Barbering, tooth-drawing and cupping being practised. Copyright Wellcome Collection.
Barbering, tooth-drawing and cupping being practised. Copyright Wellcome Collection.

Wellcome Collection

Barbering, tooth-drawing and cupping being practised. Copyright Wellcome Collection.
Wellcome Collection

The Wellcome Collection is a free museum and library based in London that encourages people to explore health and the human condition through exhibitions and research. The Sudan items in the Wellcome Collection trace the history of the collection’s founder, Sir Henry Wellcome (1853-1936), in Sudan, and has been added to regularly since his death. These items concern medical research and archaeology as well as observations of the socio-cultural situation. They exist in various media such a photographs, objects, film and campaign propaganda.

The Wellcome Collection is part of the Wellcome Trust, founded in 1936 in accordance with Henry Wellcome’s will to improve health by supporting scientific research and the study of medicine. Funding for this mission came from the profits of his pharmaceutical business. After Henry Wellcome's death, much of his collection was dispersed to other museums and collectors, though the Wellcome Trust still had thousands of objects in their care. Further items were acquired since 1936. These items now form the basis of the Wellcome Collection, opened to the public in 2007.

Part of Henry Wellcome’s collection was established through his fascinating association with Sudan. After the battle of Omdurman, Wellcome visited Sudan in 1900-1901, where he offered to support the establishment of the research laboratories. These later came to be known as the Wellcome Tropical Research Laboratories in Khartoum. He then became directly involved in the planning and running of extensive archaeological excavations at Jebel Moya. More than 4000 labourers were employed in Jebel Moya, in addition to archaeologists and anatomists who were recruited to supervise the work. Workers were paid through a newly devised Savings Bank System, whereby part of the earnings of each labourer were saved for him until the end of the season. Wellcome also introduced one of his innovations to these excavations: aerial photography using a box kite, which was the first time this was used in archaeology. It was also made a rule that no applicant to the Jebel Moya Camp should be turned away. The Camp Commandant had to find suitable work for each one, including the handicapped who were assigned to appropriate jobs like mending baskets or cutting grass for building huts. Wellcome’s welfare work had a significant impact on the local inhabitants of Jebel Moya.

Many Sudan items from the Welcome Collection are available to view on Sudan Memory. Further items are available via the Wellcome Collection’s online collections and library.

Colour lithograph from the Ahfad Center for Reproductive Health, circa 1999.

Wellcome excavation in Sudan: caravan.

Men on barges heading towards Khartoum, Sudan. Lithograph by Tom Merry, 6 September 1884.

Group of Nubian women and children resting by the Nile at Korti, Sudan.

Aerial view of the excavation (Jebel Moya).

Wellcome Tropical Research Laboratories, Khartoum: room used by Captain O'Farrell. Photograph, c. 1920.

A day at Gebel Moya, season 1912-13.

First report of the Wellcome Research Laboratories at the Gordon Memorial College Khartoum.

Colour lithographs from the Sudan National AIDS Program, circa 2000

Wellcome Tropical Research Laboratories, Khartoum: sheds for keeping animals. Photograph, c. 1920.

Wellcome Tropical Research Laboratories, Khartoum: laboratory used by Captain Archibald. Photograph, c. 1920.

Illustration from the fourth report of the Wellcome Research Laboratories at the Gordon Memorial College, Khartoum / Andrew Balfour, Director.

Henry Wellcome at Jebel Moya

Sir William Watson. Woodcut by R. Bryden.

Illustration from second report of the Wellcome Research Laboratories at the Gordon Memorial College, Khartoum.

Sudan: herdsmen and cattle, 1913.

Title page from first report of the Wellcome Research Laboratories at the Gordon Memorial College Khartoum

Excavations at Seqadi/Sagadi (?), A. E. Sudan (Jebel Moya)

Wellcome excavation in the Sudan (Jebel Moya): cattle.

Sudanese Family Planning Association, circa 2000

Wellcome Tropical Research Laboratories, Khartoum: interior of an office. Photograph, c. 1920.

Male and female Ethiopian slaves resting, Korti, Sudan.

Illustration from the third report of the Wellcome Research Laboratories at the Gordon Memorial College, Khartoum.

Sudan: fighting, medical and social activity. Wood engraving and process print by J.F.W. after M. Prior and W.S. Perry.

Wellcome Tropical Research Laboratories, Khartoum: main laboratory. Photograph, c. 1920.

James Bruce of Kinnaird, having reached a fountain at Gisha (Abyssinia) regarded as the source of the Nile, uses a coconut to drink the water to the health of King George III and Empress Catherine the Great. Engraving by J. Gillray, 1793, after R.M. Paye.

The Kitchener Memorial Medical School, Khartoum, Sudan. Process print, 1924, after G.B. Bridgman.

Figures at the temple of Wadi Saboua, Sudan.

Sudan: a surgical operation. Photograph, 19--.

The tribes of the Ashanti hinterland.

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