Europe Several European officers served on both sides of the conflict at various capacities; these include a
British adventurer
John Kirkham on the Ethiopian side, and the Dane as well as
Swiss explorer
Werner Munzinger on the Egyptian side. Munzinger, former governor of the
Keren and
Massawa regions, led one of the Egyptian attacks against Ethiopia, marching inland from
Tadjoura, but his troops were overwhelmed by the army of Muhammad ibn Hanfadhe,
Sultan of Aussa, and he was killed in battle. Meanwhile, Arendrup, who was
Isma'il's aide-de-camp was given the task of leading an expedition against the Abyssinians. In mid-November during clashes at Gundet, Arendrup, several other officers and about 1,000 privates died during a 12-hour battle. Only three men escaped alive.
United States Several ex-
Confederate officers and
Union officers who had both previously fought in the
American Civil War participated in the conflict. The Egyptian
Khedive was introduced to the idea of hiring American officers to
reorganize his army when he met
Thaddeus P. Mott, an ex-Union artillery officer and adventurer, in the sultan’s court in
Constantinople in 1868. Mott so regaled Ismail with testimonies about the advances the Americans had achieved in technology and tactics during the
US Civil War that he convinced the Khedive to hire American veterans to oversee the modernization of Egypt’s armed forces. In 1870, the first of these military overseers, ex-Confederate officers
Henry Hopkins Sibley and
William Wing Loring, arrived in Egypt. Loring was appointed by the Khedive as Inspector-General of the Egyptian army, and in 1875 was promoted to chief of staff to the commander-in-chief of the Egyptian military expedition in Ethiopia. Loring would take part in the
Battle of Gura which ended in defeat. The Egyptians blamed the Americans for the disastrous war, and the Loring, Sibley, and the other officers had to endure two years of endless frustration and humiliation in Cairo. ==Aftermath==