The River War - An Account of the Reconquest of the Sudan
Winston S. Churchill
Read by Mark F. Smith
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. (14 hr 13 min)
Chapters
The Rebellion of the Mahdi, Part 1 | 42:19 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
The Rebellion of the Mahdi, Part 2 | 42:49 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
The Fate of the Envoy, Part 1 | 40:26 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
The Fate of the Envoy, Part 2 | 42:02 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
The Dervish Empire | 47:57 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
The Years of Preparation | 42:38 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
The Beginning of the War | 45:57 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
Firket | 21:16 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
The Recovery of the Dongola Province | 53:46 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
The Desert Railway | 49:55 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
Abu Hamed | 41:55 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
Berber | 36:45 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
Reconaissance | 30:39 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
The Battle of the Atbara | 29:18 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
The Grand Advance | 29:20 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
The Operations of the First of September | 27:35 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
The Battle of Omdurman, Part 1 | 31:58 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
The Battle of Omdurman, Part 2 | 45:03 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
The Fall of the City | 21:47 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
The Fashoda Incident | 33:51 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
On the Blue Nile | 44:23 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
The End of the Khalifa | 42:20 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
Appendix | 10:00 | Read by Mark F. Smith |
Reviews
Little bit boring but significant
The One Nerd
Why do people always fight instead of sparing blood abd suffering and negotiating peacefully? Sudan could have become independent and the British could have forced the Egyptians to support Sudanese independence and in return the Egyptians and British could have withdrawn and left the nation independent under the Mahdi and so doing have spared the cost and suffering of war. The War was caused by the incompetence of the British government and Egyptian misrule, incompetency and colonial attempts. Gordon was like a zoo keeper send into the Lion's den to save some lousy tourists with nothing except a butter knife and a promise of a gun to defeat the Lion while he was still drowsy from sedatetive but instead he was abandoned and left with only two options either try to defeat the Lion or to run away, he instead chose to fight the Lion.
Excellent.
el presidente
Winston Churchill’s account is both detailed and compelling. The story is well told and draws the reader into the goals and struggles of both sides. The military and logistic details may seem a little over detailed, but as the story progresses the reader begins to appreciate how important these elements are especially in such unforgiving terrain. Well worth the listen. Also, the reader was excellent.
An Exciting True Story
F3.5.214
The reader has a good voice tone and reads at a steady pace. As the story is an interesting one, this book was a real pleasure to listen to. I had to force myself to bookmark a spot and pull away from this dramatic tale of late 19th century warfare and life in British colonial Africa.
Very detailed and well read.
Chubber
Covers in details a formative period in British colonialism. Ironic that the Sudan only remained a part of Egypt for a few decades. The details of the Madi and the religious nationalistic fervor he engendered still has echoes in the region today.
Very good book about a subject only touched on by a movie
X-ray John
I really appreciated this book. A map is a good idea. 479px-The_Mahdist_State,_1881-98,_modern_Sudan.png I then saved it as a .jpeg
How British Empire was built
Horatio Drake
Engaging account of one of the wars that made the British Empire. Fantastic narration by Mark Smith, as always. Onward to reading more Churchill books!
the river war
RLG
Very well read! Enjoyed the book by Churchill. Fascinating to listen to a description of that time, both military actions and society as it existed in 1889.
Bloody, bloody, bloody
Patrick Cullinan, Jr.
I wish we had an England and a Churchill to crush ISIS and all the bloody like of them.