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Beyond the Reach of Empire - Wolseley's Failed Campaign to Save Gordon and Khartoum (Paperback)
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Beyond the Reach of Empire - Wolseley's Failed Campaign to Save Gordon and Khartoum (Paperback)
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List price R621
Loot Price R557
Discovery Miles 5 570
You Save R64 (10%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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In the early 1880s Muhammad Ahmed, the self-styled Mahdi, unleashed
a spectacularly successful jihadist uprising against Egyptian
colonial rule in the Sudan. The Egyptian military met with a series
of disasters, including the rout of major expeditions led by
hired-in British colonels, William Hicks Pasha' and Valentine Baker
Pasha'. By the spring of 1884, Cairo had bowed to British pressure
to withdraw altogether. Beyond the Reach of Empire describes how
Major General Charles Gordon was despatched by Gladstone to
evacuate the garrison of Khartoum and turn the Sudan over to
self-rule. Fearless, profoundly religious and a committed
anti-slaver, Gordon would be on familiar ground. In the late 1870s
the Khedive of Egypt had employed him as Governor-General of the
Sudan. When he reached Cairo, Gordon was offered and accepted the
post for a second time. The author goes on to explain how and why
the Gordon mission backfired, and then homes in on Sir Garnet
Wolseley's planning and execution of the long-delayed Gordon Relief
Expedition. The most advanced part of the British force came within
sight of Khartoum only two days after it fell. Underpinned by an
extensive programme of fieldwork on remote, rarely visited
battlefields, Mike Snook's narrative is characterised by scrupulous
attention to detail, an instinctive grasp of the period and an
intimate understanding of its setting. The result is an enthralling
tale of Victorian high-adventure, combined with an expose of the
myths surrounding the failure to save one of the British Empire's
greatest heroes. The author argues compellingly that the Khartoum
affair was mismanaged from the outset. The outcome is the
exoneration of the man cast in the role of scapegoat, and an
indictment of Wolseley's generalship over the course of the last
and most deeply flawed campaign of his career.
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