Book description
The battle took place at Kerreri, 11km north of Omdurman in the
Sudan. Kitchener commanded a force of 8,000 British regulars and a
mixed force of 17,000 Sudanese and Egyptian solders. He arrayed his
force in an arc around the village of Egeiga close to the bank of the
Nile, where a gunboat flotilla waited in support, facing a wide, flat
plain with hills rising to the left and right. The British and
Egyptian cavalry was placed on either flank. Al-Taashi's followers,
known as Ansar and sometimes referred to as Dervishes, numbered around
50,000, including some 3,000 cavalry. In a few hours and at a loss of
less than 400 officers and men killed and wounded, the Anglo-Egyptian
army defeated the more than 50,000 brave tribesmen who charged their
enemy, regardless of the hail of maxim bullets, many of them armed
only with spears, swords and ancient chainmail armour. In concise
detail, with orders of battle, maps and over fifty photographs, the
author shows how Omdurman was a superb example of logistics in
warfare. First-hand accounts from both sides help the reader to
understand all the horrors and glory of that day including the famous
charge of the 21st Lancers, often called the last great cavalry charge
of the British Army. This war arguably the height of British Empire
military dominance.
William Wright is a former journalist and chairman of the
Victorian Military History Society of Great Britain. His main hobby is
collecting books on the colonial wars. He is the author of A Tidy
Little War and the forthcoming Through the Indian Mutiny. He has
written many articles of Soldiers of the Queen, the journal of the
Victorian Military Society, and Savage and Soldier, the journal of
American colonial wars. He has explored several forgotten colonial
battlefields in such places as New Zealand, Natal, Zululand and Canada.