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Description
The bravest cavalry charge in the world was instantly rendered obsolete by a heavy, water-cooled machine that industrialized the process of human slaughter. For millennia, military supremacy belonged to the army with the bravest soldiers, the fastest horses, and the sharpest steel. At the end of the 19th century, deep in the Sudanese desert, that ancient equation of honor and cavalry was permanently erased by industrial engineering. The Mahdist War was the brutally efficient testing ground for modern, mechanized slaughter.Led by a messianic figure, the Sudanese Mahdist forces initially decimated British and Egyptian troops using traditional desert tactics. But when the British returned for the final Battle of Omdurman in 1898, they brought a new weapon: the Maxim gun, the world's first fully automatic machine gun. This book breaks down the terrifying tactical shift of the conflict.We analyze the logistics of moving heavy artillery across the desert via newly constructed railways and gunboats. The narrative focuses on the horrifying realization that courage was utterly useless against a water-cooled weapon that fired 600 rounds per minute, effortlessly cutting down 10,000 charging Mahdist warriors in a matter of hours.Study the violent death of traditional combat. Learn how the British Empire used the Sudanese desert to inaugurate the era of industrialized, push-button warfare.



