of them many world first in technological breakthroughs. In this way the very first heart transplant was carried out by an Afrikaner, Chris Barnard, in the segregated hospital of Groote Schuur in Cape Town, in 1962 the first truly...
Hermann Cherusci Trained By The Romans
However, the by now established Roman policy of drawing subjugated peoples into the administration of their own territories, thereby not only Romanising the population but also going a long way to subduing the new colonies, was also implemented in Germany. In this way two young Cherusci princes, the sons of the king of the Cherusci, were selected to be Romanised. Both young princes were sent to Rome in 1 AD. One of the brothers became completely Romanised and took on the name Flavius, while the...
Wars Against Persia Bc
Alexander began his war against Persia in the spring of 334 BC by crossing the Dardanelles with an army of 35,000 Macedonian and Greek troops - his chief officers, all Macedonians, were Antigonus, Ptolemy, and Seleucus, were all to later play significant roles in history themselves. At the river Granicus, near the ancient city of Troy, Alexander launched a surprise attack on a 40,000 strong Persian force. The Macedonians defeated the Persians, losing, according to Alexandrian exaggeration, only...
Amerind Territorial claims
Amerind territorial claims also resurfaced in the 1960's, spurred on by the climate created by the broader civil rights movements. In the 1960s, the state of Ottawa introduced a policy to end the special rights and status of Amerinds - but this policy was never implemented, being sabotaged by a Supreme Court decision following a case brought by an Amerind tribe, the Nisga'a of British Columbia. This court decision held that Amerind rights to the land had been in place at the time of...
The Cultural Achievements Of The Alexandrian Age
The period from 320 BC - 30 BC is known as the Alexandrian age, and contributed a number of philosophic, cultural and scientific advances to Western civilization. It was during this time that three well known philosophies were formulated Epicureanism, Stoicism and Scepticism. Epicureanism was started by the philosopher Epicurus 342 BC - 270 BC of Samos on the Ionian coast in Turkey. Epicurus did not believe in an afterlife and taught that the highest good was to obtain material benefits during...
The Nonwhite Invasion Ad
In the midst of the religious upheavals, the Nonwhite Turkish invasion of Europe, which had been gathering pace since the city of Constantinople had been overrun in 1453, dominated German foreign affairs. When the Turks invaded Hungary in 1663, German troops defeated the Nonwhite invaders. The Turks waited another 20 years before trying again. In 1683, the Turks invaded Austria itself, besieging Vienna in 1683. German and Polish troops relieved the city before it fell, driving the Turks beyond...
The White Cossacks and the Recolonization of the South
Starting in 1552, the southernmost parts of Russia were recolonized by Whites in that year White Muscovite armies conquered and annexed the Mongol kingdom of Kazan' in 1556, another Mongol region, Astrakhan, was also annexed. The colonization and clearing of central and southern Russia was undertaken by rough and ready White adventurers from the north of Russia, who became known as Cossacks more often than not they were peasants who had fled the feudal serfdom of the principalities in the north...
The Franks Clovis I Introduces Christianity
Following the fall of the Roman Empire in the West, the region now known as France was occupied by a Germanic tribe called the Franks. Originally a pagan tribe, the fate of Western civilization was changed when the Frankish king, Clovis I, converted to Christianity in 496 AD. Clovis invaded the Visigoth Empire in 507 AD, causing them to abandon that part of France they had occupied after the fall of Rome and retreat to Spain. Clovis I died in 511, and his successor expanded the Frankish kingdom...
Seleucid Rule In Palestine
While being ruled by the Seleucids, many Jews began to take on the ways and even language of their rulers Greek. This led them into conflict with the more nationalistic Jews, and a minor skirmish broke out between the two groups of Jews in 168 BC. This provoked the Seleucids into responding. They ordered the Jewish temple in Jerusalem to be stripped of its Judaic artifacts and dedicated to the worship of the Greek God Zeus. The Jews rebelled at this order, and after a military conflict, were...
First Great Impaling Of The Turks
In 1461, Walachian soldiers took a Turkish fort called Giurgiu near the Turkish center of Nicopolis and slaughtered all the Nonwhites they could find, impaling them on stakes, with the tallest stake being reserved for the Turkish governor of Nicopolis, Hamza Pasha. A 15th Century woodcut shows the - probably allegorical - scene of Vlad Dracula having a meal amongst the victims of his impaling activities. In one instance he impaled 20,000 Turks - the sight of the massacre so shook an invading...
Justinian Last Emperor To Unite The Empire
Justinian, who reigned from 527 to 565 AD, had been able to seize a large slice of North Africa from the remnants of the Vandals in 533, and thus had a good base for an invasion of Italy. After many years Justinian was able to capture not only Italy, but also Spain and the Aegean coast, for a while almost re-establishing the Roman Empire's borders before it had moved north of the Alps. It is of significance that the army which Justinian sent to conquer these lands, was under the leadership of a...
Scorched Earth and Concentration Camps
By mid 1900, the Second Anglo-Boer War had been raging for well over a year the overwhelming British force had occupied all the major towns and centers of the Boer Republics of the Orange Free State and the Transvaal, and the Boers had been forced to resort to hit and run guerrilla tactics in the open veld. The Boers continued to inflict defeats upon the British in this way so much so that eventually the war was to cost the British government 191 000 000 191 million Pounds - a fortune by 1901...
North America Vikings Land Years Before Columbus
Other settlements established by Viking bands included outposts on the Hebrides, Orkney, Shetland and Faeore islands. In 861 AD, a Viking discovered Iceland and soon the island was settled by other bands of Vikings. Around 950 AD, one of these Icelandic settlers, Eric the Red, sailed to Greenland, where another short lived Viking outpost was established. In the year 986 AD, another Viking, Bjarni Herjulfsson, sailing from Norway to Greenland, missed his destination and by accident sighted the...
Assault On Byzantine Constantinople Holds Out
The Eastern Roman Empire viewed the rise of Islam with alarm. Forgetting that the God of the Christian Bible was the same being as the Allah in the Koran and instead dealing with the reality that a blatant racial war was brewing between the Nonwhite Muslims and White Europe, the Eastern Romans immediately tried to prevent the spread of the new religion. They were however fighting a hopeless rearguard action at best. Facing fanatical Muslim warriors engaging in a Jihad, or Holy War, the Eastern...
Whites Defeated At Battle Of Leignitz
An alliance of Germans, Poles and Teutons under the command of Duke Henry II of Silesia formed a united White army and desperately tried to stem the Asiatic advance. They met the Mongols in battle at Leignitz in what was then Poland in April 1241, but were badly defeated. Henry was beheaded by the Mongolians and for several days afterwards his impaled head was carried around on a spear at the head of the Mongol army until it rotted away. The southern Indo-European tribes, the Slavs, then put...
The Goths Attack
The Western Empire remained threatened by the new invaders from the north. Even during the height of her power, Rome had never been able to penetrate north, and now new invaders, called Goths, seemed even more ferocious than their German cousins. The Goths were one of the later waves of Indo-European invaders to enter continental Europe and had originally settled in relative isolation in Sweden and other southern parts of Scandinavia. By about 300 BC, the Goths had started moving southwards,...
The French Revolution Louis Xvi Beheaded
A meeting of a long dormant meeting of the people of France the Estates General in 1798 resulted in the third estate - the representatives of the large masses of French people at the Estates General, setting off a popular uprising, which included the seizure of a virtually empty prison in Paris, the Bastille. The popular uprising resulted in the creation of a constitutional monarchy with a parliament elected indirectly by taxpaying citizens. This state lasted just over a year, but started to...
Union Defeat at Fredericksburg
Determined to try and advance somewhere, the Unionists then launched a full scale assault on the Confederate army in Northern Virginia, who had dug themselves into a well planned string of defensive positions around the hills near Fredericksburg in Virginia. On 13 December a huge Union army stormed the Confederate positions at Fredericksburg the Confederate defences were far too good, and the result was a slaughter. Union losses in killed, wounded, and missing amounted to 12,600, as opposed to...
Racial Consequences of the Amerind Wars
Apart from the seizure of their land, which was brought about not primarily through military defeat but the simple swamping of that territory by Whites yet another example of how a change in population causes a change in culture , the Amerind-White wars produced two significant results Firstly, the Amerinds were virtually eliminated as a political, racial and socio-demographic factor this situation allowed for the final flooding of North America by Whites, with all its resultant consequences...





















