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ZOBEIR RAHAMA (183o- )

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 993 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ZOBEIR RAHAMA (183o- )  ,

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Egyptian
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pasha and Sudanese governor, came of the Gemaab section of the Jaalin, and was a member of a
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family which claims descent from the Koreish tribe through Abbas,
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uncle of Mahomet . He became prominent as the most energetic and intelligent of the .Arab ivory and slave traders who about 186o errtablishsal themselves on the White Nile and in the
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Bahr-el-Ghazal . Nominally a subject of
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Egypt, he raised an army of several thousand well-armed blacks and became a dangerous
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rival to the Egyptian authorities . At the height of his power Zobeir was visited (1871) by Georg Schweinfurth, who found him " surrounded with a court which was little less than princely in its details" (Heart of Africa, vol. ii.,
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chap. xv.) . In 1869 an expedition sent from
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Khartum into the Bahr-el-Ghazal was attacked by Zobeir and completely defeated, its
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commander being slain . Zobeir represented that he was blameless in this
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matter, received a " pardon," and was himself appointed governor of the Bahrel-Ghazal, where he was practically
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independent . In 1873 he attacked the sultan of
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Darfur, and the
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khedive Ismail gave him the rank of bey and sent troops to co-operate . After he had conquered Darfur (1874), Zobeir was made a pasha, but he claimed the more substantial
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reward of being made governor-general of the new province, and went to Cairo in the spring of 1876 to press his title . He was now in the power of the Egyptian authorities, who prevented his return, though he was allowed to go to Constantinople at the outbreak of the Russo-
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Turkish War . In 1878, however, his son
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Suleiman, having got possession of the Bahr-el-Ghazal, and acting on instructions from his
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father, defied the authority of General Gordon, the new governor-general of the Sudan . Gordon sent Romolo Gessi against Suleiman, who was subdued after an arduous
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campaign and executed . During the campaign Zobeir offered, if he were allowed to return to the Sudan, to restore order and to pay a revenue of £25,000 a
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year to the khedive .

Gordon declined this help, and subsequently, for his instigation of the revolt, Zobeir was condemned to

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death, but the trial was a
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farce, the sentence was remitted, and he remained at Cairo, now in high favour with the khedival court . In March 1884, Gordon, who had been sent to Khartum to effect, if possible, the
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relief of the Egyptian garrisons in the Sudan, astonished
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Europe by requesting that Zobeir, whose son he had overthrown and whose trade he had ruined, should be sent to Khartum as his successor.' Zobeir, described by
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Sir Reginald Wingate, who knew him well, as " a quiet, far-seeing, thoughtful man of iron will—a born ruler of men " (Mandiism and the Egyptian Sudan,
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book v.), might have been able to stem the mandist
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movement . But to re-instate the notorious slave-dealer was regarded in
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London as too perilous an expedient, even in the extreme circumstances then existing, although Colonel Stewart (Gordon's companion in Khartum), Sir Evelyn
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Baring and Nubar Pasha in Cairo, and Queen Victoria and Mr Gladstone, all favoured such a course . In March 1885 Zobeir was arrested in Cairo by order of the
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British government for treasonable correspondence with the
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mandi and other enemies of Egypt, and was interned at
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Gibraltar, In August 1887 he was allowed to return to Cairo, and after the reconquest of the Sudan was permitted (1899) to settle in his native country . He established himself on his estates at Geili, some 30 M . N. of Khartum . See GORDON, CHARLES GEORGE, and the authorities there cited .

End of Article: ZOBEIR RAHAMA (183o- )
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