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Kamerun campaign

Kamerun campaign
Part of the African theatre of World War I

British QF 12-pounder 8 cwt firing at Fort Dachang in 1915
Date6 August 1914 – 10 March 1916
(1 year, 7 months and 4 days)
Location03°52′N 11°31′E / 3.867°N 11.517°E / 3.867; 11.517
Result Allied victory
Territorial
changes
Kamerun divided into League of Nations mandates under British and French rule (1919)
Belligerents

 British Empire

 France

Belgium

 Germany

Commanders and leaders
Charles M. Dobell
Frederick H. Cunliffe
Joseph G. Aymerich
Félix Fuchs
Karl Ebermaier
Carl H. Zimmermann
Units involved
WAFF
WIR[1]
Force Publique
Schutztruppe
Strength
British:
1,668
French:
7,000
Belgian:
600[2]

Total:
9,000
1914:
1,855
1915:
6,000[3]
Casualties and losses
British:
917
French:
906[4]
5,000[5]
hundreds to thousands of Duala civilians killed[6]

The Kamerun campaign took place in the German colony of Kamerun in the African theatre of the First World War when the British, French and Belgians invaded the German colony from August 1914 to March 1916. Most of the campaign took place in Kamerun but skirmishes also broke out in British Nigeria. By the Spring of 1916, following Allied victories, the majority of German troops and the civil administration fled to the neighbouring neutral colony of Spanish Guinea (Río Muni). The campaign ended in a defeat for Germany and the partition of its former colony between France and Britain.

Background edit

Germany had established a protectorate over Kamerun by 1884 during the Scramble for Africa, and expanded its control in the Bafut Wars and Adamawa Wars. In 1911, France ceded Neukamerun (New Cameroon), a large territory to the east of Kamerun, to Germany as a part of the Treaty of Fez, the settlement that ended the Agadir Crisis. In 1914, the German colony of Kamerun made up all of modern Cameroon as well as portions of Nigeria, Chad, Gabon, the Republic of the Congo and the Central African Republic. Kamerun was surrounded on all sides by Entente territory. British-held Nigeria was to the north-west. The Belgian Congo bordered the colony to the south-east and French Equatorial Africa lay in the east. The neutral colony of Spanish Guinea was bordered by German Kamerun on all sides but one, which faced the sea. In 1914, on the eve of World War I, Kamerun remained largely unexplored and unmapped by European invaders.[7] In 1911–1912 the border with the French colonies of Gabon, Middle Congo, Ubangi-Shari and Chad was established and in 1913 the border between the colonies of Nigeria and Kamerun was defined.[8]

The German military forces stationed in the colony at the time consisted of around 1,855 Schutztruppen (protection troops). However, after the outbreak of war by mid-1915, the Germans were able to recruit an army of around 6,000. Allied forces on the other hand in the territories surrounding Kamerun were much larger. French Equatorial Africa alone could mobilize as many as 20,000 soldiers on the eve of war while British Nigeria to the west could raise an army of 7,550.[3]

Operations edit

Invasion in 1914 edit

At the outbreak of war in Europe in early August 1914, the German colonial administration in Kamerun attempted to offer neutrality with Britain and France in accordance with Articles 10 and 11 of the Berlin Act of 1885.[9] However this was rejected by the Allies. The French were eager to regain the land ceded to Germany in the Treaty of Fez in 1911. The first Allied expeditions into the colony on 6 August 1914 were from the east conducted by French troops from French Equatorial Africa under General Joseph Gaudérique Aymerich. This region was mostly marshland, undeveloped, and was initially not heavily contested by Germans.[10]

By 25 August 1914, British forces in present-day Nigeria had moved into Kamerun from three different points. They pushed into the colony towards Mara in the far north, towards Garua in the centre, and towards Nsanakang in the south. British forces moving towards Garua under the command of Colonel MacLear were ordered to push to the German border post at Tepe near Garua. The first engagement between British and German troops in the campaign took place at the Battle of Tepe, eventually resulting in German withdrawal.[11]

In the far north British forces attempted to take the German fort at Mora but initially failed. This resulted in a long siege of German positions which would last until the end of the campaign.[12] British forces in the south attacking Nsanakang were defeated and almost completely destroyed by German counter-attacks at the Battle of Nsanakong.[13] MacLear then pushed his forces further inland towards the German stronghold of Garua but was repulsed in the First Battle of Garua on 31 August.[14]

Naval operations edit

In September 1914, the Germans had mined the Kamerun or Wouri estuary and scuttled naval vessels there to protect Douala, the colony's largest city and commercial centre. British and French naval vessels bombarded towns on the coast and by late September had cleared mines and conducted amphibious landings in order to isolate Douala. On 27 September, the city surrendered to Brigadier General Charles Macpherson Dobell, commander of the combined Allied force. The occupation of the entire coast soon followed as the French captured more of the territories to the south-east in an amphibious operation at the Battle of Ukoko.[15]

War in 1915 edit

 
Kamerun, 1914

By 1915, the majority of German forces, except for those holding out at the strongholds of Mora and Garua had withdrawn to the mountainous interior of the colony surrounding the new capital at Jaunde. In the spring of that year German forces were still able to significantly stall or repulse assaults by Allied forces. A German force under the command of Captain von Crailsheim from Garua even went on the offensive, engaging the British during a failed raid into Nigeria at the Battle of Gurin.[16] This surprisingly daring incursion into British territory prompted General Frederick Hugh Cunliffe to launch another attempt at taking the German fortresses at Garua at the Second Battle of Garua in June, resulting in a British victory.[17] This action freed Allied units in northern Kamerun to push further into the interior of the colony. This push resulted in the Allied victory at the Battle of Ngaundere on 29 June. Cunliffe's advance south to Jaunde, however, was stalled by heavy rains, and his force instead participated in the continuing Siege of Mora.[18]

When the weather improved, British forces under Cunliffe moved further south, capturing a German fort at the Battle of Banjo in November and occupying a number of other towns by the end of the year.[19] By December, the forces of Cunliffe and Dobell were in contact and ready to conduct an assault of Jaunde.[20] In this year most of Neukamerun was occupied by Belgian and French troops, who also began to prepare for an assault on Jaunde.[21]

Surrender in 1916 edit

In early 1916, the German commander, Carl Zimmermann came to the conclusion that the campaign was lost. With Allied forces pressing in on Jaunde from all sides and German resistance faltering, he ordered all remaining German units and civilians to escape to the neutral Spanish colony of Rio Muni.[22] By mid-February of that year the last German garrison at Mora surrendered, ending the Siege of Mora.[23] German soldiers and civilians which had escaped to Spanish Guinea were treated amicably by the Spanish, who had only 180 militiamen in Río Muni and were unable to forcibly intern them. Most native Cameroonians remained in Muni but the Germans eventually moved to Fernando Po; some were eventually transported by Spain to the neutral Netherlands (from where they could reach home) before the war was over.[24] Many Cameroonians, including the paramount chief of the Beti people, moved to Madrid, where they lived as visiting nobility on German funds.[25]

Atrocities edit

German forces ordered a scorched earth policy against the indigenous Duala people to repress an alleged "people's war." Duala women women were victims of wartime sexual violence by the German forces. Numerous killings were committed by German forces including in Jabassi where a white commander reportedly gave the order to "kill every native they saw."[6]

Aftermath edit

In February 1916, before the campaign ended, Britain and France agreed to divide Kamerun along the Picot Provisional Partition Line.[9] This resulted in Britain obtaining approximately one fifth of the colony situated on the Nigerian border. France gained Duala and most of the central plateau, which consisted of the majority of former German territory. The partition was accepted at the Paris Peace Conference and the former German colony became the League of Nations mandates of French Cameroon and British Cameroon by the Treaty of Versailles.[26]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Paice 2007, p. 299.
  2. ^ Strachan 2004, p. 31.
  3. ^ a b Killingray 2012, p. 116.
  4. ^ Moberly 1931, p. 426.
  5. ^ Erlikman 2004.
  6. ^ a b Njung, George Ndakwena (2016). Soldiers of their Own: Honor, Violence, Resistance and Conscription in Colonial Cameroon during the First World War (PDF). University of Michigan.
  7. ^ Moberly 1931, pp. 49–52.
  8. ^ Moberly 1931, pp. 46, 50.
  9. ^ a b Ngoh 2005, p. 349.
  10. ^ Killingray 2012, p. 117.
  11. ^ Moberly 1931, pp. 73–93.
  12. ^ Moberly 1931, pp. 170–173, 228–230, 421.
  13. ^ Moberly 1931, pp. 106–109.
  14. ^ Moberly 1931, pp. 93–97.
  15. ^ Moberly 1931, pp. 129, 156–157.
  16. ^ Moberly 1931, pp. 268–270.
  17. ^ Moberly 1931, pp. 294–299.
  18. ^ Moberly 1931, pp. 300–301, 322–323.
  19. ^ Moberly 1931, pp. 346–350.
  20. ^ Moberly 1931, pp. 388–293.
  21. ^ Moberly 1931, pp. 383–384.
  22. ^ Moberly 1931, pp. 405–419.
  23. ^ Moberly 1931, p. 421.
  24. ^ Moberly 1931, p. 412.
  25. ^ Quinn 1973, pp. 722–731.
  26. ^ Moberly 1931, p. 422.

References edit

  • Elango, L. Z. (1985). "The Anglo-French "Condominium" in Cameroon, 1914–1916: The Myth and the Reality". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. XVIII (4). Boston, MA: Boston University African Studies Center: 656–673. doi:10.2307/218801. ISSN 0361-7882. JSTOR 218801.
  • Erlikman, Vadim (2004). Poteri narodonaseleniia v XX veke : spravochnik (in Russian). Moscow: Russkai︠a︡ panorama. ISBN 5-93165-107-1.
  • Killingray, D. (2012). John Horne (ed.). Companion to World War I. London: Blackwell. ISBN 978-1-4051-2386-0.
  • Moberly, F. J. (1995) [1931]. Military Operations Togoland and the Cameroons 1914–1916 (Imperial War Museum and Battery Press ed.). London: HMSO. ISBN 0-89839-235-7.
  • Ngoh, V. J. (2005). "Cameroon (Kamerun): Colonial Period: German Rule". In Kevin Shillington (ed.). Encyclopedia of African History. Vol. I. New York: Fitzroy Dearborn. ISBN 1-57958-245-1.
  • O'Neill, H. C. (1919) [1918]. The War in Africa 1914–1917 and in the Far East 1914 (reprint ed.). London: Longmans, Green. OCLC 786365389. Retrieved 9 May 2014.
  • Paice, E. (2009) [2007]. Tip and Run: The Untold Tragedy of the Great War in Africa (Phoenix ed.). London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-7538-2349-1.
  • Quinn, F. (1973). "An African Reaction to World War I: The Beti of Cameroon". Cahiers d'Études Africaines. XIII (Cahier 52). Paris: Éditions EHESS (France). ISSN 1777-5353.
  • Strachan, H. (2004). The First World War In Africa. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-925728-0.

Further reading edit

  • Bryce, J. B.; Thompson, H.; Petrie, W. M. F. (1920). The Causes of the War: The Events of 1914–1915. The Book of History A History of all Nations From the Earliest Times to the Present, With Over 8,000 Illustrations. Vol. XVI. New York: The Grolier Society. OCLC 671596127. Retrieved 9 May 2014.
  • Burg, D. F.; Purcell, L. Edward (1998). Almanac of World War I. Lexington, KY: University of Kentucky. ISBN 0-81312-745-9.
  • Damis, F. von (1929). Auf dem Moraberge – Erinnerungen an die Kämpfe der 3. Kompagnie der ehemalige Kaiserlichen Schutztruppe für Kamerun (in German). Berlin: Deuß. OCLC 253272682.
  • Dane, E. (1919). British Campaigns in Africa and the Pacific, 1914–1918. London: Hodder and Stoughton. OCLC 2460289. Retrieved 2 March 2014.
  • Dornseif, Golf. British-French Rivalry in the Cameroon Campaign.
  • Dobell, C. M. (1916). "Cameroons Campaign Army Despatch". The London Gazette (29604). HMSO. ISSN 0374-3721. Retrieved 9 May 2014. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Farwell, B. (1989). The Great War in Africa, 1914–1918. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0-39330-564-3.
  • Henry, H. B. (1999). Cameroon on a Clear Day. Pasadena, CA: William Carey Library. ISBN 0-87808-293-X.
  • Hilditch, A. N. (1915). Battle Sketches, 1914–1915. Oxford: Clarendon Press. OCLC 697895870. Retrieved 9 May 2014.
  • Innes, A. D.; Redway, Major; Wilson, H. W.; Low, S.; Wright, E. Hammerton, J. A. (ed.). Britain's Conquest of the German Cameroon. The War Illustrated Album De Luxe; the Story of the Great European War Told by Camera, Pen and Pencil. Vol. IV. pp. 1178–1182. OCLC 6460128. Retrieved 9 May 2014.
  • Reynolds, F. J.; Churchill, A. L.; Miller, F. T. (1916). "77". The Cameroons. The Story of the Great War. Vol. III. P. F. Collier & Son. OCLC 397036717.

External links edit

  • "The German Colony of Cameroon". Retrieved 18 September 2011.
  • Soldiers of their Own: Honor, Violence, Resistance and Conscription in Colonial Cameroon during the First World War

kamerun, campaign, part, african, theatre, world, ibritish, pounder, firing, fort, dachang, 1915date6, august, 1914, march, 1916, year, months, days, locationgerman, kamerun, british, nigeria03, 517resultallied, victoryterritorialchangeskamerun, divided, into,. Kamerun campaignPart of the African theatre of World War IBritish QF 12 pounder 8 cwt firing at Fort Dachang in 1915Date6 August 1914 10 March 1916 1 year 7 months and 4 days LocationGerman Kamerun and British Nigeria03 52 N 11 31 E 3 867 N 11 517 E 3 867 11 517ResultAllied victoryTerritorialchangesKamerun divided into League of Nations mandates under British and French rule 1919 Belligerents British Empire Nigeria India France French Equatorial Africa Belgium Belgian Congo Germany KamerunCommanders and leadersCharles M Dobell Frederick H Cunliffe Joseph G Aymerich Felix FuchsKarl Ebermaier Carl H ZimmermannUnits involvedWAFF WIR 1 Force PubliqueSchutztruppeStrengthBritish 1 668French 7 000Belgian 600 2 Total 9 0001914 1 8551915 6 000 3 Casualties and lossesBritish 917French 906 4 5 000 5 hundreds to thousands of Duala civilians killed 6 The Kamerun campaign took place in the German colony of Kamerun in the African theatre of the First World War when the British French and Belgians invaded the German colony from August 1914 to March 1916 Most of the campaign took place in Kamerun but skirmishes also broke out in British Nigeria By the Spring of 1916 following Allied victories the majority of German troops and the civil administration fled to the neighbouring neutral colony of Spanish Guinea Rio Muni The campaign ended in a defeat for Germany and the partition of its former colony between France and Britain Contents 1 Background 2 Operations 2 1 Invasion in 1914 2 2 Naval operations 2 3 War in 1915 2 4 Surrender in 1916 3 Atrocities 4 Aftermath 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBackground editGermany had established a protectorate over Kamerun by 1884 during the Scramble for Africa and expanded its control in the Bafut Wars and Adamawa Wars In 1911 France ceded Neukamerun New Cameroon a large territory to the east of Kamerun to Germany as a part of the Treaty of Fez the settlement that ended the Agadir Crisis In 1914 the German colony of Kamerun made up all of modern Cameroon as well as portions of Nigeria Chad Gabon the Republic of the Congo and the Central African Republic Kamerun was surrounded on all sides by Entente territory British held Nigeria was to the north west The Belgian Congo bordered the colony to the south east and French Equatorial Africa lay in the east The neutral colony of Spanish Guinea was bordered by German Kamerun on all sides but one which faced the sea In 1914 on the eve of World War I Kamerun remained largely unexplored and unmapped by European invaders 7 In 1911 1912 the border with the French colonies of Gabon Middle Congo Ubangi Shari and Chad was established and in 1913 the border between the colonies of Nigeria and Kamerun was defined 8 The German military forces stationed in the colony at the time consisted of around 1 855 Schutztruppen protection troops However after the outbreak of war by mid 1915 the Germans were able to recruit an army of around 6 000 Allied forces on the other hand in the territories surrounding Kamerun were much larger French Equatorial Africa alone could mobilize as many as 20 000 soldiers on the eve of war while British Nigeria to the west could raise an army of 7 550 3 Operations editInvasion in 1914 edit At the outbreak of war in Europe in early August 1914 the German colonial administration in Kamerun attempted to offer neutrality with Britain and France in accordance with Articles 10 and 11 of the Berlin Act of 1885 9 However this was rejected by the Allies The French were eager to regain the land ceded to Germany in the Treaty of Fez in 1911 The first Allied expeditions into the colony on 6 August 1914 were from the east conducted by French troops from French Equatorial Africa under General Joseph Gauderique Aymerich This region was mostly marshland undeveloped and was initially not heavily contested by Germans 10 By 25 August 1914 British forces in present day Nigeria had moved into Kamerun from three different points They pushed into the colony towards Mara in the far north towards Garua in the centre and towards Nsanakang in the south British forces moving towards Garua under the command of Colonel MacLear were ordered to push to the German border post at Tepe near Garua The first engagement between British and German troops in the campaign took place at the Battle of Tepe eventually resulting in German withdrawal 11 In the far north British forces attempted to take the German fort at Mora but initially failed This resulted in a long siege of German positions which would last until the end of the campaign 12 British forces in the south attacking Nsanakang were defeated and almost completely destroyed by German counter attacks at the Battle of Nsanakong 13 MacLear then pushed his forces further inland towards the German stronghold of Garua but was repulsed in the First Battle of Garua on 31 August 14 Naval operations edit Main article Naval operations of the Kamerun campaign In September 1914 the Germans had mined the Kamerun or Wouri estuary and scuttled naval vessels there to protect Douala the colony s largest city and commercial centre British and French naval vessels bombarded towns on the coast and by late September had cleared mines and conducted amphibious landings in order to isolate Douala On 27 September the city surrendered to Brigadier General Charles Macpherson Dobell commander of the combined Allied force The occupation of the entire coast soon followed as the French captured more of the territories to the south east in an amphibious operation at the Battle of Ukoko 15 War in 1915 edit nbsp Kamerun 1914 By 1915 the majority of German forces except for those holding out at the strongholds of Mora and Garua had withdrawn to the mountainous interior of the colony surrounding the new capital at Jaunde In the spring of that year German forces were still able to significantly stall or repulse assaults by Allied forces A German force under the command of Captain von Crailsheim from Garua even went on the offensive engaging the British during a failed raid into Nigeria at the Battle of Gurin 16 This surprisingly daring incursion into British territory prompted General Frederick Hugh Cunliffe to launch another attempt at taking the German fortresses at Garua at the Second Battle of Garua in June resulting in a British victory 17 This action freed Allied units in northern Kamerun to push further into the interior of the colony This push resulted in the Allied victory at the Battle of Ngaundere on 29 June Cunliffe s advance south to Jaunde however was stalled by heavy rains and his force instead participated in the continuing Siege of Mora 18 When the weather improved British forces under Cunliffe moved further south capturing a German fort at the Battle of Banjo in November and occupying a number of other towns by the end of the year 19 By December the forces of Cunliffe and Dobell were in contact and ready to conduct an assault of Jaunde 20 In this year most of Neukamerun was occupied by Belgian and French troops who also began to prepare for an assault on Jaunde 21 Surrender in 1916 edit In early 1916 the German commander Carl Zimmermann came to the conclusion that the campaign was lost With Allied forces pressing in on Jaunde from all sides and German resistance faltering he ordered all remaining German units and civilians to escape to the neutral Spanish colony of Rio Muni 22 By mid February of that year the last German garrison at Mora surrendered ending the Siege of Mora 23 German soldiers and civilians which had escaped to Spanish Guinea were treated amicably by the Spanish who had only 180 militiamen in Rio Muni and were unable to forcibly intern them Most native Cameroonians remained in Muni but the Germans eventually moved to Fernando Po some were eventually transported by Spain to the neutral Netherlands from where they could reach home before the war was over 24 Many Cameroonians including the paramount chief of the Beti people moved to Madrid where they lived as visiting nobility on German funds 25 Atrocities editGerman forces ordered a scorched earth policy against the indigenous Duala people to repress an alleged people s war Duala women women were victims of wartime sexual violence by the German forces Numerous killings were committed by German forces including in Jabassi where a white commander reportedly gave the order to kill every native they saw 6 Aftermath editIn February 1916 before the campaign ended Britain and France agreed to divide Kamerun along the Picot Provisional Partition Line 9 This resulted in Britain obtaining approximately one fifth of the colony situated on the Nigerian border France gained Duala and most of the central plateau which consisted of the majority of former German territory The partition was accepted at the Paris Peace Conference and the former German colony became the League of Nations mandates of French Cameroon and British Cameroon by the Treaty of Versailles 26 Notes edit Paice 2007 p 299 Strachan 2004 p 31 a b Killingray 2012 p 116 Moberly 1931 p 426 Erlikman 2004 a b Njung George Ndakwena 2016 Soldiers of their Own Honor Violence Resistance and Conscription in Colonial Cameroon during the First World War PDF University of Michigan Moberly 1931 pp 49 52 Moberly 1931 pp 46 50 a b Ngoh 2005 p 349 Killingray 2012 p 117 Moberly 1931 pp 73 93 Moberly 1931 pp 170 173 228 230 421 Moberly 1931 pp 106 109 Moberly 1931 pp 93 97 Moberly 1931 pp 129 156 157 Moberly 1931 pp 268 270 Moberly 1931 pp 294 299 Moberly 1931 pp 300 301 322 323 Moberly 1931 pp 346 350 Moberly 1931 pp 388 293 Moberly 1931 pp 383 384 Moberly 1931 pp 405 419 Moberly 1931 p 421 Moberly 1931 p 412 Quinn 1973 pp 722 731 Moberly 1931 p 422 References editElango L Z 1985 The Anglo French Condominium in Cameroon 1914 1916 The Myth and the Reality The International Journal of African Historical Studies XVIII 4 Boston MA Boston University African Studies Center 656 673 doi 10 2307 218801 ISSN 0361 7882 JSTOR 218801 Erlikman Vadim 2004 Poteri narodonaseleniia v XX veke spravochnik in Russian Moscow Russkai a panorama ISBN 5 93165 107 1 Killingray D 2012 John Horne ed Companion to World War I London Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 2386 0 Moberly F J 1995 1931 Military Operations Togoland and the Cameroons 1914 1916 Imperial War Museum and Battery Press ed London HMSO ISBN 0 89839 235 7 Ngoh V J 2005 Cameroon Kamerun Colonial Period German Rule In Kevin Shillington ed Encyclopedia of African History Vol I New York Fitzroy Dearborn ISBN 1 57958 245 1 O Neill H C 1919 1918 The War in Africa 1914 1917 and in the Far East 1914 reprint ed London Longmans Green OCLC 786365389 Retrieved 9 May 2014 Paice E 2009 2007 Tip and Run The Untold Tragedy of the Great War in Africa Phoenix ed London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 7538 2349 1 Quinn F 1973 An African Reaction to World War I The Beti of Cameroon Cahiers d Etudes Africaines XIII Cahier 52 Paris Editions EHESS France ISSN 1777 5353 Strachan H 2004 The First World War In Africa New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 925728 0 Further reading editBryce J B Thompson H Petrie W M F 1920 The Causes of the War The Events of 1914 1915 The Book of History A History of all Nations From the Earliest Times to the Present With Over 8 000 Illustrations Vol XVI New York The Grolier Society OCLC 671596127 Retrieved 9 May 2014 Burg D F Purcell L Edward 1998 Almanac of World War I Lexington KY University of Kentucky ISBN 0 81312 745 9 Damis F von 1929 Auf dem Moraberge Erinnerungen an die Kampfe der 3 Kompagnie der ehemalige Kaiserlichen Schutztruppe fur Kamerun in German Berlin Deuss OCLC 253272682 Dane E 1919 British Campaigns in Africa and the Pacific 1914 1918 London Hodder and Stoughton OCLC 2460289 Retrieved 2 March 2014 Dornseif Golf British French Rivalry in the Cameroon Campaign Dobell C M 1916 Cameroons Campaign Army Despatch The London Gazette 29604 HMSO ISSN 0374 3721 Retrieved 9 May 2014 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Farwell B 1989 The Great War in Africa 1914 1918 New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 39330 564 3 Henry H B 1999 Cameroon on a Clear Day Pasadena CA William Carey Library ISBN 0 87808 293 X Hilditch A N 1915 Battle Sketches 1914 1915 Oxford Clarendon Press OCLC 697895870 Retrieved 9 May 2014 Innes A D Redway Major Wilson H W Low S Wright E Hammerton J A ed Britain s Conquest of the German Cameroon The War Illustrated Album De Luxe the Story of the Great European War Told by Camera Pen and Pencil Vol IV pp 1178 1182 OCLC 6460128 Retrieved 9 May 2014 Reynolds F J Churchill A L Miller F T 1916 77 The Cameroons The Story of the Great War Vol III P F Collier amp Son OCLC 397036717 External links edit nbsp Africa portal Timeline of the Conquest of Kamerun Kamerun im Spiegel der deutschen Schutztruppe Kameruner Endkampf um die Festung Moraberg The German Colony of Cameroon Retrieved 18 September 2011 Soldiers of their Own Honor Violence Resistance and Conscription in Colonial Cameroon during the First World War Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kamerun campaign amp oldid 1215540243, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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