British troops from Sierra Leone march into …
Years: 1883 - 1883
British troops from Sierra Leone march into the disputed territory several months later.
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- Sierra Leone, British Colony of
- Britain (United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland)
- Liberia, Republic of
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Kalākaua had decided to erect the Kamehameha Statue in recognition of Kamehameha I, the first king of the entire Hawaiian Islands chain.
The original statue had been lost when the ship carrying it sank near the Falkland Islands, so a replacement had been ordered and is unveiled by the king in 1883. (The original statue will later be salvaged, repaired and sent to Hawaii in 1912. A third statue, erected in 1969, is currently the only statue in the United States Capitol that commemorates a native Hawaiian.)
European navigators have visited New Guinea's islands and explored its coastlines in the sixteenth through the nineteenth centuries, but Europeans know little of the inhabitants until the 1870s, when Russian anthropologist Nicholai Miklukho-Maklai makes a number of expeditions to New Guinea, spending several years living among native tribes, and describes their way of life in a comprehensive treatise on their way of life and customs.
He has also visited the Philippines and Indonesia on a number of occasions.
In 1883, Sir Thomas McIlwraith, the Premier of Queensland, orders Henry Chester (1832–1914), the Police Magistrate on Thursday Island to proceed to Port Moresby and annex New Guinea and adjacent islands in the name of the British government.
Chester makes the proclamation on April 4, 1883, but the British government repudiates the action.
The spectators who throng the courthouse during the trial of fifteen Jews living in Tiszavasvári, and among whom one Ónody, the representative of Tiszaeszlár in the House of Deputies, is most conspicuous, conduct themselves scandalously during the proceedings: they insult the prisoners and threaten the witnesses and lawyers for the defense.
Known as the Tiszaeszlár Affair, the verdict of acquittal and the deliverance of the prisoners, most of whom languish in prison for fifteen months, are the signal for uprisings in Pozsony, Budapest, and other parts of Hungary.
Milan Obrenović quells with his army a large peasant uprising in 1883, led by radicals in the eastern part of the country.
His pro-Austro-Hungarian policies have undermined his popularity in Serbia.
The British lease the Bolan Pass, southeast of Quetta, from the khan of Kalat on a permanent basis in 1883.
...the Mahdi had started to raise an army in Darfur and in Kordofan following his retreat there in 1881.
The Mahdists are joined also by the Hadendoa Beja, who have been rallied to the Mahdi by an Ansār captain in east of Sudan in 1883, Osman Digna.
The Mahdi's forces have grown spectacularly, and by 1883 British sources placed their size at two hundred thousand, although that is almost certainly an overestimate.
Early in 1883, the Ansār, armed only with spears and swords, overwhelm a four thousand-man Egyptian force not far from Al Ubayyid ("El Obeid"), and seize their rifles and ammunition.
The Egyptian Governor, Raouf Pasha, has decided that the only solution to the growing rebellion is a fight, and against the advice of his British advisors, has started to raise an army of his own.
He hires a number of European officers to lead his force, placing them under the command of William "Billy" Hicks, a retired Colonel who has had experience in India and Abyssinia.
Hicks' force is composed mostly of Egyptian soldiers who had been imprisoned after fighting in the Urabi Revolt.
Released for service in Sudan, they accordingly show little inclination to fight.
They initially stay near Khartoum and meet small portions of the Mahdist forces on April 29, near the fort of Kawa, on the Nile, beating them off without too much trouble.
Similar skirmishes follow over the next few weeks.
Later in the summer, they heard that the Mahdi himself is besieging El Obeid, a small town set up by the Egyptians some years earlier and now the capital of the Kordofan.
The Egyptian officials decide to capture him, and, despite Hicks' reluctance, plan an expedition from their current location at Duem on the Nile to El Obeid, about two hundred miles away.
The Kordofan expedition, made up of about eight thousand Egyptian regulars, one thousand bashi-bazouk cavalry, one hundred tribal irregulars, and two thousand camp followers, carries supplies for fifty days on an immense baggage train consisting of five thousand camels.
The army also carries some ten mountain guns, four Krupp field guns, and six Nordenfeldt machine guns.
By the time the expedition started, El Obeid had fallen, but the operation is maintained to relieve Slatin Bey, the Governor of Darfur.
The force is, in the words of Winston Churchill, "perhaps the worst army that has ever marched to war"—unpaid, untrained, undisciplined and whose soldiers had more in common with their enemies than with their officers.
Either by mistake or by design, their guides lead them astray, and they soon find themselves surrounded.
The regulars' morale plummets and they start to desert en masse.
After marching for some time, they are set upon by the entire Mahdist army on November 3.
The Egyptian forces quickly form into a defensive square.
According to reports published in England soon after, the square holds for two days before finally collapsing.
About one-third of the Egyptian soldiers surrender and are later freed, while all the officers are killed.
Only about five hundred Egyptian troops manage to escape and make it back to Khartoum.
Neither Hicks nor any of his senior officers are among them.
Apparently only two or three Europeans survive.
After the battle, the Mahdist army makes El Obeid a center for operations.
Their success also emboldens Osman Digna, whose Hadendoa tribesmen, the so-called fuzzy-wuzzies, join the rebellion from their lands on the Red Sea coast.
The British, given their general lack of interest in the Sudan, decide to abandon the area in December 1883, holding only several northern towns and Red Sea ports, such as Kassala, ...
...Sannar, ...
...Sawakin, and ...
...Khartoum.
The evacuation of Egyptian troops and officials and other foreigners from Sudan is assigned to General Charles George Gordon, who had been reappointed governor general with orders to return to Khartoum and organize a withdrawal of the Egyptian garrisons there.
Years: 1883 - 1883
Locations
People
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- Sierra Leone, British Colony of
- Britain (United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland)
- Liberia, Republic of
