Osman Digna

Osman Digna
Osman Digna in old age
Bornc. 1840
Suakin
Died1926
AllegianceMahdist State
Years of service1883–1899
RankEmir
Battles / wars

Osman Digna (Arabic: عثمان دقنة) (c. 1840–1926) was a follower of Muhammad Ahmad, the self-proclaimed Mahdi, in Sudan, who became his best known military commander during the Mahdist War. He was claimed to be a descendant from the Abbasid family. As the Mahdi's ablest general, he played an important role in the fate of General Charles George Gordon and the end of Turkish-Egyptian rule in Sudan.

In Britain, Osman Digna became a notorious figure, both demonised as a savage and respected as a warrior. Winston Churchill described him as an "astute" and "prudent" man, calling him "the celebrated, and perhaps immortal, Osman Digna."[1]

  1. ^ Churchill, Winston S. (1902). The River War: An Account of the Reconquest of the Sudan. p. 47.