By the early 1880s, Egypt and more particularly the Sudan were among the most exciting places in the British Empire. Egypt itself had fallen under British influence in the 1870s, when Disraeli had bought shares in the Suez Canal, and the Egyptian government, under a hereditary ruler known as the Khedive, began to come under the informal influence of the British Consul General, who in 1882 was Evelyn Baring, a scion of the British banking family and another graduate of the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. Baring was a gruff bear of a man whose nickname, inevitably, became âOver-Baring' or âle Grand Ours' (the Big Bear). Egyptian politics were even more complicated by the fact that the Khedive and the ruling classes in Egypt were Turkish and were, nominally at least, vassals of the Ottoman Sultan in Constantinople. The land to the south of Egypt had been known to Arab traders for years as
al bilad as-sudan
, or the âLand of the Blacks'. In the eyes of the British and the Arabs alike, the history of the Sudan before the Egyptians under Turkish rulers established nominal control over the country was a tale of incoherent blood feuds and chaos. In Kitchener's own words, âendless wars raged' and the âblood feud was most bitter'.
16
The Egyptians' claims on Sudan and their attempt, under British influence, to suppress slave trading had alienated many of the Sudanese tribes, who had thrived on this inhumane, if lucrative, activity. The Sudanese were also beginning to feel the weight of Egyptian rule through the âself-seeking and unscrupulous tax-gatherers' who were now descending upon them from Cairo.
17
To exacerbate the problem for the Egyptians, there arose, as so often is the case, a national leader of great charisma and force who, through the power of religious enthusiasm, combined the various disaffected elements in the Sudan into one movement.
Mohammed Ahmed had been born in 1844, the son of a boat builder, and his brothers followed their father in that trade. Ahmed, however, found his vocation in religion. His father died on a journey to Khartoum while Ahmed was still a boy and, in a celebrated description by Winston Churchill, which some historians have taken as referring to Churchill himself, the boy âdeprived of a father's care' developed âan independence and vigour of thought which may restore in after life the heavy loss of early days'. Mohammed Ahmed was certainly an independent thinker. He pursued his religious studies with great diligence and cultivated a personal reputation for austerity, often fasting for days.
18
He started off as a disciple of the renowned holy sheikh Mohammed Sherif, but a dispute with his master made Ahmed strike out on his own, preaching and winning disciples to his austere brand of Islam.
Emboldened by his initial success in attracting followers, Ahmed proclaimed himself the âMahdi' in the summer of 1881. âAl-Mahdi' was an Arabic term, meaning guide or leader; and the expectation that a prophet with special powers would come to earth at the end of the world to purify mankind and bring justice is a belief not exclusive to the Islamic faith. To Victorian generals, the mystical and religious aspect of the Mahdi's mission was especially fascinating. There was a general view that Islam held a particular attraction for the ânative races' of Central Africa, and the natural superstition of the native was often invoked to explain the Mahdi's stunning successes. The Mahdi had to be a âdescendant of the Prophet', the âAshraf', and would share the same name as the Prophet, Mohammed ibn Abdullah, Mohammed son of Abdullah, which was the Mahdi's full name if one includes his patronymic. Whatever the general aims of the âexpected Mahdi' might be, Mohammed Ahmed's ambitions in 1881 were more specific. He aspired to âgain over the whole of the Sudan to his cause, then march on Egypt and overthrow the false-believing Turks'. Only after this had been accomplished would the Mahdi finally establish âthe thousand years' kingdom in Mecca, and convert the whole world', according to a contemporary British account of the Mahdist uprising.
19
Among the followers the Mahdi managed to gather, there was a man called Abdullah, from the Ta'aisha Beggara tribe of the northern Sudan. Abdullah was a man of determination and force who acted as the Mahdi's
practical right-hand man; he was often described as âthe man of the world, the practical politician, the general', and, with the Mahdi providing the religious inspiration, the two men began to rouse the local tribes to rebellion.
20
The Mahdi himself wrote letters to all parts of the Sudan, calling upon everyone to fight for the purity of Islam, for the freedom of the soil and for âGod's holy prophet “the expected Mahdi”'. The Egyptian government, by now increasingly under British influence, sent two companies of infantryâabout sixty menâto arrest the religious leader in an attempt to bring the revolt to an end. It was an August evening in 1881 when a steamer with the infantrymen aboard arrived at Abba, near the village where the Mahdi resided. The two companies approached the Mahdi's village by separate routes. It was now dark, and the two units entered the village from opposite directions; in the confusion caused by the uncertainty of where the Mahdi actually was and by the darkness, the soldiers started firing at each other, and the Mahdi, with his small following, seized his opportunity and destroyed both companies of men. Some of the Egyptian soldiers managed to get back to the steamship at anchor in Abba, but its captain quickly left the scene of the debacle, and âthose who could not swim out to the vessel were left to their fate'.
21
This initial success brought the Mahdi great prestige, and people in Sudan began to wonder if he was indeed the âexpected guide', the genuine Mahdi who would inaugurate a reign of peace and justice. The self-styled Mahdi now began to assume the airs and confidence of a man bent on a divinely inspired mission. He appointed his four successors, or khalifas, in accordance with the precedent set by the Prophet Mohammed himself, and, unsurprisingly, the chief of these khalifas was Abdullah. It was against this backdrop of religious enthusiasm and insurrection that the famous mission of General Gordon was conceived. In November 1883 the Mahdi's troops had achieved a victory even more dramatic than that at Abba, annihilating a force of 10,000 Egyptian soldiers commanded by Major General William Hicks. Hicks's men had been attacked in a savage onslaught, which only 300 of the 10,000 men survived. In keeping with Sudanese custom, the heads of Hicks and his leading officers were presented to the Mahdi and his followers.
22
It was then decided by Gladstone's government in London to evacuate the Egyptian garrison in
Khartoum, an operation that Gordon was dispatched to oversee; he arrived on 18 February 1884.
Charles Gordon is one of those historical figures of whom many people are dimly aware. This is partly because the role of Gordon was successfully played by Charlton Heston in the 1966 film
Khartoum
, in which Gordon meets his end on the steps of the palace at Khartoum, surrounded by spear-wielding dervishes. Despite being the subject of a Hollywood blockbuster, Gordon's life was even more spectacular than any work of creative fiction could depict. Born in 1833, he was fifty-one when the final act of his eventful life unfolded. Like Kitchener and many others in the Sudan story, Gordon had been educated at the Royal Military Academy in Woolwich, from which he had been recruited into the Royal Engineers. Requiring a knowledge of mathematics and engineering, this corps compensated for its lack of social prestige by attracting a particularly determined type of officer. Gordon was, however, even more unusual. He was a mystic, a Christian fundamentalist, who became convinced that the Garden of Eden was located in the Seychelles. His religious fervour embraced death as the âgateway to eternal life'. He despised money, luxury and modern living, and when he left England for the last time in 1884 he sensed that he would never return, exclaiming passionately, âI dwell on the joy of never seeing Great Britain again, with its horrid, wearisome dinner parties and miseries.'
23
The circumstances which pitched the Mahdi against General Gordon were out of the ordinary, and both men, as was remarked at the time, were of a remarkably similar type. They were religious fanatics who each believed he was performing God's will, though the sincerity of the Mahdi's protestations has been doubted. The Mahdi preached asceticism and worldly renunciation, though the number of wives and concubines he tookâsome put the figure as high as 110âundermined his claims to rigorous abstinence.
24
Gordon, on the other hand, was a genuine ascetic. He was friends with the greatest imperialist capitalist of the age, Cecil Rhodes, and told Rhodes, at a breakfast in South Africa, that in China, where he had served with distinction in the 1860s, he had been offered a âwhole room-full of silver'. He had refused the gift and, in recounting the story to Rhodes, asked, âWhat would you have done?' âWhy', said Rhodes incredulously,
âtaken it of course! What is the earthly use of having ideas if you haven't got the money to carry them out?'
25
Gordon immediately tried to rally the garrison in Khartoum, which grew increasingly nervous as the Mahdi's men arrived to besiege the town. Ever rigid in his sense of duty and honour, the General âconsidered that he was personally pledged to effect the evacuation of Khartoum by the garrison and civil servants'. Nothing would now induce him to leave until its inhabitants had been rescued.
26
He also formed an âunshaken determination never to surrender the town to the rebels'. The inhabitants of the city now numbered only about 14,000 out of the original 34,000, since Gordon had immediately on arrival in Khartoum started sending people away.
27
While the siege lasted, the British public, updated by newspaper reports, became increasingly concerned about the impending crisis. As Lord Randolph Churchill told the House of Commons on 16 March 1884, the General was in a dangerous situation, being âsurrounded by hostile tribes and cut off from communications with Cairo and London'.
28
The siege continued, with conditions in Khartoum becoming more and more desperate. The garrison suffered from âwant of food', and by December âall the donkeys, dogs, cats, rats etc. had been eaten'.
29
The slow response from the Gladstone government to the crisis in which Gordon found himself is well known. The Prime Minister was as stubborn as Gordon and seems to have taken a perverse pride in not heeding the popular demand that he immediately send a force to save Gordon.
Belatedly, a Gordon Relief Expedition was dispatched in August 1884, under Sir Garnet Wolseley, another powerful figure of this militaristic age. In Khartoum, Gordon was having sleepless nights and was only too aware that his ability to withstand the siege was limited. The denouement came in January 1885, when, at about 3.30 a.m. on Monday the 26th, the Mahdi's troops made a âdetermined attack' on the south side of the town. Khartoum fell, according to Kitchener's account (though he was not there to witness it), because the garrison were too exhausted by their sufferings to put up a proper resistance. Once the rebels had entered the town, there was a general massacre, and the exact fate of General Gordon remains unclear. He was killed, certainly, but differing accounts of his death have been related to this day. It is likely that he died near the gate of the palace,
but the dramatic accounts of his confronting the mob on the steps of the Governor's palace may derive more from the imagination of subsequent storytellers than from what actually happened. After his death, there unfolded a macabre scene. Since none of the tribesmen knew what the General looked like, there was uncertainty about which was âGordon's body, and great confusion occurred in the Mahdi's camp at Omdurman' âa town on the western banks of the Nile on the other side from Khartoum. When the heads of various Europeans were presented, some were identified as Gordon's, only for other tribesmen to deny the attribution. The General's body itself was never found.
30
The massacre, in which 4,000 people were killed, ended at about 10 a.m. when the Mahdi ordered the slaughter to stop. Kitchener's description of the siege is written in a characteristically dry, matter-of-fact style but, at the end of his account, he did allow himself an uncharacteristic rhetorical flourish: âThe memorable siege of Khartoum lasted 317 days and it is not too much to say that such a noble resistance was due to the indomitable resolution and resource of one Englishman.' Kitchener's assessment was that the Mahdi was now in control of the whole of the Sudan, and it would be difficult for the time being to envisage a government without him: âThe Mahdi's personal influence is paramount in the country and unless he leaves it I hardly think the people could free themselves.'
31
The Mahdi himself, however, was soon stricken with a dangerous disease and, in June 1885, only five months after the fall of Khartoum, he failed to appear at the mosque for prayers for several days. At first, his followers thought nothing of this, for had it not been revealed that the âMahdi should conquer Mecca, Medina, and Jerusalem' before his earthly mission was done?
32
The rule of the Mahdi had been strict, but there is no evidence that he was particularly unpopular. He had forbidden âdancing and playing', which he denounced as âearthly pleasures', and anyone who was found disobeying his rules was liable to punishment by flogging and confiscation of all his property. The use of bad language was strictly forbidden, with a punishment of eighty lashes prescribed for every insulting word uttered. To the usual Islamic prohibition against alcohol, there was added an equally strong injunction against the smoking of
tobacco. Thieves would be deprived of their right hands for a first offence, and of their left foot for a second.
33
The Mahdi was perhaps the first Islamic fundamentalist of the modern era, as earlier fanatics, like Mohammed ibn Abd al-Wahhab in eighteenth-century Saudi Arabia, were unmolested by the modern Western world of machine guns and organized military campaigns. On the seventh day of his illness, the Mahdi, stricken with typhus, knew that his end was near. Summoning his followers by one last effort, he named Khalifa Abdullah his successor, declaring, âHe is of me, and I am of him; as you have obeyed me, so you should deal with him. May God have mercy upon me.'
34