>>956247For some less specific information, I'd also recommend Boer Command 1876-1902 and The Boer Wars: 1836-98 published by Osprey.
Osprey aren't very detailed in their historical accounts, barely being a step up from a Wikipedia article, but these books covers some obscure early Boer conflicts from the Great Trek to Second Boer War. In particular it covered Dinuzulu's Volunteers; Boer volunteers under Louis Botha who intervened on one side of a Zulu Civil War, coming to the assistance of kaCetshwayo Dinuzulu.
Both can be downloaded for free here,
https://b-ok.xyz/book/649832/fc62ffhttps://b-ok.xyz/book/649946/4fe6d2b-ok may trigger a false positive on your AV; it does that sometimes but has always been safe for me.
There's also Ian of Forgotten Weapons' videos on South African firearms, which are relevant to apartheid history given that South Africa was under arms embargo because of apartheid and had to produce a majority of it's weapons locally. It also covers some apartheid era gun laws, which are interesting.
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9e3UCcU00TTeTbtAxxz_WGc1urtmj0ZdSadly his playlist lumps them in with Rhodesian weapons, however it's easy enough to skip over and select certain videos based on the flags in the lower left of the thumbnail and titles of each video.
I hope all of these have been of use in some way.
Also, if you have a Steam account, you could add me if you want. I'm always interested in more people to discuss history with. I go by "Bourbon" with pic related as my profile image.