Siege of Khartoum (1 Viewer)

PolarBear

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I am starting this thread to post intel and related info on John's new Anglo-Sudan line on Gordon & The Siege of Khartoum so please feel free to post any related material or thoughts here on the topic. Hopefully we will have some pictures in the not too distant future

For initial material on this new line see the following thread posted October 25th

http://www.treefrogtreasures.com/forum/showthread.php?t=17126
 
Wilbur Smith novel on life in Khartoum during the siege:

The Triumph of the Sun

From one of the world’s most celebrated and bestselling novelists comes an epic adventure in the spirit and tradition of Monsoon and Blue Horizon.

It is 1884, and in the Sudan, decades of brutal misgovernment by the ruling Egyptian Khedive in Cairo precipitates a bloody rebellion and Holy War. The charismatic new religious leader, the Mahdi or 'Expected One', has gathered his forces of Arab warlords in preparation for a siege on the city of Khartoum. The British are forced to intervene to protect their national interests and to attempt to rescue the hundreds of British subjects stranded in the city.

British trader and businessman Ryder Courtney is trapped in the capital city of Khartoum under the orders of the infamously iron-willed General Charles George Gordon. It is here that he meets skilled soldier and swordsman Captain Penrod Ballantyne of the 10th Hussars and the British Consul, David Benbrook, as well as Benbrook’s three beautiful daughters. Against the vivid and bloody backdrop of the Arabs’ fierce and merciless siege these three powerful men must fight to survive.

Rich with vibrant historical detail and infused with his inimitable powers of storytelling, The Triumph of the Sun is Wilbur Smith at his masterful best.
 

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Wonderful news..but that means that Britain will shift attention to NW frontier?
 
I hope for NW frontier,more possibilities, more regiments,more magic...Sudan was epic, the Four Feathers,Gordon..but the Afghans with those beautiful long rifles fighting with Sikhs..maybe a mountain battery..pray it's NW frontier!!!
 
Wilbur Smith novel on life in Khartoum during the siege:

The Triumph of the Sun

From one of the world’s most celebrated and bestselling novelists comes an epic adventure in the spirit and tradition of Monsoon and Blue Horizon.

It is 1884, and in the Sudan, decades of brutal misgovernment by the ruling Egyptian Khedive in Cairo precipitates a bloody rebellion and Holy War. The charismatic new religious leader, the Mahdi or 'Expected One', has gathered his forces of Arab warlords in preparation for a siege on the city of Khartoum. The British are forced to intervene to protect their national interests and to attempt to rescue the hundreds of British subjects stranded in the city.

British trader and businessman Ryder Courtney is trapped in the capital city of Khartoum under the orders of the infamously iron-willed General Charles George Gordon. It is here that he meets skilled soldier and swordsman Captain Penrod Ballantyne of the 10th Hussars and the British Consul, David Benbrook, as well as Benbrook’s three beautiful daughters. Against the vivid and bloody backdrop of the Arabs’ fierce and merciless siege these three powerful men must fight to survive.

Rich with vibrant historical detail and infused with his inimitable powers of storytelling, The Triumph of the Sun is Wilbur Smith at his masterful best.

WONDERFUL book, and Courtney/Ballantyne saga! One of his best. Read before Assegai.
Mike
 
I think this is a great new area for JJ, and a fascinating historical period with modern implications. Its always been an interest of mine. I have some (I think) Imperial figures from Khartoum including a "death of Gordon" set with his head on a spear. Wow! Talk about a 180 degree shift from current production themes. This guy gets it.

One of my favorite movies:

Khartoum poster.jpg
 
I think this is a great new area for JJ, and a fascinating historical period with modern implications. Its always been an interest of mine. I have some (I think) Imperial figures from Khartoum including a "death of Gordon" set with his head on a spear. Wow! Talk about a 180 degree shift from current production themes. This guy gets it.

One of my favorite movies:

View attachment 36652

John is a veteran wargamer and as you know does a 28mm Colonial series called Darkest Africa (boats only)
 

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John is a veteran wargamer and as you know does a 28mm Colonial series called Darkest Africa (boats only)

I know he does wargame stuff, but have never explored this line - too busy with his larger figures. This is new to me.

I became a "fan" when I found out he was the sculptor behind the Frontline FIW series, which I own.

Very cool boat! Maybe it will be upscaled for Khartoum!! :) Thanks for sharing.
 
Count me in. Even if you don't collect this series, how cool would having a boat be?
 
Thanks Randy for everything.I have read and studied the Sudan wars for the last 20 years but for those who don't know much about them you've been great educating them.For movie fans who would like movies about this period besides Khartoum is Four Feathers, the 1939 version.The best version in my book.This is set in 1898 during Kitchner's reconquest.Some of the extras in this film were actually in the Dervish Army.
Mark
 
A great set for John to add to the Siege of Khartoum would be the Canadian Voyageurs and Mohawk Indians who were chosen by Wolseley to participate in the Nile Relief Expedition to rescue Gordon. This would tie together John's French & Indian War and Sudan series quite nicely.


Carl Benn’s new book, Mohawks on the Nile, just released by Dundurn Press in Toronto, explores the fascinating story of sixty aboriginal men who left their occupations in the Ottawa River timber industry to participate in a military expedition on the Nile River in 1884–85. Chosen because of their outstanding skills as river pilots, they formed part of the Canadian Voyageur Contingent, which transported British troops through the Nile’s treacherous cataracts on a fleet of whaleboats in the hard campaigning of the Sudan War. Their objective was to reach Khartoum in what then was the Egyptian province of Sudan. Their mission was to save its governor-general, Major-General Charles Gordon, besieged by Muslim forces inspired by the call to liberate Sudan from foreign control by Muhammad Ahmad ibn ‘Abdullahi, known to his followers as the ‘the Mahdi.’

Beyond Carl Benn’s narrative of the campaign of 1884–85 and analysis of its larger meaning in First Nations history, the book presents the memoirs of two Mohawk veterans of the Sudan War, Louis Jackson and James Deer, which they wrote upon returning to Canada in 1885. It also includes other revealing period images and documents, along with an annotated roll of the Mohawks voyageurs and other appendices. One of those appendices is a particularly-accurate distance chart of the Nile River in the 1880s, produced with the best satellite and other data available by Ryerson’s Associate Dean of Arts, Dr Philip Coppack. As well, Ryerson’s Paul Du from the Centre for the Study of Commercial Activity drew maps for Mohawks on the Nile, the cost of which was supported through the generosity of the university.
 

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Here is another book on the subject:
 

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I will check these 2 books out Randy, thanks for posting the info.

Cheers

Martyn:)
 
More on the Canadian Voyageurs and the Nile Expedition

From:
The Company of Military Historians
Military Uniforms in America
Volume 4
The Modern Era from 1868
 

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