Battle of Abukir (1799)

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Battle of Abukir (1799)
Part of the French campaign in Egypt
Antoine-Jean Gros - Bataille d'Aboukir, 25 juillet 1799 - Google Art Project.jpg
The Battle of Abukir, by Antoine-Jean Gros 1806. The Coronation Room
Date25 July 1799
Location
Abu Qir, Egypt
31°19′N 30°04′E / 31.317°N 30.067°E / 31.317; 30.067
Result French victory
Belligerents
France France

Ottoman Empire Ottoman Empire

  • Mamluks
Commanders and leaders
Napoleon Bonaparte
Joachim Murat (WIA)
Géraud Duroc (WIA)
Mustafa Pasha (POW)
Murad Bey
Ibrahim Bey
Strength
7,700 men[1]
17 guns[2]
Cavalry: 1,000[1]
18,000[3] or 20,000 [2]
30 guns[2]
Casualties and losses
220 killed in action
600 wounded[3]
2,000 killed in action
11,000 drowned
5,000 captured
2,000 missing and unaccounted for[2]

The Battle of Abukir (or Aboukir or Abu Qir)[2] was a battle in which Napoleon Bonaparte defeated Seid Mustafa Pasha's Ottoman army on 25 July 1799, during the French campaign in Egypt.[4] It is considered the first pitched battle with this name, as there already was a naval battle on 1 August 1798 (a second pitched battle followed on 8 March 1801). No sooner had the French forces returned from a campaign to Syria, than the Ottoman forces were transported to Egypt by Sidney Smith's British fleet to put an end to French rule in Egypt.[4][5]

Seid Mustafa Pasha was an experienced commander who had fought against the Russians. He knew that cavalry charges against the French squares were futile. So, he sought to avoid them by fortifying his beachhead with two defensive lines. From this beachhead Mustafa could carry out the invasion of Egypt. However, Napoleon immediately saw the flaw in the tactic as it meant that the Turks had nowhere to run if routed.[6]

The French attacked the Ottoman positions and quickly broke through the first defensive line before it was fully completed. The second line, however, proved tougher to defeat and the French withdrew for a while. At this point, cavalry general Murat saw his opportunity and attacked with his cavalry, quickly routing the exposed Turks.[6]

Murat's charge was so rapid that he burst inside Mustafa's tent and captured the Turkish commander, severing two of the Turk's fingers with his sabre. In return, Mustafa shot Murat in the jaw. Immediately, Murat was operated on and resumed his duties the next day.

The Turkish army fled in panic. Some Ottomans drowned trying to swim to the British ships two miles away from shore, while others fled to Abukir castle, but they surrendered shortly thereafter. The Turks suffered about 8,000 casualties and the French around 1,000.[7] News of the victory reached France before Napoleon arrived in October and this made him even more popular, an important asset considering the troubles brewing in the French Directory. This battle temporarily secured France's control over Egypt.[8]

Background[]

The Ottomans, at the insistence of Great Britain, had declared war on France. In the summer of 1798, Bonaparte led an expedition which took Egypt from the Ottomans.[9] In 1799, two Ottoman armies were to attack Egypt: one carried by the British fleet, the other marching down from Anatolia into north Syria. As usual, Bonaparte chose to take the initiative. in February 1799 he marched north conquering Gaza, El Arish, and Jaffa, but was halted before the town of Acre (Saint-Jean-d'Acre) for two months of siege. Acre was defended by its governor, Djezzar Pasha, and Napoleon's former fellow student of the Ecole Militaire in Paris, Antoine de Phélippeaux, an engineer and master of artillery, now a British Colonel.[10] In addition, the city was continually replenished with men, food, water, and other necessities by the British Navy. The French army being decimated by the plague, Napoleon ended his dreams of conquest in the East.[11] He had dreamed of taking Constantinople and then invading India to take advantage of the local insurgency against the British.[12] He also dreamed that once in Constantinople, he could return with his army to France through Vienna.[13]

On 14 July a British fleet of sixty ships landed with 16,000 men under the command of Mustapha Pasha, a veteran of the last Russo-Turkish war. They stormed the fortifications of the harbor and put 300 French troops under the command of Battalion Chief Godart, hors de combat. The peninsula changed hands and Ottoman flags fluttered on the bastions of the city.

Proud of this success, Mustapha Pasha was in no hurry to march on Cairo. Murad Bey, who had managed to escape and join him, said, "The French dreaded that you could not support the presence, I watch, and they are fleeing before me." and Murad replied, "Pasha, be glad that it suits the French to withdraw because if they turned, you would disappear before them like dust before the north wind."[citation needed]

Napoleon brought together as many troops as possible. Without waiting for Kleber, he approached Abukir with the divisions of Lannes, Desaix and Murat's cavalry, 7,700 men and 1,000 horsemen, and the Turks gathered 18,000 men, 8,000 of whom were in a condition to fight. According to François Furet and Denis Richet ("French Revolution", Macmillan 1970, XI-14), the clash between the two armies took place near Alexandria, but the victorious French called it "the battle of Abu Qir" (or Aboukir) to avenge the former defeat of 1-3 August 1798.

Battle[]

Battle of Abukir

On 25 July the Turks were on the defensive and relied on a strong redoubt between their lines and the sea. The British, too far from shore because of shallow waters, could not use their artillery against the French. Bonaparte established his artillery on the heights, but his first attack was a failure, because Desaix stalled and Murat dared not proceed when he saw the shot flying above his head.

Pasha took advantage of the lull, and attacked the fort with his men, decapitating fallen French troops. Rage seized the French,[14] who without orders, rushed into the enemy ranks. Murat wheeled his cavalry driving quickly through the Turkish lines and ended up behind the town, cutting off Mustapha Pasha's retreat. Murat captured Mustapha Pasha in single combat.[citation needed]

Meanwhile, some of the Turkish army drowned while trying to swim to Turkish gunboats and the British vessels; while 3,000 Ottomans succeeded in taking refuge in the fort. Lacking the rallying force of their commander, they were forced by thirst and hunger to surrender two days later.[14]

Murat was promoted to the General rank of the evening division.

Aftermath[]

"The Battle of Aboukir", relief by Bernard Seurre on the South Façade of the Arc de Triomphe, Paris.

The French suffered only 220 dead and 600 wounded while the Turkish losses were enormous: 2,000 dead on the battlefield, 4,000 men drowned, 1,000 dead and 1,500 prisoners captured from the fort of Abukir.

Sidney Smith, admiral of the British fleet, blamed the defeat on the Ottoman chiefs, as they had not followed his advice to seize the town of Rosetta in order to isolate Alexandria. Furthermore, the Ottomans did not engage all their troops from the objective for the capture of Alexandria.

Abukir gave the French a few months respite. Desaix continued through Upper Egypt in search of Murad Bey.

On 23 August, leaving the command to Kleber, Bonaparte embarked on the frigate Muiron, with Berthier, Murat, Lannes and others, because, from reading the British newspapers, he had learned of the recent defeats of the Directory. On this occasion, he earned the nickname "General Good Catch".

In the long term, a French presence in Egypt was impossible to maintain. Kleber did restore French rule over the country thanks to his victory at Heliopolis on 18 March 1800, but less than a month later he was murdered in his garden in Cairo by a student of theology. Kleber's successor, Menou, lacking the skills of a war leader, was defeated at Canopus and surrendered on 2 September. Under the convention signed with the British, the French army came back to France in British ships.

See also[]

References[]

Citations[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b Isenberg 2002, p. 4
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Connelly 2006, p. 55–56
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b Pawly 2012, p. 7
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Durant & Durant 1975, p. 113
  5. ^ McLynn 2002, p. 195
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b McLynn 2002, p. 196
  7. ^ McLynn 2002, pp. 196–197
  8. ^ McLynn 2002, p. 202
  9. ^ Cole 2014
  10. ^ Woodman 2014, p. 122
  11. ^ Wood 2008, p. 520
  12. ^ Watson 2003, pp. 13–14
  13. ^ Gibbs 1913, p. 128
  14. ^ Jump up to: a b Henty 1899, pp. 280–281

Sources[]

  • Cole, Juan (2007). Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle East. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-4039-6431-1.
  • Connelly, Owen (2006). Blundering to Glory: Napoleon's Military Campaigns (third ed.). Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-5317-0.
  • Durant, Will; Durant, Ariel (1975). The Age of Napoleon: A History of European Civilization from 1789 to 1815. Volume XI of The Story of Civilization. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-21988-8.
  • Gibbs, Montgomery B. (1913). Military Career of Napoleon the Great: An Account of the Remarkable Campaigns of the "man of Destiny"; Authentic Anecdotes of the Battlefield as Told by the Famous Marshals and Generals of the First Empire. Akron, Ohio: Saalfield Publishing. p. 128. OCLC 1253331. Originally published in 1895.
  • Henty, George Alfred (1899). At Aboukir and Acre: A Story of Napoleon's Invasion of Egypt. London: Blackie & Son.
  • Isenberg, Joseph M. (2002). "Aboukir (25 July 1799)". In Sandler, Stanley (ed.). Ground Warfare: An international encyclopedia. 1, A–G. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. pp. 3–4. ISBN 978-1-57607-344-5.
  • McLynn, Frank (2002). Napoleon: A biography. New York: Arcade. ISBN 978-1-55970-631-5.
  • Pawly, Ronald (2012). Napoleon's Mamelukes. Oxford, England: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-78096-419-5.
  • Watson, William E. (2003). Tricolor and Crescent: France and the Islamic World. Greenwood. pp. 13–14. ISBN 0-275-97470-7.
  • Wood, Mary Mendenhall (2008). "Dominique-Jean Larrey, Chief Surgeon of the French Army with Napoleon in Egypt: Notes and Observations on Larrey's Medical Memoirs Based on the Egyptian Campaign". Canadian Bulletin of Medical History. 25 (2): 515–535, page 520. doi:10.3138/cbmh.25.2.515. PMID 19227793.
  • Woodman, Richard (2014). The Sea Warriors: Fighting Captains and Frigate Warfare in the Age of Nelson. Barnsley, South Yorkshire, England: Seaforth Publishing. p. 122. ISBN 978-1-84832-202-8. Originally published in 2001 by Constable, London.

External links[]

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