Karam Allāh Muḥammad Kurkusāwī

Karam Allāh Muḥammad Kurkusāwī[lower-alpha 1] (died 1903) was a Dongolāwī Mahdist emir (amīr).[1] Born on the island of Kurkus, near Shendi, Karam Allāh worked with slave traders in the Baḥr al-Gẖazāl in his youth. In 1882 he went to al-Ubaiyaḍ to enlist with the Mahdists.[1]

In 1884 Muḥammad Aḥmad al-Mahdī sent Karam Allāh back to the Baḥr al-Gẖazāl as emir and gave him an army. He captured the Egyptian governor, Frank Lupton (Lupton Bey),[2] and the garrison.[1] In 1885, when the Rizaiqāt of southern Dār Fūr rebelled by accepting as refugess some mutinous Mahdists from al-Ubaiyaḍ, Karam Allāh and his brother, Muḥammad Sẖaikẖ, led a large army against him.[3] When the Rizaiqāt chief Madībbū Bey ʿAlī refused a summons, his forces were attacked near Sẖaqqa. They lost the ensuing battle and Madībbū fled north. He was eventually captured by Yūsuf Ibrāhīm and turned over to Karam Allāh, who sent him on to Omdurman.[3]

In 1896 he was wounded in the Battle of Ferkeh. In 1898, when the Mahdists were defeated, he fled to the court of ʿAlī Dīnār, sultan of Dār Fūr. He was eventually executed at al-Fāṣẖar on suspicion of intriguing against the sultan.[1]

Notes

  1. Also spelled Karamallah and Kurqusawi.
  1. 1 2 3 4 Hill 1967, pp. 196–97.
  2. For a brief biography, see E. Macro and F. Lupton, "Frank Miller Lupton", Sudan Notes and Records 28 (1947): 50–61.
  3. 1 2 Daly 2007, p. 72.

Sources

  • Hill, Richard Leslie, ed. (1967). "Karam Allāh Muḥammad Kurkusāwī". A Biographical Dictionary of the Sudan (2nd ed.). Frank Cass and Company. pp. 196–97. 
  • Daly, M. W. (2007). Darfur's Sorrow: A History of Destruction and Genocide. Cambridge University Press. 
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