Siege of Cairo

Coordinates: 30°02′40″N 31°14′09″E / 30.04444°N 31.23583°E / 30.04444; 31.23583
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Siege of Cairo
Part of the French Campaign in Egypt and Syria of the French Revolutionary Wars

Principle Square In Grand Cairo, With Murad Bey's Palace circa 1801
DateMay–June 1801
Location30°02′40″N 31°14′09″E / 30.04444°N 31.23583°E / 30.04444; 31.23583
Result Anglo-Ottoman victory
Belligerents
French First Republic French Republic United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland United Kingdom
Ottoman Empire Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders
French First Republic Augustin Daniel Belliard Surrendered United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland John Hely-Hutchinson
Ottoman Empire Yusuf Pasha
Strength
14,000[1] 20,000[2]
Casualties and losses
13,500 captured[3] Low
800km
500miles
6
Battle of Mount Tabor (1799) on 16 April 1799
5
Siege of Acre (1799) from 20 March to 21 May 1799
Jaffa
4
Siege of Jaffa from 3 to 7 March 1799
Cairo
3
Battle of the Pyramids on 21 July 1798 Revolt of Cairo from 21 to 22 October 1798 Napoleon's return to France Siege of Cairo from May to June 1801
Alexandria
2
Battle of the Nile from 1 to 3 August 1798 Napoleon's return to France from 23 August to 9 October 1799 Siege of Alexandria (1801) from 17 August to 2 September 1801
Malta
1
French invasion of Malta from 10 to 12 June 1798
Map
  current battle
  Napoleon in command till 23 August 1799

The siege of Cairo, also known as the Cairo campaign, was a siege that took place during the French Revolutionary Wars, between French and British with Ottoman forces and was the penultimate action of the Egyptian Campaign.[4] British commander John Hely-Hutchinson advanced to Cairo, where he arrived after a few skirmishes in mid June. Joined by a sizeable Ottoman force Hutchinson invested Cairo and on 27 June the surrounded 13,000-strong French garrison under General Augustin Daniel Belliard, out-manned and out-gunned then surrendered. The remaining French troops in Egypt under Jacques-François Menou disheartened by this failure, retired to Alexandria.[3][5]

Background[edit]

With General Ralph Abercromby's death at the Battle of Canope, John Hely-Hutchinson succeeded as commander of the British force in August.[6] On 26 April Major General Eyre Coote was left in command of the army before Alexandria while Hutchinson arrived at Rosetta to press home the operations against the French in the interior of the country that lead towards Cairo.[7]

The British fifty gun ship HMS Leopard under Commodore John Blankett anchored in the road of Suez on 21 April along with three frigates and sloops and a number of transports.[1] Native troops hired from the East India Company from Bombay amounting to about 6,000 were to support with those disembarked on the shore.[8] On the 22nd at daybreak an officer and a party of the 86th regiment of foot landed from the Leopard and took possession of the town of Suez which the French garrison had previously evacuated.[1] At 8 am the British Union Jack was hoisted on shore and afterwards the transports disembarked their troops. Soon after they consolidated their gains and set up camp while the rest of the force arrived.[4]

On 5 May Hutchinson now with 8,000 British troops marched along the banks of the Nile towards the position of General Lagrange at El Aft accompanied on the river by a division of British and Ottoman gun boats.[7] Meanwhile, Sir William Sidney Smith in HMS Tigre with Commander James Hillyar were expecting the arrival of Rear Admiral Joseph Antoine Ganteaume upon the coast in support of the French land forces.[8] The French squadron under Gantheaume consisting of four ships of the line – a frigate, a corvette and five transports had been off the coast for some days. The men of war had between three and four thousand troops on board all. however Gantheaume fearing the approach of Sydney's ships which was in search of him cut his cables and stood off to sea.[9] The five transports were empty of troops having been transferred to the ships. but the only occupants being many civilians were taken by Sydney's ships on the 7th and brought into Abu Qir Bay. The British took all the provisions and stores on board the transports and with the retreat of their fleet the French thus abandoned El Aft and retreated towards El Rahmaniya on May 7.[8] On the same evening allied troops entered El Aft and thus commenced the Cairo campaign.[4]

Cairo campaign[edit]

On May 9 the British force advanced to Er-Rahmaniyeh where French General Lagrange had taken post with the intention of holding firm. At 10 am Royal Marines and sailors under Captain Curry with four boats and three armed launches commenced an attack upon the French forts at Er-Rahmaniyeh and at 4 pm were supported by Ottoman gunboats and soon the French made a general retreat towards Cairo leaving in the fort 110 of their sick and wounded.[9] A French detachment of fifty cavalry from Alexandria were taken at the same time and with this they were effectively cut off with all communication between there and the interior of Egypt; the allied forces suffered only five killed and 26 wounded.[4]

Portrait of General Hely-Hutchinson

The British force on the 14th continued their march towards the capital of Egypt and on their way captured a French armed vessel and sixteen Feluccas conveying wine, brandy and clothing listed as around £5000 in sterling and 150 troops along with heavy pieces of ordnance which were headed from Cairo to Er-Rahmaniyeh.[9] Having entered the Nile by a canal which joins the Damietta and Rosetta branches the French commanding officer had no knowledge of the recent French defeats. [4][8]

On the 17th a division of cavalry and infantry under Brigadier General Doyle after having been given information by local Arabs intercepted a body of 550 camels escorted by 560 French soldiers going from Alexandria when they had departed on the 14th towards Middle Egypt to secure provisions. The French cavalry made a tired charge but they were overtaken by a party of British dragoons and surrendered upon honourable terms.[1] The small garrison about 200 of the fort of Ras El Bar on the Damietta branch of the Nile was invested on the same day on the land side by a by a flotilla of British guns and Ottoman gunboats and near the mouth of the Damietta. On seeing this the French abandoned the post and retired upon Port Said; the two garrisons numbering altogether 700 men were also evacuated and embarked on board five small vessels in the hope to be able to reach the port of Alexandria.[4] Four of these vessels however were captured and carried into Abu Qir Bay with only one escaping to the coast of Italy.[9] On 6 June Colonel Lloyd with his detachment of the 86th regiment numbering about 150 men set out to march across the desert to Cairo a distance by a route intended to be taken in order to avoid meeting a superior force.[1] By the 10th these men joined Colonel John Stewart's detachment which was to be attached to Yusuf Pashas' (the Grand Vizier) army on the right bank of the Nile. [9] Hutchinson moved about three miles in front to the village of Saael on the 14th and two days later advanced to a position just out of reach of the French works.[4] The same day he was joined by the 28th Regiment of Foot and the 42nd Highland Regiment who had marched from the camp before Alexandria in twelve days.[9][10] Meanwhile, the 320 troops under Stewart and Lloyd with the Grand Vizier moved to a parallel position and arrived on 20 June at Imbaba a village a few miles from the fortress of Giza opposite Cairo on the banks of the Nile.[1] Here they lay directly opposite to Cairo and in which Belliard had stationed his large garrison.[8]

Hutchinson made another movement on the 21st and invested the town of Giza with the Anglo Ottoman force encamped close to the French advanced works on the other side of the river. By this time the force besieging Cairo had swelled to 20,000 men. An important letter had been found in the pocket of a French General named Roize who was killed in the action at the Battle of Alexandria. The letter written by Menou expressed an apprehension that the British would cut the embankment which formed the canal of Alexandria and thereby to let the waters of the sea into Lake Mariout, cutting off any chance of escape for the French. This was subsequently done by the engineers and water rushed in flooding the area and making the canal unusable and making the French with no escape route whatsoever. Some slight skirmishing took place in the evening on both banks of the Nile wherein the Mamelukes forced back a French sortie. On the 22nd preparations were made to besiege Cairo and its different forts by the allied forces.[4][8]

Belliard finding himself surrounded on all sides his communication with the interior part of the country entirely cut off and without hopes of relief sent a flag of truce to Hutchinson on 22 June requesting that he would agree to a conference. In this it was agreed for the French for the evacuation of Cairo and its dependencies.[8]

Aftermath[edit]

The conference continued till the 28th when the surrender of Cairo by the French was signed and were allowed seventeen days for the final evacuation.[8] By the terms of the treaty the French troops of which there were in effective 8,000 men with another 5,000 sick or convalescence were to be conveyed to a port of France.[4] General John Moore then escorted them to the coast via Rosetta.[3] On the evening of the 28th the British and the Ottoman's took possession of Giza and Cairo where the British and Turkish colours were conjointly hoisted.[9]

The last division of the French troops taken prisoners at Cairo and at other places were by 10 August sailed from the bay of Abu qir and Hutchinson having arrived from Cairo at his headquarters before Alexandria.[3] Article 12 of the capitulation treaty made clear than any inhabitant of Egypt whatever their religion would be free to follow the French army. As a result, many Egyptian soldiers emigrated and formed the Mamelukes of the Imperial Guard.[11]

Immediate measures were taken to reduce the last strong hold of the French in Egypt and thus accomplish the ultimate objective of the expedition.[9] Hutchinson, with Cairo out of the way, now began the final reduction of Alexandria – between 10 and 15 June the two divisions set off their march across the desert and the 30th arrived on the banks of the Nile.[10]

Soon they reached Alexandria and invested the place and after a siege between 17 August – 2 September 1801 the French again capitulated and with it the final collection of French troops in the middle east.[3]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Mackesy 2013, pp. 187–190.
  2. ^ Barthorp 1992, p. 29.
  3. ^ a b c d e Barthorp 1992, p. 6.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Wilson 1803, pp. 60–69.
  5. ^ James 1826, pp. 151–156.
  6. ^ Russell 1831, p. 313.
  7. ^ a b Mackesy 2013, pp. 184–187.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h McGregor 1828, pp. 156–173.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h Camden 1814, pp. 369–371.
  10. ^ a b Mackesy 2013, pp. 191–192.
  11. ^ Pawly 2012, p. 9.

References[edit]

  • Barthorp, Michael (1992). Napoleon's Egyptian Campaigns 1798-1801 Volume 79 of Men-at-arms series. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 9780850451269.
  • Fortescue, John William (2014). A History Of The British Army – Vol. IV – Part Two (1789-1801) Volume 5 of A History of the British Army. Pickle Partners Publishing. ISBN 9781782891314.
  • Mackesy, Piers (2013). British Victory in Egypt, 1801: The End of Napoleon's Conquest. Routledge. ISBN 9781134953578.
  • Pawly, Ronald (2012). Napoleon's Mamelukes. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 9781780964195.
  • Wilson, Robert (1803). Narrative of the British Expedition to Egypt: Carefully Abridged from the History of that Campaign; with a Preliminary View of the Proceedings of the French Previous to the Arrival of the British Forces. W. Corbet.
  • James, William (1826). 1800-1805 Volume 3 of The Naval History of Great Britain: From the Declaration of War by France, in February- 1793, to the Accession of George IV in January 1820. Harding, Lepard, and Company. pp. 151–56.
  • Russell, Michael (1831). View of Ancient and Modern Egypt: An Outline of Its Natural History Volume 3. Oliver & Boyd. pp. 313–14. cairo hutchinson beliard.
  • McGregor, John James (1828). History of the French Revolution: And of the Wars Resulting from that Memorable Event, Volume 7. G.B. Whittaker.
  • Camden, Theophilus (1814). The History of the Rise, Progress, and Overthrow of Napoleon Bonaparte. J. Stratford. pp. 369–371.

External links[edit]