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First View of Magdala, 1868 (w/c)

IMAGE number
NAM5929551
Image title
First View of Magdala, 1868 (w/c)
Auto-translated text View Original Source
Artist
James, Francis (Frank) Cornelius (19th century) / English
Location
National Army Museum, London
Medium
watercolour
Date
1868 AD (C19th AD)
Image description

First View of Magdala, 1868. Watercolour by Captain Cornelius Francis James, Bombay Staff Corps, 1868. After his diplomatic overtures to the British for help against his Moslem enemies had been ignored (including a letter to Queen Victoria), King Theodore of Ethiopia imprisoned the British Consul, Captain Charles Cameron, along with several missionaries and other civilians. Lieutenant-General Sir Robert (later Field Marshal Lord) Napier's expeditionary force was subsequently despatched and advanced over 400 miles (640 km) of difficult country to the capital, Magdala, near to which the decisive actions of the campaign were fought in April 1868. On 9 April, the British repelled a massive attack by the ill-equipped Abyssinians, then routed the defending forces in just two hours the following day. British casualties were two killed and 18 wounded, while the Ethiopians lost 700 killed and 1,400 wounded. The king released his hostages, but opted to commit suicide rather than be captured.

Photo credit
© National Army Museum / Bridgeman Images
Image keywords
agriculture / Mumbai / India / Asia / topography / mountain / natural feature

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Largest available format 7098 × 2458 px 15 MB
Dimension [pixels] Dimension in 300dpi [mm] File size [MB] Online Purchase
Large 7098 × 2458 px 601 × 208 mm 15.0 MB
Medium 1024 × 355 px 87 × 30 mm 486 KB

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