Turco-Egyptian Sudan - Wikipedia Turco-Egyptian Sudan (Arabic: التركى المصرى السودان), also known as Turkish Sudan or Turkiyya (Arabic: التركية, at-Turkiyyah), describes the rule of the Eyalet and later Khedivate of Egypt over what is now Sudan and South Sudan
Egyptian-Ottoman rule over the Sudan - Britannica In July 1820 Muḥammad ʿAlī, viceroy of Egypt under the Ottoman Empire, sent an army under his son Ismāʿīl to conquer the Sudan Muḥammad ʿAli was interested in the gold and enslaved people that the Sudan could provide and wished to control the vast hinterland south of Egypt
Sudan - THE TURKIYAH, 1821-85 - Country Studies Muhammad Ali's immediate successors, Abbas I (1849-54) and Said (1854-63), lacked leadership qualities and paid little attention to Sudan, but the reign of Ismail (1863-79) revitalized Egyptian interest in the country In 1865 the Ottoman Empire ceded the Red Sea coast and its ports to Egypt
Sudan: Turco-Egyptian Period, 1820-1885 - World history Between 1820 and 1885, most of present-day Sudan was under Turco-Egyptian colonial rule The annexation of the country to Egypt was begun in 1820-1821 by Muhammad ‘Ali, the Ottoman viceroy of Egypt, and later completed by his grandson Khedive Isma’il
EGYPTIAN RULE IN THE SUDAN - Belleten One of the more serious accounts written about Turko-Egyptian rule in the Sudan was that of Lieutenant-Colonel D H Stewart Stewart was sent on orders of the British government to report on the Sudan after the outbreak of the Mahdist revolt
Sudan: Turkish Invasion in 1821 - Fanack Chronicles During the Turkish-Egyptian rule of Sudan, the country began to be integrated into regional and international markets and politics The administration was modernized, new crops and agricultural methods were introduced, and foreign trade expanded
MUHAMMAD ALI’S CONQUEST OF SUDAN (1820 – 1824) - Academia. edu The paper begins with a brief review of the establishment of Ottoman rule in Egypt, before moving on to consider the broader geopolitical forces that gave rise to the decision by the Egyptian Khedive, Mehmed Ali, to invade Sinnar, Kordofan and adjacent areas of northern Sudan
30 Facts About Turco-Egyptian Conquest Of Sudan This period of history stretched from 1820, when Muhammad Ali Pasha's forces first entered Sudan, until 1885 That's a span of 65 years, during which Sudan was under the control of the Turco-Egyptian administration, experiencing significant changes in its political, social, and economic landscapes
The Turco-Egyptian Sudan: A Recent Historiographical Controversy Egyptian rule in the Sudan is to a considerable extent based on the accounts of travellers and, later in the nineteenth century, on memoirs of European officials serving in the Turco-Egyptian Sudan These accounts, taken together with the Ottoman archives, whether in Cairo or in Istanbul, provide us with a fairly com-