Tomb of the Mahdi, Omdurman
Visited November 2007 and January 2009
In
2007 and 2009 I was lucky enough to spend time working in Khartoum,
Sudan. Across the river from Khartoum is Omdurman, the largest city in
Sudan, and the site of the tomb of the Mahdi, and of the Battle of
Omdurman (1898) where Kitchener beat the local forces and gave Britain
control over the Sudan.
This
tomb is a rebuilt version of that built for the Mahdi, Muhammad Ahmad,
who died in 1885, who was a religious leader and military campaigner.
I'm not going to go into all the political details of who the Mahdi was,
and the whole capture of Khartoum - read more about it here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammad_Ahmad
The
original of this tomb was destroyed on the orders of Kitchener, and the
Mahdi's ashes were thrown into the Nile (his skull was saved by
Kitchener). The tomb was later rebuilt into the one that survives
today, although it is generally closed to visitors. I only saw it from
the outside (you get a great view from the Omdurman Museum, close by).
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