Battle of Ferkeh

Battle of Ferkeh

Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Battle of Ferkeh
date=June 7 , 1896
partof=the Mahdist War
place=near Dongola, Northern Sudan
result=British/Egyptian victory.
combatant1=Mahdist Sudan
combatant2=flagcountry|United Kingdom
flagcountry|Egypt|Ottoman
strength1=3,000-4,000 men
strength2=9,000-9,500 men
commander1=Osman Azrak
HammudaKIA|alt=yes
commander2=Sir Herbert Kitchener
casualties1=44 emirs killed
4 emirs captured
800-1,500 soldiers killed
500 soldiers wounded
500-600 soldiers captured
casualties2=20 soldiers killed
81-83 soldiers wounded

The Battle of Ferkeh (or Firket) occurred during the Mahdist War when an army of the Mahdist Sudanese was surprised and wiped out by the British and Egyptian forces under Sir Herbert Kitchener on June 7, 1896.

In 1896, as part of the Sudan campaign, Kitchener's Anglo-Egyptian force was advancing on Dongola, in Northern Sudan. Ferkeh was a small fortified village on the banks of the Nile. It was the first important Mahdist position they encountered. At the time, it was occupied by 3,000 Mahdist warriors, led by the Emirs Hammuda and Osman Azrak.

Kitchener's force, nominally in service of the Khedive of Egypt, but in fact under direct British control, was composed of Egyptian and Sudanese soldiers, led by British officers. It numbered 9,000 men, accompanied by three batteries of field guns and one battery of Maxim guns.

Kitchener divided his force into two columns. One was formed mostly of infantry , and had to march along the Nile to attack Ferkeh from the North. The other consisted of cavalry, camel-mounted infantry and horse artillery units and was sent through the desert to attack from the South-East. Both columns departed in the evening of the 6th, and marched through the night, deploying at dawn in the morning of the 7th.

The attack caught the Mahdists completely by surprise, and they made only uncoordinated attacks against the deploying Egyptians, during which Hammuda was killed. Many of the Mahdists then turned and fled. The cavalry column should have cut off their retreat, but they were hidden from view by the terrain, and many made good their escape along the Nile, including Osman Azrak. Other Mahdists stayed in their fortifications in the village, and fought to the bitter end. The Egyptians had to clear the position with bayonets.

The battle lasted from 4.30 to 7.20 am and resulted in the death of 20 Egyptians and 800 to 1000 Mahdists. It was the first significant action during the Sudan campaign.

References

*George Bruce. Harbottle's Dictionary of Battles. (Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1981) (ISBN 0-442-22336-6).
*Churchill, Winston S. (1952), "The river war - an account of the Reconquest of the Sudan", Eyre and Spottiswoode, London.

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