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Battle of Sidi Bou Othman

Coordinates: 31°54′12″N 7°56′32″W / 31.9033°N 7.94222°W / 31.9033; -7.94222

The Battle of Sidi Bou Othman was an important battle fought at Sidi Bou Othman, some 40 kilometers north of Marrakesh, during the French conquest of Morocco. It saw the victory of a French column under Colonel Charles Mangin over the forces of the south Moroccan leader Ahmed al-Hiba in September 1912. As a result of the victory, the French captured the city of Marrakesh and annexed southern Morocco into the French protectorate of Morocco. The conquest was facilitated by the defection of the great qaids of the south, notably the El Glaoui brothers.

Battle of Sidi Bou Othman

Charles Mangin enters Marrakesh, 9 September 1912
Belligerents
French colonial army Moroccan resistance
Commanders and leaders
Charles Mangin Ahmed al-Hiba
Merebbi Rebbo
Strength
5,000 10,000
Casualties and losses
27 4,000
class=notpageimage|
Location within Morocco

Background

French encroachment on Morocco began in 1907, with the military occupation of the towns of Casablanca and Oujda, following the assassination of some French nationals in Moroccan cities during disorders marked by anti-colonial violence. The French military presence outraged domestic opinion in Morocco, but the new Alawite sultan Abd al-Hafid of Morocco, facing severe financial difficulties and dependent on French loans, was unable to do much about it. Some tribal leaders took matters into their own hands and attacked the French themselves. Notable among these was the Saharan marabout Ma al-'Aynayn, who had previously led the anti-French resistance in Mauritania.[1] In 1910, al-Aynayn crossed the High Atlas with his veiled, camel-riding Saharan troops (nicknamed the "Blue Men"), aiming to liberate Casablanca, but he was defeated by the French at Tadla on 23 June 1910, and forced to retreat to Tiznit (in the Anti-Atlas foothills of the Souss valley), where he died shortly after.[2]

In early 1911, there was a massive uprising in Fez against Abd al-Hafid which was put down by French troops.[3] The entry of French troops into the Moroccan capital alarmed other European powers and led to a brief international crisis (see Agadir Crisis). To write out other European powers permanently, France hurriedly concluded the Treaty of Fez in March 1912, by which Abd al-Hafid effectively surrendered his sovereignty, allowing France to establish a protectorate over Morocco. General Hubert Lyautey was appointed the first French resident-general.[4]

The event provoked uprisings across northern Morocco. Tribal armies in the north promptly besieged the French colonial forces, strung out on the line between Casablanca and Fez.[5] Changing course, the sultan Abd al-Hafid himself entered into contact with the rebels, prompting Lyautey to force him to abdicate the throne on 11 August 1912 in favor of his more pliable brother, Yusuf.[6]

 
Call to arms by al-Hiba's partisans, as illustrated by the French peridiocal Le Petit Journal, 1 September 1912

In the south, Moroccan resistance rallied around Ahmed al-Hiba, the son of the late Ma al-Aynayn, who declared a jihad to expel the French from Morocco.[7] Quickly gaining control of the Souss valley, in July, 1912, Ahmed al-Hiba led his Saharan troops ("Blue Men") and his growing army of Moroccan followers over the High Atlas. The Hibists took possession of Marrakesh on 15 August 1912. Declaring the throne vacant with Abd al-Hafid's abdication, Ahmed al-Hiba was recognized by the ulama of Marrakesh as the new sultan of Morocco ("The Blue Sultan").[8]

The rise of the new sultan in the south alarmed Lyautey, as al-Hiba undermined the legitimacy of the puppet-sultan Yusuf, and consequently threatened the French hold on the north.[9] Lyautey rushed French diplomatic and military officials to try to persuade the great lords (qaids) of the south to prevent Marrakesh from falling in the hands of the Hibists.[10] The great qaids — notably the El Glaoui brothers, Madani and Thami, and their fellow-qaids al-Mtouggi and al-Gundafi of the High Atlas — had little love for al-Hiba, as he openly denounced the whole semi-feudal system they represented and threatened their power and authority. But the Hibist movement had swept up the rank-and-file of their tribes, and the qaids were unable or reluctant to oppose al-Hiba, they had to play along or risk being deposed themselves.[11] Eight French officials trapped in Marrakesh were taken hostage by al-Hiba, who hoped to use them as bargaining chips in negotiations for the recognition of his sultanate and insurance against a French attack on Marrakesh.[12] Nonetheless, some qaids, notably Thami El Glaoui (who secretly retained one of the French hostages with him), continued clandestine communication with Lyautey, and kept him up to date on the situation in Marrakesh.[9]

Mangin's column

Deeming it the priority threat to the French protectorate, Lyautey peeled away French colonial soldiers from their hard-pressed positions in the north to assemble a new column to dislodge al-Hiba from Marrakesh. Lyautey placed the column under the command of Colonel Charles Mangin. Mangin's column was composed of six companies of Senegalese tirailleurs, two companies of Algerian tirailleurs, two companies of colonial infantry, a goum of Moroccan auxiliaries, two cavalry squadrons and a mountain artillery battery. They would be later joined by another column under Lieutenant Colonel Joseph, composed of a battalion of zouaves, two companies of Algerian tirailleurs, a squadron of spahis and mobile artillery.[13]

Initial skirmishes

Mangin set out with his column from Casablanca on 14 August 1912 and reached the furthest French station at Mechra ben Abbou (on the Oum Er-Rbia River), about half-way on the north–south road between Casablanca and Marrakesh.[14] On 15 August, the Mangin column advanced to Skhour Rehamna further south along the same road.[15] Their position was harassed by Arab Rehamna tribesmen from the region, who had recently adhered to the Hibist cause. Lyautey ordered them to stay put there and await reinforcements from Lt.-Col Joseph from Doukkala.[16] In the meantime, Lyautey continued using backchannels to negotiate with al-Hiba for the release of the French hostages.

Al-Hiba dispatched an army to Ouham (west of Skhour), to ambush Joseph's column and prevent their junction. Hearing of this, Mangin launched a quick attack on the Hibist camp on 22 August, breaking it up and forcing them to disperse. The Hibists regrouped and attacked the French camp the next day, but were fended off after a brief skirmish.[17] Reinforced by Joseph, the Mangin column proceeded back towards Skhour, where they were instructed to stay put by Lyautey while negotiations continued. Regional tribesmen continued harassing the French camp at Skhour.[18]

Hearing that a great Hibist army under al-Hiba's brother, Merebbi Rebbo, was assembling to the south of them at Ben Guerir, Mangin, without consulting Lyautey, ordered an offensive. Mangin fell on the Hibist army at Ben Guerir on August 29, but with the terrain unfavorable to them, the Hibists broke off the engagement and retreated back towards Marrakesh. The French column returned to Skhour.[19]

On September 3, Lyautey received missives from Thami El Glaoui, informing him that the situation in Marrakesh had turned decisively against the Hibists. Al-Hiba's puritanical edicts - he famously ordered all unmarried women in Marrakesh to take a husband from among his mujahadeen - had already alienated much of the city's resident population.[20] The timidity and defeats of the Hibist armies in the skirmishes with Mangin now fostered doubts about al-Hiba's military judgment and leadership qualities, and began to disenchant his followers. Even the more fanatical ones who regarded him as a mahdi began feeling uneasy. Al-Hiba's mystical promise that "French bullets would turn into water and French shells into watermelons" had been tested and found wanting.[21] As al-Hiba's popularity was weakening, the qaids began feeling bolder. Should the French march on Marrakesh, El Glaoui promised, the qaids were prepared to pounce inside the city and secure the French hostages themselves.[22]

Digesting all this information, on the evening of 3 September, Lyautey dispatched a message by wireless to Mangin, famously stating only: "Allez-y carrément" ("Go straight ahead").[23]

Battle

 
Colonel Charles Mangin who led the French forces in the Battle of Sidi Bou Othman

On the morning of September 5, 1912, Mangin set out with his column of five-thousand men - six battalions, two goums, two-and-a-half cavalry squadrons and three artillery batteries.[24] They carried twelve 75mm field guns, eight machine guns and 1,200 Gras rifles.[25] The troops were organized on their march into a "fighting square", followed by a convoy square of 1,500 mules and 2,000 camels.[26]

On the dawn of September 6, the French column reached Sidi Bou Othman, some 40 kilometers north of Marrakesh, where the Hibist army was already gathered, blocking the entrance to a key valley on the road to Marrakesh. The Hibist force, led by al-Hiba's brother, had around ten thousand men, with 1,000 muzzle-loading muskets, the rest poorly armed, many merely with sticks and stones, stretched out on a two-and-half mile front.[27] They carried with them two Krupp cannons and some eight hundred rounds, under the command of a Spanish renegade.[28]

The French army was running out of water by this time, and another scorching hot day was ahead, so there was no question of avoiding or delaying engagement. Mangin maintained his battle square, placing his guns in the center of the infantry formations, offering a mere half-mile front, and began his march against the Hibist line.[29] The Hibists maintained formation as they marched forth to meet him, their longer line enveloping the advancing square like a crescent. The Hibists held their fire until around 1,400 meters. Mangin waited until they were around 800 meters distant to halt his square and open fire.[29] The cascading salvoes of French close-range artillery, machine guns and rifles devastated the ranks of the Hibist army. Nonetheless the Hibists held formation and continued their enveloping approach. The French square held ground, reloading and firing relentlessly, decimating the Hibist ranks as they approached.[29]

 
A 7.5 cm Gebirgskanone L/13 C/80, captured in Morocco at the Musée de La Marine Nationale de Toulon.

The concentration of continuous French firepower, particularly the artillery and machine guns, on the approaching, tight human mass caused horrific casualties in the Hibist ranks. The Hibists' Krupp guns, in inexperienced hands, did little damage in response, their aim being off.[29] The Hibist charges fell consistently short of the French square, the attackers never getting closer than a hundred meters before being mowed down. The French thereby avoided the hand-to-hand engagement in which the Hibists's superior numbers might have tipped the balance.[30]

By nine o'clock, the battle was over. Hibist volley fire began to falter, with the army breaking up in retreat. Mangin sent out his cavalry under Captain Picard to disperse the remainder and sweep through the Hibist camp and cut down survivors. It had been a veritable massacre. The Hibists had suffered two thousand dead and thousands more wounded. Mangin's forces suffered merely four (or two) dead and twenty-three wounded.[31]

The battle of Sidi bou Othman was the first ranged battle fought by the French in North Africa since the Battle of Isly of 1844.[32] The Hibists employed much the same archaic tactics – tight regiments in a firing line, infantry charges, auxiliary cavalry and light cannon – as might be found in an early 19th-century Napoleonic battle.[33] These proved ineffective when confronted by modern French technology. Mangin credited the victory to the judicious application of the superior speed and power of massed artillery and machine guns.[34]

Aftermath

 
 
Left: Recovery of the French prisoners in Marrakesh, Right: Hubert Lyautey decorates the El Glaoui brothers, as envisioned by Le Petit Journal, 1912

A few hours after the battle, Mangin assembled a flying column under Lt.Col. Henri Simon to race to Marrakesh (some 105 kilometers away) and break the French hostages out before the Hibists could reorganize. Simon's column was composed of two cavalry squadrons, the goums, and a section of the 75mm guns, in all some 600 horsemen.[35] Avoiding Hibist strongpoints, Simon's column arrived at the Tensift River that same evening, and entered into communication with the qaids inside the city.

At first light, 7 September 1912, on a pre-arranged signal, as Simon's column left the Tensift's banks and approached the city, the qaids pounced. Forces loyal to the qaids Madani and Thami El Glaoui, al-Gundafi, al-Mtouggi and Driss Menou overwhelmed the Hibist garrison posts inside the city. By the time Simon reached the Bab Doukkala gate at 10 o'clock, it was all over. The qaids were in control of Marrakesh, the French hostages were safely in their hands, and al-Hiba himself had fled the city with his remaining supporters.[36]

Mangin arrived with the rest of the army that afternoon, and set up his camp at Gueliz, northwest of the city, where he received the Marrakeshi qaids and their oaths of allegiance to the sultan Yusuf.[37] Two days later, on 9 September 1912, the French army finally entered and took possession of the city of Marrakesh.[38]

Al-Hiba fled to the Souss valley, where his support was still strong. The region around Marrakesh was organized as a military district, initially under Mangin, but given the lack of French troops, Lyautey's policy was to rely on the grand qaids - al-Glawi, al-Mtouggi, al-Goundafi, al-Ayadi, Haida, etc. - to hold the south in their name.[39] Thami El Glaoui was promptly restored to his former position as pasha of Marrakesh and awarded the Legion of Honour by Lyautey, who personally visited Marrakesh in October 1912. While the French troops were reoriented northwards, towards conquering the Tadla plain and the Middle Atlas (see Zaian War), it was the qaids who were placed in charge of putting an end to the Hibists in the Souss.

The qaids proved their worth almost immediately, El Glaoui and al-Goundafi led an invasion of the Souss valley in early 1913, capturing Taroudannt in May and Agadir in June, driving the Hibists up into the mountains.[40] The Hibists, however, would hold out there for much longer. The outbreak of World War I in 1914 deprived the French authorities in Morocco of additional French troops, and many of the officers broken in by the Moroccan campaign would go on to distinguish themselves in the European front. During the war, Germany supplied the Hibists with money, guns and ammunition. Although they were largely confined to the highland peaks and ravines, the Hibists still presented a constant threat to the thin French hold on the southern Moroccan valleys. In 1917, a French column under Leopold Justinard attempted to dislodge them from their mountain strongholds, but the resistance proved too fierce.[41] Ahmed al-Hiba died on 23 May 1919, and was buried in Akerdous village.[42] Despite the death of their charismatic leader and the evaporation of German support, the Hibist movement continued under his brother Merebbi Rebbo.[43] The Hibists were only finally reduced in 1934, after a concerted French campaign up the Anti-Atlas.[44] Rebbo fled into exile in the Spanish enclave of Sidi Ifni, dying in 1942.[44]

A monument was erected by the French at the site of the battle of Sidi Bou Othman. It was destroyed after Morocco gained independence in 1956.[42]

Notes

  1. ^ Ferré (2000: p.170)
  2. ^ Lévi-Provençal (1913-36: p.57); Abun-Nasr (1987: p.370), Ferré (2000: p.176-7)
  3. ^ Cana (1913: p.1106); Burke (1976: p.200), Park and Boum (1996: p.133-34)
  4. ^ Cana (1913: p.1106); Burke (1976: p.190)
  5. ^ Gershovich (2000: p.94); Burke (1976: p.190-93)
  6. ^ Porch (1982: p.259-61)
  7. ^ Burke (1976: p.200)
  8. ^ Cornet (1914: p.1, 11); Verlet-Hanus (1913:p.45); Burke (1976: p.203-04); Porch (1982: p.264); Mangin (1986:p.115); Hoisington (1995: p.45); Park and Boum (1996: p.153-54)
  9. ^ a b Burke (1976: p.204)
  10. ^ Verlet-Hanus (1913: p.44-45)
  11. ^ Burke (1976: p.200-201)
  12. ^ Verlet-Hanus (1913: p.48); Simon (1930: p.254); Burke (1976: p.204); Porch (1982: p.264)
  13. ^ Composition as reported in Antony Muñoz's Sidi Bou Othmane website, which may need confirmation.
  14. ^ Cornet (1914: p.3); Verlet-Hanus (1913: p.43)
  15. ^ Cornet's (1914) chronicle claims the camp was set up at "Souk el Arba" in Rehamna country. Burke (1976) identifies it as modern Skhour Rehamna. Confusingly, there is another Souk El Arbaa nearby, a little further west. Skhour Rehmana lies directly south on the road between Mechra ben Abbou and Marrakesh.
  16. ^ Cornet (1914:p.11-12)
  17. ^ Cornet (1914: p.15)
  18. ^ Cornet (1914: p.17-18)
  19. ^ Cornet (1914: p.22-25); Burke (1976: p.206)
  20. ^ Burke (1976: p.205-06); Porch (1982: p.266)
  21. ^ Katz (2006:p.253); Burke (1976: p.200); Mangin (1986: p.116)
  22. ^ Cornet (1914: p.30-31)
  23. ^ Cornet (1914: p.31); Porch (1982: p.266), Mangin (1986:p.116) Ferre (2000:p.177)
  24. ^ Gershovich (2000:p.96)
  25. ^ Porch (1982:p.266)
  26. ^ Porch (1983: p.266); Mangin (1986: p.117)
  27. ^ Burke (1976: p.206) and Hughes (2001: p. 238) cite 10,000. Porch (1982:266) elevates the estimate to 15,000.
  28. ^ Ferré (2000: p.177)
  29. ^ a b c d Burke (1976: p.206); Porch (1982:266-67); Mangin (1986: p.117)
  30. ^ Mangin (1986: p.117)
  31. ^ Burke (1976: p.206) and Hughes (2001: p. 238) say four dead, Porch (1982:p.267) and Mangin (1986: p.117) say two dead.
  32. ^ Mangin (1986: p.118)
  33. ^ Mangin (1986: p.118-19); Hughes (2001: p. 238).
  34. ^ Mangin (1986: p.119)
  35. ^ Simon (1930: p.39); Mangin (1986: p.118)
  36. ^ Cornet (1914: p.49); Verlet-Hanus (1913: p.51) reports al-Hiba left Marrakesh at 5:30 AM on September 7.
  37. ^ Cornet (1914: p.53)
  38. ^ Cornet(1914: p.55)
  39. ^ Abun-Nasr (1987: p.371)
  40. ^ Hoisington (1995:p.94-95); Abun-Nasr (1987: p.371)
  41. ^ Hoisington (1995: p.100); Park and Boum (1996: p.153)
  42. ^ a b Hughes (2001: p. 238)
  43. ^ Hughes (2001); Hoisington (1995: p.100); Gershovich (2000: p.105)
  44. ^ a b Gershovich (2000: p.160)

References

  • Abun-Nasr, J.M. (1987) A History of the Maghrib in the Islamic Period. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. preview
  • Burke, Edmund (1976) Prelude to Protectorate in Morocco: Pre-colonial protest and resistance, 1860-1912. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Google books preview Retrieved December 9, 2012.
  • Cana, Frank R. (1913) "Morocco", in Chisholm, editor, 'Britannica Year Book, 1913 New York: Encyclopædia Britannica Company. p.1015-18
  • Cornet, C.J.A. (1914) A la conquête du Maroc Sud avec la colonne Mangin, 1912-1913. Paris: Plon-Nourit. online
  • Ferré, Jean (2000) Au Désert Interdit. Lausanne: L'Age d'Homme. preview
  • Gershovich, Moshe (2000) French Military Rule in Morocco: Colonialism and its Consequences New York: Cass preview
  • Hoisington, William A. (1995) Lyautey and the French Conquest of Morocco. New York: St. Martin's.
  • Hughes, Stephen O. (2001). Morocco Under King Hassan. Reading: Garnet & Ithaca Press. preview
  • Katz, Jonathan Glustrom (2006) Murder in Marrakesh: Émile Mauchamp and the French Colonial Adventure Bloomington: Indiana University Press preview
  • Lévi-Provençal, Évariste (1913–36) "Ma Al-Ainain" in, vol. 5, p.56-58
  • Mangin, Louis Eugène (1986) Le Général Mangin: 1866-1925. Paris: F. Lanore.preview
  • Park, T.K. and A. Boum (1996) Historical Dictionary of Morocco, Lanham, Md: Scarecrow
  • Porch, Douglas (1982) The Conquest of Morocco. 2005 edition, New York: Farrar Straus and Giraux. preview
  • Simon, Henri (1930) Un officier d'Afrique: le commandant Verlet-Hanus: mission saharienne, pacification marocaine (1898-1912). Paris: Peyronnet
  • Verlet-Hanus, Edmond Émile (1913) "La Révolte du Sud-Marocain en Juillet-Août 1912 et l'occupation de Merrakech; résumé de la conférence de M. le Commandant Verlet-Hanus 14 Février 1913, par M. Zimmerman." Bulletin de la Société de Géographie de Lyon, 2nd Sem. (Aug 1913), pp. 38–51 Gallica.

External links

  • Recueil. Campagnes du colonel Mangin au Maroc at Gallica, BnF: collection of postcard photographs from the 1912-13 Mangin campaign.
  • Sidi Bou Othmane website of Antony Muñoz (accessed November 22, 2012).

battle, sidi, othman, coordinates, 9033, 94222, 9033, 94222, important, battle, fought, sidi, othman, some, kilometers, north, marrakesh, during, french, conquest, morocco, victory, french, column, under, colonel, charles, mangin, over, forces, south, moroccan. Coordinates 31 54 12 N 7 56 32 W 31 9033 N 7 94222 W 31 9033 7 94222 The Battle of Sidi Bou Othman was an important battle fought at Sidi Bou Othman some 40 kilometers north of Marrakesh during the French conquest of Morocco It saw the victory of a French column under Colonel Charles Mangin over the forces of the south Moroccan leader Ahmed al Hiba in September 1912 As a result of the victory the French captured the city of Marrakesh and annexed southern Morocco into the French protectorate of Morocco The conquest was facilitated by the defection of the great qaids of the south notably the El Glaoui brothers Battle of Sidi Bou OthmanCharles Mangin enters Marrakesh 9 September 1912Date6 September 1912LocationSidi Bou Othman Morocco31 54 12 N 7 56 32 W 31 9033 N 7 94222 W 31 9033 7 94222ResultFrench victoryBelligerentsFrench colonial armyMoroccan resistanceCommanders and leadersCharles ManginAhmed al HibaMerebbi RebboStrength5 00010 000Casualties and losses274 000class notpageimage Location within Morocco Contents 1 Background 2 Mangin s column 3 Initial skirmishes 4 Battle 5 Aftermath 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBackground EditFrench encroachment on Morocco began in 1907 with the military occupation of the towns of Casablanca and Oujda following the assassination of some French nationals in Moroccan cities during disorders marked by anti colonial violence The French military presence outraged domestic opinion in Morocco but the new Alawite sultan Abd al Hafid of Morocco facing severe financial difficulties and dependent on French loans was unable to do much about it Some tribal leaders took matters into their own hands and attacked the French themselves Notable among these was the Saharan marabout Ma al Aynayn who had previously led the anti French resistance in Mauritania 1 In 1910 al Aynayn crossed the High Atlas with his veiled camel riding Saharan troops nicknamed the Blue Men aiming to liberate Casablanca but he was defeated by the French at Tadla on 23 June 1910 and forced to retreat to Tiznit in the Anti Atlas foothills of the Souss valley where he died shortly after 2 In early 1911 there was a massive uprising in Fez against Abd al Hafid which was put down by French troops 3 The entry of French troops into the Moroccan capital alarmed other European powers and led to a brief international crisis see Agadir Crisis To write out other European powers permanently France hurriedly concluded the Treaty of Fez in March 1912 by which Abd al Hafid effectively surrendered his sovereignty allowing France to establish a protectorate over Morocco General Hubert Lyautey was appointed the first French resident general 4 The event provoked uprisings across northern Morocco Tribal armies in the north promptly besieged the French colonial forces strung out on the line between Casablanca and Fez 5 Changing course the sultan Abd al Hafid himself entered into contact with the rebels prompting Lyautey to force him to abdicate the throne on 11 August 1912 in favor of his more pliable brother Yusuf 6 Call to arms by al Hiba s partisans as illustrated by the French peridiocal Le Petit Journal 1 September 1912 In the south Moroccan resistance rallied around Ahmed al Hiba the son of the late Ma al Aynayn who declared a jihad to expel the French from Morocco 7 Quickly gaining control of the Souss valley in July 1912 Ahmed al Hiba led his Saharan troops Blue Men and his growing army of Moroccan followers over the High Atlas The Hibists took possession of Marrakesh on 15 August 1912 Declaring the throne vacant with Abd al Hafid s abdication Ahmed al Hiba was recognized by the ulama of Marrakesh as the new sultan of Morocco The Blue Sultan 8 The rise of the new sultan in the south alarmed Lyautey as al Hiba undermined the legitimacy of the puppet sultan Yusuf and consequently threatened the French hold on the north 9 Lyautey rushed French diplomatic and military officials to try to persuade the great lords qaids of the south to prevent Marrakesh from falling in the hands of the Hibists 10 The great qaids notably the El Glaoui brothers Madani and Thami and their fellow qaids al Mtouggi and al Gundafi of the High Atlas had little love for al Hiba as he openly denounced the whole semi feudal system they represented and threatened their power and authority But the Hibist movement had swept up the rank and file of their tribes and the qaids were unable or reluctant to oppose al Hiba they had to play along or risk being deposed themselves 11 Eight French officials trapped in Marrakesh were taken hostage by al Hiba who hoped to use them as bargaining chips in negotiations for the recognition of his sultanate and insurance against a French attack on Marrakesh 12 Nonetheless some qaids notably Thami El Glaoui who secretly retained one of the French hostages with him continued clandestine communication with Lyautey and kept him up to date on the situation in Marrakesh 9 Mangin s column EditDeeming it the priority threat to the French protectorate Lyautey peeled away French colonial soldiers from their hard pressed positions in the north to assemble a new column to dislodge al Hiba from Marrakesh Lyautey placed the column under the command of Colonel Charles Mangin Mangin s column was composed of six companies of Senegalese tirailleurs two companies of Algerian tirailleurs two companies of colonial infantry a goum of Moroccan auxiliaries two cavalry squadrons and a mountain artillery battery They would be later joined by another column under Lieutenant Colonel Joseph composed of a battalion of zouaves two companies of Algerian tirailleurs a squadron of spahis and mobile artillery 13 Initial skirmishes EditMangin set out with his column from Casablanca on 14 August 1912 and reached the furthest French station at Mechra ben Abbou on the Oum Er Rbia River about half way on the north south road between Casablanca and Marrakesh 14 On 15 August the Mangin column advanced to Skhour Rehamna further south along the same road 15 Their position was harassed by Arab Rehamna tribesmen from the region who had recently adhered to the Hibist cause Lyautey ordered them to stay put there and await reinforcements from Lt Col Joseph from Doukkala 16 In the meantime Lyautey continued using backchannels to negotiate with al Hiba for the release of the French hostages Al Hiba dispatched an army to Ouham west of Skhour to ambush Joseph s column and prevent their junction Hearing of this Mangin launched a quick attack on the Hibist camp on 22 August breaking it up and forcing them to disperse The Hibists regrouped and attacked the French camp the next day but were fended off after a brief skirmish 17 Reinforced by Joseph the Mangin column proceeded back towards Skhour where they were instructed to stay put by Lyautey while negotiations continued Regional tribesmen continued harassing the French camp at Skhour 18 Hearing that a great Hibist army under al Hiba s brother Merebbi Rebbo was assembling to the south of them at Ben Guerir Mangin without consulting Lyautey ordered an offensive Mangin fell on the Hibist army at Ben Guerir on August 29 but with the terrain unfavorable to them the Hibists broke off the engagement and retreated back towards Marrakesh The French column returned to Skhour 19 On September 3 Lyautey received missives from Thami El Glaoui informing him that the situation in Marrakesh had turned decisively against the Hibists Al Hiba s puritanical edicts he famously ordered all unmarried women in Marrakesh to take a husband from among his mujahadeen had already alienated much of the city s resident population 20 The timidity and defeats of the Hibist armies in the skirmishes with Mangin now fostered doubts about al Hiba s military judgment and leadership qualities and began to disenchant his followers Even the more fanatical ones who regarded him as a mahdi began feeling uneasy Al Hiba s mystical promise that French bullets would turn into water and French shells into watermelons had been tested and found wanting 21 As al Hiba s popularity was weakening the qaids began feeling bolder Should the French march on Marrakesh El Glaoui promised the qaids were prepared to pounce inside the city and secure the French hostages themselves 22 Digesting all this information on the evening of 3 September Lyautey dispatched a message by wireless to Mangin famously stating only Allez y carrement Go straight ahead 23 Battle Edit Colonel Charles Mangin who led the French forces in the Battle of Sidi Bou Othman On the morning of September 5 1912 Mangin set out with his column of five thousand men six battalions two goums two and a half cavalry squadrons and three artillery batteries 24 They carried twelve 75mm field guns eight machine guns and 1 200 Gras rifles 25 The troops were organized on their march into a fighting square followed by a convoy square of 1 500 mules and 2 000 camels 26 On the dawn of September 6 the French column reached Sidi Bou Othman some 40 kilometers north of Marrakesh where the Hibist army was already gathered blocking the entrance to a key valley on the road to Marrakesh The Hibist force led by al Hiba s brother had around ten thousand men with 1 000 muzzle loading muskets the rest poorly armed many merely with sticks and stones stretched out on a two and half mile front 27 They carried with them two Krupp cannons and some eight hundred rounds under the command of a Spanish renegade 28 The French army was running out of water by this time and another scorching hot day was ahead so there was no question of avoiding or delaying engagement Mangin maintained his battle square placing his guns in the center of the infantry formations offering a mere half mile front and began his march against the Hibist line 29 The Hibists maintained formation as they marched forth to meet him their longer line enveloping the advancing square like a crescent The Hibists held their fire until around 1 400 meters Mangin waited until they were around 800 meters distant to halt his square and open fire 29 The cascading salvoes of French close range artillery machine guns and rifles devastated the ranks of the Hibist army Nonetheless the Hibists held formation and continued their enveloping approach The French square held ground reloading and firing relentlessly decimating the Hibist ranks as they approached 29 A 7 5 cm Gebirgskanone L 13 C 80 captured in Morocco at the Musee de La Marine Nationale de Toulon The concentration of continuous French firepower particularly the artillery and machine guns on the approaching tight human mass caused horrific casualties in the Hibist ranks The Hibists Krupp guns in inexperienced hands did little damage in response their aim being off 29 The Hibist charges fell consistently short of the French square the attackers never getting closer than a hundred meters before being mowed down The French thereby avoided the hand to hand engagement in which the Hibists s superior numbers might have tipped the balance 30 By nine o clock the battle was over Hibist volley fire began to falter with the army breaking up in retreat Mangin sent out his cavalry under Captain Picard to disperse the remainder and sweep through the Hibist camp and cut down survivors It had been a veritable massacre The Hibists had suffered two thousand dead and thousands more wounded Mangin s forces suffered merely four or two dead and twenty three wounded 31 The battle of Sidi bou Othman was the first ranged battle fought by the French in North Africa since the Battle of Isly of 1844 32 The Hibists employed much the same archaic tactics tight regiments in a firing line infantry charges auxiliary cavalry and light cannon as might be found in an early 19th century Napoleonic battle 33 These proved ineffective when confronted by modern French technology Mangin credited the victory to the judicious application of the superior speed and power of massed artillery and machine guns 34 Aftermath Edit Left Recovery of the French prisoners in Marrakesh Right Hubert Lyautey decorates the El Glaoui brothers as envisioned by Le Petit Journal 1912A few hours after the battle Mangin assembled a flying column under Lt Col Henri Simon to race to Marrakesh some 105 kilometers away and break the French hostages out before the Hibists could reorganize Simon s column was composed of two cavalry squadrons the goums and a section of the 75mm guns in all some 600 horsemen 35 Avoiding Hibist strongpoints Simon s column arrived at the Tensift River that same evening and entered into communication with the qaids inside the city At first light 7 September 1912 on a pre arranged signal as Simon s column left the Tensift s banks and approached the city the qaids pounced Forces loyal to the qaids Madani and Thami El Glaoui al Gundafi al Mtouggi and Driss Menou overwhelmed the Hibist garrison posts inside the city By the time Simon reached the Bab Doukkala gate at 10 o clock it was all over The qaids were in control of Marrakesh the French hostages were safely in their hands and al Hiba himself had fled the city with his remaining supporters 36 Mangin arrived with the rest of the army that afternoon and set up his camp at Gueliz northwest of the city where he received the Marrakeshi qaids and their oaths of allegiance to the sultan Yusuf 37 Two days later on 9 September 1912 the French army finally entered and took possession of the city of Marrakesh 38 Al Hiba fled to the Souss valley where his support was still strong The region around Marrakesh was organized as a military district initially under Mangin but given the lack of French troops Lyautey s policy was to rely on the grand qaids al Glawi al Mtouggi al Goundafi al Ayadi Haida etc to hold the south in their name 39 Thami El Glaoui was promptly restored to his former position as pasha of Marrakesh and awarded the Legion of Honour by Lyautey who personally visited Marrakesh in October 1912 While the French troops were reoriented northwards towards conquering the Tadla plain and the Middle Atlas see Zaian War it was the qaids who were placed in charge of putting an end to the Hibists in the Souss The qaids proved their worth almost immediately El Glaoui and al Goundafi led an invasion of the Souss valley in early 1913 capturing Taroudannt in May and Agadir in June driving the Hibists up into the mountains 40 The Hibists however would hold out there for much longer The outbreak of World War I in 1914 deprived the French authorities in Morocco of additional French troops and many of the officers broken in by the Moroccan campaign would go on to distinguish themselves in the European front During the war Germany supplied the Hibists with money guns and ammunition Although they were largely confined to the highland peaks and ravines the Hibists still presented a constant threat to the thin French hold on the southern Moroccan valleys In 1917 a French column under Leopold Justinard attempted to dislodge them from their mountain strongholds but the resistance proved too fierce 41 Ahmed al Hiba died on 23 May 1919 and was buried in Akerdous village 42 Despite the death of their charismatic leader and the evaporation of German support the Hibist movement continued under his brother Merebbi Rebbo 43 The Hibists were only finally reduced in 1934 after a concerted French campaign up the Anti Atlas 44 Rebbo fled into exile in the Spanish enclave of Sidi Ifni dying in 1942 44 A monument was erected by the French at the site of the battle of Sidi Bou Othman It was destroyed after Morocco gained independence in 1956 42 Notes Edit Ferre 2000 p 170 Levi Provencal 1913 36 p 57 Abun Nasr 1987 p 370 Ferre 2000 p 176 7 Cana 1913 p 1106 Burke 1976 p 200 Park and Boum 1996 p 133 34 Cana 1913 p 1106 Burke 1976 p 190 Gershovich 2000 p 94 Burke 1976 p 190 93 Porch 1982 p 259 61 Burke 1976 p 200 Cornet 1914 p 1 11 Verlet Hanus 1913 p 45 Burke 1976 p 203 04 Porch 1982 p 264 Mangin 1986 p 115 Hoisington 1995 p 45 Park and Boum 1996 p 153 54 a b Burke 1976 p 204 Verlet Hanus 1913 p 44 45 Burke 1976 p 200 201 Verlet Hanus 1913 p 48 Simon 1930 p 254 Burke 1976 p 204 Porch 1982 p 264 Composition as reported in Antony Munoz s Sidi Bou Othmane website which may need confirmation Cornet 1914 p 3 Verlet Hanus 1913 p 43 Cornet s 1914 chronicle claims the camp was set up at Souk el Arba in Rehamna country Burke 1976 identifies it as modern Skhour Rehamna Confusingly there is another Souk El Arbaa nearby a little further west Skhour Rehmana lies directly south on the road between Mechra ben Abbou and Marrakesh Cornet 1914 p 11 12 Cornet 1914 p 15 Cornet 1914 p 17 18 Cornet 1914 p 22 25 Burke 1976 p 206 Burke 1976 p 205 06 Porch 1982 p 266 Katz 2006 p 253 Burke 1976 p 200 Mangin 1986 p 116 Cornet 1914 p 30 31 Cornet 1914 p 31 Porch 1982 p 266 Mangin 1986 p 116 Ferre 2000 p 177 Gershovich 2000 p 96 Porch 1982 p 266 Porch 1983 p 266 Mangin 1986 p 117 Burke 1976 p 206 and Hughes 2001 p 238 cite 10 000 Porch 1982 266 elevates the estimate to 15 000 Ferre 2000 p 177 a b c d Burke 1976 p 206 Porch 1982 266 67 Mangin 1986 p 117 Mangin 1986 p 117 Burke 1976 p 206 and Hughes 2001 p 238 say four dead Porch 1982 p 267 and Mangin 1986 p 117 say two dead Mangin 1986 p 118 Mangin 1986 p 118 19 Hughes 2001 p 238 Mangin 1986 p 119 Simon 1930 p 39 Mangin 1986 p 118 Cornet 1914 p 49 Verlet Hanus 1913 p 51 reports al Hiba left Marrakesh at 5 30 AM on September 7 Cornet 1914 p 53 Cornet 1914 p 55 Abun Nasr 1987 p 371 Hoisington 1995 p 94 95 Abun Nasr 1987 p 371 Hoisington 1995 p 100 Park and Boum 1996 p 153 a b Hughes 2001 p 238 Hughes 2001 Hoisington 1995 p 100 Gershovich 2000 p 105 a b Gershovich 2000 p 160 References EditAbun Nasr J M 1987 A History of the Maghrib in the Islamic Period Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press preview Burke Edmund 1976 Prelude to Protectorate in Morocco Pre colonial protest and resistance 1860 1912 Chicago University of Chicago Press Google books preview Retrieved December 9 2012 Cana Frank R 1913 Morocco in Chisholm editor Britannica Year Book 1913 New York Encyclopaedia Britannica Company p 1015 18 Cornet C J A 1914 A la conquete du Maroc Sud avec la colonne Mangin 1912 1913 Paris Plon Nourit online Ferre Jean 2000 Au Desert Interdit Lausanne L Age d Homme preview Gershovich Moshe 2000 French Military Rule in Morocco Colonialism and its Consequences New York Cass preview Hoisington William A 1995 Lyautey and the French Conquest of Morocco New York St Martin s Hughes Stephen O 2001 Morocco Under King Hassan Reading Garnet amp Ithaca Press preview Katz Jonathan Glustrom 2006 Murder in Marrakesh Emile Mauchamp and the French Colonial Adventure Bloomington Indiana University Press preview Levi Provencal Evariste 1913 36 Ma Al Ainain in vol 5 p 56 58 Mangin Louis Eugene 1986 Le General Mangin 1866 1925 Paris F Lanore preview Park T K and A Boum 1996 Historical Dictionary of Morocco Lanham Md Scarecrow Porch Douglas 1982 The Conquest of Morocco 2005 edition New York Farrar Straus and Giraux preview Simon Henri 1930 Un officier d Afrique le commandant Verlet Hanus mission saharienne pacification marocaine 1898 1912 Paris Peyronnet Verlet Hanus Edmond Emile 1913 La Revolte du Sud Marocain en Juillet Aout 1912 et l occupation de Merrakech resume de la conference de M le Commandant Verlet Hanus 14 Fevrier 1913 par M Zimmerman Bulletin de la Societe de Geographie de Lyon 2nd Sem Aug 1913 pp 38 51 Gallica External links EditRecueil Campagnes du colonel Mangin au Maroc at Gallica BnF collection of postcard photographs from the 1912 13 Mangin campaign Sidi Bou Othmane website of Antony Munoz accessed November 22 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Sidi Bou Othman amp oldid 1132724705, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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