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VISCOUNT HORATIO See also: British See also: field marshal, was the son of Lieut.-Colonel H
.
H
.
Kitchener and was
See also: born at Bally See also: Longford, Co
.
See also: Kerry, on the 24th of See also: June 1850
.
He entered the Royal Military See also: Academy, See also: Woolwich, in 1868, and was commissioned second See also: lieutenant, Royal See also: Engineers, in 1871
.
As a subaltern he was employed in survey See also: work in See also: Cyprus and See also: Palestine, and on promotion to captain in 1883 was attached to the See also: Egyptian army, then in course of re-organization under British See also: officers
.
In the following See also: year he served on the staff of the British expeditionary force on the See also: Nile, and was promoted successively major and lieutenant-colonel by brevet for his services
.
From 1886 to 1888 he was commandant at See also: Suakin, commanding and receiving a severe wound in the See also: action of Handub in 1888
.
In 1888 he commanded a brigade in the actions of Gamaizieh and Toski
.
From 1889 to 1892 he served as adjutant-general of the army
.
He had become brevet-colonel in the British army in 1888, and
See also: KITE
he received the C.B. in 1889 after the action of Toski
.
In 1892 Colonel Kitchener succeeded See also: Sir See also: Francis (See also: Lord) Grenfell as sirdar of the Egyptian army, and three years later, when he had completed his predecessor's work of re-organizing the forces of the See also: khedive, he began the formation of an expeditionary force on the vexed military frontier of Wady See also: Haifa
.
The advance into the Sudan (seeSee also: EGYPT, Military Operations) was prepared by thorough administrative work on his See also: part which gained universal admiration
.
In 1896 Kitchener won the action of Ferket (June 7) and advanced the frontier and the railway to See also: Dongola
.
In 1897 Sir Archibald See also: Hunter's victory of See also: Abu Hamed (Aug
.
7) carried the Egyptian See also: flag one stage farther, and in 1898 the resolve to destroy the See also: Mandi's power was openly indicated by the despatch of a British force to co-operate with the Egyptians
.
The sirdar, who in 1896 became a British major-general and received the K.C.B., commanded the See also: united force, which stormed the Mandist zareba on the See also: river Atbara on the 8th of See also: April, and, the outposts being soon afterwards advanced to Metemmeh and Shendy, the British force was augmented to the strength of a division for the final advance on See also: Khartum
.
Kitchener's work was crowned and the power of the Mandists utterly destroyed by the victory of See also: Omdurman (See also: Sept
.
2), for which he was raised to the See also: peerage as Baron Kitchener of Khartoum, received the G.C.B., the thanks of parliament and a See also: grant of £30,000
.
Little more than a year afterwards, while still sirdar of the Egyptian army, he was promoted lieutenant-general and appointed chiefof-staff to Lord Roberts in the
See also: South See also: African War (see See also: TRANSVAAL, See also: History)
.
In this capacity he served in the See also: campaign of Paardeberg, the advance on See also: Bloemfontein and the subsequent northward advance to See also: Pretoria, and on Lord Roberts' return to See also: England in See also: November I90o succeeded him as See also: commander-inchief, receiving at the same See also: time the See also: local See also: rank of general
.
In June 1902 the long and harassing war came to its close, and Kitchener was rewarded by See also: advancement to the dignity of viscount, promotion to the substantive rank of general " for distinguished service," the thanks of parliament and a grant of X50,000
.
He was also included in the See also: Order of Merit
.
Immediately after the See also: peace he went to See also: India as commanderin-chief in the See also: East Indies, and in this position, which he held for seven years, he carried out not only many far-reaching administrative reforms but a See also: complete re-organization and strategical redistribution of the British and native forces
.
On leaving India in 1909 he was promoted field marshal, and succeeded the duke of Connaught as commander-in-chief and highSee also: commissioner in the Mediterranean
.
This See also: post, not of See also: great importance in itself, was regarded as a virtual command of the colonial as distinct from the home and the See also: Indian forces, and on his See also: appointment Lord Kitchener (after a visit to See also: Japan) undertook a tour of inspection of the forces of the See also: empire, and went to See also: Australia and New Zealand in order to assist in See also: drawing up local schemes of defence
.
In this See also: mission he was highly successful, and earned See also: golden opinions
.
But soon after his return to England in April 1910 he declined to take up his Mediterranean appointment, owing to his dislike of its inadequate scope, and he was succeeded in June by Sir Ian See also: Hamilton
.
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