The Most Unlikely Soldiers In The US Civil War

The Most Unlikely Soldiers In The US Civil War

Khalid Elhassan - December 6, 2023

The Most Unlikely Soldiers In The US Civil War
William Wing Loring after the Civil War, as an Egyptian Army general. Wikimedia

Southern Mercenaries in the Egyptian Army

Confederates such as William Wing Loring (1818 – 1886) had fought in the US Civil War, in part, to preserve a system based on the enslavement of Africans and their descendants. A decade later, Loring was back at war, this time in Africa. He sought to realize Khedive Ismail’s dreams of creating an Egyptian empire in Africa, that stretched from the Mediterranean to Lake Victoria, and from the Sahara to Somalia. In 1874, Ismail got started on making his dreams come true by ordering an invasion of Ethiopia, Egypt’s chief rival in northeast Africa.

The Most Unlikely Soldiers In The US Civil War
Nineteenth century Ethiopian warriors. Pinterest

In the resultant Egyptian-Ethiopian War (1874 – 1876), Egyptian columns twice tried to conquer Ethiopia. Once from Egyptian-controlled Sudan, and again from the Egyptian-controlled Red Sea coast of what is now Eritrea. Each time, the Egyptian forces, equipped with modern weapons and led by Western officers such as Loring, were crushed by poorly equipped but numerically superior Ethiopians. Loring played a significant role in the second failed attempt, which ended in a devastating defeat at the Battle of Gura in 1876.

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