Natal Native Rebellion Medal

Natal Native Rebellion Medal
Awarded by the Monarch of the United Kingdom and the British Dominions, and Emperor of India
Country United Kingdom
Colony of Natal
Type Military campaign medal
Eligibility Military and police forces
Awarded for Campaign service
Campaign Bambatha Rebellion, 1906
Clasps 1906
Statistics
Established 1907
First awarded 1907
Total awarded 9,622
Order of wear
Next (higher) Tibet Medal
Next (lower) India General Service Medal (1909)

Ribbon bar

The Natal Native Rebellion Medal was a British campaign medal. It was authorised in 1907 for service in Natal during a Zulu revolt against British rule and taxation in 1906. The 1906 Clasp to the medal was awarded to those who had served for more than fifty days.[1][2][3]

The Bambatha Rebellion

In the years following the Anglo-Boer War, British employers in Natal found it difficult to recruit sufficient Zulu farm workers because of increased competition from the gold mines on the Witwatersrand. To coerce more Zulu men to enter the labour market, the Natal Colonial government introduced a £1 head tax in addition to the existing hut tax. The revolt, led by Bambatha kaMancinza, leader of the amaZondi clan of the Zulu people who lived in the Mpanza Valley, a district near Greytown, was sparked in February 1906 when two British tax collectors were killed near Richmond.[4]

Institution

The Natal Native Rebellion Medal and the 1906 Clasp to the medal were authorised by King Edward VII on 9 May 1907, as a campaign medal for service during the Bambatha Rebellion in Natal in 1906.[1][2][3]

Award criteria

To qualify for the medal, a soldier or policeman had to have served in the field for at least twenty days between 11 February 1906 and 3 August 1906. Those who had served for fifty days or longer, which most recipients did, qualified for the award of the 1906 Clasp to the medal.[1][2][3]

Altogether 9,622 medals were awarded. Most of the recipients were members of the Natal colonial military and police forces, while 546 medals were awarded to volunteers from the Transvaal Colony and 70 medals to troops from the Cape of Good Hope.[1][2][3]

Order of wear

Campaign Medals and Stars are not listed by name in the order of wear prescribed by the British Central Chancery of the Orders of Knighthood, but are all grouped together as taking precedence after the Queen's Medal for Chiefs and before the Polar Medals, in order of the date of the campaign for which awarded.[5]

In the order of wear of British Campaign Medals, the Natal Native Rebellion Medal takes precedence after the Tibet Medal and before the India General Service Medal (1909).[5]

South Africa

With effect from 6 April 1952, when a new South African set of decorations and medals was instituted to replace the British awards used to date, the older British decorations and medals applicable to South Africa continued to be worn in the same order of precedence but, with the exception of the Victoria Cross, took precedence after all South African orders, decorations and medals awarded to South Africans on or after that date.[5][6][7]

Description

Obverse

The medal was struck in silver and is a disk, 36 millimetres in diameter. The obverse depicts the uncrowned head of King Edward VII, surrounded by the legend "EDWARDVS VII REX IMPERATOR" around the perimeter.[1][2][3]

Reverse

The reverse displays the figures of Britannia and Natalia against a background of a landscape with Zulu huts. The name "NATAL" appears in the exergue.[1][2][3]

Clasp

The clasp displays the year "•1906•".[1][2]

Ribbon

The ribbon is 32 millimetres wide and crimson, with 7 millimetres wide black edges.[1][2]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Alexander, E.G.M., Barron, G.K.B. and Bateman, A.J. (1986). South African Orders, Decorations and Medals. Human and Rousseau.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Mitchell, F.K. (1965). The Natal Native Rebellion 1906 War Medal in South African Numismatic Journal, April 1965.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 South African Medal Website - Colonial Military Forces (Accessed 6 May 2015)
  4. Stuart, J. (1913). History of the Zulu Rebellion 1906. London: Macmillan and Co. pp. 548–581.
  5. 1 2 3 The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 56878. p. 3352. 17 March 2003.
  6. Government Notice no. 1982 of 1 October 1954 - Order of Precedence of Orders, Decorations and Medals, published in the Government Gazette of 1 October 1954.
  7. Republic of South Africa Government Gazette Vol. 477, no. 27376, Pretoria, 11 March 2005, OCLC 72827981
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