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Dervish: The Rise and Fall of an African Empire

by Philip Warner

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743359,559 (3.64)1
Dervish is the vivid and colourful story of one of the more remarkable episodes in the high Empire period of British history. The Mahdis rising in the Sudan in the 1880s starting as a localized Holy War against the decadent Turkish/Egyptian overlords, engulfed a million square miles of arid territory and forced the British Liberal Government to get involved after the early disasters of the Hicks expedition and Gordons death at Khartoum.The narrative, which makes excellent use of the first-hand diaries and reports, including those of Rider Haggards brother Andrew and of Father Ohrwalder (the Austrian missionary who spent ten years of captivity in the Mahdis camp), brilliantly describes the growth and strength of the Mahdist movement and the extraordinary devotion and discipline of the Dervish troops. Facing such opponents with stoic endurance were the British, Egyptian and Sudanese Negro soldiers, and the resulting military engagements evoked amazing feats of courage and derring-do on both sides.The Dervish Empire outlasted the Mahdi by thirteen years. It ended in the battle of Omdurman and Kitcheners reconquest of the Sudan, which was well supported by Reginald Wingates military intelligence operations. It lasted a comparatively brief span of time, but it had been established at the expense not only of the neighbouring Abyssinians but also of the European white man, at a time when Britain was approaching the zenith of its imperial power.Philip Warner is author of Passchendale and The Zeebrugge Raid and numerous other first rate histories. He wrote the biographies of Auchinleck and Horrocks. He was the military obituary writer of The Daily Telegraph for many years. In WW2 he was a POW of the Japanese for 1,000 days. He died in 2000.… (more)
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In 1844, on an island in the Nile, a son was born to a carpenter - something of a tradition for Middle Eastern prophets. Mohammed Ahmed ibn al-Sayid Abdullah grew up to be an exceptional Koranic student. He also had a gap between his front teeth and a birthmark on one cheek, which turned out to be important later. Disgusted by the secular ways of his contemporaries, he took up the life of a wandering teacher. In 1880 he announced (or someone else announced for him) that he was the Mahdi - The Expected Guide, a descendant of The Prophet recognized by his spiritual ways, a gap between his front teeth and a birthmark on his cheek - who would bring Muslims back to the True Religion and prepare for the Last Days.


Sudan was in a strange political position at the time; it was a protectorate of Egypt, which in turn was a protectorate of Great Britain (well, technically not until 1882) (hence the name Anglo-Egyptian Sudan). Egypt was still de jure part of the Ottoman Empire, although it had not been de facto since the 1830s. Egypt had only recently (1874) annexed the Sudan, and the Khedive Ismail (under pressure from the British) decided one of the first orders of business for his new territory was suppressing the slave trade - a dicey prospect, since 7/8 of the population of the Sudan were slaves. The man for the job was Charles “Chinese” Gordon, who promptly went to work bustling all over the place, freeing slaves and arresting slave traders. Enter the Mahdi and his Dervishes
.

To be fair, although slavery has always been tolerated by Islam, it probably wasn’t this issue alone that set off the Mahdist Revolt, but just the desire not to be pushed around by those people from the north. At any rate, the Mahdi and his followers proceeded to annihilate first a small contingent of Egyptian troops, then (1883) a much larger column (also mostly Egyptian) lead by General Hicks Pasha, and another force lead by General Valentine Baker, and finally an all-British force lead by Sir Gerald Graham (during which the Mahdists “bruk a British square.”) In the meantime, Gordon was in Khartoum, supposedly to organize the evacuation. Instead, he organized a defense. It’s never been clear why he disobeyed orders - that the orders were not framed clearly enough, or that he couldn’t leave native civilians behind as Mahdi fodder, or some personal desire for martyrdom have all been suggested. At any rate, he didn’t leave, and a relief column pushing down the river in nearly 1885 got close enough the see the Mahdi’s flag flying over the Khartoum citadel, then turned around and went home, leaving the Sudan until 1896.


The Mahdi died in 1885, only a few months after Gordon; his successor, the Khalifa, was much more interested in empire-building than religion (although that remained the primary troop motivator). The Khalifa destroyed a couple of Sudanese tribes who disagreed with him, took over the Darfur region, made some desultory and unsuccessful attacks on Egyptian border posts, and engaged in a generally successful war with Ethiopia. Nemesis eventually arrived in the form of General Horatio Kitchener, who pushed down the Nile, building a parallel railroad as he went, and crushed the Dervish army with Maxim guns and massed infantry fire at Omdurman, where the young Lieutenant Winston Churchill distinguished himself. Churchill had himself seconded from the 9th Hussars to the 21st Lancers, correctly deducing that since the 21st Lancers were the only regiment in the Royal Army never to have won battle honors they would be looking for trouble at Omdurman; they found it, charging into a trap and cutting their way out. One bullet more or less and the 20th Century would have been very different. The war wasn’t quite over; the Khalifa wasn’t hunted down and finished off until later and his principal lieutenant, Osman Dinga, wasn’t picked up until 1900. In a postscript, Kitchener learned that a small French force had established themselves up the Nile a Fashoda. After considerable diplomatic wrangling, the French withdrew.


This book is part of the Wordsworth Military Library series; I haven’t been much impressed with earlier books from the series but I rather liked this one. It goes to considerable effort to present both sides of the story, including using diary entries from the Dervish side, and has the right mix of narrative and quotation from participants. There are excellent maps of all the major engagements and a pretty good historical background (although slightly more detail on British politics would have been useful.


For a relatively minor war, the Dervish campaign has attracted a lot of literary and cinematic attention; see


The River War, Winston Churchill


The Tragedy of the Korosko, Arthur Conan Doyle


The Four Feathers, A.E.W. Mason, and its movie versions:


1939
,

1978
and

2002, and, of course,


Khartoum. ( )
1 vote setnahkt | Dec 6, 2017 |
Helped me understand Kipling poetry! ( )
  emmakendon | Apr 21, 2013 |
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Dervish is the vivid and colourful story of one of the more remarkable episodes in the high Empire period of British history. The Mahdis rising in the Sudan in the 1880s starting as a localized Holy War against the decadent Turkish/Egyptian overlords, engulfed a million square miles of arid territory and forced the British Liberal Government to get involved after the early disasters of the Hicks expedition and Gordons death at Khartoum.The narrative, which makes excellent use of the first-hand diaries and reports, including those of Rider Haggards brother Andrew and of Father Ohrwalder (the Austrian missionary who spent ten years of captivity in the Mahdis camp), brilliantly describes the growth and strength of the Mahdist movement and the extraordinary devotion and discipline of the Dervish troops. Facing such opponents with stoic endurance were the British, Egyptian and Sudanese Negro soldiers, and the resulting military engagements evoked amazing feats of courage and derring-do on both sides.The Dervish Empire outlasted the Mahdi by thirteen years. It ended in the battle of Omdurman and Kitcheners reconquest of the Sudan, which was well supported by Reginald Wingates military intelligence operations. It lasted a comparatively brief span of time, but it had been established at the expense not only of the neighbouring Abyssinians but also of the European white man, at a time when Britain was approaching the zenith of its imperial power.Philip Warner is author of Passchendale and The Zeebrugge Raid and numerous other first rate histories. He wrote the biographies of Auchinleck and Horrocks. He was the military obituary writer of The Daily Telegraph for many years. In WW2 he was a POW of the Japanese for 1,000 days. He died in 2000.

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