`Abd Allah al-Dalil, of lesser repute, and Hasan Salab Salih b. Of the calligraphers of the regime three were held in high repute: `Abd al-Ghani al Salawi, a Turk Muhammad al-Amin, who came from the west and wrote in sakrawi hand, a variant of the Towards the close of the regime the organisation was as follows:-Īl-Jak al-Suyuff, said to have been an Egyptian See Sudan Intelligence Report No.60, 25 May - 31 December 1898, p.56. The organization of the Mahdist press ( al-matba `at al-mahdiya) It during the months of Sha`ban and Ramadan 1304 (April-June 1887) to the new Mahdist capital of Omdurman. The Mahdists first operated the press in its original room in the hukumdariya in Khartoum but transferred Lithographed on the press of which the succeeding Mahdist government performed the whole of its lithographic work. ![]() During the siege of Khartoum General Gordon had a series of currency notes (items Nos. The needs of the Mahdist government until its fall in 1898 though it is possible that small supplies were imported through merchants at Aswan and Suakin. The lithographic press together with all imported stationery in the administrative offices of the Egyptian government in Khartoum were captured by the Mahdists on the fall of the capital on 26 January 1885. The secretarial practice of the Mahdist government ![]() ![]() ![]() Held by: Durham University Library, Archives and Special Collections Title: Arabic manuscripts and lithographs in the Sudan Archive
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