British Hero, "Chinese" Gordon, Defeated at Khartoum as Relief Arrives too Late
Michael Streich
July 28, 2009
In the early 1880s, a Muslim
uprising began in the Sudan,
threatening Egypt
and British colonial interests. The leader of the revolt was Muhammad Ahmad who
called himself the “Mahdi” or expected one. His object was to restore Muslim
practices and eradicate foreign influences. Through awe and fear, the Mahdi
managed to gather thousands of loyal followers. Ultimately, Great Britain was obliged to address the
situation, and did so by sending a national hero to Khartoum,
General Charles Gordon, known as “Chinese” Gordon for his leadership in
suppressing the Taiping Uprising in China some years earlier.
Early Attempts to Restore
Peace
The liberal government of
Prime Minister William Gladstone was discussing down-sizing imperial military
commitments and rejected any initial appeals to significantly take on the
Sudanese uprising. Sudan was
a province of Egypt,
which was, ostensibly, part of the Ottoman Empire
but “advised” by the British through their proconsul, Lord Cromer.
The Egyptian khedive hired a
British colonel and tasked him with leading an army into the Sudan to
destroy the Mahdi. Given the rank of general in the Egyptian army, William
Hicks led a force of 10,000 men (some estimates are lower) into the one million
square miles of desert. Ambushed, Hicks and his entire command were annihilated
virtually to the last man. Although subsequent forays led by Valentine Baker
and Lt. General Gerald Graham were slightly more successful, public outcry in Britain
forced the government to react.
Chinese Gordon is sent to
Evacuate Khartoum
Charles Gordon was seen as a
“Christian soldier,” who, as previous Governor General of Equatoria and then
the full Sudan,
ended slavery. He knew the Bible well and had even managed to locate the site
of the Genesis “Garden of Eden.” As a soldier, Gordon was a sapper – a military
engineer. This would serve him well when forced to fortify Khartoum.
Yet Gordon was also fiercely
independent and whose personal view of justice conflicted with political
prerogatives. Stubborn, insubordinate, and frequently arrogant, he traveled up
the Nile River to evacuate the Europeans and Egyptians despite having publicly
criticized this policy in the British press on weeks before the assignment was
given. Gordon had his own agenda. He would defend Khartoum against the Mahdi.
The Relief of Gordon
By 1884 it became apparent
that Gordon was not leaving Khartoum.
The prospect of his death and the loss of the Sudan
prompted national outcry in Britain,
including Queen Victoria who pressured Prime Minister Gladstone into sending a
relief force. On March 25th, the Queen wrote the Secretary of War,
Lord Hartington (a hawk in the Cabinet), “Gordon is in danger: you are bound to
try to save him.”
Gordon was a living symbol of
all that Britons saw of their empire and their values. In death, he became,
according to Karl Meyer, “a devout martyr who died bravely while on an
impossible mission for an ingrate government.” In Parliament, Gladstone’s government narrowly averted a
vote of censure.
Ultimately, General, Sir Garnet
Wolseley was sent to Cairo
to command a relief force of 10,000 British soldiers. Wolseley was a friend of
Charles Gordon and a bitter critic of Gladstone, whom he blamed for Gordon’s
death. Through brilliantly improvised tactics, including the construction of
hundreds of specially designed boats that could navigate the Nile cataracts,
the relief expedition moved up the Nile.
“Too Late”
The forces of the Mahdi
breached Khartoum’s
defenses in January 1885, slaughtering the inhabitants and murdering Governor-General
Charles Gordon. His severed head was paraded before the Mahdi on a pike.
Referring to Prime Minister Gladstone, General Wolseley wrote in his journal,
“He is responsible for Gordon’s death and all the bloodshed and horrors
attendant upon the fall of Khartoum.”
(Tuesday, 17th February, 1885)
Sources:
Byron Farwell, Queen Victoria’s Little Wars (New York: W. W. Norton
& Company, 1972)
Karl E. Meyer and Shareen
Blair Brysac, Kingmakers: The Invention
of the Modern Middle East (New
York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2008)
Lytton Strachey, Eminent Victorians New York: Harvest Books/Harcourt Brace &
Company, 1969)
Lord Garnet Wolseley, In Relief of Gordon: Lord Wolseley’s
Campaign Journal of the Khartoum
Relief Expedition 1884-1885, edited by Adrian Preston (London: Hutchinson
Press, 1967)
First Published in Suite101. Copyright owned by Michael Streich. Republishing of this article by written permission only.
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