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1 of 253523 objects
Omdurman: Officers' Mess, 1st Battalion Grenadier Guards [Khartoum 1898] Sep 1898
Gelatin silver print | 11.2 x 16.0 cm (image) | RCIN 2501910
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Photograph of group sitting on boxes at tables under canvas awning. Left-to right: Lieutenants E Seymour and FLV Swaine; Lieutentant-Colonel F Lloyd (1853-1926); Captain EG Verschoyle (1866-1900); Lieutenant EH Trotter and GBA Russell; Captain W Murray-Threipland; Lieutenants FEW Hervey-Bathurst and H St Leger Stucley (1877-1914); Capt WGH Marshall; Lieutenant GS Clive (1874-1959).
This photograph is mounted in an album which documents the final stages of the Mahdist War, or Sudan Campaign, in 1898. In 1881 a Mahdist state was proclaimed by Muhammad Ahmad (1845-1885), beginning a popular uprising against Egyptian rule in the Sudan and capturing the capital of Khartoum. The British, who took power in Egypt in 1882, sought to reconquer the Sudan and, after 1885, to avenge the death of General Charles Gordon in Khartoum. In 1898 the Mahdist state was defeated by Anglo-Egyptian forces, led by Major General Sir Herbert Kitchener, Sirdar (Commander-in-Chief) of the Egyptian army, in the Battle of Omdurman. Sudan became an independent republic in 1956, and the Republic of South Sudan came into being in 2011.
Some of the photographs in this album document British atrocities in the aftermath of the Battle of Omdurman and depict graphic violence. Francis Gregson, who compiled the album and is thought to have taken many of the photographs mounted in it, accompanied the Sudan Campaign as a War Correspondent for the St James’s Gazette. He is not thought to have been commissioned to take these photographs, however, which were not made public at the time. He wrote to Sir Reginald Wingate, Director of Military Intelligence of the Egyptian Army, in November 1898 stating his intention to collate photographs he had taken during his time in Egypt and the Sudan in an album as a souvenir for Wingate. Gregson appears to have produced several copies of this album (a number of copies, thought to be identical to this as regards contents and binding, exist in UK public collections) and the captions given to each photograph are his. This copy was, according to Gregson, requested directly by Queen Victoria. See Michelle Gordon, ‘Viewing Violence in the British Empire: Images of Atrocity from the Battle of Omdurman, 1898’ Journal of Perpetrator Research, 2.2 (2019) pp 65-100.
Provenance
In an album presented to Queen Victoria
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Creator(s)
Acquirer(s)
Subject(s)
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Medium and techniques
Gelatin silver print
Measurements
11.2 x 16.0 cm (image)