Fer et feu au Soudan, vol. 2 of 2

audiobook

Fer et feu au Soudan, vol. 2 of 2

by Freiherr von Rudolf Carl Slatin

FR·~12 hours·14 chapters

Chapters

14 total

NOTES SUR LA TRANSCRIPTION:

0:20

Fer et Feu au Soudan

0:24

TABLE DES MATIÈRES

0:02

CHAPITRE X.

3:17:48

CHAPITRE XI.

59:44

CHAPITRE XII.

52:35

CHAPITRE XIII.

1:04:18

CHAPITRE XIV.

24:46

CHAPITRE XV.

1:11:33

CHAPITRE XVI.

1:02:44

Description

In the heat of the 1880s Sudanese revolt, the Mahdi’s fervor spreads like lightning across the desert, rallying tribes and toppling garrisons with startling speed. From the perspective of a seasoned Egyptian officer, the narrative follows the frantic scramble of imperial forces as they try to contain a movement that feels both inevitable and incomprehensible. The account captures the uneasy optimism that greets the arrival of a celebrated commander in Khartoum, a man whose reputation precedes him and whose very presence is expected to calm the raging insurgency.

The commander’s first act is a bold diplomatic overture: a letter offering peace, recognition, and the abolition of slavery in exchange for the release of prisoners. As messengers deliver precious gifts to the Mahdi, tensions simmer beneath the veneer of courtesy, hinting at the fragile balance between negotiation and inevitable clash. Listeners are drawn into a world of shifting loyalties, cultural misunderstandings, and the looming uncertainty that defines this pivotal moment in Sudan’s history.

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Details

Language

fr

Duration

~12 hours (696K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Giovanni Fini, Clarity and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)

Release date

2016-06-15

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Freiherr von Rudolf Carl Slatin

Freiherr von Rudolf Carl Slatin

1857–1932

An Austrian soldier and Sudan administrator, he became famous for surviving years of captivity under the Mahdists and later telling the story in a vivid memoir. His life moved from Vienna to Khartoum and back again, crossing empires, wars, and political upheaval.

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