Conflict: | Wad Habuba Revolt |
Partof: | the aftermath of the Mahdist War |
Date: | April - 3 May 1908 |
Place: | Tugur and Katfia, Gezira, Sudan |
Result: | British victory |
Combatant1: | Anglo-Egyptian Sudan |
Combatant2: | Mahdist State |
Commander1: | Ernest Arthur Dickinson |
Commander2: | Abd al-Qadir Muhammad Imam Wad Habuba |
Strength1: | 2 infantry companies |
Strength2: | 41 followers |
Casualties1: | 17 killed and wounded |
Casualties2: | 35 killed |
The Wad Habuba Revolt (Arabic: ثورة ود حبوبة) was an uprising in Anglo-Egyptian Sudan in mid-1908. Its causes laid in religious opposition to Christian British rule in Sudan, and a desire to restore the Mahdist State. It was led Mahdist War veteran, Abd al-Qadir Muhammad Imam Wad Habuba. It began in April, when al-Qadir took over the town of Tugur with 40 followers. From there, the rebellion spread to Katfia. Colonial authorities took the revolt very seriously and dispatched 2 infantry companies to quell the uprising. By the end of April, Katfia had been bloodlessly recaptured. On the night of 2 May, the rebels attempted to retake Katfia from the British, but were unsuccessful, with 35 of them killed in the battle, while the British forces, led by Ernest Arthur Dickinson (b. 1864,[1] Governor of Blue Nile province 1905–1914) suffered 17 killed and wounded. By 3 May, the revolt had ended and al-Qadir had left for Omdurman on a donkey.[2]