The Sudan Archive at Durham
special collection at Durham University Library, UK
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The Sudan Archive at Durham
Summary
The Sudan Archive at Durham is a collection[1].
Key Facts
- The Sudan Archive at Durham is in the country of United Kingdom[2].
- The Sudan Archive at Durham's instance of is recorded as collection[3].
- The Sudan Archive at Durham's maintained by is recorded as Durham University Library and Collections[4].
- The Sudan Archive at Durham's operator is recorded as Durham University Library and Collections[5].
- The Sudan Archive at Durham's collection is recorded as Durham University Library and Collections[6].
- The Sudan Archive at Durham's inventory number is recorded as GB-0033-SAD[7].
- The Sudan Archive at Durham's part of is recorded as Durham University Archives and Special Collections[8].
- +1957-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of The Sudan Archive at Durham[9].
- The Sudan Archive at Durham's official website is recorded as https://www.dur.ac.uk/library/asc/sudan/[10].
- The Sudan Archive at Durham's described at URL is recorded as https://n2t.durham.ac.uk/ark:/32150/s1xs55mc07h.xml[11].
- The Sudan Archive at Durham's collection or exhibition size is recorded as {'unit': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q188075', 'amount': '+1000'}[12].
- The Sudan Archive at Durham's level of description is recorded as fonds[13].
- The Sudan Archive at Durham's scope and content is recorded as The Sudan Archive was founded in 1957, the year after Sudanese independence, to collect and preserve the papers of administrators from the Sudan Political Service, missionaries, soldiers, business men, doctors, agriculturalists, teachers and others who had served or lived in the Sudan during the Anglo-Egyptian Condominium. It comprises over 330 individual collections of official, semi-official and private papers of British men and women. Each collection is named after the donor who is usually the creator of the records. The collections vary in size from one file to 180 boxes. All levels of colonial society are represented, from Assistant District Commissioner to Governor-General and senior officers of government, as well as from the technical and medical services, the army and the church. The core period covered is 1898-1955, but there is a significant amount of Mahdist material as well as papers relating to the military campaigns of the 1880s and 1890s, while in recent years the scope of the Archive has extended to the period after independence and now contains material up to the present day. Moreover, as officials were frequently seconded or posted to neighbouring countries, or simply passed through them on leave, the Archive also holds substantial numbers of papers relating to Egypt, the Arabian Peninsula, Palestine, Transjordan, Syria and African states bordering on the Sudan.[14].