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Anglo-Egyptian War

The British conquest of Egypt (1882), also known as Anglo-Egyptian War (Arabic: الاحتلال البريطاني لمصر, romanizedal-iḥtilāl al-Brīṭānī li-Miṣr, lit.'British occupation of Egypt'), occurred in 1882 between Egyptian and Sudanese forces under Ahmed ‘Urabi and the United Kingdom. It ended a nationalist uprising against the Khedive Tewfik Pasha. It established firm British influence over Egypt at the expense of the Egyptians, the French, and the Ottoman Empire, whose already weak authority became nominal.

Anglo-Egyptian War
Part of the Urabi Revolt and Scramble for Africa
DateJuly–September 1882
Location
Result

British victory

  • ‘Urabi sentenced to death (later commuted to exile)
Territorial
changes
British occupation of Egypt
Belligerents

 United Kingdom

Tewfik loyalists
Egypt
Commanders and leaders
Strength
40,560 regulars
Casualties and losses
  • 80–90 killed
  • 600+ wounded[2]
2,000–4,000 killed or wounded (British estimates)[3]

Background

In 1881, an Egyptian army officer, Ahmed ‘Urabi (then known in English as Arabi Pasha), mutinied and initiated a coup against Tewfik Pasha, the Khedive of Egypt and Sudan, because of grievances over disparities in pay between Egyptians and Europeans, as well as other concerns. In January 1882 the British and French governments sent a "Joint Note" to the Egyptian government, declaring their recognition of the Khedive's authority. On 20 May, British and French warships arrived off the coast of Alexandria. On 11 June, an anti-Christian riot occurred in Alexandria that killed 50 Europeans. Colonel ‘Urabi ordered his forces to put down the riot, but Europeans fled the city and ‘Urabi's army began fortifying the town. The French fleet was recalled to France. A British ultimatum was rejected and its warships began a 10+12-hour bombardment of Alexandria on 11 July.

Reasons for the invasion

The reasons why the British government sent a fleet of ships to the coast of Alexandria is a point of historical debate. In their 1961 essay Africa and the Victorians, Ronald Robinson and John Gallagher argue that the British invasion was ordered in order to quell the perceived anarchy of the ‘Urabi Revolt, as well as to protect British control over the Suez Canal in order to maintain its shipping route to the Indian Ocean.[4]

A.G. Hopkins rejected Robinson and Gallagher's argument, citing original documents to claim that there was no perceived danger to the Suez Canal from the ‘Urabi movement, and that ‘Urabi and his forces were not chaotic "anarchists", but rather maintained law and order.[5]: 373–374  He alternatively argues that British Prime Minister William Gladstone's cabinet was motivated by protecting the interests of British bondholders with investments in Egypt as well as by pursuit of domestic political popularity. Hopkins cites the British investments in Egypt that grew massively leading into the 1880s, partially as a result of the Khedive's debt from construction of the Suez Canal, as well as the close links that existed between the British government and the economic sector.[5]: 379–380  He writes that Britain's economic interests occurred simultaneously with a desire within one element of the ruling Liberal Party for a militant foreign policy in order to gain the domestic political popularity that enabled it to compete with the Conservative Party.[5]: 382  Hopkins cites a letter from Edward Malet, the British consul general in Egypt at the time, to a member of the Gladstone Cabinet offering his congratulations on the invasion: "You have fought the battle of all Christendom and history will acknowledge it. May I also venture to say that it has given the Liberal Party a new lease of popularity and power."[5]: 385 

John Galbraith and Afaf Lutfi al-Sayyid-Marsot make a similar argument to Hopkins, though their argument focuses on how individuals within the British government bureaucracy used their positions to make the invasion appear as a more favourable option. First, they describe a plot by Edward Malet in which he portrayed the Egyptian government as unstable to his superiors in the cabinet.[6]: 477  On Galbraith and al-Sayyid-Marsot's reading, Malet naïvely expected he could convince the British to intimidate Egypt with a show of force without considering a full invasion or occupation as a possibility.[6]: 477–478  They also dwell on Admiral Beauchamp Seymour, who hastened the start of the bombardment by exaggerating the danger posed to his ships by ‘Urabi's forces in his telegrams back to the British government.[6]: 485 

Course of the war

British bombardment

 
Bombardment of Alexandria

The British fleet bombarded Alexandria from 11 to 13 July and then occupied it with marines. The British did not lose a single ship, but much of the city was destroyed by fires caused by explosive shells and by ‘Urabists seeking to ruin the city that the British were taking over.[7] Tewfik Pasha, who had moved his court to Alexandria during the unrest, declared ‘Urabi a rebel and formally deposed him from his positions within the government.

‘Urabi's response

‘Urabi then reacted by obtaining a fatwa from Al Azhar shaykhs which condemned Tewfik as a traitor to both his country and religion, absolving those who fought against him. ‘Urabi also declared war on the United Kingdom and initiated conscription.

British order of battle

 
The Seat of War – Alexandria and the Nile-Delta (1882)

The British army launched a probing attack at Kafr El Dawwar in an attempt to see if it was possible to reach Cairo through Alexandria. Afterwards, they determined it would not be possible to reach Cairo from this direction as Egyptian defences were too strong. In August, a British army of over 40,000, commanded by Garnet Wolseley, invaded the Suez Canal Zone. He was authorised to destroy 'Urabi's forces and clear the country of all other rebels.[citation needed][8]

The engineer troops had left England for Egypt in July and August 1882. The engineers included pontoon, railway and telegraph troops.[9]: 65 

Wolseley saw the campaign as a logistical challenge as he did not believe the Egyptians would put up much resistance.[10]

Order of battle of the British Expeditionary Force

Battle of Kafr El Dawwar

This battle took place on 5 August 1882 between an Egyptian army, headed by Ahmed Orabi, and British forces headed by Sir Archibald Alison. Seeking to ascertain the strength of the Egyptian's Kafr El Dawwar position, and to test local rumours that the Egyptians were retreating, Alison ordered a probing attack on the evening of the 5th. This action was reported by Orabi as a battle, and Cairo was full of the news that the advancing British had been repulsed; however most historians describe the action merely as a reconnaissance in force which was never intended as a serious assault on the Egyptian lines. Regardless, the end result was that the British abandoned any hope they may have had of reaching Cairo from the north, and shifted their base of operations to Ismailia instead.

Wolseley arrived at Alexandria on 15 August and immediately began to organize the movement of troops through the Suez Canal to Ismailia. This was quickly accomplished; Ismailia was occupied on 20 August without resistance.[9]: 67 

Battle of Tell El Kebir

 
Tell El Kebir

Ismailia was quickly reinforced with 9,000 troops, with the engineers put to work repairing the railway line from Suez. A small force was pushed along the Sweet Water Canal to the Kassassin lock arriving on 26 August. There they met the enemy. Heavily outnumbered the two battalions with 4 guns held their ground until some heavy cavalry arrived when the force went onto the offensive, forcing ‘Urabi to fall back 5 miles (8.0 km) with heavy casualties.[9]: 67–68 

The main body of the army started to move up to Kassassin and planning for the battle at Tell El Kebir was undertaken. Skirmishing took place but did not interfere with the build up. On 12 September all was ready and during that night the army marched to battle.[9]: 68 

13 September – ‘Urabi redeployed to defend Cairo against Wolseley. His main force dug in at Tell El Kebir, north of the railway and the Sweet Water Canal, both of which linked Cairo to Ismailia on the canal. The defences were hastily prepared as there was little time to arrange them. ‘Urabi's forces possessed 60 pieces of artillery and breech loading rifles. Wolseley made several personal reconnaissances, and determined that the Egyptians did not man outposts in front of their main defences at night, which made it possible for an attacking force to approach the defences under cover of darkness. Wolseley sent his force to approach the position by night and attacked frontally at dawn.

Surprise was not achieved; rifle fire and artillery from redoubts opened up when the range was 600 yards (550 m). Continuing the advance, the defending troops were hampered by the smoke from their weapons blocking their vision of the advancing British. The three battalions arrived in the enemy trenches all together and with little loss, resulting in a decisive victory for the British.[9]: 69 

Officially losing only 57 troops while killing approximately two thousand Egyptians, the British army had more casualties due to heatstroke than enemy action.[10]: 130  The ‘Urabi forces were routed, and British cavalry pursued them and captured Cairo, which was undefended.

Power was then restored to the Khedive, the war was at an end and the majority of the British army went to Alexandria and took ship for home, leaving, from November, just an army of occupation.[9]: 69 

Lieutenant William Mordaunt Marsh Edwards was awarded a Victoria Cross for his gallantry during the battle.

British military innovations

Railway

During the build up to the battle at Tell El Kebir the specially raised 8th Railway Company RE operated trains carrying stores and troops, as well as repairing track. On the day of the battle they ran a train into Tell El Kebir station between 8 and 9 am (13 September) and "found it completely blocked with trains, full of the enemy's ammunition: the line strewn with dead and wounded, and our own soldiers swarming over the place almost mad for want of water" (extract from Captain Sidney Smith's diary). Once the station was cleared they began to ferry the wounded, prisoners and troops with stores to other destinations.[11]

Telegraph

In the wake of the advancing columns, telegraph lines were laid on either side of the Sweet Water canal. At 2 am (13 September) Wolseley successfully sent a message to the Major General Sir H. Macpherson VC on the extreme left with the Indian Contingent and the Naval Brigade. At Tell El Kebir a field telegraph office was established in a saloon carriage, which Arabi Pasha had travelled in the day before. At 8:30 am (13 September) after the victory at the battle of Tell El Kebir, Wolseley used the telegram to send messages of his victory to Queen Victoria; he received a reply from her at 9.15 am the same day. Once they had got connected to the permanent line the Section also worked the Theiber sounder and the telephone.[11]

Army Post Office Corps

The forerunners of Royal Engineers (Postal Section) made their debut on this campaign. They were specially raised from the 24th Middlesex Rifle Volunteers (Post Office Rifles) and for the first time in British military history, post office clerks trained as soldiers, provided a dedicated postal service to an army in the field. During the battle of Kassassin they became the first Volunteers ever to come under enemy fire.[12]

Aftermath

‘Urabi's trial

Prime Minister Gladstone initially sought to put ‘Urabi on trial and execute him, portraying him as "a self-seeking tyrant whose oppression of the Egyptian people still left him enough time, in his capacity as a latter-day Saladin, to massacre Christians." After glancing through his captured diaries and various other evidence, there was little with which to "demonize" ‘Urabi in a public trial. His charges were down-graded, after which he admitted to rebellion and was sent into exile.[5]: 384 

British occupation

British troops then occupied Egypt until the Anglo-Egyptian Treaty of 1922 and Anglo-Egyptian treaty of 1936, giving gradual control back to the government of Egypt.

Hopkins argues that Britain continued its occupation of Egypt after 1882 in order to guarantee British investments: "Britain had important interests to defend in Egypt and she was prepared to withdraw only if conditions guaranteeing the security of those interests were met—and they never were."[5]: 388  Consistent with this view, investment in Egypt increased during the British occupation, interest rates fell, and bond prices rose.[5]: 389 

See also

References

  1. ^ Featherstone, Donald (1993). Tel El-Kebir 1882. Osprey Publishing. pp. 40–41.
  2. ^ There are no exact British casualty figures. The official War Office history gives a total of 83 killed, 607 wounded and 30 'missing', not including Royal Navy losses at Alexandria. Colonel J. F. Maurice, Military History of the Campaign of 1882 in Egypt (HMSO, 1887: new ed. 1908) Appendix VI. See, however, Peter Duckers, Egypt 1882: Dispatches, Casualties, Awards (Spink, 2001).
  3. ^ Wright, William (2009). A Tidy Little War: The British Invasion of Egypt, 1882. Spellmount.
  4. ^ Robinson, Ronald; Gallagher, John (1961). Africa and the Victorians: The Official Mind of Imperialism. London: Macmillan.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Hopkins, A. G. (July 1986). "The Victorians and Africa: A Reconsideration of the Occupation of Egypt, 1882". The Journal of African History. 27 (2): 363–391. doi:10.1017/S0021853700036719. JSTOR 181140. S2CID 162732269.
  6. ^ a b c Galbraith, John S.; al-Sayyid-Marsot, Afaf Lutfi (November 1978). "The British Occupation of Egypt: Another View". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 9 (4): 471–488. doi:10.1017/S0020743800030658. JSTOR 162074. S2CID 162397342.
  7. ^ "The Bombardment of Alexandria (1882)". Old Mersey Times. from the original on 8 October 2007. Retrieved 13 October 2007.
  8. ^ Spiers, Edward (2018). Intervention in Egypt. Manchester University Press. ISBN 9781526137913.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ a b c d e f Porter, Whitworth (1889). History of the Corps of Royal Engineers. Vol. II. Chatham: The Institution of Royal Engineers.
  10. ^ a b Kochanski, Halik (January 1999). Sir Garnet Wolseley: Victorian Hero. ISBN 9781852851880.
  11. ^ a b Porter, Whitworth (1889). History of the Corps of Royal Engineers, Vol. II. London: Longmans, Green and Co.
  12. ^ Wells, Edward (1987). Mailshot – A History of the Forces Postal Services. London: Defence Postal & Courier Services. ISBN 0951300903.

Further reading

  • Barthorp, Michael. The British Army on Campaign: vol 4: 1882–1902 (Osprey Publishing, 1988).
  • Halvorson, D. "Prestige, prudence and public opinion in the 1882 British occupation of Egypt." Australian Journal of Politics and History (2010) 56#3, 423–440. online free
  • Hopkins, Anthony G. "The Victorians and Africa: a reconsideration of the occupation of Egypt, 1882." Journal of African History 27.2 (1986): 363–391.
  • Langer, William L. European alliances and alignments, 1871–1890 (1950) pp 251–80.
  • Mowat, R.C. "From Liberalism to Imperialism: The Case of Egypt 1875–1887", Historical Journal, Vol 16, No.1 (Mar., 1973), pp. 109–124. online
  • Mulligan, William. "Decisions for Empire: Revisiting the 1882 Occupation of Egypt." English Historical Review 135.572 (2020): 94-126.
  • Newsinger, John. "Liberal Imperialism and the Occupation of Egypt in 1882." Race & Class 49.3 (2008): 54–75.
  • Reid, Donald Malcolm. "The 'Urabi revolution and the British conquest, 1879–1882", in M.W. Daly, ed., The Cambridge History of Egypt, vol. 2: Modern Egypt, from 1517 to the end of the twentieth century (1998) pp. 217=238.
  • Robinson, Ronald, and John Gallagher. Africa and the Victorians: The Climax of Imperialism (1961) pp 76–159. online
  • al-Sayid-Marsot, A. "The Occupation of Egypt", in A. Porter (ed), The Oxford History of the British Empire: The Nineteenth Century: Volume III (Oxford, 1999)
  • Schölch, Alexander. "The ‘Men on the Spot’ and the English Occupation of Egypt in 1882." Historical Journal 19.3 (1976): 773–785.
  • Thomas, Martin, and Richard Toye. "Arguing about intervention: a comparison of British and French rhetoric surrounding the 1882 and 1956 invasions of Egypt." Historical Journal 58.4 (2015): 1081–1113.

Primary sources

  • Cromer, Earl of. Modern Egypt (2 vol 1908) online free 1220pp, by a senior British official
  • Malet, Edward. Egypt, 1879–1883 (London, 1909), by a senior British official online

External links

  • Old Mersey Times. "The Bombardment of Alexandria" (1882)
  • Fiorillo, Luigi. "Alexandria Bombardment of 1882 Photograph Album". American University in Cairo Rare Books and Special Collections Library.

anglo, egyptian, this, article, about, british, intervention, egypt, 1882, earlier, alexandria, expedition, 1807, conflict, 1956, suez, crisis, egyptian, expedition, redirects, here, american, response, conflict, egyptian, expedition, 1882, british, conquest, . This article is about the British intervention in Egypt in 1882 For the earlier war see Alexandria expedition of 1807 For the conflict of 1956 see Suez Crisis Egyptian Expedition redirects here For the American response to the conflict see Egyptian Expedition 1882 The British conquest of Egypt 1882 also known as Anglo Egyptian War Arabic الاحتلال البريطاني لمصر romanized al iḥtilal al Briṭani li Miṣr lit British occupation of Egypt occurred in 1882 between Egyptian and Sudanese forces under Ahmed Urabi and the United Kingdom It ended a nationalist uprising against the Khedive Tewfik Pasha It established firm British influence over Egypt at the expense of the Egyptians the French and the Ottoman Empire whose already weak authority became nominal Anglo Egyptian WarPart of the Urabi Revolt and Scramble for AfricaDateJuly September 1882LocationKhedivate of EgyptResultBritish victory Urabi sentenced to death later commuted to exile TerritorialchangesBritish occupation of EgyptBelligerents United Kingdom India Tewfik loyalistsEgyptCommanders and leadersGarnet WolseleyBeauchamp SeymourTewfik PashaAhmed UrabiMahmoud FehmyMahmoud El BaroudiStrength40 560 regulars11 300 regulars50 000 reservists and irregular troops 1 Casualties and losses80 90 killed600 wounded 2 2 000 4 000 killed or wounded British estimates 3 Contents 1 Background 2 Reasons for the invasion 3 Course of the war 3 1 British bombardment 3 2 Urabi s response 3 3 British order of battle 3 4 Battle of Kafr El Dawwar 3 5 Battle of Tell El Kebir 4 British military innovations 4 1 Railway 4 2 Telegraph 4 3 Army Post Office Corps 5 Aftermath 5 1 Urabi s trial 5 2 British occupation 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 8 1 Primary sources 9 External linksBackground EditMain articles Urabi Revolt and Bombardment of Alexandria In 1881 an Egyptian army officer Ahmed Urabi then known in English as Arabi Pasha mutinied and initiated a coup against Tewfik Pasha the Khedive of Egypt and Sudan because of grievances over disparities in pay between Egyptians and Europeans as well as other concerns In January 1882 the British and French governments sent a Joint Note to the Egyptian government declaring their recognition of the Khedive s authority On 20 May British and French warships arrived off the coast of Alexandria On 11 June an anti Christian riot occurred in Alexandria that killed 50 Europeans Colonel Urabi ordered his forces to put down the riot but Europeans fled the city and Urabi s army began fortifying the town The French fleet was recalled to France A British ultimatum was rejected and its warships began a 10 1 2 hour bombardment of Alexandria on 11 July Reasons for the invasion EditThe reasons why the British government sent a fleet of ships to the coast of Alexandria is a point of historical debate In their 1961 essay Africa and the Victorians Ronald Robinson and John Gallagher argue that the British invasion was ordered in order to quell the perceived anarchy of the Urabi Revolt as well as to protect British control over the Suez Canal in order to maintain its shipping route to the Indian Ocean 4 A G Hopkins rejected Robinson and Gallagher s argument citing original documents to claim that there was no perceived danger to the Suez Canal from the Urabi movement and that Urabi and his forces were not chaotic anarchists but rather maintained law and order 5 373 374 He alternatively argues that British Prime Minister William Gladstone s cabinet was motivated by protecting the interests of British bondholders with investments in Egypt as well as by pursuit of domestic political popularity Hopkins cites the British investments in Egypt that grew massively leading into the 1880s partially as a result of the Khedive s debt from construction of the Suez Canal as well as the close links that existed between the British government and the economic sector 5 379 380 He writes that Britain s economic interests occurred simultaneously with a desire within one element of the ruling Liberal Party for a militant foreign policy in order to gain the domestic political popularity that enabled it to compete with the Conservative Party 5 382 Hopkins cites a letter from Edward Malet the British consul general in Egypt at the time to a member of the Gladstone Cabinet offering his congratulations on the invasion You have fought the battle of all Christendom and history will acknowledge it May I also venture to say that it has given the Liberal Party a new lease of popularity and power 5 385 John Galbraith and Afaf Lutfi al Sayyid Marsot make a similar argument to Hopkins though their argument focuses on how individuals within the British government bureaucracy used their positions to make the invasion appear as a more favourable option First they describe a plot by Edward Malet in which he portrayed the Egyptian government as unstable to his superiors in the cabinet 6 477 On Galbraith and al Sayyid Marsot s reading Malet naively expected he could convince the British to intimidate Egypt with a show of force without considering a full invasion or occupation as a possibility 6 477 478 They also dwell on Admiral Beauchamp Seymour who hastened the start of the bombardment by exaggerating the danger posed to his ships by Urabi s forces in his telegrams back to the British government 6 485 Course of the war EditBritish bombardment Edit Main article Bombardment of Alexandria Bombardment of Alexandria The British fleet bombarded Alexandria from 11 to 13 July and then occupied it with marines The British did not lose a single ship but much of the city was destroyed by fires caused by explosive shells and by Urabists seeking to ruin the city that the British were taking over 7 Tewfik Pasha who had moved his court to Alexandria during the unrest declared Urabi a rebel and formally deposed him from his positions within the government Urabi s response Edit Urabi then reacted by obtaining a fatwa from Al Azhar shaykhs which condemned Tewfik as a traitor to both his country and religion absolving those who fought against him Urabi also declared war on the United Kingdom and initiated conscription British order of battle Edit The Seat of War Alexandria and the Nile Delta 1882 The British army launched a probing attack at Kafr El Dawwar in an attempt to see if it was possible to reach Cairo through Alexandria Afterwards they determined it would not be possible to reach Cairo from this direction as Egyptian defences were too strong In August a British army of over 40 000 commanded by Garnet Wolseley invaded the Suez Canal Zone He was authorised to destroy Urabi s forces and clear the country of all other rebels citation needed 8 The engineer troops had left England for Egypt in July and August 1882 The engineers included pontoon railway and telegraph troops 9 65 Wolseley saw the campaign as a logistical challenge as he did not believe the Egyptians would put up much resistance 10 Order of battle of the British Expeditionary Force Commander Lieutenant General Sir Garnet Wolseley Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Sir John Adye1st Division Lt Gen GHS Willis 1st Brigade Maj Gen HRH The Duke of Connaught 2nd Battalion Grenadier Guards 2nd Battalion Coldstream Guards 1st Battalion Scots Guards 2nd Brigade Maj Gen Gerald Graham VC 1st Battalion The Buffs East Kent Regiment 1st Battalion Royal Irish Fusiliers Princess Victoria s 2nd Battalion Royal Irish Fusiliers Princess Victoria s 2nd Battalion York and Lancaster Regiment Divisional Troops 19th Hussars 2 Sqns 2nd Battalion Duke of Cornwall s Light Infantry A Battery 1st Field Brigade Royal Artillery D Battery 1st Field Brigade Royal Artillery 24 Field Company Royal Engineers 12 Company Army Commissariat and Transport Corps 1 Bearer Company Army Hospital Corps Half 3 Field Hospital Army Hospital Corps 2nd Division Lt Gen Sir Edward Hamley 3rd Highland Infantry Brigade Maj Gen Sir Archibald Alison 2nd Battalion Highland Light Infantry 1st Battalion Black Watch Royal Highlanders 1st Battalion Cameron Highlanders 1st Battalion Gordon Highlanders 4th Brigade Maj Gen Sir Evelyn Wood VC 1st Battalion The Royal Sussex Regiment 1st Battalion Royal Berkshire Regiment Princess Charlotte s 1st Battalion The South Staffordshire Regiment 1st Battalion The King s Shropshire Light Infantry Divisional Troops 19th Hussars 2 Sqns 3rd Battalion The King s Royal Rifle Corps I Battery 2nd Field Brigade Royal Artillery N Battery 2nd Field Brigade Royal Artillery 26 Field Company Royal Engineers 11 Company Army Commissariat and Transport Corps 2 Bearer Company Army Hospital Corps Half 4 Field Hospital Army Hospital Corps 5 Field Hospital Army Hospital Corps Indian Contingent Maj Gen Sir Herbert Macpherson VC 1st Battalion Manchester Regiment 1st Battalion Seaforth Highlanders 7th Bengal Infantry 20th Punjab Infantry 29th Baluch Infantry 7 Mountain Battery Northern Division Royal Garrison Artillery plus their own Commissariat Engineers etc Cavalry Division Maj Gen Drury Curzon Drury Lowe 1st Heavy Cavalry Brigade Brig Gen Sir Baker Creed Russell Household Cavalry Composite Regiment 1 Sqn each from the 1st Life Guards 2nd Life Guards and Royal Horse Guards 4th Dragoon Guards 7th Dragoon Guards 2nd Bengal Cavalry Brigade Brig Gen H C Wilkinson 2nd Bengal Cavalry 6th Bengal Cavalry 13th Bengal Lancers Division Troops N Battery A Horse Brigade Royal Horse Artillery Mounted Infantry Battalion formed from Mounted Coys of line infantry battalions 17 Company Army Commissariat and Transport 6 Field Hospital Army Hospital Corps Army Troops Naval Brigade Battalion Royal Marine Light Infantry G Battery B Horse Brigade Royal Horse Artillery F Battery 1st Field Brigade Royal Field Artillery H Battery 1st Field Brigade RFA C Battery 3rd Field Brigade RFA J Battery 3rd Field Brigade RFA T Battery 3rd Field Brigade RFA Royal Marine Artillery 1 Battery London Division Royal Garrison Artillery 4 Battery London Division RGA 5 Battery London Division RGA 5 Battery Scottish Division RGA 6 Battery Scottish Division RGA Army Train A Bridging Troop Royal Engineers C Telegraph Troop RE Railway Troop RE 8 Field Company RE 17 Field Company RE 18 Field Company RE A Company Queen s Own Madras Sappers and Miners I Company QOMS amp M 8 Company Army Commissariat and Transport Corps 15 Company ACT Corps Auxiliary Company ACT Corps 2 Bearer Company Army Hospital Corps 1 Field Hospital AHC 3 Field Hospital AHC 7 Field Hospital AHC 8 Field Hospital AHC Army Post Office Corps M Company 49th Middlesex Rifle Volunteers Battle of Kafr El Dawwar Edit Main article Battle of Kafr El Dawwar This battle took place on 5 August 1882 between an Egyptian army headed by Ahmed Orabi and British forces headed by Sir Archibald Alison Seeking to ascertain the strength of the Egyptian s Kafr El Dawwar position and to test local rumours that the Egyptians were retreating Alison ordered a probing attack on the evening of the 5th This action was reported by Orabi as a battle and Cairo was full of the news that the advancing British had been repulsed however most historians describe the action merely as a reconnaissance in force which was never intended as a serious assault on the Egyptian lines Regardless the end result was that the British abandoned any hope they may have had of reaching Cairo from the north and shifted their base of operations to Ismailia instead Wolseley arrived at Alexandria on 15 August and immediately began to organize the movement of troops through the Suez Canal to Ismailia This was quickly accomplished Ismailia was occupied on 20 August without resistance 9 67 Battle of Tell El Kebir Edit Main article Battle of Kassassin Lock Main article Battle of Tell El Kebir Tell El Kebir Ismailia was quickly reinforced with 9 000 troops with the engineers put to work repairing the railway line from Suez A small force was pushed along the Sweet Water Canal to the Kassassin lock arriving on 26 August There they met the enemy Heavily outnumbered the two battalions with 4 guns held their ground until some heavy cavalry arrived when the force went onto the offensive forcing Urabi to fall back 5 miles 8 0 km with heavy casualties 9 67 68 The main body of the army started to move up to Kassassin and planning for the battle at Tell El Kebir was undertaken Skirmishing took place but did not interfere with the build up On 12 September all was ready and during that night the army marched to battle 9 68 13 September Urabi redeployed to defend Cairo against Wolseley His main force dug in at Tell El Kebir north of the railway and the Sweet Water Canal both of which linked Cairo to Ismailia on the canal The defences were hastily prepared as there was little time to arrange them Urabi s forces possessed 60 pieces of artillery and breech loading rifles Wolseley made several personal reconnaissances and determined that the Egyptians did not man outposts in front of their main defences at night which made it possible for an attacking force to approach the defences under cover of darkness Wolseley sent his force to approach the position by night and attacked frontally at dawn Surprise was not achieved rifle fire and artillery from redoubts opened up when the range was 600 yards 550 m Continuing the advance the defending troops were hampered by the smoke from their weapons blocking their vision of the advancing British The three battalions arrived in the enemy trenches all together and with little loss resulting in a decisive victory for the British 9 69 Officially losing only 57 troops while killing approximately two thousand Egyptians the British army had more casualties due to heatstroke than enemy action 10 130 The Urabi forces were routed and British cavalry pursued them and captured Cairo which was undefended Power was then restored to the Khedive the war was at an end and the majority of the British army went to Alexandria and took ship for home leaving from November just an army of occupation 9 69 Lieutenant William Mordaunt Marsh Edwards was awarded a Victoria Cross for his gallantry during the battle British military innovations EditRailway Edit During the build up to the battle at Tell El Kebir the specially raised 8th Railway Company RE operated trains carrying stores and troops as well as repairing track On the day of the battle they ran a train into Tell El Kebir station between 8 and 9 am 13 September and found it completely blocked with trains full of the enemy s ammunition the line strewn with dead and wounded and our own soldiers swarming over the place almost mad for want of water extract from Captain Sidney Smith s diary Once the station was cleared they began to ferry the wounded prisoners and troops with stores to other destinations 11 Telegraph Edit In the wake of the advancing columns telegraph lines were laid on either side of the Sweet Water canal At 2 am 13 September Wolseley successfully sent a message to the Major General Sir H Macpherson VC on the extreme left with the Indian Contingent and the Naval Brigade At Tell El Kebir a field telegraph office was established in a saloon carriage which Arabi Pasha had travelled in the day before At 8 30 am 13 September after the victory at the battle of Tell El Kebir Wolseley used the telegram to send messages of his victory to Queen Victoria he received a reply from her at 9 15 am the same day Once they had got connected to the permanent line the Section also worked the Theiber sounder and the telephone 11 Army Post Office Corps Edit The forerunners of Royal Engineers Postal Section made their debut on this campaign They were specially raised from the 24th Middlesex Rifle Volunteers Post Office Rifles and for the first time in British military history post office clerks trained as soldiers provided a dedicated postal service to an army in the field During the battle of Kassassin they became the first Volunteers ever to come under enemy fire 12 Aftermath Edit Urabi s trial Edit Prime Minister Gladstone initially sought to put Urabi on trial and execute him portraying him as a self seeking tyrant whose oppression of the Egyptian people still left him enough time in his capacity as a latter day Saladin to massacre Christians After glancing through his captured diaries and various other evidence there was little with which to demonize Urabi in a public trial His charges were down graded after which he admitted to rebellion and was sent into exile 5 384 British occupation Edit Main article British occupation of Egypt British troops then occupied Egypt until the Anglo Egyptian Treaty of 1922 and Anglo Egyptian treaty of 1936 giving gradual control back to the government of Egypt Hopkins argues that Britain continued its occupation of Egypt after 1882 in order to guarantee British investments Britain had important interests to defend in Egypt and she was prepared to withdraw only if conditions guaranteeing the security of those interests were met and they never were 5 388 Consistent with this view investment in Egypt increased during the British occupation interest rates fell and bond prices rose 5 389 See also EditEgypt Medal Khedive s Star List of conflicts in the Near EastReferences Edit Featherstone Donald 1993 Tel El Kebir 1882 Osprey Publishing pp 40 41 There are no exact British casualty figures The official War Office history gives a total of 83 killed 607 wounded and 30 missing not including Royal Navy losses at Alexandria Colonel J F Maurice Military History of the Campaign of 1882 in Egypt HMSO 1887 new ed 1908 Appendix VI See however Peter Duckers Egypt 1882 Dispatches Casualties Awards Spink 2001 Wright William 2009 A Tidy Little War The British Invasion of Egypt 1882 Spellmount Robinson Ronald Gallagher John 1961 Africa and the Victorians The Official Mind of Imperialism London Macmillan a b c d e f g Hopkins A G July 1986 The Victorians and Africa A Reconsideration of the Occupation of Egypt 1882 The Journal of African History 27 2 363 391 doi 10 1017 S0021853700036719 JSTOR 181140 S2CID 162732269 a b c Galbraith John S al Sayyid Marsot Afaf Lutfi November 1978 The British Occupation of Egypt Another View International Journal of Middle East Studies 9 4 471 488 doi 10 1017 S0020743800030658 JSTOR 162074 S2CID 162397342 The Bombardment of Alexandria 1882 Old Mersey Times Archived from the original on 8 October 2007 Retrieved 13 October 2007 Spiers Edward 2018 Intervention in Egypt Manchester University Press ISBN 9781526137913 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint url status link a b c d e f Porter Whitworth 1889 History of the Corps of Royal Engineers Vol II Chatham The Institution of Royal Engineers a b Kochanski Halik January 1999 Sir Garnet Wolseley Victorian Hero ISBN 9781852851880 a b Porter Whitworth 1889 History of the Corps of Royal Engineers Vol II London Longmans Green and Co Wells Edward 1987 Mailshot A History of the Forces Postal Services London Defence Postal amp Courier Services ISBN 0951300903 Further reading EditBarthorp Michael The British Army on Campaign vol 4 1882 1902 Osprey Publishing 1988 Halvorson D Prestige prudence and public opinion in the 1882 British occupation of Egypt Australian Journal of Politics and History 2010 56 3 423 440 online free Hopkins Anthony G The Victorians and Africa a reconsideration of the occupation of Egypt 1882 Journal of African History 27 2 1986 363 391 Langer William L European alliances and alignments 1871 1890 1950 pp 251 80 Mowat R C From Liberalism to Imperialism The Case of Egypt 1875 1887 Historical Journal Vol 16 No 1 Mar 1973 pp 109 124 online Mulligan William Decisions for Empire Revisiting the 1882 Occupation of Egypt English Historical Review 135 572 2020 94 126 Newsinger John Liberal Imperialism and the Occupation of Egypt in 1882 Race amp Class 49 3 2008 54 75 Reid Donald Malcolm The Urabi revolution and the British conquest 1879 1882 in M W Daly ed The Cambridge History of Egypt vol 2 Modern Egypt from 1517 to the end of the twentieth century 1998 pp 217 238 Robinson Ronald and John Gallagher Africa and the Victorians The Climax of Imperialism 1961 pp 76 159 online al Sayid Marsot A The Occupation of Egypt in A Porter ed The Oxford History of the British Empire The Nineteenth Century Volume III Oxford 1999 Scholch Alexander The Men on the Spot and the English Occupation of Egypt in 1882 Historical Journal 19 3 1976 773 785 Thomas Martin and Richard Toye Arguing about intervention a comparison of British and French rhetoric surrounding the 1882 and 1956 invasions of Egypt Historical Journal 58 4 2015 1081 1113 Primary sources Edit Cromer Earl of Modern Egypt 2 vol 1908 online free 1220pp by a senior British official Malet Edward Egypt 1879 1883 London 1909 by a senior British official onlineExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1882 Anglo Egyptian War Old Mersey Times The Bombardment of Alexandria 1882 Autobiography of Sir John Stokes Fiorillo Luigi Alexandria Bombardment of 1882 Photograph Album American University in Cairo Rare Books and Special Collections Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anglo Egyptian War amp oldid 1132914445, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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