Panorama of the River Nile
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This striking aerial view captures the course of the Nile River between its mouth near Cairo and Alexandria and the split into the Blue and White forks near Khartoum. It was published by G.W. Bacon & Co. in London in 1885 to update an English public on the disastrous results of the Gordon Relief Expedition. The year prior (1884), a violent uprising in adjacent Sudan (then part of Egyptian-controlled territory) led the British to plan to withdraw their military forces and resident populations. Sadly for the citizens and garrison of Khartoum, the Governor-General Charles George Gordon failed to immediately evacuate the city upon his arrival, leading to a prolonged ten-month siege by attacking forces under Muhammad Ahmad. The British government, wary of the costs of further intervention, was slow to respond, but a relief expedition finally arrived in Egypt in January 1885. After much difficulty moving steamships up the Nile, the reinforcements arrived two days too late – Khartoum had fallen and all its troops had been killed. The image highlights the difficulty of the mission route – an apparently narrow river with a meandering course and numerous cataracts. The fertile, heavily populated banks of the Nile are subtly shaded with a light green that contrasts sharply with the harsh brown of the adjacent (largely empty) desert. Important infrastructure like railways and telegraph lines is noted. Three scenes in the upper right present different aspects of the engagement – hauling steamers over rapids, taking fire from a hostile shoreline, and marching with the camel corps.
North Africa