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Military History Companion:

Maj Gen Charles George 'Chinese' Gordon

Gordon, Maj Gen Charles George ‘Chinese’ (1833-85). The fourth son of Lt Gen H. W. Gordon, he was educated at the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich. Commissioned in the Royal Engineers (1852), he served in the Crimean war, participated in surveying the Russo-Turkish frontier, and served in the second Opium war. He remained in China, reorganizing the ‘Ever Victorious Army’, and leading it to a series of brilliant victories over the Taipings. He held several military commands, colonial postings and commissions thereafter, but served most notably as governor of Equatoria (1873-6) and governor-general of the Sudan (1877-9 and 1884-5), gaining acclaim for his efforts to suppress the slave trade. During the Mahdist revolt he was sent to Khartoum on 18 February 1884 with vague instructions from the Gladstone cabinet. Gordon evacuated some 2, 600 civilians and soldiers before the city was blockaded in March. The Gordon relief expedition failed to perform as named and he was killed on the steps of the governor's palace when the Mahdists stormed the place on 26 January 1885. The uproar in Britain nearly brought down the government and the Egypt and Sudan campaigns were waged to avenge this prototypical Victorian Christian warrior-martyr. In his personal life he was very much more complex than the stereotype, but he was a shrewd tactician, a brave and energetic commander, and an indefatigable imperial administrator.

Bibliography

  • Trench, Charles Chevenix, Charley Gordon (London, 1978)

— Edward M. Spiers

 
 
Biography: Charles George Gordon

The English soldier, adventurer, and popular hero Charles George Gordon (1833-1885) was known as "Chinese" Gordon. He was killed at the fall of Khartoum.

Born at Woolwich on Jan. 28, 1833, Charles George Gordon was the son of a lieutenant general. He attended Taunton School and entered the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich in 1848, gaining his commission in the Royal Engineers in 1852.

At the end of 1855, during the Crimean War, Gordon was ordered to the Crimea. He was wounded there and then worked on the demolition of Sevastopol harbor. From May 1856 he was engaged in quasi-political work helping to delimit the frontiers of Bessarabia and Armenia. In 1860 Gordon joined the British forces operating with the French against China and was at the capture of Peking, spending the next 2 years fighting in southern China.

In 1863 Gordon took command of the small Chinese army in Sinkiang, which was officered by Europeans and which had been raised to suppress the Taiping Rebellion. At first Gordon quarreled with the Chinese authorities over the execution of rebels, but he returned to his post at the end of 1863, and by April 1864 the Taiping Rebellion was crushed. Gordon's exploits and his refusal to accept money presents offered by the Chinese emperor made him a popular hero in England from this time forward.

This heroic impression was reinforced during the years from 1865 to 1871, when Gordon served quietly in home army duties as commander of the Royal Engineers at Gravesend, supervising the Thames forts, for he spent much of his free time in social work, interesting himself in hospitals and schools for poor children and even taking destitute boys into his home.

Activities in Africa

In 1871 and 1872 Gordon was sent to Turkey to work on the International Danube Commission. In Constantinople he met Nubar Pasha, the Egyptian politician, and this led to his acceptance of an offer to succeed Sir Samuel Baker as governor of the Equatorial Provinces of the Sudan. Characteristically Gordon requested the salary of £10,000 be cut and accepted £2,000. Gordon's vigorous opposition to slave trading led to a quarrel with the Egyptian governor general of the Sudan, and Gordon resigned in 1876, but in January 1877 Gordon returned as governor general of the Sudan and Darfur and Equatoria, the other Egyptian provinces on the Red Sea. For the next 2 years he spent his time fighting in Darfur, suppressing rebellions elsewhere, and failing to secure agreement with Ethiopia on frontiers. When the British and French deposed Khedive Ismail, Gordon resigned at the end of 1879.

In April 1880 Gordon accompanied Lord Ripon, the new viceroy of India, as his private secretary but quickly resigned and spent the remainder of the year in China. During 1881 and 1882 he worked with the Royal Engineers in Mauritius and was in command of the British troops there from January 1882. In May he assumed command of the forces in Cape Colony but quarreled with the Cape government over its handling of the Basuto and left in October 1882, visiting Palestine the next year.

At the end of 1883 Gordon was approached by King Leopold II of the Belgians, who wished to employ him to take charge of plans to create the Congo Free State, from what was at that time ostensibly a philanthropic organization for "civilizing" the Congo Basin. In January 1884 Gordon accepted the offer, but the British War Office refused to sanction the appointment, and Leopold eventually chose H. M. Stanley for the post.

Gordon had intended to defy the War Office and resign his commission in the army. He was actually enroute for Brussels and the Congo when he was recalled by telegram to meet the British Cabinet, which persuaded him to accept the task of returning to the Sudan to withdraw the British and Egyptian troops there who were threatened by the successful revolt of the Mahdi. At the same time he was told to leave behind an organized government, so that his instructions were unclear.

Fall of Khartoum

By temperament Gordon was hardly the man to preside over the Sudan's abandonment (which the British government wanted so as to cut Egyptian expenditures). Arriving in Khartoum in February 1884, Gordon proceeded to proclaim the Sudan's independence, open communications with the Red Sea, demand Turkish troops to assist him, and request the presence of Zobeir Pasha, a notorious slave dealer, to form an alternative leadership to the Mahdi. Meanwhile Gordon made little move to withdraw, and the British and Egyptian governments did nothing to reinforce him. In March 1884 the Mahdists began their attack on Khartoum, and Gordon sent telegrams bitterly denouncing the government for neglect, until communications were cut off in April.

There followed a 10-month siege of Khartoum, during which William Gladstone's Liberal government resisted a growing popular clamor for Gordon's relief. In August 1884 money was voted for relief "should it become necessary," and Lord Wolseley was put in command of a force which left, after many delays, in September. But the expedition was too late; Khartoum fell to the Mahdi's army on Jan. 26, 1885, and Gordon was killed. The news reached England in February, and Friday, March 13, was officially declared a national day of mourning in Britain.

Gordon's death stirred a popular movement of indignation against Gladstone's Liberal government, which has been seen as one of the first stirring of popular "imperialism" in Britain and contributed to the collapse of the Liberals in 1885.

Further Reading

Gordon's own Journal, which he kept at Khartoum during the Mahdist siege, was edited by Lord Elton (1961), who also wrote a biography, Gordon of Khartoum: The Life of General Charles George Gordon (1954). Bernard M. Allen, Gordon and the Sudan (1931), is useful. The most recent treatment of Gordon's last months is John Marlowe, Mission to Khartoum: The Apotheosis of General Gordon (1969).

Additional Sources

Chenevix Trench, Charles, The road to Khartoum: a life of General Charles Gordon, New York: Norton, 1979, 1978.

Chenevix Trench, Charles Pocklington, Charley Gordon: an eminent Victorian reassessed, London: Allen Lane, 1978.

Hake, A. Egmont (Alfred Egmont), Gordon in China and the Soudan, London: Darf Publishers, 1987.

MacGregor-Hastie, Roy, Never to be taken alive: a biography of General Gordon, New York: St. Martin's Press, 1985.

Pollock, John Charles, Gordon: the man behind the legend, London: Constable, 1993.

Strachey, Lytton, Eminent Victorians: the illustrated edition, New York: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1989, 1988.

Waller, John H., Gordon of Khartoum: the saga of a Victorian hero, New York: Atheneum, 1988.

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Charles George Gordon

Charles George Gordon, portrait by Lady Julia Abercromby; in the National Portrait Gallery, London.
(click to enlarge)
Charles George Gordon, portrait by Lady Julia Abercromby; in the National Portrait Gallery, London. (credit: Courtesy of The National Portrait Gallery, London)
(born Jan. 28, 1833, Woolwich, near London, Eng. — died Jan. 26, 1885, Khartoum, Sudan) British general. Gordon distinguished himself as a young officer in the Crimean War (1853 – 56) and subsequently volunteered for the second Opium War (1856 – 60). In 1862 he helped defend Shanghai during the Taiping Rebellion. These exploits earned him the epithet "Chinese" Gordon. In 1873 the Egyptian ruler Isma'il Pasha, who regularly employed Europeans, appointed Gordon governor of the province of Equatoria in southern Sudan (1874 – 76) and as governor-general of the Sudan (1874 – 80). In that post Gordon acted to crush rebellions and suppress the slave trade. He was again sent to the Sudan by Britain in 1884 to evacuate Anglo-Egyptian forces from Khartoum, which was threatened by Mahdist movement insurgents. After his arrival the city was besieged; it remained isolated for several months until it finally succumbed (Jan. 26, 1885). Gordon was killed in the action.

For more information on Charles George Gordon, visit Britannica.com.

 
British History: Charles George Gordon

Gordon, Charles George (1833-85). British soldier and Christian mystic. After serving with distinction in the Crimean War (1853-6), Gordon gained public acclaim by his exploits in China (1860-5) where he showed great talent as commander of irregular troops in the defence of Shanghai during the Taiping rebellion. Seconded to the service of the khedive of Egypt as governor of Equatoria (1873-6) and then as governor-general of the Sudan until 1880, Gordon mapped the upper reaches of the White Nile. He returned to the Sudan in 1884 to evacuate Egyptian troops threatened by the forces of the Mahdi, a Muslim revivalist. A relief force failed to arrive in time and Gordon was killed in Khartoum in January 1885.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Gordon, Charles George,
1833–85, British soldier and administrator. He served in the Crimean War, went to China in the expedition of 1860, taking part in the capture of Beijing, and in 1863 took over the command of F. T. Ward, who had raised a Chinese army to suppress the Taiping Rebellion. For the achievements of this Ever-Victorious Army he was popularly known as Chinese Gordon. In 1873 he entered the service of the khedive of Egypt, succeeding Sir Samuel Baker as governor of Equatoria (S Sudan). Appointed governor of Sudan in 1877, he waged a vigorous campaign against slave traders. He resigned in 1879, but after various appointments in India, China, Mauritius, and Cape Colony (South Africa), he was sent back to Sudan, where Muhammad Ahmad (see under Mahdi) had acquired control. Although under orders to evacuate the Egyptian garrison from Khartoum, Gordon took it upon himself to attempt to defeat the Mahdi. He was cut off and besieged at Khartoum for 10 months. A relief expedition belatedly dispatched from England reached the garrison two days after it had been stormed by the Mahdists, who killed Gordon. Gordon's death stirred public indignation and contributed to the collapse of the Gladstone government in 1885.

Bibliography

See Gordon's journals at Khartoum (1885, repr. 1969); studies by P. Charrier (1965), A. Nutting (1966), J. Marlowe (1969), and C. Trench (1979).

 

1833 - 1885

British army engineer, explorer, and empire builder active in the Crimea, China, and Africa.

Born into a military family on 28 January 1833, Charles Gordon was commissioned in the Royal Engineers in 1852 and two years later fought in the Crimean War. In 1863 he became commander of the Ever Victorious Army, a Chinese ragtag mercenary outfit, which defeated the Taiping rebellion against the Manchu emperor. The popularity he subsequently won in the British press earned him the nickname Chinese Gordon.

It is, however, through his service in Africa that Gordon attained both lasting fame and martyrdom. In 1874 the viceroy of Egypt sent him to the Sudan and equatorial Africa to suppress the slave trade and extend, through exploration, the southern boundaries of Egypt's African dominions. In 1877 he continued his antislavery crusade as governor general of the Sudan; frustrated in his efforts, he resigned three years later.

When Muhammad Ahmad, claiming to be the Mahdi (the Muslim messiah), led a revolt in the Sudan that threatened Egypt's and Britain's African interests, Gordon was appointed to lead the evacuation of Khartoum's garrison. Disobeying his instructions, he tried to crush the rebellion but failed in the face of overwhelming odds. Besieged in Khartoum, he chose to make a suicidal stand. The Mahdi's troops stormed the city on 26 January 1885, killing Gordon and most of his soldiers.

Bibliography

Nutting, Anthony. Gordon of Khartoum: Martyr and Misfit. New York: C.N. Potter, 1966.

JEAN-MARC R. OPPENHEIM

 
Quotes By: Charles Gordon

Quotes:

"If you tell the truth, you have infinite power supporting you; but if not, you have infinite power against you."

 
 

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Military History Companion. The Oxford Companion to Military History. Copyright © 2001, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
British History. A Dictionary of British History. Copyright © 2001, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Mideast & N. Africa Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa. Copyright © 2004 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Quotes By. Copyright © 2008 QuotationsBook.com. All rights reserved.  Read more

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