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Egypt Medal | |
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![]() ![]() Obverse and reverse of the 1882 medal | |
Type | Campaign medal |
Awarded for | Campaign service |
Description | Silver, 36 mm in diameter |
Presented by | United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland |
Eligibility | British and Indian forces. |
Campaign(s) | Egypt |
Clasps |
|
Established | 17 October 1882 |
![]() Ribbon bar of the medal | |
Related | Khedive's Star |
The Egypt Medal (1882–1889) was awarded for the military actions involving the British Army and Royal Navy during the 1882 Anglo-Egyptian War and in the Sudan between 1884 and 1889.
Resentment at increasing British and other European involvement in Egypt since the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 triggered an Egyptian army mutiny that threatened the authority of the British-backed Khedive of Egypt, Tewfik Pasha. The British military intervention was in response, to protect British interests. Once in Egypt, the British became involved in the conflicts in the Sudan, which Egypt had occupied since the 1820s. [1]
All recipients of the Egypt Medal were also eligible for one of the four versions of the Khedive's Star. [2]
The medal had the following design: [3]
A total of 13 clasps were awarded, two for the Anglo-Egyptian War of 1882 and eleven for service in the Sudan between 1884 and 1889: [5]
Medals without clasp were awarded to:
While most of those who received the Egypt Medal were members of the British Regular Army or Royal Navy, other recipients included:
While few members of the Egyptian Army participated in earlier Sudanese campaigns, the majority of troops who received 'Gemaizah 1888' and 'Toski 1889' clasps belonged to the Egyptian Army, including newly raised Sudanese battalions, [5] with one squadron of the 20th Hussars being the only British unit present at Toski. [9]
An unofficial decoration related to the Egypt Medal, this award in three grades was designed, minted and presented by General Gordon to the officers, soldiers and civilians who participated in the siege of Khartoum, 1884–85. Based on the badge of the Ottoman Order of the Medjidieh, the awards were produced locally during the siege and were fairly crude in form. [10] [11]
–
Egypt Medal | |
---|---|
![]() ![]() Obverse and reverse of the 1882 medal | |
Type | Campaign medal |
Awarded for | Campaign service |
Description | Silver, 36 mm in diameter |
Presented by | United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland |
Eligibility | British and Indian forces. |
Campaign(s) | Egypt |
Clasps |
|
Established | 17 October 1882 |
![]() Ribbon bar of the medal | |
Related | Khedive's Star |
The Egypt Medal (1882–1889) was awarded for the military actions involving the British Army and Royal Navy during the 1882 Anglo-Egyptian War and in the Sudan between 1884 and 1889.
Resentment at increasing British and other European involvement in Egypt since the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 triggered an Egyptian army mutiny that threatened the authority of the British-backed Khedive of Egypt, Tewfik Pasha. The British military intervention was in response, to protect British interests. Once in Egypt, the British became involved in the conflicts in the Sudan, which Egypt had occupied since the 1820s. [1]
All recipients of the Egypt Medal were also eligible for one of the four versions of the Khedive's Star. [2]
The medal had the following design: [3]
A total of 13 clasps were awarded, two for the Anglo-Egyptian War of 1882 and eleven for service in the Sudan between 1884 and 1889: [5]
Medals without clasp were awarded to:
While most of those who received the Egypt Medal were members of the British Regular Army or Royal Navy, other recipients included:
While few members of the Egyptian Army participated in earlier Sudanese campaigns, the majority of troops who received 'Gemaizah 1888' and 'Toski 1889' clasps belonged to the Egyptian Army, including newly raised Sudanese battalions, [5] with one squadron of the 20th Hussars being the only British unit present at Toski. [9]
An unofficial decoration related to the Egypt Medal, this award in three grades was designed, minted and presented by General Gordon to the officers, soldiers and civilians who participated in the siege of Khartoum, 1884–85. Based on the badge of the Ottoman Order of the Medjidieh, the awards were produced locally during the siege and were fairly crude in form. [10] [11]