In the early 1820s, a small group of British traders and hunters established a settlement at Port Natal, in present-day Durban, on the southeastern coast of South Africa. These settlers, often referred to as the "Port Natal traders," sought to engage in commerce with the powerful Zulu Kingdom under Shaka Zulu. Despite their remote location, they requested formal recognition and protection from the British Cape Colony, but the Cape Government initially declined to annex the area. As a result, the settlers operated independently, developing cooperative—though sometimes tense—relations with the Zulu leadership and laying the foundation for future British colonial expansion in the region. However, the Afrikaner
Boers, who had recently left the
Cape Colony in the mass exodus called the
Great Trek, had ventured over the
Drakensberg mountains, settled in the area they named the
Natalia Republic and resumed their farming lifestyles. The
Zulu people naturally had misgivings about the intentions of the newcomers and war followed soon afterward. Eventually the Cape Government heard news of the Boer republic and the subsequent attacks on white people in Port Natal, and how these attacks were approaching the Cape Colony. The Governor of the Cape,
Benjamin d'Urban (the settlement of Port Natal was later named Durban in his honour), sent a regiment to take possession of Natal from the Boers and to settle the Zulu attacks. It was, however, D'Urban's successor,
George Thomas Napier, who dispatched Captain Thomas Charlton Smith (who had served at the
Battle of Waterloo). ==Clash between Dutch (Boer) and British forces==