This is the story of two remarkable 'firsts'. It is the story of the first successful attempt by Allied forces during the Second World War to support and sustain a local resistance movement with regular forces in enemy-held territory. It is also the story of how Ethiopia became the first nation conquered by the Axis to be freed. The campaign in Ethiopia might appear small in relation to the war in the whole of East Africa, but it had great military importance. In 1941 the British Commonwealth, the Indian and Sudanese forces, with the Patriots - local chiefs and their followers who resisted the Italian occupation - advanced into Italian East Africa and defeated the Italian armies. David Shireff, who himself served in the campaign, gives an evocative and impressive account of how Colonel Orde Wingate with his Gideon Force was able through bold and imaginative command to force the surrender of a large part of the Italian forces. Shireff also explores the role of Brigadier Daniel Sandford, now an almost forgotten commander, in organizing his Mission 101 and the sustained rebellion of the Patriots. AUTHOR: David Shireff served in the King's African Rifles in Abyssinia, Madagascar and Burma. Awarded the Military Cross and Mentioned in Despatches he was in the Colonial Service before becoming a solicitor. He retired in 1991 and died in 1999. SELLING POINTS: * Definitive accounts of the liberation of Ethiopia from the Italians and reinstatement of Emperior Haile Selassie. * Colonel Orde Wingate (later the Chindit founder) and his Gideon Force have considerable appeal. * Reveals the role played by Brigadier Daniel Sandford in achieving the Patriots' rebellion. ILLUSTRATIONS: 8 pages of b/w plates