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Siege of Khartoum

The siege of Khartoum (also known as the battle of Khartoum or fall of Khartoum) took place from 13 March 1884 to 26 January 1885. Sudanese Mahdist forces captured the city of Khartoum from its Egyptian garrison, thereby gaining control over the whole of Sudan.

For the 2023 battle, see Battle of Khartoum (2023).

Egypt had conquered Sudan in 1820, but had itself come under British domination in 1882. In 1881, the Mahdist War began in Sudan, led by Muhammad Ahmad who claimed to be the Mahdi. The Egyptian Army was unable to suppress the revolt, being defeated in several battles and retreating to their garrisons. The British refused to send a military force to the area, instead appointing Charles George Gordon as Governor-General of Sudan, with orders to evacuate Khartoum and the other garrisons. Gordon arrived in Khartoum in February 1884, where he found it impossible to reach the other garrisons which were already besieged. Rather than evacuating immediately, Gordon began to fortify the city, which was cut off when the local tribes switched their support to the Mahdi. Approximately 7,000 Egyptian troops and 27,000 (mostly Sudanese) civilians were besieged in Khartoum by 30,000 Mahdist warriors, rising to 50,000 by the end of the siege.


Attempts by the defenders to break out of the city failed. Food supplies began to run out; they had been expected to last six months, but the siege went on for ten, so the garrison and civilian population began to starve. After months of public pressure, the British government reluctantly agreed to send troops to relieve the siege. With the relief column approaching, the Mahdists launched a night assault on Khartoum. They broke through the defences and killed the entire garrison, including Gordon. A further 4,000 male civilians were killed, while many women and children were enslaved. The relief expedition arrived two days later; realising they were too late, they withdrew from Sudan. The Mahdi then founded a religious state in Sudan, the Mahdiyah, which would last for fourteen years.

Background[edit]

Strategic situation[edit]

The Khedivate of Egypt was nominally a vassal state of the Ottoman Empire, but came under British military occupation during the 1882 Anglo-Egyptian War, making it a de facto British protectorate. Egypt was mostly left to govern itself under the Khedive, though its finances remained under a system of dual control that had begun in the 1870s. The British regarded Egypt's possession of Sudan as a domestic matter.[1]

These events are depicted in the 1966 film , with Charlton Heston as General Gordon and Laurence Olivier as Muhammad Ahmad.[24]

Khartoum

The siege of Khartoum is the setting for 's novel The Triumph of the Sun (2005) and David Gibbins' Pharaoh (2013).

Wilbur Smith

wrote a young adults' novel about the siege called The Dash for Khartoum (1892). It has been reissued and is also available to read free online at Project Gutenberg.

G. A. Henty

Polish writer and Nobel Prize winner, set his novel In Desert and Wilderness (1923) in Sudan during Mahdi's rebellion, which is integral to the plot.[25]

Henryk Sienkiewicz

based her novel An Honourable Man (2012) on the established narrative of General Gordon's last days in Khartoum.[26]

Gillian Slovo

(2006). Khartoum: The Ultimate Imperial Adventure. London: Penguin. ISBN 0-14-025855-8.

Asher, Michael

Bass, Jeff D. "Of madness and empire: The rhetor as 'fool' in the Khartoum siege journals of Charles Gordon, 1884." Quarterly Journal of Speech 93.4 (2007): 449–469.

. Gordon at Khartoum: Being a Personal Narrative of Events (1923) online.

Blunt, Wilfrid Scawen

. Gordon at Khartoum (1934). online, Internet Archive

Buchan, John

. The Road to Khartoum: a life of General Charles Gordon (1979) online free to borrow

Chenevix Trench, Charles

. Gordon of Khartoum: The Life of General Charles Gordon (Knopf, 1954).

Elton, Godfrey Elton, Baron

. The Sword of the Prophet: the Mahdi of Sudan and the Death of General Gordon (Sutton Publishing, 2004).

Nicoll, Fergus

Miller, Brook. "Our Abdiel: The British Press and the Lionization of 'Chinese' Gordon." Nineteenth-Century Prose 32.2 (2005): 127+

online

Snook, Mike. Beyond the Reach of Empire: Wolseley's Failed Campaign to save Gordon and Khartoum (Frontline Books, 2013).