Audiolibro: The River War: An Account of the Reconquest of the Sudan
The River War: An Account of the Reconquest of the Sudan
1 - 01 - The Rebellion of the Mahdi, Part 1
- Download 01 - The Rebellion of the Mahdi, Part 1 audio
- Download 02 - The Rebellion of the Mahdi, Part 2 audio
- Download 03 - The Fate of the Envoy, Part 1 audio
- Download 04 - The Fate of the Envoy, Part 2 audio
- Download 05 - The Dervish Empire audio
- Download 06 - The Years of Preparation audio
- Download 07 - The Beginning of the War audio
- Download 08 - Firket audio
- Download 09 - The Recovery of the Dongola Province audio
- Download 10 - The Desert Railway audio
- Download 11 - Abu Hamed audio
- Download 12 - Berber audio
- Download 13 - Reconaissance audio
- Download 14 - The Battle of the Atbara audio
- Download 15 - The Grand Advance audio
- Download 16 - The Operations of the First of September audio
- Download 17 - The Battle of Omdurman, Part 1 audio
- Download 18 - The Battle of Omdurman, Part 2 audio
- Download 19 - The Fall of the City audio
- Download 20 - The Fashoda Incident audio
- Download 21 - On the Blue Nile audio
- Download 22 - The End of the Khalifa audio
- Download 23 - Appendix audio
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When the self-proclaimed Mahdi (“Guided One”) gathered Islamic forces and kicked the Anglo-Egyptians out of the Sudan, he unleashed a backlash. With the image of the heroic General Charles Gordon dying at Khartoum, the British public was ready to support a war to reclaim the lost territories. And when the political time was right, a British-Egyptian-Sudanese expedition led by the redoubtable Herbert Kitchener set out to do just that.
The river involved was the Nile. For millennia, its annual flood has made habitable a slender strip, though hundreds of miles of deserts, between its tributaries and its delta. Through this desolate region, man and beast struggled to supply the bare essentials of life. Though this same region, the expedition had to find and defeat an enemy several times larger than itself.
The young Churchill was hot to gain war experience to aid his career, and so he wangled a transfer to the 21st Lancers and participated in the last successful cavalry charge the world ever saw, in the climactic battle of Omdurman. He also had a position as war correspondent for the Morning Post, and on his return to England he used his notes to compose this book.
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