polybooru
Login Posts Comments Notes Artists Tags Pools Wiki Forum More ยป
Search Changes Help | Posts (2) History
  • Help
guro
scat

Recent Changes (all)

  • frada
  • gorytos
  • kandys
  • brian mcmorrow
  • reproduction
  • help:museum sources
  • help:tagging
  • uthman shaykh al din
  • al nur anqara
  • mulazimin
  • jabana
  • al siddiq al mahdi
  • asiatic (egyptian)
  • bronze
  • patina
  • new kingdom egypt
  • late period egypt
  • ptolemaic egypt
  • egyptian
  • third intermediate period egypt
  • pre roman italy
  • rider
  • wood
  • boots
  • affronted

Options

  • Tag History
  • Edit Tag
  • Post History
  • Wiki History
  • Discussions
  • What Links Here
  • Mistagged Posts
  • Untagged Posts

uthman shaykh al din

Uthman b. Abdallahi al-Taishi, titled shaykh al-din, was the eldest son of the Khalifa Abdallahi. Born c. 1874, Uthman was only a young child when the Mahdist Revolution began and spent much of his youth growing up in the Mahdist camp, where his father fretted for him continually. However, despite this, Uthman received an in-depth religious education, particularly once the conquest of Khartoum had been carried out in 1885. He was known to speak in 'Omdurmani' Arabic as opposed to the western dialect spoken by his relatives and was consumed by contemporary culture (he had a special penchant for drinking, dancing-girls, and crossdressers i.e. mukhannathin). Ultimately, Uthman's debauchery would earn him his father's censure and a house arrest. Later, with the abortive Ashraf coup in Nov. 1891, Uthman would be placed in command of his father's mulazimiyya guardsmen and honorary ownership of all rifle-bearing soldiers in the capital. Uthman's father also began to groom him as his successor. During this period of heightened influence, Uthman proved himself to be highly aware of foreign affairs and unsuccessfully advocated for an alliance with the French via Abyssinia. However, though educated, he lacked military capability and had a lackluster performance at the battle of Karari (2 Sept., 1898). Uthman was subsequently wounded and captured at the battle of Umm Dibaykarat (24 Nov., 1899); he would die a year later in Rosetta after his wounds became gangrenous from malcare by his captors. Uthman is said to have been buried in the Kum al-Afrah cemetery near Rosetta, however, damage and theft of grave stones has left his final resting place unidentifiable.

References:

Ibrahim Fawzi, Kitab al-Sudan bayna yaday Ghurdun wa-Kitshinir, 2 vols. (1319 AH /1901-1902 AD), 2/166-170.

Richard Hill, Biographical Dictionary of the Sudan, 2nd edn (1967), 370, 408 s.v. "Uthman Shaikh al-Din Abd Allahi al-Taaishi."

Abbas Hasan al-Sisi, Rashid: al-Madinat al-basila [1979], 84.

Ismat Hasan Zulfu, Karari (1973), 261-262; (1980), 86-87.

Viviane Amina Yagi, Rijal hawl al-Mahdi, trans. Makki Bashir Mustafa (2001), 44-51.

Posts

post #484
post #163
Terms / Privacy / Contact /