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French campaign in Egypt and Syria

French campaign in Egypt and Syria
Part of the War of the Second Coalition
Battle of the PyramidsBattle of the NileRevolt of CairoBattle of Abukir (1799)Battle of Abukir (1801)Battle of Alexandria (1801)
French campaign in Egypt and Syria

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Left to right, top to bottom:
Battles of the Pyramids, the Nile, Cairo, Abukir (1799), Abukir (1801), and Alexandria (1801)
Date1 July 1798 – 2 September 1801
(3 years, 2 months and 1 day)
Location
Result

Anglo-Ottoman victory

  • End of Mamluk rule in Egypt
  • Formal end of the Franco-Ottoman alliance
  • Failure of French expedition to Syria
  • Capitulation of French administration in Egypt
Belligerents

Ottoman Empire

 Great Britain (1798–1800)
 United Kingdom (1801)
Regency of Algiers[2]

 French Republic

Commanders and leaders
Selim III
Yusuf Pasha
Mustafa Pasha
Muhammad Ali Pasha
Jezzar Pasha
Abdullah Pasha
Murad Bey
Ibrahim Bey
Abdallah Bey 
Haim Farhi
Ralph Abercromby (DOW)
Gordon Drummond
Samuel Graham
John Moore
George Ramsay
John Hely-Hutchinson
William Beresford
Sidney Smith
Horatio Nelson
Mustapha Dey
Rais Hamidou
Antoine de Phélippeaux
Napoleon Bonaparte
Jean Kléber 
Thomas Dumas
Jacques Menou 
Jean Lannes
Louis Desaix
Joachim Murat
Louis-Nicolas Davout
Jean Rapp
René Savary
Jean-Antoine Verdier
Jean Reynier
Louis André Bon 
Jean-Baptiste Bessières
Cousin de Dommartin (DOW)
Maximilian Caffarelli (DOW)
Jean-Baptiste Perrée
Charles Dugua
Martin Dupuy 
Brueys d'Aigalliers 
Pierre-Charles Villeneuve
Horace Sébastiani
Charles-Louis Lasalle
Rose de Beauharnais
Louis Bonaparte
Géraud Duroc
Joseph Sulkowski (DOW)
Louis Friant
Strength
220,000 soldiers
30,000 soldiers
40,000 soldiers
10,000 sailors
Casualties and losses
Ottoman Empire:
50,000 killed and wounded[3]
15,000 captured
Total: 65,000
France:
15,000 killed and wounded[3]
23,500 captured[4]
Total: 38,500
  Napoleon in command till 23 August 1799

The French campaign in Egypt and Syria (1798–1801) was a Napoleonic campaign in the Ottoman territories of Egypt and Syria, executed by Napoleon Bonaparte. Napoleon proclaimed to "defend French trade interests" and to establish "scientific enterprise" in the region. It was the primary purpose of the Mediterranean campaign of 1798, which was a series of naval engagements that included the capture of Malta and the Greek island Crete, later arriving in the Port of Alexandria. The campaign ended in defeat for Napoleon after abandoning his troops to head back to France for the looming risk of a Second Coalition. This led to the death and withdrawal of French troops in the region.

On a scientific front, the expedition was a success that led to the discovery of the Rosetta Stone, creating the field of Egyptology. Despite early victories and an initially successful expedition into Syria, Napoleon and his Armée d'Orient were eventually defeated and forced to withdraw, especially after suffering the defeat of the supporting French fleet by the British Royal Navy at the Battle of the Nile.

Preparations and voyage edit

Proposal edit

At the time of the invasion, the Directory had assumed executive power in France. It would resort to the army to maintain order in the face of the Jacobin and royalist threats, and count in particular on General Bonaparte, already a successful commander, having led the Italian campaign.

The notion of annexing Egypt as a French colony had been under discussion since François Baron de Tott undertook a secret mission to the Levant in 1777 to determine its feasibility.[5] Baron de Tott's report was favourable, but no immediate action was taken.[5] Nevertheless, Egypt became a topic of debate between Talleyrand and Napoleon, which continued in their correspondence during Napoleon's Italian campaign.[5] In early 1798, Bonaparte proposed an expedition to Egypt and convinced the Directory to establish the Commission des Sciences et des Arts.[5] He further wished to strengthen French trade interests over those of Great Britain in the Middle East,[6] hoping to join forces with France's ally Tipu Sultan, ruler of Mysore in India and an opponent of British control in that country.[6] As France was not ready for a head-on attack on Great Britain itself, the Directory decided to intervene indirectly and create a "double port" connecting the Red Sea to the Mediterranean Sea, prefiguring the Suez Canal.[7]

At the time, Egypt had been an Ottoman province since 1517, but was now out of direct Ottoman control, and was in disorder, with dissension among the ruling Mamluk elite. In France, "Egyptian" fashion was in full swing – intellectuals believed that Egypt was the cradle of Western civilization and wished to conquer it. French traders already based on the Nile were complaining of harassment by the Mamluks, and Napoleon wished to walk in the footsteps of Alexander the Great. He assured the Directory that "as soon as he had conquered Egypt, he will establish relations with the Indian princes and, together with them, attack the English in their possessions."[8] According to a 13 February report by Talleyrand, "Having occupied and fortified Egypt, we shall send force from Suez to the Sultanate of Mysore, to join the forces of Tipu Sultan and drive away the English."[8] The Directory agreed to the plan in March, though troubled by its scope and cost. They saw that it would remove the popular and over-ambitious Napoleon from the centre of power, though this motive long remained secret.

Before departure from Toulon edit

Rumours became rife as 40,000 soldiers and 10,000 sailors were gathered in French Mediterranean ports. A large fleet was assembled at Toulon: 13 ships of the line, 14 frigates, and 400 transports. To avoid interception by the British fleet under Nelson, the expedition's target was kept secret. It was known only to Bonaparte himself, his generals Berthier and Caffarelli, and the mathematician Gaspard Monge.[7] Bonaparte was the commander, with subordinates including Thomas Alexandre Dumas, Kléber, Desaix, Berthier, Caffarelli, Lannes, Damas, Murat, Andréossy, Belliard, Menou, and Zajączek. His aides de camp included his brother Louis Bonaparte, Duroc, Eugène de Beauharnais, Thomas Prosper Jullien, and the Polish nobleman Joseph Sulkowski.

The fleet at Toulon was joined by squadrons from Genoa, Civitavecchia and Bastia and was put under the command of Admiral Brueys and Contre-amirals Villeneuve, Du Chayla, Decrès and Ganteaume.

The fleet was about to set sail when a crisis developed with Austria, and the Directory recalled Bonaparte in case war broke out. The crisis was resolved in a few weeks, and Bonaparte received orders to travel to Toulon as soon as possible. It is claimed[by whom?] that, in a stormy meeting with the Directory, Bonaparte threatened to dissolve them and director Reubell gave him a pen saying "Sign there, general!"

Bonaparte arrived at Toulon on 9 May, lodging with Benoît Georges de Najac, the officer in charge of preparing the fleet. The army embarked confident in their commander's talent and on 19 May, just as he embarked, Bonaparte addressed the troops, especially those who had served under him in the Armée d'Italie:

Soldiers! You are one of the wings of the French army. You have made war on the mountains, on the plains, and in cities; it remains for you to fight on the seas. The Roman legions, that you sometimes imitated but no longer equalled, fought Carthage now on this same sea and now on the plains of Zama... Soldiers, sailors, you have been neglected until this day; today, the greatest concern of the Republic is for you... The genius of liberty, which made you, at her birth, the arbiter of Europe, wants to be genius of the seas and the furthest nations.

Capture of Malta edit

When Napoleon's fleet arrived off Malta, Napoleon demanded that the Knights of Malta allow his fleet to enter the port and take on water and supplies. Grand Master von Hompesch replied that only two foreign ships would be allowed to enter the port at a time. Under that restriction, re-victualling the French fleet would take weeks, and it would be vulnerable to the British fleet of Admiral Nelson. Napoleon therefore ordered the invasion of Malta.[9]

The French Revolution had significantly reduced the Knights' income and their ability to put up serious resistance. Half of the Knights were French, and most of these knights refused to fight.[9]

French troops disembarked in Malta at seven points on the morning of 11 June. General Louis Baraguey d'Hilliers landed soldiers and cannon in the western part of the main island of Malta, under artillery fire from Maltese fortifications. The French troops met some initial resistance but pressed forward. The Knights' ill-prepared force in that region, numbering only about 2,000, regrouped. The French pressed on with their attack. After a fierce gun battle lasting twenty-four hours, most of the Knights' force in the west surrendered.[9] Napoleon, during his stay in Malta, resided at Palazzo Parisio in Valletta.[10][11][12]

Napoleon then opened negotiations. Faced with vastly superior French forces and the loss of western Malta, von Hompesch surrendered the main fortress of Valletta.[9]

Alexandria to Syria edit

Disembarkment at Alexandria edit

 
Landing of Napoleon's troops in Egypt in July 1798

Napoleon departed Malta for Egypt. After successfully eluding detection by the Royal Navy for thirteen days, the fleet was in sight of Alexandria where it landed on 1 July, although Napoleon's plan had been to land elsewhere. On the day of the landing, Napoleon told his troops "I promise to each soldier who returns from this expedition, enough to purchase six arpents of land." (approximately 7.6 acres or 3.1 ha) and added:

The peoples we will be living alongside are Muslims; their first article of faith is "There is no other god but God, and Mahomet is his prophet". Do not contradict them; treat them as you treated the Jews, the Italians; respect their muftis and their imams, as you respected their rabbis and bishops. Have the same tolerance for the ceremonies prescribed by the Quran, for their mosques, as you had for the convents, for the synagogues, for the religion of Moses and that of Jesus Christ. The Roman legions used to protect all religions. You will here find different customs to those of Europe, you must get accustomed to them. The people among whom we are going treat women differently to us; but in every country whoever violates one is a monster. Pillaging only enriches a small number of men; it dishonours us, it destroys our resources; it makes enemies of the people who it is in our interest to have as our friends. The first city we will encounter was built by Alexander [the Great]. We shall find at every step great remains worthy of exciting French emulation.[13]

On 1 July, Napoleon, aboard the ship L'Orient en route to Egypt, wrote the following proclamation to the Muslim inhabitants of Alexandria:

For too long the beys who govern Egypt have insulted the French nation and covered their traders in slanders. The hour of their punishment has come. For too long this horde of slaves, bought in the Caucasus and Georgia, have tyrannised the most beautiful part of the world; but God, on whom all depends, has ordained that their empire shall end. People of Egypt, they have told you that I come to destroy your religion, but do not believe it; [tell them] in reply [that] I come to restore your rights, punish the usurpers and that I respect God, his prophet and the Quran more than the Mamluks. Tell them that all men are equal before God; wisdom, talents, virtues are the only things to make one man different from another... Is there a more beautiful land? It belongs to the Mamluks. If Egypt is their farm, then they should show the lease that God gave them for it... Cadis, cheiks, imans, tchorbadjis, and notables of the nation [I ask you to] tell the people that we are true friends of Muslims. Wasn't it us who destroyed the Knights of Malta? Wasn't it us who destroyed the Pope who used to say that he had a duty to make war on Muslims? Wasn't it us who have at all times been friends to the Great Lord and enemies to his enemies? ... Thrice happy are those who will be with us! They shall prosper in their fortune and in their rank. Happy are those who will be neutral! They will get to know us over time, and join their ranks with ours. But unhappy, thrice unhappy, are those who shall arm themselves [to fight] for the Mamluks and who shall fight against us! There shall be no hope for them, they shall perish.[14][15]

 
Kléber wounded in front of Alexandria, engraving by Adolphe-François Pannemaker

Despite the idealistic promises proclaimed by Napoleon, Egyptian intellectuals like 'Abd al-Rahman al-Jabarti (1753–1825 C.E/ 1166–1240 A.H) were heavily critical of Napoleon's objectives. As a major chronicler of the French invasion, Jabarti decried the French invasion of Egypt as the start of:

"fierce fights and important incidents; of the momentous mishaps and appalling afflictions, of the multiplication of malice and the acceleration of affairs; of successive sufferings and turning times; of the inversion of the innate and the elimination of the established; of horrors upon horrors and contradicting conditions; of the perversion of all precepts and the onset of annihilation; of the dominance of destruction and the occurrence of occasions"[16]

Menou had been the first to set out for Egypt, and was the first Frenchman to land. Bonaparte and Kléber landed together and joined Menou at night at the cove of Marabout (Citadel of Qaitbay), on which the first French tricolour to be hoisted in Egypt was raised.

On the night of the 1st of July, Bonaparte who was informed that Alexandria intended to resist him, rushed to get a force ashore without waiting for the artillery or the cavalry to land, in which he marched on Alexandria at the head of 4,000 to 5,000 men.[17][18] At 2 am, 2 July, he set off marching in three columns, on the left, Menou attacked the "triangular fort",[18] where he received seven wounds, while Kléber was in the centre, in which he received a bullet in the forehead but was only wounded, and Louis André Bon on the right attacked the city gates.[18] Alexandria was defended by Koraim Pasha and 500 men.[19] However, after a rather lively shooting in the city, the defenders gave up and fled. The city had not had time to surrender and put itself at the French's discretion but, despite Bonaparte's orders, the French soldiers broke into the city.

 
The capture of Alexandria, bas-relief on the Arc de Triomphe in Paris

When the whole expeditionary force had been disembarked, Admiral Brueys received orders to take the fleet to Aboukir Bay before anchoring the battle-fleet in the old port of Alexandria if possible or taking it to Corfu. These precautions were made vital by the imminent arrival of the British fleet, which had already been seen near Alexandria 24 hours before the French fleet's arrival. It was wisest to avoid the risks of a naval battle – a defeat could have disastrous results and it was in the force's better interests to go by land, marching at top speed to Cairo to frighten the enemy commanders and surprise them before they could put any defence measures in place.

Victory on land, defeat at sea edit

 
1803 map noting fleet anchor points and location of 17 battles: Carte physique et politique de la syrie pour servir a l'histoire des conquetes du general Bonaparte en Orient
 
The Battle of the Pyramids, Louis-François, Baron Lejeune, 1808

Louis Desaix marched across the desert with his division and two cannon, arriving at Demenhour, 24 kilometres (15 mi) from Alexandria, on 18 Messidor (6 July). Meanwhile, Bonaparte left Alexandria, leaving the city under Kléber's command. General Dugua marched on Rosetta, with orders to seize and hold the entrance to the port housing the French fleet, which had to follow the route to Cairo down the river's left bank and rejoin the army at Rahmanié. On 20 Messidor (8 July), Bonaparte arrived at Demenhour, where he found the forces that had met up, and on 22 Messidor they marched to Rahmanié, where they then awaited the fleet with their provisions. The fleet arrived on 24 Messidor (12 July) and the army began to march again at night, followed by the fleet.

The winds' violence suddenly forced the fleet to the army's left and straight into the enemy fleet, which was supported by musket fire from 4,000 Mamluks, reinforced by peasants and Arabs. The French fleet had numerical superiority but still lost its gunboats to the enemy. Attracted by the sound of gunfire, Bonaparte ordered his land force to the charge and attacked the village of Chebreiss, which was captured after two hours' fierce fighting. The enemy fled in disorder towards Cairo, leaving 600 dead on the battlefield.

 
The Battle of the Nile: Destruction of L'Orient, August 1, 1798

After a day's rest at Chebreiss, the French land force continued the pursuit. On 2 Thermidor (20 July), it arrived 800 metres (12 mi) from the village of Embabé. The heat was unbearable and the army was exhausted and needed a rest, but there was not enough time and so Bonaparte drew up his 25,000 troops for battle approximately 15 km (9 mi) from the Pyramids of Giza. He is said to have shown his army the pyramids behind the enemy's left flank and at the moment of ordering the attack shouted "Soldiers, see the tops of the Pyramids" – in accounts written long afterwards, this phrase was altered into "Soldiers, remember that from the top of these pyramids, 40 centuries of history contemplate you." This was the start of the so-called Battle of the Pyramids, a French victory over an enemy force of about 21,000 Mamluks.[20] (Around 40,000 Mamluk soldiers stayed away from the battle.) The French defeated the Mamluk cavalry with a giant infantry square, with cannons and supplies safely on the inside. In all 300 French and approximately 6,000 Mamluks were killed. The battle gave rise to dozens of stories and drawings.

Dupuy's brigade pursued the routed enemy and at night entered Cairo, which had been abandoned by the beys Mourad and Ibrahim. On 4 Thermidor (22 July), the notables of Cairo came to Giza to meet Bonaparte and offered to hand over the city to him. Three days later, he moved his main headquarters there. Desaix was ordered to follow Mourad, who had set off for Upper Egypt. An observation corps was put in place at Elkanka to keep an eye on the movements of Ibrahim, who was heading towards Syria. Bonaparte personally led the pursuit of Ibrahim, beat him at Salahie and pushed him completely out of Egypt.

The transports had sailed back to France, but the battle fleet stayed and supported the army along the coast. The British fleet under the command of Horatio Nelson had been searching in vain for the French fleet for weeks. The British fleet had not found it in time to prevent the landings in Egypt, but on 1 August Nelson discovered the French warships anchored in a strong defensive position in the Bay of Abukir. The French believed that they were open to attack only on one side, the other side being protected by the shore. During the Battle of the Nile the arriving British fleet under Horatio Nelson managed to slip half of their ships in between the land and the French line, thus attacking from both sides. In a few hours 11 out of the 13 French ships of the line and 2 out of the 4 French frigates were captured or destroyed; the four remaining ships fled. This frustrated Bonaparte's goal of strengthening the French position in the Mediterranean Sea, and instead put it totally under British control. News of the naval defeat reached Bonaparte en route back to Cairo from defeating Ibrahim but, far from being worried, Mullié states:

This disastrous event did not disconcert [Bonaparte] at all – ever impenetrable, he did not allow any emotion to appear that he had not tested in his mind. Having calmly read the despatch which informed him that he and his army were now prisoners in Egypt, he said "We no longer have a navy. Well! We'll have to stay here, or leave as great men just as the ancients did". The army then showed itself happy at this short energetic response, but the native Egyptians considered the defeat at Aboukir as fortune turning in their favour and so from then on busied themselves to find means to throw off the hateful yoke the foreigners were trying to impose on them by force and to hunt them from their country. This project was soon put into execution.[21]


After the Battle of Pyramids, Napoleon instituted a French administration in Cairo and suppressed the subsequent rebellions violently. Although Napoleon tried to co-opt local Egyptian ulema, scholars like Al-Jabarti poured scorn on the ideas and cultural ways of the French.[22] Despite their cordial proclamations to the natives, with some French soldiers even converting to Islam, clerics like Abdullah al-Sharqawi condemned the French as:

"‘materialist, libertine philosophers … they deny the Resurrection, and the afterlife, and … [the] prophets"[23]

Bonaparte's administration of Egypt edit

 
Napoleon in Cairo, by Jean-Léon Gérôme, 19th century, Princeton University Art Museum
 
The skeleton of Napoleon's Arabian horse, Marengo, on display at the National Army Museum in London
 
"Tracé du théatre des opérations militaires" from E.L.F. Hauet's manuscripts of the Campaign in Egypt at the American University in Cairo

After the naval defeat at Aboukir, Bonaparte's campaign remained land-bound. His army still succeeded in consolidating power in Egypt, although it faced repeated nationalist uprisings, and Napoleon began to behave as absolute ruler of all Egypt. He set up a pavilion and from within it presided over a fête du Nil – it was he who gave the signal to throw into the floats the statue of the river's fiancée, his name and Mohammed's were mingled in the same acclamations, on his orders gifts were distributed to the people, and he gave kaftans to his main officers.

In a largely unsuccessful effort to gain the support of the Egyptian population, Bonaparte issued proclamations that cast him as a liberator of the people from Ottoman and Mamluk oppression, praising the precepts of Islam and claiming friendship between France and the Ottoman Empire despite French intervention in the breakaway state. This position as a liberator initially gained him solid support in Egypt and later led to admiration for Napoleon from the Albanian Muhammad Ali of Egypt, who succeeded where Bonaparte had not in reforming Egypt and declaring its independence from the Ottomans. In a letter to a sheikh in August, Napoleon wrote, "I hope... I shall be able to unite all the wise and educated men of all the countries and establish a uniform regime based on the principles of the Quran which alone are true and which alone can lead men to happiness."[24] Bonaparte's secretary Bourienne wrote that his employer had no serious interest in Islam or any other religion beyond their political value.

Bonaparte's principle was... to look upon religions as the work of men, but to respect them everywhere as a powerful engine of government... If Bonaparte spoke as a Mussulman (Muslim), it was merely in his character of a military and political chief in a Mussulman country. To do so was essential to his success, to the safety of his army, and... to his glory... In India he would have been for Ali, at Thibet for the Dalai-lama, and in China for Confucius."[25]

Shortly after Bonaparte's return from facing Ibrahim came Mohammed's birthday, which was celebrated with great pomp. Bonaparte himself directed the military parades for the occasion, preparing for this festival in the sheik's house wearing oriental dress and a turban. It was on this occasion that the divan granted him the title Ali-Bonaparte after Bonaparte proclaimed himself "a worthy son of the Prophet" and "favourite of Allah". Around the same time he took severe measures to protect pilgrim caravans from Egypt to Mecca, writing a letter himself to the governor of Mecca.

Even so, thanks to the taxes he imposed on them to support his army, the Egyptians remained unconvinced of the sincerity of all Bonaparte's attempts at conciliation and continued to attack him ceaselessly. Any means, even sudden attacks and assassination, were allowed to force the "infidels" out of Egypt. Military executions were unable to deter these attacks and they continued.

22 September was the anniversary of the founding of the First French Republic and Bonaparte organised the most magnificent celebration possible. On his orders, an immense circus was built in the largest square in Cairo, with 105 columns (each with a flag bearing the name of a département) round the edge and a colossal inscribed obelisk at the centre. On seven classical altars were inscribed the names of heroes killed in the French Revolutionary Wars. Two triumphal arches were built to commemorate the campaign: a wooden arc de triomphe in Azbakiyya Square, and a second arch which was inscribed with the words "There is no god but God, and Muhammad is his prophet" and decorated by the Genoese artist Michel Rigo with scenes from the Battle of the Pyramids.[26] Here there was some awkwardness – the painting flattered the French but aggrieved the defeated Egyptians they were trying to win over as allies.

On the day of the festival, Bonaparte addressed his troops, enumerating their exploits since the 1793 siege of Toulon and telling them:

From the English, famous for arts and commerce, to the hideous and fierce Bedouin, you have caught the gaze of the world. Soldiers, your destiny is fair... This day, 40 million citizens celebrate the era of representative government, 40 million citizens think of you.

The speech was followed by cries of "Vive la République!" and a cannon volley. Later, Bonaparte held a feast for two hundred people in a garden in Cairo and sent soldiers to plant a French flag on the top of a pyramid.[27]

Napoleon's administration of Egypt is important in Coptic history. On 30 July 1798, just a few days after his arrival, he appointed Jirjis Al-Jawhary (brother of Ibrahim El-Gohary and the most prominent Coptic layperson) as General Steward of Egypt.[28][29] In his Declaration to the Coptic Nation, Napoleon elevated them from dhimmi to equal citizens, permitting them to “carry weapons, mount mules or horses, wear turbans and dress in whatever way they like”. He also punished those who had killed Copts in the chaos following the French arrival. In return, he demanded that the Copts show “zeal and fidelity in the service of the (French) Republic”.[30] On 21 December 1798, he appointed four Coptic members to his new consultative assembly that replaced the first assemblies, and which did not include Copts, and which he had to abolish soon after the First Cairo Revolution.

Pursuit of Mamluks edit

After his defeat at the Pyramids, Mourad Bey retreated to Upper Egypt. On 25 August 1798, General Desaix embarked at the head of his division on a flotilla and sailed up the Nile.[31] On 31 August, Desaix arrived at Beni Suef where he began to encounter supply problems,[32] then he went up the Nile to Behneseh and progressed towards Minya. The Mamluks did not fight, and the flotilla returned on September 12 at the entrance of Bahr Yussef.[32] Desaix learned that the Mamluks were in the plain of Faiyum by 24 September.[33]

The first contact between the two sides occurred on 3 October and a second minor fight took place, which began to deplete food and ammunition of the French forces.[33]

On 7 October, Mourad Bey's troops came out of Sédiman's entrenchments and attacked the French, who formed themselves into three squares, one large and two small at its angles.[34] The Mamluks as previous encounters attacked furiously but were repulsed.[33] The Mamluks attempted to use their four cannons, but a vigorous attack led by Captain Jean Rapp managed to capture them.[33]

After several hours of fighting, the French went on the offensive and the Mamluks fled southwards.[34]

Revolt of Cairo edit

 
Revolt in Cairo
 
The uprising in Cairo. Napoleon extended amnesty to the leaders of the revolt in 1798.

In 1798, Napoleon led the French army into Egypt, swiftly conquering Alexandria and Cairo. However, in October of that year, discontent against the French led to an uprising by the people of Cairo. While Bonaparte was in Old Cairo, the city's population began spreading weapons around to one another and fortifying strongpoints, especially at the Al-Azhar Mosque. A French commander, Dominique Dupuy, was killed by the revolting Cairenes, as well as Bonaparte's Aide-de-camp, Joseph Sulkowski. Excited by the sheikhs and imams, the local citizens swore by the Prophet to exterminate all and any Frenchman they met, and all Frenchmen they encountered – at home or in the streets – were mercilessly slaughtered. Crowds rallied at the city gates to keep out Bonaparte, who was repulsed and forced to take a detour to get in via the Boulaq gate.

The French army's situation was critical – the British were threatening French control of Egypt after their victory at the Battle of the Nile, Murad Bey and his army were still in the field in Upper Egypt, and the generals Menou and Dugua were only just able to maintain control of Lower Egypt. The Ottoman peasants had common cause with those rising against the French in Cairo – the whole region was in revolt. A manifesto of the Great Lord was published widely throughout Egypt, stating:

The French people are a nation of stubborn infidels and unbridled rascals... They look upon the Koran, the Old Testament and the New Testament as fables... Soon, troops as numerous as they are formidable will advance on us by land, at the same time ships of the line as high as the mountains will cover the surface of the seas... If it pleases God, it is reserved for you to preside over their [i.e. the French forces in Egypt] entire destruction; as dust is scattered by the wind, there will not remain a single vestige of these infidels: for the promise of God is formal, the hope of the wicked man will be deceived, and the wicked men will perish. Glory to the Lord of the worlds!

The French responded by setting up cannons in the Citadel and firing them at areas containing rebel forces. During the night, French soldiers advanced around Cairo and destroyed any barricades and fortifications they came across.[35] The rebels soon began to be pushed back by the strength of the French forces, gradually losing control of their areas of the city. Bonaparte personally hunted down rebels from street to street and forced them to seek refuge in the Al-Azhar Mosque. Bonaparte said that "He [i.e God] is too late – you've begun, now I will finish!". He then immediately ordered his cannon to open fire on the Mosque. The French broke down the gates and stormed into the building, massacring the inhabitants. At the end of the revolt 5,000 to 6,000 Cairenes were dead or wounded.

Syria edit

Canal of the Pharaohs edit

 
Bonaparte and his chief of staff in Egypt, painting by Jean-Léon Gérôme, 1863

With Egypt quiet again and under his control, Bonaparte used this time of rest to visit Suez and see with his own eyes the possibility of a canal (known as the Canal of the Pharaohs) said to have been cut in antiquity between the Red Sea and the Nile by order of the pharaohs. Before setting out on the expedition, he gave Cairo back its self-government as a token of its pardon – a new 'divan' made up of 60 members replaced the military commission.

Then, accompanied by his colleagues from the Institut, Berthollet, Monge, Le Père, Dutertre, Costaz, Caffarelli, and followed by a 300-man escort, Bonaparte set out for the Red Sea and after three days' marching across the desert he and his caravan arrived at Suez. After giving orders to complete the fortifications at Suez, Bonaparte crossed the Red Sea and on 28 December moved into Sinai to look for the celebrated mountains of Moses 17 kilometres from Suez. On his return, surprised by the rising tide, he ran the risk of drowning. Arriving back at Suez, after much exploration the expedition fulfilled its aim, finding the remains of the ancient canal built by Senusret III and Necho II.

Ottoman offensives edit

 
Map of campaigns in Egypt and Syria

In the meantime the Ottomans in Constantinople (modern-day Istanbul) received news of the French fleet's destruction at Aboukir and believed this spelled the end for Bonaparte and his expedition, trapped in Egypt. Sultan Selim III decided to wage war against France, and sent two armies to Egypt. The first army, under the command of Jezzar Pasha, had set out with 12,000 soldiers; but was reinforced with troops from Damascus, Aleppo, Iraq (10,000 men), and Jerusalem (8,000 men). The second army, under the command of Mustafa Pasha, began on Rhodes with about eight thousand soldiers. He also knew he would get about 42,000 soldiers from Albania, Constantinople, Asia Minor, and Greece. The Ottomans planned two offensives against Cairo: from Syria, across the desert of El Salheya-Bilbeis-Al Khankah, and from Rhodes by sea landing in the Aboukir area or the port city of Damietta.

French response edit

In January 1799, during the canal expedition, the French learned of the hostile Ottoman movements and that Jezzar had seized the desert fort of El-Arish 16 km (10 mi) from Syria's frontier with Egypt, which he was in charge of guarding. Certain that war with the Ottoman sultan was imminent and that he would be unable to defend against the Ottoman army, Bonaparte decided that his best defence would be to attack them first in Syria, where a victory would give him more time to prepare against the Ottoman forces on Rhodes.

He prepared around 13,000 soldiers who were organised in divisions under the command of Generals Reynier (with 2,160 men), Kléber (with 2,336), Bon (2,449), Lannes (2,938), a cavalry division under General Murat (900), a brigade of infantry and cavalry under Brigade chief Bessières (400), a camel company (89), artillery under Dommartin (1,387), and engineers and sappers under Caffarelli (3,404). Every infantry and cavalry division had 6 cannons. Napoleon took 16 siege cannons which were placed on ships in Damietta under the command of Captain Standelet. He also ordered contre-amiral Perrée to Jaffa with siege artillery pieces. The total artillery sent on the campaign was 80 cannon.

Reynier and the vanguard quickly arrived before Arish, captured it, destroyed part of the garrison and forced the rest to take refuge in the castle. At the same time he caused Ibrahim's mamluks to flee and captured their camp. Bonaparte's French forces left Egypt on 5 February and, seven days after leaving Cairo, Bonaparte too arrived at Arish and bombarded one of the castle towers. The garrison surrendered two days later and some of the garrison joined the French army.

Jaffa edit

After marching 100 kilometres (60 mi) across the desert the army arrived in Gaza, where it rested for two days, and then moved onto Jaffa. This city was surrounded by high walls flanked by towers. Jezzar had entrusted its defence to elite troops, with the artillery manned by 1,200 Ottoman gunners. The city was one of the ways into Syria, its port could be used by his fleet and a large part of the expedition's success depended on its fall. This meant Bonaparte had to capture the city before advancing further, and so he laid siege to it from 3–7 March.

All the outer works were in the besiegers' power and a breach could be produced. When Bonaparte sent a Turk to the city's commander to demand his surrender, the commander beheaded him despite the envoy's neutrality and ordered a sortie. He was repulsed and on the evening of the same day the besiegers' cannonballs caused one of the towers to crumble. Despite the defenders' desperate resistance, Jaffa fell. Two days and two nights of carnage were enough to assuage the French soldiers' fury[editorializing]  – 4,500 prisoners were shot or beheaded by an executioner taken on in Egypt. This vengeful execution found apologists, who wrote that Napoleon could neither afford to hold such a large number of prisoners nor let them escape to rejoin Jezzar's ranks.

 
Napoleon visiting the plague victims of Jaffa, by Antoine-Jean Gros

Before leaving Jaffa, Bonaparte set up a divan for the city along with a large hospital on the site of the Carmelite monastery at Mount Carmel to treat those of his soldiers who had caught the plague, whose symptoms had been seen among them since the start of the siege. A report from generals Bon and Rampon on the plague's spread worried Bonaparte. To calm his army, it is said he went into the sufferers' rooms, spoke with and consoled the sick and touched them, saying "See, it's nothing", then left the hospital and told those who thought his actions unwise "It was my duty, I'm commander-in-chief". Some later historians state that Napoleon avoided touching or even meeting plague-sufferers to avoid catching it and that his visits to the sick were invented by later Napoleonic propaganda. For example, long after the campaign, Antoine-Jean Gros produced the commissioned painting Bonaparte Visiting the Plague Victims of Jaffa in 1804. This showed Napoleon touching a sick man's body, modelling him on an Ancien Régime king-healer touching sufferers from the "King's Evil" during his coronation rites – this was no coincidence, since 1804 was the year Napoleon Bonaparte crowned himself emperor.

Mount Tabor edit

 
Battle of Mount Tabor against the Ottomans
 
The monument to Napoleon's soldiers at Stella Maris Monastery, Haifa

From Jaffa the army set off for the coastal town of Acre. En route it captured Haifa and the munitions and provisions stored there, along with the castle at Jaffe, the castle at Nazareth and even the town of Tyre much farther up the coast. The siege of Acre began on 18 March but the French were unable to take it and it was here that the Syrian campaign came to an abrupt halt. The city was defended by newly created Ottoman modern, elite infantry (Nizam-ı Cedid) under the command of Jezzar Pasha and was right on the coast, enabling it to be reinforced and resupplied by the British and Ottoman fleets.

After sixty days' repeated attacks and two murderous and inconclusive assaults, the city remained uncaptured. Even so, it was still awaiting reinforcements by sea as well as a large army forming up in Asia on the sultan's orders to march against the French. To find out the latter's movements, Jezzar ordered a general sortie against Bonaparte's camp. This sortie was supported by its own artillery and a naval bombardment from the British. With his usual impetuosity, Bonaparte pushed Jezzar's columns back against their own walls and then went to help Kléber, who was retrenched in the ruins with 4,000 Frenchmen under his command against 20,000 Ottomans at Mount Tabor. Bonaparte conceived a trick which used all the advantages offered him by the enemy position, sending Murat and his cavalry across the River Jordan to defend the river crossing and Vial and Rampon to march on Nablus, while Bonaparte himself put his troops between the Ottomans and the magazines. These manoeuvres were successful, in what was known as the Battle of Mount Tabor. The enemy army, taken by surprise at many points at once, was routed and forced to retreat, leaving their camels, tents, provisions and 5,000 dead on the battlefield.

Acre edit

Returning to besiege Acre, Bonaparte learned that Rear-Admiral Perrée had landed seven siege artillery pieces at Jaffa. Bonaparte then ordered two assaults, both vigorously repulsed. A fleet was sighted flying the Ottoman flag and Bonaparte realised he must capture the city before that fleet arrived with reinforcements. A fifth general attack was ordered, which took the outer works, planted the French tricolour on the rampart, pushed the Ottomans back into the city and forced the Ottoman fire to relent. Acre was thus taken or about to capitulate.

One of those fighting on the Ottoman side was the French émigré and engineer officer Phélippeaux, one of Bonaparte's classmates at the École Militaire. Phélippeaux ordered cannon to be placed in the most advantageous positions and new trenches dug as if by magic behind the ruins which Bonaparte's forces had captured. At the same time Sidney Smith, commander of the British fleet, and his ships' crews landed. These factors renewed the courage of the besieged and they pushed Bonaparte's force back, with stubborn fury on both sides. Three final consecutive assaults were all repulsed, convincing Bonaparte that it would be unwise to continue trying to capture Acre. He raised the siege in May and consoled his soldiers with the proclamation:

After feeding the war for three months in the heart of Syria with a handful of men, taking forty guns, fifty flags, 10,000 prisoners, razing the fortifications of Gaza, Kaïffa, Jaffa, Acre, we shall return to Egypt.

Retreat from Acre edit

The French force's situation was now critical – the enemy could harass its rear as it retreated, it was tired and hungry in the desert, and it was carrying a large number of plague-sufferers. To carry these sufferers in the middle of the army would spread the disease, so they had to be carried in the rear, where they were most at risk from the fury of the Ottomans, keen to avenge the massacres at Jaffa. There were two hospital depots, one in the large hospital on Mount Carmel and the other at Jaffa. On Bonaparte's orders, all those at Mount Carmel were evacuated to Jaffa and Tantura. The gun horses were abandoned before Acre and Bonaparte and all his officers handed their horses over to the transport officer Daure, with Bonaparte walking to set an example.

To conceal its withdrawal from the siege, the army set off at night. Arriving at Jaffa, Bonaparte ordered three evacuations of the plague sufferers to three different points – one by sea to Damietta, one by land to Gaza and another by land to Arish. During the retreat the army picked clean all the lands through which they passed, with livestock, crops and houses all being destroyed. Gaza was the only place to be spared, in return for remaining loyal to Bonaparte. To speed the retreat, Napoleon suggested the controversial step of euthanizing his own soldiers who were terminally ill with plague (between 15 and 50, sources vary) and not expected to recover through an opium overdose, to relieve their suffering, ease the retreat, prevent the spread of the disease and prevent the torture and executions the soldiers left behind would have received if captured by the enemy; his doctors refused to carry out such orders[36][37][38] but there is also evidence in the form of first-hand testimonies that claim the mass euthanasia did take place, and the matter remains one for debate.[39][40]

Back in Egypt edit

Finally, after four months away from Egypt, the expedition arrived back at Cairo with 1,800 wounded, having lost 600 men to the plague and 1,200 to enemy action. In the meantime Ottoman and British emissaries had brought news of Bonaparte's setback at Acre to Egypt, stating that his expeditionary force was largely destroyed and Bonaparte himself was dead. On his return Bonaparte scotched these rumours by re-entering Egypt as if he was at the head of a triumphal army, with his soldiers carrying palm branches, emblems of victory. In his proclamation to the inhabitants of Cairo, Bonaparte told them:

He is back in Cairo, the Bien-Gardé, the head of the French army, general Bonaparte, who loves Mahomet's religion; he is back sound and well, thanking God for the favours he has given him. He has entered Cairo by the gate of Victory. This day is a great day; no one has ever seen its like; all the inhabitants of Cairo have come out to meet him. They have seen and recognised that it is the same commander in chief, Bonaparte, in his own person; but those of Jaffa, having refused to surrender, he handed them all over to pillage and death in his anger. He has destroyed all its ramparts and killed all those found there. There were around 5,000 of Jezzar's troops in Jaffa – he destroyed them all.

Campaigns in Upper Egypt edit

The French were determined to exterminate the Mamluks or to expel them from Egypt. By that time, the Mamluks were driven out of Faiyum to Upper Egypt. General Desaix informed Bonaparte of his situation, and soon received a reinforcement of 1,000 cavalry and three light artillery pieces, commanded by General Davout.

On 29 December 1798, the French army arrived at Girga, capital of Upper Egypt, and waited there for a flotilla to bring them ammunition. However, twenty days passed without hearing of the flotilla. In the meantime, Mourad Bey had contacted chieftains from Jeddah and Yanbu to cross the Red Sea and to exterminate a handful of infidels who have come to destroy the religion of Mohammed. He also sent emissaries to Nubia to bring reinforcements, and Hassan Bey Jeddaoui who also conjured to join against the enemies of the Quran.

Upon hearing these endeavours, General Davout mobilized his forces on 2–3 January 1799, where he met a multitude of armed men near the village of Sawaqui.[41] The insurgents were easily routed, and eight hundred of them remained on the battlefield. However, the locals kept gathering around Asyut to combat the French. On 8 January, Davout met another local forces at Tahta, where he killed a thousand men and put the rest to flight.[42]

In the meantime, Mourad Bey's army was reinforced by a thousand sheriffs arriving from beyond the Red Sea, two hundred and fifty Mamluks led Hassan bey Jeddaoui and Osman bey Hassan, in addition to Nubians and North Africans led by Sheikh Al-Kilani, where they encamped near the village of Houé, all supported by the inhabitants of Upper Egypt and the Cataracts of the Nile.[42]

Battle of Samhud edit

The combined Muslim army marched on 21 January 1799 in the desert, until they reached Samhud near Qena. On 22 January, Desaix formed three squares, two infantry and one cavalry. The latter was placed in the centre of the other two, in order to be protected. The French were scarcely drawn up in line, as the enemy cavalry completely surrounded them, while a column of Arabs from Yanbu fired continuously on their left. Desaix instructed the riflemen of the 96th Infantry Regiment to attack them, while Rapp and Savary, at the head of a squadron of cavalry, would charge the enemy in flank.[43]

The Arabs were attacked so vividly which forced them to flee, leaving about thirty of their own in the square, both killed and wounded. Afterwards, the Arabs of Yanbu, having rallied, came back to attack, and wanted to capture the village of Samhud, but the riflemen of the 96th Infantry Regiment assaulted them viciously and directed against them such a sustained fire, in which they were obliged to withdraw, after having lost many people.[43]

However, the numerous Muslim forces were advancing, uttering frightful cries, and the Mamluks swooped down on the squares commanded by the generals, Friant and Belliard, but they were so strongly repulsed by artillery and musketry fire that they had to withdraw, leaving the battlefield strewn with their dead.[43]

Mourad Bey and Osman bey Hassan, who commanded the Mamluk corps, could not stand against the charge of Davout's cavalry. They abandoned their positions, and dragged the whole army in their flight. The French pursued their enemies until the next day, and did not stop until after having pushed them beyond the Cataracts of the Nile.[43]

Battle of Aswan edit

Desaix continued to march south, as he reached Esneh on 9 February. Meanwhile, Osman bey Hassan had stationed his forces at the foot of a mountain near Aswan. On 12 February, General Davout discovered the enemy positions and immediately made his military arrangements. He formed his cavalry in two lines, and, in this order of battle, he swooped down on the Mamluks. Osman bey Hassan was dangerously wounded, as he saw his horse killed under him. The French cavalry rushed with such impetuosity on the Muslims, and the fight turned into fury. However, the Mamluks were defeated and forced to abandon the battlefield.[44]

Massacre of Qena edit

By the end of February 1799, Sherif Hassan and 2,000 Infantry arrived from Mecca. When Desaix and his forces reached Asyut, his flotilla was left behind near Qena. On 3 March, Muslims launched an attack on the flotilla which was called "L' Italie" led by Captain Morandi with 200 marines and 300 wounded and blind on board. Morandi tried to manoeuvre but the vessel was boarded by hundreds of invaders, in which he ordered that the vessel to be set on fire. He was later killed by rain of hostile bullets. However, all on board were eventually mutilated and killed.[45]

Battle of Abnud edit

On 8 March 1799, General Belliard led his forces to fight 3,000 Meccan Infantry and 350 Mamluks in the plain of Abnud, located on the right bank of the Nile to the south of Qena. The French with their square formation managed to advance on the Muslims forces who later garrisoned themselves in the houses of Abnud. The fighting lasted for hours, afterward, the French managed to reach the courtyard of the village and set the houses on fire. The Muslims were forced to escape and the remaining injured were all killed.[46]

Battle of Beni Adi edit

The Mamluks maintained with their strategy of inciting the locals against the French forces. On 1 May 1799, General Davout's forces killed at least 2,000 fellahin at Beni Adi near Asyut.[47] However, as they were pursuing Murad Bey into Upper Egypt, the French discovered the monuments at Dendera, Thebes, Edfu and Philae.

Capture of Kosseir edit

On 29 May 1799, General Belliard managed to capture Kosseir on the Red Sea, after he marched through the desert, to halt further incoming of Meccan troops or any possible invasion from the English.[48]

Abukir to withdrawal edit

Land battle at Abukir edit

 
Bonaparte Before the Sphinx, (c. 1868) by Jean-Léon Gérôme, Hearst Castle

At Cairo the army found the rest and supplies it needed to recover, but its stay there could not be a long one. Bonaparte had been informed that Murad Bey had evaded the pursuit by Generals Desaix, Belliard, Donzelot and Davout and was descending on Lower Egypt. Bonaparte thus marched to attack him at Giza, also learning that 100 Ottoman ships were off Aboukir, threatening Alexandria.

Without losing time or returning to Cairo, Bonaparte ordered his generals to make all speed to meet the army commanded by the pasha of Rumelia, Saïd-Mustapha, which had joined up with the forces under Murad Bey and Ibrahim. Before leaving Giza, where he found them, Bonaparte wrote to Cairo's divan, stating:

Eighty ships have dared to attack Alexandria but, beaten back by the artillery in that place, they have gone to anchor in Aboukir Bay, where they began disembarking [troops]. I leave them to do this, since my intention is to attack them, to kill all those who do not wish to surrender, and to leave others alive to be led in triumph to Cairo. This will be a handsome spectacle for the city.

First Bonaparte advanced to Alexandria, from which he marched to Aboukir, whose fort was now strongly garrisoned by the Ottomans. Bonaparte deployed his army so that Mustapha would have to win or die with all his family. Mustapha's army was 18,000 strong and supported by several cannons, with trenches defending it on the landward side and free communication with the Ottoman fleet on the seaward side. Bonaparte ordered an attack on 25 July and the Battle of Abukir ensued. In a few hours the trenches were taken, 10,000 Ottomans drowned in the sea[citation needed] and the rest captured or killed. Most of the credit for the French victory that day goes to Murat, who captured Mustapha himself. Mustapha's son was in command of the fort and he and all his officers survived but were captured and sent back to Cairo as part of the French triumphal procession. Seeing Bonaparte return with these high-ranking prisoners, the population of Cairo superstitiously welcomed him as a prophet-warrior who had predicted his own triumph with such remarkable precision.

Bonaparte leaves Egypt edit

The land battle at Abukir was Bonaparte's last action in Egypt, partly restoring his reputation after the French naval defeat at the same place a year earlier. During the prisoner exchange at Aboukir and notably via the Gazette de Francfort Sidney Smith had sent him, he was in communication with the British fleet, from which he had learned of events in France. As Bonaparte saw (and later mythologised) France was thrown back into retreat, its enemies had recaptured France's conquests, France was unhappy at its dictatorial government and was nostalgic for the glorious peace it had signed in the Treaty of Campo Formio – as Bonaparte saw it, this meant France needed him and would welcome him back. With the Egyptian campaign stagnating and political instability developing back home, a new phase in Bonaparte's career was beginning – he felt that he had nothing left to do in Egypt which was worthy of his ambition and that (as had been shown by the defeat at Acre) the forces he had left to him there were not sufficient for an expedition of any importance outside of Egypt. Bonaparte thus spontaneously decided to return to France. According to an accusatory letter by General Kléber, his successor in Egypt, Napoleon also foresaw that the army was getting yet weaker from losses in battle and to disease and would soon have to surrender and be taken prisoner by its enemies, which would destroy all the prestige he had won by his many victories. [49]

He only shared the secret of his return with a small number of friends whose discretion and loyalty were well-known. He left Cairo in August on the pretext of a voyage in the Nile Delta without arousing suspicion, accompanied by the scholars Monge and Berthollet, the painter Denon, and generals Berthier, Murat, Lannes and Marmont. On 23 August, a proclamation informed the army that Bonaparte had transferred his powers as commander in chief to General Kléber. This news was taken badly, with the soldiers angry with Bonaparte and the French government for leaving them behind, but this indignation soon ended, since the troops were confident in Kléber, who convinced them that Bonaparte had not left permanently but would soon be back with reinforcements from France. As night fell, the frigate Muiron silently moored by the shore, with three other ships escorting her. Some became worried when a British corvette was sighted at the moment of departure, but Bonaparte cried "Bah! We'll get there, luck has never abandoned us, we shall get there, despite the English."

Bonaparte's voyage to France edit

On their 41-day voyage back they did not meet a single enemy ship to stop them, with some sources suggesting that Bonaparte had purchased the British fleet's neutrality via a tacit agreement, though others hold this unlikely, since many would argue that he also had a pact with Nelson to leave him to board on the Egyptian coast unopposed with the fleet bearing his large army. It has been suggested that Sidney Smith and other British commanders in the Mediterranean helped Napoleon evade the Royal Navy blockade, thinking that he might act as a Royalist element back in France, but there is no solid historical evidence in support of this conjecture.[citation needed]

On 1 October, Napoleon's small flotilla entered port at Ajaccio, where contrary winds kept them until 8 October, when they set out for France. This was the last time Napoleon set foot upon his birthland.[50] When the coast came in sight, ten British ships were sighted. Contre-amiral Ganteaume suggested changing course towards Corsica, but Bonaparte said "No, this manoeuvre would lead us to England, and I want to get to France." This courageous act saved them and on 8 October (16 vendémiaire year VIII) the frigates anchored in the roads off Fréjus. As there were no sick men on board and the plague in Egypt had ended six months before their departure, Bonaparte and his entourage were allowed to land immediately without waiting in quarantine. At 6 pm he set off for Paris, accompanied by his chief of staff Berthier. He stopped off at Saint-Raphaël, where he built a pyramid commemorating the expedition.

Siege of Damietta edit

On 1 November 1799, the British fleet commanded by Admiral Sidney Smith unloaded an army of Janissaries near Damietta, between Lake Manzala and the sea. The garrison of Damietta, 800 infantry and 150 cavalry strong, commanded by General Jean-Antoine Verdier encountered the Turks. According to Kléber's report, 2,000 to 3,000 Janissaries were killed or drowned and 800 surrendered, including their leader Ismaël Bey. The Turks also lost 32 standards and 5 cannons.[51]

End of the campaign edit

 
Assassination of Kléber, painting in the Musée historique de Strasbourg
 
British victory over the French at the Battle of Alexandria in 1801

The troops Bonaparte left behind were supposed to be honourably evacuated under the terms of the Convention of El Arish Kléber had negotiated with Smith and the Ottoman commander Kör Yusuf in early 1800, but Britain refused to sign and Kör Yusuf sent an amphibious assault force of 30,000 Mamlukes against Kléber.

Kléber defeated the Mamlukes at the battle of Heliopolis in March 1800, and then suppressed an insurrection in Cairo. On 14 June (26 prairial), a Syrian student called Suleiman al-Halabi assassinated Kléber with a dagger in the heart, chest, left forearm and right thigh. Command of the French army passed to General Menou, who held command from 3 July until August 1801. Menou's letter was published in Le Moniteur on 6 September, with the conclusions of the committee charged with judging those responsible for the assassination:

The committee, after carrying through the trial with all due solemnity and process, thought it necessary to follow Egyptian customs in its application of punishment; it condemned the assassin to be impaled after having his right hand burned; and three of the guilty sheikhs to be beheaded and their bodies burned.

The Anglo-Ottomans then commenced their land offensive, the French were defeated by the British in the Battle of Alexandria on March 21, surrendered at Fort Julien in April and then Cairo fell in June. Finally besieged in Alexandria from 17 August – 2 September, Menou eventually capitulated to the British. Under the terms of his capitulation, the British General John Hely-Hutchinson allowed the French army to be repatriated in British ships. Menou also signed over to Britain all Egyptian antiquities, such as the Rosetta Stone, which the French had collected. After initial talks in Al Arish on 30 January 1802, the Treaty of Paris on 25 June ended all hostilities between France and the Ottoman Empire, returning Egypt to the Ottomans.

Scientific expedition edit

 
The Egyptian Expedition under the orders of Bonaparte, painting by Léon Cogniet, early 19th century

An unusual aspect of the Egyptian expedition was the inclusion of an enormous contingent of scientists and scholars ("savants") assigned to the invading French force, 167 in total. This deployment of intellectual resources is considered as an indication of Napoleon's devotion to the principles of the Enlightenment, and by others as a masterstroke of propaganda obfuscating the true motives of the invasion: the increase of Bonaparte's power.

These scholars included engineers and artists, members of the Commission des Sciences et des Arts, the geologist Dolomieu, Henri-Joseph Redouté, the mathematician Gaspard Monge (a founding member of the École polytechnique), the chemist Claude Louis Berthollet, Vivant Denon, the mathematician Jean-Joseph Fourier (who did some of the empirical work upon which his "analytical theory of heat" was founded in Egypt), the physicist Étienne Malus, the naturalist Étienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, the botanist Alire Raffeneau-Delile, and the engineer Nicolas-Jacques Conté of the Conservatoire national des arts et métiers.

Their original aim was to help the army, notably by opening a Suez Canal, mapping out roads and building mills to supply food.[7] They founded the Institut d'Égypte with the aim of propagating Enlightenment values in Egypt through interdisciplinary work, including improving its agricultural and architectural techniques. A scientific review was created under the title Décade égyptienne and in the course of the expedition the scholars also observed and drew the flora and fauna in Egypt and became interested in the country's resources. The Egyptian Institute saw the construction of laboratories, libraries, and a printing press. The group worked prodigiously, and some of their discoveries were not finally cataloged until the 1820s.[52]

A young engineering officer, Pierre-François Bouchard, discovered the Rosetta Stone in July 1799. Many of the antiquities discovered by the French in Egypt, including the stone, were signed over to the British at the end of the campaign by Menou as part of his treaty with Hutchinson. The French scholars' research in Egypt gave rise to the 4-volume Mémoires sur l'Égypte (published from 1798 to 1801). A subsequent and more comprehensive text was Description de l'Égypte, published on Napoleon's orders between 1809 and 1821. Publications such as these of Napoleon's discoveries in Egypt gave rise to fascination with Ancient Egyptian culture and the birth of Egyptology in Europe.

The scientists also tested methods in hot air ballooning while in Egypt. Several months after the revolt of Cairo in 1798, inventor Nicolas-Jacques Conté and mathematician Gaspard Monge built a hot air balloon from paper, coloured with the tricolour red, white and blue of the French Republic. They launched the balloon above Azbakiyya Square above a crowd of spectators, but the balloon soon fell to earth, causing panic among the spectators.[53] The French had also planned to demonstrate hot air balloon flight during their celebrations of the anniversary of the founding of the French Republic in 1798, but the scientists had lost their equipment due to the Battle of the Nile.[26]

Printing press edit

The printing press was first introduced to Egypt by Napoleon.[54] He brought with his expedition a French, Arabic, and Greek printing press, which were far superior in speed, efficiency and quality to the nearest presses used in Istanbul. In the Middle East, Africa, India and even much of Eastern Europe and Russia, printing was a minor, specialised activity until the 18th century at least. From about 1720, the Mutaferrika Press in Istanbul produced substantial amounts of printing, some of which the Egyptian clerics were aware of at the time. Juan Cole reports that, "Bonaparte was a master of what we would now call spin, and his genius for it is demonstrated by reports in Arabic sources that several of his more outlandish allegations were actually taken seriously in the Egyptian countryside."[54]

Bonaparte's initial use of Arabic in his printed proclamations was rife with error. In addition to much of the awkwardly translated Arabic wording being unsound grammatically, often the proclamations were so poorly constructed that they were undecipherable.[55] The French Orientalist Jean Michel de Venture de Paradis, plausibly with the help of Maltese assistants, was responsible for translating the first of Napoleon's French proclamations into Arabic. The Maltese language is distantly related to the Egyptian dialect; and classical Arabic differs greatly in grammar, vocabulary, and idiom. Venture de Paradis, who had lived in Tunis, understood Arabic grammar and vocabulary, but did not know how to use them idiomatically.

The Sunni Muslim clerics of the Al-Azhar University in Cairo reacted incredulously to Napoleon's proclamations.[54] Abd al-Rahman al-Jabarti, a Cairene cleric and historian, received the proclamations with a combination of amusement, bewilderment, and outrage.[56][57][58] He berated the French's poor Arabic grammar and the infelicitous style of their proclamations. Over the course of Napoleon's invasion of Egypt, al-Jabarti wrote a wealth of material regarding the French and their occupation tactics. Among his observations, he rejected Napoleon's claim that the French were "muslims" (the wrong noun case was used in the Arabic proclamation, making it a lower case "m") and poorly understood the French concept of a republic and democracy – words which did not exist at the time in Arabic.[54]

Analysis edit

In addition to its significance in the wider French Revolutionary Wars, the campaign had a powerful impact on the Ottoman Empire in general, and the Arab world in particular. The invasion demonstrated the military, technological, and organisational superiority of the Western European powers to the Middle East. This led to profound social changes in the region. The invasion introduced Western inventions, such as the printing press, and ideas, such as liberalism and incipient nationalism, to the Middle East, eventually leading to the establishment of Egyptian independence and modernisation under Muhammad Ali Pasha in the first half of the 19th century and eventually the Nahda, or Arab Renaissance. To modernist historians, the French arrival marks the start of the modern Middle East.[59] Napoleon's astonishing destruction of the conventional Mamluk soldiers at the Battle of the Pyramids served as a reminder for modernising Muslim monarchs to implement wide-ranging military reforms.[60]

While the Egyptian Islamic scholar and historian Al-Jabarti was critical of Napoleon and the French, he preferred them over the Ottomans. To Jabarti, Napoleon was compassionate towards Muslims and poor folk and he safeguarded the lives of innocents and civilians. This was at odds with the "arrogance, cruelty and tyranny" of Ottoman rule, which he characterised as an un-Islamic system marked by corruption, backwardness and summary executions. Although critical of the French Republic and French Revolution, both Jabarti and his disciple Hassan Al-Attar were astonished by French technological advancements and appreciated the fair trials in the French judicial system.[61]

The campaign ultimately ended in failure, with 15,000 French troops killed in action and 15,000 by disease. Napoleon's reputation as a brilliant military commander remained intact and continued to increase, despite some of his failures during the campaign. This was due to his expert propaganda, such as his Courrier de l'Égypte, set up to propagandise the expeditionary force itself and support its morale. Such propaganda spread back to France, where news of defeats such as at sea in Aboukir Bay and on land in Syria were suppressed. Defeats could be blamed on the now-assassinated Kléber, leaving Napoleon free from blame and with a burnished reputation. This opened his way to power and he profited from his reputation by engineering his becoming First Consul in the coup d'état of 18 brumaire (November 1799).

Charges of imperialism edit

Napoleonic invasion of Egypt is widely regarded in contemporary academic circles to be "the first act of modern European imperialism" and also criticised for its role in shaping the civilizing mission narrative of 19th century European colonial empires.[62]

According to Professor Edward W. Said, Napoleonic invasion led to the dominance of Orientalist narratives of the Muslim world:

"with Napoleon's occupation of Egypt, processes were set in motion between East and West that still dominate our contemporary cultural and political perspectives. And the Napoleonic expedition, with its great collective monument of erudition, the Description de l'Égypte, provided a scene or setting for Orientalism.. Napoleon's invasion of Egypt in 1798 and his foray into Syria have had by far the greater consequence for the modern history of Orientalism."[63]

Mamelukes in French service edit

Colonel Barthelemy Serra took the first steps towards creating a Mameluke Corps in France. On September 27, 1800, he wrote a letter from Cairo to the first consul, couched in an Oriental style. He regretted being very far away from Napoleon and offered his total devotion to the French nation and expressed the Mamelukes' wish to become the bodyguard to the first consul. They wished to serve him as living shields against those who would seek to harm him. The first consul became receptive of admitting a unit of carefully selected cavalrymen as his personal guard. He had an officer pay appropriate respects to the foreign troops and provided Napoleon himself with a full report to the number of refugees.[64]

French order of battle edit

British order of battle edit

British Army edit

The British Army in Egypt, as it was known was the colloquial name of the forces under command of General Ralph Abercromby, the armies order of battle in March 1800 was;[65]

Royal Navy edit

The Royal Navy squadron still in the area cruising off Alexandria was organised into:[67]

Timeline and battles edit

 
Battle at Nazareth (April 1799) by Gros
 
General Murat at the battle of Abukir (July 1799), where thousands of Ottoman soldiers drowned in the Nile
 
Battle of Heliopolis (March 1800)
  • 1798
    • 19 May (30 Floréal year VI) – Departure from Toulon
    • 11 June (23 Prairial year VI) – Capture of Malta
    • 1 July (13 Messidor year VI) – Landing at Alexandria
    • 13 July – Battle of Shubra Khit, French victory
    • 21 July (3 Thermidor year VI) – Battle of the Pyramids, French land victory
    • 1 and 2 August (14–15 Thermidor year VI) – Battle of the Nile, British naval victory over French squadron anchored in Aboukir Bay
    • 10 August – Battle at Salheyeh, French victory
    • 7 October – Battle of Sédiman, French victory
    • 21 October (30 Vendémiaire) – Cairo Revolt
  • 1799
    • 11–19 February – Siege of El Arish, French victory
    • 7 March – Siege of Jaffa, French victory
    • 8 April – Battle at Nazareth, French victory, Junot with 500 defeats 3000 Ottoman soldiers
    • 11 April – Battle of Cana, French victory, Napoleon wins a great battle against Ottomans
    • 16 April (27 Germinal year VII) – Bonaparte relieves the troops under Kléber just as the latter are about to be overwhelmed at the foot of Mount Tabor
    • 20 May (1 Prairial an VII) – Siege of Acre, French troops retire after eight assaults
    • 1 August (14 Thermidor year VII) – Battle of Abukir, French victory
    • 23 August (6 Fructidor year VII) – Bonaparte embarks on the frigate Muiron and abandons command to Kléber
  • 1800
    • 24 January (4 Pluviôse year VIII) – Kléber concludes the Convention of El Arish with the British admiral Sidney Smith
    • February (Pluviôse-Ventôse year VIII) – French troops begin their withdrawal, but the British admiral Keith refuses to recognize the convention's terms
    • 20 March (29 Ventôse year VIII) – Battle of Heliopolis, Kléber wins one last victory, against a force of 30,000 Ottomans
    • 14 June (25 Prairial year VIII) – A Kurd named Suleiman al-Halabi assassinates Kléber in his garden in Cairo. General Menou, a convert to Islam, takes over command
    • 3 September (16 Fructidor year VIII) – The British recapture Malta from the French
  • 1801
    • 8 March (17 Ventôse year IX) – British landing near Aboukir
    • 21 March (30 Ventôse year IX) – Battle of Alexandria, French defeat, army under Menou digs in at Alexandria ready for the siege of Alexandria
    • 31 March (10 Germinal year IX) – Ottoman army arrives at El-Arich
    • 19 April (29 Germinal year IX) – British and Ottoman forces capture Fort Julien at Rosetta after a four-day bombardment, opening the Nile
    • 27 June (8 Messidor year IX) – General Belliard surrenders in Cairo
    • 31 August (13 Fructidor year IX) – Siege of Alexandria ends in Menou's surrender

In popular culture edit

  • The 2010 video game, Napoleon: Total War, features an Egyptian Campaign, where players can control French armies throughout the campaigns in Egypt and Syria.
  • Adieu Bonaparte

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Strathern 2008, p. 351.
  2. ^ Daniel Panzac (2005). Barbary Corsairs. Brill. ISBN 9789004125940.
  3. ^ a b Warfare and Armed Conflicts : A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492-2015 (in French). p. 106..
  4. ^ Barthorp 1992, p. 6.
  5. ^ a b c d James, T. G. H. (2003). "Napoleon and Egyptology: Britain's Debt to French Enterprise". Enlightening the British: Knowledge, Discovery and the Museum in the Eighteenth Century. British Museum Press. p. 151. ISBN 0-7141-5010-X.
  6. ^ a b Watson, William E. (2003). Tricolor and Crescent: France and the Islamic World. Greenwood. pp. 13–14. ISBN 0-275-97470-7. Retrieved 9 October 2010.
  7. ^ a b c (in French) La Campagne d'Egypte de Bonaparte 2010-07-26 at the Wayback Machine Emission Deux mille ans d'Histoire by France Inter, 22 July 2010.
  8. ^ a b Amini, Iradj (1999). Napoleon and Persia: Franco-Persian Relations Under the First Empire. Mage. p. 12. ISBN 0-934211-58-2. Retrieved 9 October 2010.
  9. ^ a b c d Cole, Juan (2007). Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle East. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 8–10. ISBN 978-1-4039-6431-1.
  10. ^ "Palazzo Parisio". foreignaffairs.gov.mt. from the original on 6 January 2018. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
  11. ^ . blog.maltaweathersite.com. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
  12. ^ "MaltaToday". archive.maltatoday.com.mt. Archived from the original on 21 August 2015. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
  13. ^ Original text: Napoleon Bonaparte, ed. C.A. Fischer, Collection Générale et Complète de lettres… de Napoléon le Grand… Leipzig: H. Graff, 1808; pp. 58–59. Available at "Archived copy". from the original on 7 April 2016. Retrieved 11 March 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link).
  14. ^ "Wikisource – Full text of the Déclaration du général Bonaparte au peuple égyptien, 1798" (in French). Fr.wikisource.org. Archived from the original on 1 September 2010. Retrieved 9 October 2010.
  15. ^ Cairo, Nezar AlSayyad, p. 174
  16. ^ De Bellaigue, Christopher (2017). "1: Cairo". The Islamic Enlightenment: The Struggle Between Faith and Reason – 1798 to Modern Times. New York: Liveright Publishing Corporation. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-87140-373-5.
  17. ^ Bainville 1997, p. 31.
  18. ^ a b c Tulard 1999, p. 64.
  19. ^ Smith 1998, p. 140.
  20. ^ Chandler, David. The Campaigns of Napoleon New York, Macmillan, 1966
  21. ^ Bonaparte, chapter 6 Archived 2010-08-13 at the Wayback Machine, in Charles Mullié, Biographie des célébrités militaires des armées de terre et de mer de 1789 à 1850, 1852
  22. ^ De Bellaigue, Christopher (2017). "Chapter 1: Cairo". The Islamic Enlightenment: The Struggle Between Faith and Reason – 1798 to Modern Times. New York: Liveright Publishing Corporation. pp. 4–12. ISBN 978-0-87140-373-5.
  23. ^ De Bellaigue, Christopher (2017). "Chapter 1: Cairo". The Islamic Enlightenment: The Struggle Between Faith and Reason – 1798 to Modern Times. New York: Liveright Publishing Corporation. pp. 12–13. ISBN 978-0-87140-373-5.
  24. ^ Cherfils 1914, pp. 105, 125
  25. ^ . George Mason University Center for History and New Media. Archived from the original on 28 June 2011. Retrieved 11 October 2008.
  26. ^ a b Scurr, Ruth (2022). Napoleon: A Life in Gardens and Shadows. Vintage. p. 77.
  27. ^ Scurr, Ruth (2022). Napoleon: A Life in Gardens and Shadows. Vintage. p. 78.
  28. ^ "Mu'allem Jirjis Al-Jawhari, Islam, Napleon Bonaparte and the Copt's cashmere turban". copticliterature.wordpress.com. 13 October 2011.
  29. ^ "سير القديسين والشهداء في الكنيسة القبطية الأرثوذكسية: المعلم جرجس الجوهري". st-takla.org.
  30. ^ "Napoleon Bonaparte's declaration to the Coptic nation on 7 December 1798 – a new social contract". copticliterature.com. 17 October 2011.
  31. ^ Bernède 1998, p. 61.
  32. ^ a b Bernède 1998, p. 62.
  33. ^ a b c d Bernède 1998, p. 63.
  34. ^ a b Pigeard 2004.
  35. ^ "Egypt: History – French Occupation Period". Touregypt.net. 20 June 2011. Retrieved 5 March 2014.
  36. ^ Rachlin, Harvey (2013). "The Rosetta Stone". Lucy's Bones, Sacred Stones, & Einstein's Brain: The Remarkable Stories Behind the Great Objects and Artifacts of History, From Antiquity to the Modern Era. Garrett County Press. p. 57. ISBN 978-1939430915.
  37. ^ Ludwig, Emil (1927). "The Torrent: Poisoning the plague-stricken". Napoleon. Unwin Brothers, Ltd. pp. 135–136.
  38. ^ Snodgrass, Mary Ellen (2017). "The Chronology: Summer 1798–1800". World Epidemics: A Cultural Chronology of Disease from Prehistory to the Era of Zika. McFarland. p. 118. ISBN 978-1476671246.
  39. ^ Strathern, Paul (2008). "The Retreat from Acre". Napoleon in Egypt. Random House Publishing Group. p. 353. ISBN 978-0553905885.
  40. ^ Roberts, Andrews (2014). "Acre". Napoleon: A Life. Penguin Random House Publishing Group. p. 188. ISBN 978-0698176287.
  41. ^ Société de militaires et de marins 1818a, p. 31.
  42. ^ a b Société de militaires et de marins 1818b, p. 443.
  43. ^ a b c d Société de militaires et de marins 1818b, p. 444.
  44. ^ Société de militaires et de marins 1818a, pp. 74–75.
  45. ^ Herold 1962, p. 255.
  46. ^ Herold 1962, p. 256.
  47. ^ Herold 1962, p. 259.
  48. ^ Herold 1962, p. 261.
  49. ^ Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne (1831). Memoirs of Napoleon Bonaparte. Scribners. ISBN 9780342283217.
  50. ^ Roberts, Andrew (2015). Napoleon: A Life. Penguin. ISBN 978-0698176287.
  51. ^ Journal de Paris. Bibliothèque municipale de Lyon. 2012. pp. 521–522.
  52. ^ Frank McLynn, "Napoleon: a biography", Pimlico, 1998. (pp. 180–183).
  53. ^ Scurr, Ruth (2022). Napoleon: A Life in Gardens and Shadows. Vintage. p. 80.
  54. ^ a b c d Cole, Juan (2007). Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle East. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 148.
  55. ^ Cole, Juan (2007). Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle East. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 31.
  56. ^ 'Abd al-Rahman Al-Jabarti (2000). Ta'rikh, Muddat al-faransis bi misr. Cairo: Dar al-Kitab al-Jami'i. pp. 33–41.
  57. ^ Shmuel Moreh (1995). Napoleon in Egypt: Al-Jabarti's Chronicle of the French Occupation, 1798. Markus Wiener Publishing. pp. 27–33.
  58. ^ Cole, Juan (2007). Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle East. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 32.
  59. ^ Cleveland, William L. (2004). A history of the modern Middle East. Michigan University Press. p. 65. ISBN 0-8133-4048-9.
  60. ^ De Bellaigue, Christopher (2017). The Islamic Enlightenment: The Struggle Between Faith and Reason – 1798 to Modern Times. New York: Liveright Publishing Corporation. p. 227. ISBN 978-0-87140-373-5.
  61. ^ Moreh, Shmuel (2004). Napoleon in Egypt: Al-Jabarti's Chronicle of the French Occupation, 1798 – Expanded Edition. Princeton, New Jersey: Markus Wiener Publishers. pp. 183–184, 192, 195–198. ISBN 978-1-55876-337-1.
  62. ^ A. Bell, David (2015). "Epilogue: 1815–the Present". Napoleon: A Concise Biography. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 111. ISBN 978-0-19-026271-6.
  63. ^ W. Said, Edward (1979). "1: The Scope of Orientalism". Orientalism. New York: Vintage Books. pp. 42–43, 76. ISBN 0-394-74067-X.
  64. ^ Pawly, Ronald (2006). Napoleon's Mamelukes. New York: Osprey Publishing. p. 9.
  65. ^ George Nafziger, British Army in Egypt 1 March 1800, United States Army Combined Arms Center.
  66. ^ Major A. C. Lovett, The Armies of India, 1911, Delhi, India. pp. 23 & 329.
  67. ^ George Nafziger, Royal Navy Squadron Cruising off Alexandria August 1798, United States Army Combined Arms Center.

Sources edit

  • Napoleon Was Here! An interactive journey following Napoleon's expedition to Egypt, The National Library of Israel
  • Bainville, Jacques (1997). Bonaparte en Égypte: poème (in French). Paris: Balland. ISBN 2-7158-1135-7.
  • Barthorp, Michael (1992). Napoleon's Egyptian Campaigns 1798-1801 Volume 79 of Men-at-arms series. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 9780850451269.
  • Bernède, Allain (1998). Gérard-Jean Chaduc; Christophe Dickès; Laurent Leprévost (eds.). La campagne d'Égypte : 1798–1801 Mythes et réalités (in French). Paris: Musée de l'Armée. ISBN 978-2-901-41823-8.
  • Burleigh, Nina. Mirage. Harper, New York, 2007. ISBN 978-0-06-059767-2
  • Cherfils, Christian (1914). Bonaparte et l'Islam d'après les documents français & arabes. Pedone. OCLC 253080866.
  • Cole, Juan (2007). Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle East. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-4039-6431-1.
  • Herold, J. Christopher (1962). Bonaparte in Egypt. New York: Harper & Row.
  • Jourquin, Jacques, Journal du capitaine François dit 'le dromadaire d'Égypte', 2 vol., introduction critique et annexes par Jacques Jourquin, éditions Tallandier (couronné par l'Académie française), 1984, new edition, 2003.
  • Karabell, Zachary (2003). Parting the desert: the creation of the Suez Canal. Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-375-40883-5.
  • Mackesy, Piers. British Victory in Egypt, 1801: The End of Napoleon's Conquest. Routledge, 2013. ISBN 978-1134953578
  • Miot, Jacques. Narrative of the French expedition in Egypt, and the operations in Syria. Translated from the French. (1816)
    • Miot, Jacques-François. Mémoires pour servir à l’histoire des expéditions en Égypte et en Syrie. Deuxième édition. (1814).
      • "Review of Mémoires pour servir à l'Histoire des Expéditions en Égypte et en Syrie by J. Miot". The Quarterly Review. 13: 1–55. April 1815.
  • Pigeard, Alain (2004). Dictionnaire des batailles de Napoléon : 1796–1815 (in French). Paris: Tallandier. ISBN 2-84734-073-4.
  • Rickard, J French Invasion of Egypt, 1798–1801, (2006)
  • Smith, Digby (1998). The Greenhill Napoleonic Wars Data Book : Actions and Losses in Personnel, Colours, Standards and Artillery, 1792–1815. London: Greenhill Books. ISBN 1-85367-276-9.
  • Société de militaires et de marins (1818a). Dictionnaire historique des batailles, siéges, et combats de terre et de mer, qui ont eu lieu pendant la Révolution Française (in French). Menard et Desenne.
  • Société de militaires et de marins (1818b). Dictionnaire historique des batailles, siéges, et combats de terre et de mer: qui ont en lieu pendant la révolution Française, Volume 3 (in French). Menard et Desenne.
  • Strathern, Paul. Napoleon in Egypt: The Greatest Glory. Jonathan Cape, Random House, London, 2007. ISBN 978-0-224-07681-4 online
  • Tulard, Jean (1999). Dictionnaire Napoléon (in French). Paris: Fayard. ISBN 2-213-60485-1.
  • Melanie Ulz: Auf dem Schlachtfeld des Empire. Männlichkeitskonzepte in der Bildproduktion zu Napoleons Ägyptenfeldzug (Marburg: Jonas Verlag 2008), ISBN 978-3-89445-396-1.
  • Napoleonic Egypt Digital Collection; Rare Books and Special Collections Library; the American University in Cairo

External links edit

  •   Media related to Expédition d’Égypte at Wikimedia Commons
Preceded by
French invasion of Switzerland
French Revolution: Revolutionary campaigns
French campaign in Egypt and Syria
Succeeded by
Irish Rebellion of 1798

french, campaign, egypt, syria, other, conflicts, franco, ottoman, french, invasion, egypt, redirects, here, 20th, century, conflict, suez, crisis, part, second, coalitionclick, image, load, appropriate, article, left, right, bottom, battles, pyramids, nile, c. For other conflicts see Franco Ottoman War French invasion of Egypt redirects here For the 20th century conflict see Suez Crisis French campaign in Egypt and SyriaPart of the War of the Second CoalitionFrench campaign in Egypt and SyriaClick an image to load the appropriate article Left to right top to bottom Battles of the Pyramids the Nile Cairo Abukir 1799 Abukir 1801 and Alexandria 1801 Date1 July 1798 2 September 1801 3 years 2 months and 1 day LocationOttoman EmpireResultAnglo Ottoman victory End of Mamluk rule in Egypt Formal end of the Franco Ottoman alliance Failure of French expedition to Syria Capitulation of French administration in EgyptBelligerentsOttoman Empire Eyalet of Egypt Mamluks Nablus Tribesman 1 Albanian Bashi bazouks Great Britain 1798 1800 United Kingdom 1801 Regency of Algiers 2 French Republic Armee d OrientCommanders and leadersSelim III Yusuf Pasha Mustafa Pasha Muhammad Ali Pasha Jezzar Pasha Abdullah Pasha Murad Bey Ibrahim Bey Abdallah Bey Haim FarhiRalph Abercromby DOW Gordon Drummond Samuel Graham John Moore George Ramsay John Hely Hutchinson William Beresford Sidney Smith Horatio Nelson Mustapha Dey Rais Hamidou Antoine de PhelippeauxNapoleon Bonaparte Jean Kleber Thomas Dumas Jacques Menou Jean Lannes Louis Desaix Joachim Murat Louis Nicolas Davout Jean Rapp Rene Savary Jean Antoine Verdier Jean Reynier Louis Andre Bon Jean Baptiste Bessieres Cousin de Dommartin DOW Maximilian Caffarelli DOW Jean Baptiste Perree Charles Dugua Martin Dupuy Brueys d Aigalliers Pierre Charles Villeneuve Horace Sebastiani Charles Louis Lasalle Rose de Beauharnais Louis Bonaparte Geraud Duroc Joseph Sulkowski DOW Louis FriantStrength220 000 soldiers 30 000 soldiers40 000 soldiers10 000 sailorsCasualties and lossesOttoman Empire 50 000 killed and wounded 3 15 000 capturedTotal 65 000France 15 000 killed and wounded 3 23 500 captured 4 Total 38 500 War of the Second Coalition Egypt and Syria Interactive fullscreen map nearby articles Napoleon in command till 23 August 1799 The French campaign in Egypt and Syria 1798 1801 was a Napoleonic campaign in the Ottoman territories of Egypt and Syria executed by Napoleon Bonaparte Napoleon proclaimed to defend French trade interests and to establish scientific enterprise in the region It was the primary purpose of the Mediterranean campaign of 1798 which was a series of naval engagements that included the capture of Malta and the Greek island Crete later arriving in the Port of Alexandria The campaign ended in defeat for Napoleon after abandoning his troops to head back to France for the looming risk of a Second Coalition This led to the death and withdrawal of French troops in the region On a scientific front the expedition was a success that led to the discovery of the Rosetta Stone creating the field of Egyptology Despite early victories and an initially successful expedition into Syria Napoleon and his Armee d Orient were eventually defeated and forced to withdraw especially after suffering the defeat of the supporting French fleet by the British Royal Navy at the Battle of the Nile Contents 1 Preparations and voyage 1 1 Proposal 1 2 Before departure from Toulon 1 3 Capture of Malta 2 Alexandria to Syria 2 1 Disembarkment at Alexandria 2 2 Victory on land defeat at sea 2 3 Bonaparte s administration of Egypt 2 4 Pursuit of Mamluks 2 5 Revolt of Cairo 3 Syria 3 1 Canal of the Pharaohs 3 2 Ottoman offensives 3 3 French response 3 4 Jaffa 3 5 Mount Tabor 3 6 Acre 3 7 Retreat from Acre 3 8 Back in Egypt 4 Campaigns in Upper Egypt 4 1 Battle of Samhud 4 2 Battle of Aswan 4 3 Massacre of Qena 4 4 Battle of Abnud 4 5 Battle of Beni Adi 4 6 Capture of Kosseir 5 Abukir to withdrawal 5 1 Land battle at Abukir 5 2 Bonaparte leaves Egypt 5 3 Bonaparte s voyage to France 5 4 Siege of Damietta 5 5 End of the campaign 6 Scientific expedition 7 Printing press 8 Analysis 9 Charges of imperialism 10 Mamelukes in French service 11 French order of battle 12 British order of battle 12 1 British Army 12 2 Royal Navy 13 Timeline and battles 14 In popular culture 15 See also 16 References 17 Sources 18 External linksPreparations and voyage editProposal edit At the time of the invasion the Directory had assumed executive power in France It would resort to the army to maintain order in the face of the Jacobin and royalist threats and count in particular on General Bonaparte already a successful commander having led the Italian campaign The notion of annexing Egypt as a French colony had been under discussion since Francois Baron de Tott undertook a secret mission to the Levant in 1777 to determine its feasibility 5 Baron de Tott s report was favourable but no immediate action was taken 5 Nevertheless Egypt became a topic of debate between Talleyrand and Napoleon which continued in their correspondence during Napoleon s Italian campaign 5 In early 1798 Bonaparte proposed an expedition to Egypt and convinced the Directory to establish the Commission des Sciences et des Arts 5 He further wished to strengthen French trade interests over those of Great Britain in the Middle East 6 hoping to join forces with France s ally Tipu Sultan ruler of Mysore in India and an opponent of British control in that country 6 As France was not ready for a head on attack on Great Britain itself the Directory decided to intervene indirectly and create a double port connecting the Red Sea to the Mediterranean Sea prefiguring the Suez Canal 7 At the time Egypt had been an Ottoman province since 1517 but was now out of direct Ottoman control and was in disorder with dissension among the ruling Mamluk elite In France Egyptian fashion was in full swing intellectuals believed that Egypt was the cradle of Western civilization and wished to conquer it French traders already based on the Nile were complaining of harassment by the Mamluks and Napoleon wished to walk in the footsteps of Alexander the Great He assured the Directory that as soon as he had conquered Egypt he will establish relations with the Indian princes and together with them attack the English in their possessions 8 According to a 13 February report by Talleyrand Having occupied and fortified Egypt we shall send force from Suez to the Sultanate of Mysore to join the forces of Tipu Sultan and drive away the English 8 The Directory agreed to the plan in March though troubled by its scope and cost They saw that it would remove the popular and over ambitious Napoleon from the centre of power though this motive long remained secret Before departure from Toulon edit Rumours became rife as 40 000 soldiers and 10 000 sailors were gathered in French Mediterranean ports A large fleet was assembled at Toulon 13 ships of the line 14 frigates and 400 transports To avoid interception by the British fleet under Nelson the expedition s target was kept secret It was known only to Bonaparte himself his generals Berthier and Caffarelli and the mathematician Gaspard Monge 7 Bonaparte was the commander with subordinates including Thomas Alexandre Dumas Kleber Desaix Berthier Caffarelli Lannes Damas Murat Andreossy Belliard Menou and Zajaczek His aides de camp included his brother Louis Bonaparte Duroc Eugene de Beauharnais Thomas Prosper Jullien and the Polish nobleman Joseph Sulkowski The fleet at Toulon was joined by squadrons from Genoa Civitavecchia and Bastia and was put under the command of Admiral Brueys and Contre amirals Villeneuve Du Chayla Decres and Ganteaume The fleet was about to set sail when a crisis developed with Austria and the Directory recalled Bonaparte in case war broke out The crisis was resolved in a few weeks and Bonaparte received orders to travel to Toulon as soon as possible It is claimed by whom that in a stormy meeting with the Directory Bonaparte threatened to dissolve them and director Reubell gave him a pen saying Sign there general Bonaparte arrived at Toulon on 9 May lodging with Benoit Georges de Najac the officer in charge of preparing the fleet The army embarked confident in their commander s talent and on 19 May just as he embarked Bonaparte addressed the troops especially those who had served under him in the Armee d Italie Soldiers You are one of the wings of the French army You have made war on the mountains on the plains and in cities it remains for you to fight on the seas The Roman legions that you sometimes imitated but no longer equalled fought Carthage now on this same sea and now on the plains of Zama Soldiers sailors you have been neglected until this day today the greatest concern of the Republic is for you The genius of liberty which made you at her birth the arbiter of Europe wants to be genius of the seas and the furthest nations Capture of Malta edit Main article French invasion of Malta When Napoleon s fleet arrived off Malta Napoleon demanded that the Knights of Malta allow his fleet to enter the port and take on water and supplies Grand Master von Hompesch replied that only two foreign ships would be allowed to enter the port at a time Under that restriction re victualling the French fleet would take weeks and it would be vulnerable to the British fleet of Admiral Nelson Napoleon therefore ordered the invasion of Malta 9 The French Revolution had significantly reduced the Knights income and their ability to put up serious resistance Half of the Knights were French and most of these knights refused to fight 9 French troops disembarked in Malta at seven points on the morning of 11 June General Louis Baraguey d Hilliers landed soldiers and cannon in the western part of the main island of Malta under artillery fire from Maltese fortifications The French troops met some initial resistance but pressed forward The Knights ill prepared force in that region numbering only about 2 000 regrouped The French pressed on with their attack After a fierce gun battle lasting twenty four hours most of the Knights force in the west surrendered 9 Napoleon during his stay in Malta resided at Palazzo Parisio in Valletta 10 11 12 Napoleon then opened negotiations Faced with vastly superior French forces and the loss of western Malta von Hompesch surrendered the main fortress of Valletta 9 Alexandria to Syria editDisembarkment at Alexandria edit nbsp Landing of Napoleon s troops in Egypt in July 1798Napoleon departed Malta for Egypt After successfully eluding detection by the Royal Navy for thirteen days the fleet was in sight of Alexandria where it landed on 1 July although Napoleon s plan had been to land elsewhere On the day of the landing Napoleon told his troops I promise to each soldier who returns from this expedition enough to purchase six arpents of land approximately 7 6 acres or 3 1 ha and added The peoples we will be living alongside are Muslims their first article of faith is There is no other god but God and Mahomet is his prophet Do not contradict them treat them as you treated the Jews the Italians respect their muftis and their imams as you respected their rabbis and bishops Have the same tolerance for the ceremonies prescribed by the Quran for their mosques as you had for the convents for the synagogues for the religion of Moses and that of Jesus Christ The Roman legions used to protect all religions You will here find different customs to those of Europe you must get accustomed to them The people among whom we are going treat women differently to us but in every country whoever violates one is a monster Pillaging only enriches a small number of men it dishonours us it destroys our resources it makes enemies of the people who it is in our interest to have as our friends The first city we will encounter was built by Alexander the Great We shall find at every step great remains worthy of exciting French emulation 13 On 1 July Napoleon aboard the ship L Orient en route to Egypt wrote the following proclamation to the Muslim inhabitants of Alexandria For too long the beys who govern Egypt have insulted the French nation and covered their traders in slanders The hour of their punishment has come For too long this horde of slaves bought in the Caucasus and Georgia have tyrannised the most beautiful part of the world but God on whom all depends has ordained that their empire shall end People of Egypt they have told you that I come to destroy your religion but do not believe it tell them in reply that I come to restore your rights punish the usurpers and that I respect God his prophet and the Quran more than the Mamluks Tell them that all men are equal before God wisdom talents virtues are the only things to make one man different from another Is there a more beautiful land It belongs to the Mamluks If Egypt is their farm then they should show the lease that God gave them for it Cadis cheiks imans tchorbadjis and notables of the nation I ask you to tell the people that we are true friends of Muslims Wasn t it us who destroyed the Knights of Malta Wasn t it us who destroyed the Pope who used to say that he had a duty to make war on Muslims Wasn t it us who have at all times been friends to the Great Lord and enemies to his enemies Thrice happy are those who will be with us They shall prosper in their fortune and in their rank Happy are those who will be neutral They will get to know us over time and join their ranks with ours But unhappy thrice unhappy are those who shall arm themselves to fight for the Mamluks and who shall fight against us There shall be no hope for them they shall perish 14 15 nbsp Kleber wounded in front of Alexandria engraving by Adolphe Francois PannemakerDespite the idealistic promises proclaimed by Napoleon Egyptian intellectuals like Abd al Rahman al Jabarti 1753 1825 C E 1166 1240 A H were heavily critical of Napoleon s objectives As a major chronicler of the French invasion Jabarti decried the French invasion of Egypt as the start of fierce fights and important incidents of the momentous mishaps and appalling afflictions of the multiplication of malice and the acceleration of affairs of successive sufferings and turning times of the inversion of the innate and the elimination of the established of horrors upon horrors and contradicting conditions of the perversion of all precepts and the onset of annihilation of the dominance of destruction and the occurrence of occasions 16 Menou had been the first to set out for Egypt and was the first Frenchman to land Bonaparte and Kleber landed together and joined Menou at night at the cove of Marabout Citadel of Qaitbay on which the first French tricolour to be hoisted in Egypt was raised On the night of the 1st of July Bonaparte who was informed that Alexandria intended to resist him rushed to get a force ashore without waiting for the artillery or the cavalry to land in which he marched on Alexandria at the head of 4 000 to 5 000 men 17 18 At 2 am 2 July he set off marching in three columns on the left Menou attacked the triangular fort 18 where he received seven wounds while Kleber was in the centre in which he received a bullet in the forehead but was only wounded and Louis Andre Bon on the right attacked the city gates 18 Alexandria was defended by Koraim Pasha and 500 men 19 However after a rather lively shooting in the city the defenders gave up and fled The city had not had time to surrender and put itself at the French s discretion but despite Bonaparte s orders the French soldiers broke into the city nbsp The capture of Alexandria bas relief on the Arc de Triomphe in ParisWhen the whole expeditionary force had been disembarked Admiral Brueys received orders to take the fleet to Aboukir Bay before anchoring the battle fleet in the old port of Alexandria if possible or taking it to Corfu These precautions were made vital by the imminent arrival of the British fleet which had already been seen near Alexandria 24 hours before the French fleet s arrival It was wisest to avoid the risks of a naval battle a defeat could have disastrous results and it was in the force s better interests to go by land marching at top speed to Cairo to frighten the enemy commanders and surprise them before they could put any defence measures in place Victory on land defeat at sea edit nbsp 1803 map noting fleet anchor points and location of 17 battles Carte physique et politique de la syrie pour servir a l histoire des conquetes du general Bonaparte en Orient nbsp The Battle of the Pyramids Louis Francois Baron Lejeune 1808Main articles Battle of the Pyramids and Battle of the Nile Louis Desaix marched across the desert with his division and two cannon arriving at Demenhour 24 kilometres 15 mi from Alexandria on 18 Messidor 6 July Meanwhile Bonaparte left Alexandria leaving the city under Kleber s command General Dugua marched on Rosetta with orders to seize and hold the entrance to the port housing the French fleet which had to follow the route to Cairo down the river s left bank and rejoin the army at Rahmanie On 20 Messidor 8 July Bonaparte arrived at Demenhour where he found the forces that had met up and on 22 Messidor they marched to Rahmanie where they then awaited the fleet with their provisions The fleet arrived on 24 Messidor 12 July and the army began to march again at night followed by the fleet The winds violence suddenly forced the fleet to the army s left and straight into the enemy fleet which was supported by musket fire from 4 000 Mamluks reinforced by peasants and Arabs The French fleet had numerical superiority but still lost its gunboats to the enemy Attracted by the sound of gunfire Bonaparte ordered his land force to the charge and attacked the village of Chebreiss which was captured after two hours fierce fighting The enemy fled in disorder towards Cairo leaving 600 dead on the battlefield nbsp The Battle of the Nile Destruction of L Orient August 1 1798After a day s rest at Chebreiss the French land force continued the pursuit On 2 Thermidor 20 July it arrived 800 metres 1 2 mi from the village of Embabe The heat was unbearable and the army was exhausted and needed a rest but there was not enough time and so Bonaparte drew up his 25 000 troops for battle approximately 15 km 9 mi from the Pyramids of Giza He is said to have shown his army the pyramids behind the enemy s left flank and at the moment of ordering the attack shouted Soldiers see the tops of the Pyramids in accounts written long afterwards this phrase was altered into Soldiers remember that from the top of these pyramids 40 centuries of history contemplate you This was the start of the so called Battle of the Pyramids a French victory over an enemy force of about 21 000 Mamluks 20 Around 40 000 Mamluk soldiers stayed away from the battle The French defeated the Mamluk cavalry with a giant infantry square with cannons and supplies safely on the inside In all 300 French and approximately 6 000 Mamluks were killed The battle gave rise to dozens of stories and drawings Dupuy s brigade pursued the routed enemy and at night entered Cairo which had been abandoned by the beys Mourad and Ibrahim On 4 Thermidor 22 July the notables of Cairo came to Giza to meet Bonaparte and offered to hand over the city to him Three days later he moved his main headquarters there Desaix was ordered to follow Mourad who had set off for Upper Egypt An observation corps was put in place at Elkanka to keep an eye on the movements of Ibrahim who was heading towards Syria Bonaparte personally led the pursuit of Ibrahim beat him at Salahie and pushed him completely out of Egypt The transports had sailed back to France but the battle fleet stayed and supported the army along the coast The British fleet under the command of Horatio Nelson had been searching in vain for the French fleet for weeks The British fleet had not found it in time to prevent the landings in Egypt but on 1 August Nelson discovered the French warships anchored in a strong defensive position in the Bay of Abukir The French believed that they were open to attack only on one side the other side being protected by the shore During the Battle of the Nile the arriving British fleet under Horatio Nelson managed to slip half of their ships in between the land and the French line thus attacking from both sides In a few hours 11 out of the 13 French ships of the line and 2 out of the 4 French frigates were captured or destroyed the four remaining ships fled This frustrated Bonaparte s goal of strengthening the French position in the Mediterranean Sea and instead put it totally under British control News of the naval defeat reached Bonaparte en route back to Cairo from defeating Ibrahim but far from being worried Mullie states This disastrous event did not disconcert Bonaparte at all ever impenetrable he did not allow any emotion to appear that he had not tested in his mind Having calmly read the despatch which informed him that he and his army were now prisoners in Egypt he said We no longer have a navy Well We ll have to stay here or leave as great men just as the ancients did The army then showed itself happy at this short energetic response but the native Egyptians considered the defeat at Aboukir as fortune turning in their favour and so from then on busied themselves to find means to throw off the hateful yoke the foreigners were trying to impose on them by force and to hunt them from their country This project was soon put into execution 21 After the Battle of Pyramids Napoleon instituted a French administration in Cairo and suppressed the subsequent rebellions violently Although Napoleon tried to co opt local Egyptian ulema scholars like Al Jabarti poured scorn on the ideas and cultural ways of the French 22 Despite their cordial proclamations to the natives with some French soldiers even converting to Islam clerics like Abdullah al Sharqawi condemned the French as materialist libertine philosophers they deny the Resurrection and the afterlife and the prophets 23 Bonaparte s administration of Egypt edit nbsp Napoleon in Cairo by Jean Leon Gerome 19th century Princeton University Art Museum nbsp The skeleton of Napoleon s Arabian horse Marengo on display at the National Army Museum in London nbsp Trace du theatre des operations militaires from E L F Hauet s manuscripts of the Campaign in Egypt at the American University in CairoAfter the naval defeat at Aboukir Bonaparte s campaign remained land bound His army still succeeded in consolidating power in Egypt although it faced repeated nationalist uprisings and Napoleon began to behave as absolute ruler of all Egypt He set up a pavilion and from within it presided over a fete du Nil it was he who gave the signal to throw into the floats the statue of the river s fiancee his name and Mohammed s were mingled in the same acclamations on his orders gifts were distributed to the people and he gave kaftans to his main officers In a largely unsuccessful effort to gain the support of the Egyptian population Bonaparte issued proclamations that cast him as a liberator of the people from Ottoman and Mamluk oppression praising the precepts of Islam and claiming friendship between France and the Ottoman Empire despite French intervention in the breakaway state This position as a liberator initially gained him solid support in Egypt and later led to admiration for Napoleon from the Albanian Muhammad Ali of Egypt who succeeded where Bonaparte had not in reforming Egypt and declaring its independence from the Ottomans In a letter to a sheikh in August Napoleon wrote I hope I shall be able to unite all the wise and educated men of all the countries and establish a uniform regime based on the principles of the Quran which alone are true and which alone can lead men to happiness 24 Bonaparte s secretary Bourienne wrote that his employer had no serious interest in Islam or any other religion beyond their political value Bonaparte s principle was to look upon religions as the work of men but to respect them everywhere as a powerful engine of government If Bonaparte spoke as a Mussulman Muslim it was merely in his character of a military and political chief in a Mussulman country To do so was essential to his success to the safety of his army and to his glory In India he would have been for Ali at Thibet for the Dalai lama and in China for Confucius 25 Shortly after Bonaparte s return from facing Ibrahim came Mohammed s birthday which was celebrated with great pomp Bonaparte himself directed the military parades for the occasion preparing for this festival in the sheik s house wearing oriental dress and a turban It was on this occasion that the divan granted him the title Ali Bonaparte after Bonaparte proclaimed himself a worthy son of the Prophet and favourite of Allah Around the same time he took severe measures to protect pilgrim caravans from Egypt to Mecca writing a letter himself to the governor of Mecca Even so thanks to the taxes he imposed on them to support his army the Egyptians remained unconvinced of the sincerity of all Bonaparte s attempts at conciliation and continued to attack him ceaselessly Any means even sudden attacks and assassination were allowed to force the infidels out of Egypt Military executions were unable to deter these attacks and they continued 22 September was the anniversary of the founding of the First French Republic and Bonaparte organised the most magnificent celebration possible On his orders an immense circus was built in the largest square in Cairo with 105 columns each with a flag bearing the name of a departement round the edge and a colossal inscribed obelisk at the centre On seven classical altars were inscribed the names of heroes killed in the French Revolutionary Wars Two triumphal arches were built to commemorate the campaign a wooden arc de triomphe in Azbakiyya Square and a second arch which was inscribed with the words There is no god but God and Muhammad is his prophet and decorated by the Genoese artist Michel Rigo with scenes from the Battle of the Pyramids 26 Here there was some awkwardness the painting flattered the French but aggrieved the defeated Egyptians they were trying to win over as allies On the day of the festival Bonaparte addressed his troops enumerating their exploits since the 1793 siege of Toulon and telling them From the English famous for arts and commerce to the hideous and fierce Bedouin you have caught the gaze of the world Soldiers your destiny is fair This day 40 million citizens celebrate the era of representative government 40 million citizens think of you The speech was followed by cries of Vive la Republique and a cannon volley Later Bonaparte held a feast for two hundred people in a garden in Cairo and sent soldiers to plant a French flag on the top of a pyramid 27 Napoleon s administration of Egypt is important in Coptic history On 30 July 1798 just a few days after his arrival he appointed Jirjis Al Jawhary brother of Ibrahim El Gohary and the most prominent Coptic layperson as General Steward of Egypt 28 29 In his Declaration to the Coptic Nation Napoleon elevated them from dhimmi to equal citizens permitting them to carry weapons mount mules or horses wear turbans and dress in whatever way they like He also punished those who had killed Copts in the chaos following the French arrival In return he demanded that the Copts show zeal and fidelity in the service of the French Republic 30 On 21 December 1798 he appointed four Coptic members to his new consultative assembly that replaced the first assemblies and which did not include Copts and which he had to abolish soon after the First Cairo Revolution Pursuit of Mamluks edit After his defeat at the Pyramids Mourad Bey retreated to Upper Egypt On 25 August 1798 General Desaix embarked at the head of his division on a flotilla and sailed up the Nile 31 On 31 August Desaix arrived at Beni Suef where he began to encounter supply problems 32 then he went up the Nile to Behneseh and progressed towards Minya The Mamluks did not fight and the flotilla returned on September 12 at the entrance of Bahr Yussef 32 Desaix learned that the Mamluks were in the plain of Faiyum by 24 September 33 The first contact between the two sides occurred on 3 October and a second minor fight took place which began to deplete food and ammunition of the French forces 33 On 7 October Mourad Bey s troops came out of Sediman s entrenchments and attacked the French who formed themselves into three squares one large and two small at its angles 34 The Mamluks as previous encounters attacked furiously but were repulsed 33 The Mamluks attempted to use their four cannons but a vigorous attack led by Captain Jean Rapp managed to capture them 33 After several hours of fighting the French went on the offensive and the Mamluks fled southwards 34 Revolt of Cairo edit Further information Revolt of Cairo nbsp Revolt in Cairo nbsp The uprising in Cairo Napoleon extended amnesty to the leaders of the revolt in 1798 In 1798 Napoleon led the French army into Egypt swiftly conquering Alexandria and Cairo However in October of that year discontent against the French led to an uprising by the people of Cairo While Bonaparte was in Old Cairo the city s population began spreading weapons around to one another and fortifying strongpoints especially at the Al Azhar Mosque A French commander Dominique Dupuy was killed by the revolting Cairenes as well as Bonaparte s Aide de camp Joseph Sulkowski Excited by the sheikhs and imams the local citizens swore by the Prophet to exterminate all and any Frenchman they met and all Frenchmen they encountered at home or in the streets were mercilessly slaughtered Crowds rallied at the city gates to keep out Bonaparte who was repulsed and forced to take a detour to get in via the Boulaq gate The French army s situation was critical the British were threatening French control of Egypt after their victory at the Battle of the Nile Murad Bey and his army were still in the field in Upper Egypt and the generals Menou and Dugua were only just able to maintain control of Lower Egypt The Ottoman peasants had common cause with those rising against the French in Cairo the whole region was in revolt A manifesto of the Great Lord was published widely throughout Egypt stating The French people are a nation of stubborn infidels and unbridled rascals They look upon the Koran the Old Testament and the New Testament as fables Soon troops as numerous as they are formidable will advance on us by land at the same time ships of the line as high as the mountains will cover the surface of the seas If it pleases God it is reserved for you to preside over their i e the French forces in Egypt entire destruction as dust is scattered by the wind there will not remain a single vestige of these infidels for the promise of God is formal the hope of the wicked man will be deceived and the wicked men will perish Glory to the Lord of the worlds The French responded by setting up cannons in the Citadel and firing them at areas containing rebel forces During the night French soldiers advanced around Cairo and destroyed any barricades and fortifications they came across 35 The rebels soon began to be pushed back by the strength of the French forces gradually losing control of their areas of the city Bonaparte personally hunted down rebels from street to street and forced them to seek refuge in the Al Azhar Mosque Bonaparte said that He i e God is too late you ve begun now I will finish He then immediately ordered his cannon to open fire on the Mosque The French broke down the gates and stormed into the building massacring the inhabitants At the end of the revolt 5 000 to 6 000 Cairenes were dead or wounded Syria editCanal of the Pharaohs edit nbsp Bonaparte and his chief of staff in Egypt painting by Jean Leon Gerome 1863With Egypt quiet again and under his control Bonaparte used this time of rest to visit Suez and see with his own eyes the possibility of a canal known as the Canal of the Pharaohs said to have been cut in antiquity between the Red Sea and the Nile by order of the pharaohs Before setting out on the expedition he gave Cairo back its self government as a token of its pardon a new divan made up of 60 members replaced the military commission Then accompanied by his colleagues from the Institut Berthollet Monge Le Pere Dutertre Costaz Caffarelli and followed by a 300 man escort Bonaparte set out for the Red Sea and after three days marching across the desert he and his caravan arrived at Suez After giving orders to complete the fortifications at Suez Bonaparte crossed the Red Sea and on 28 December moved into Sinai to look for the celebrated mountains of Moses 17 kilometres from Suez On his return surprised by the rising tide he ran the risk of drowning Arriving back at Suez after much exploration the expedition fulfilled its aim finding the remains of the ancient canal built by Senusret III and Necho II Ottoman offensives edit nbsp Map of campaigns in Egypt and SyriaIn the meantime the Ottomans in Constantinople modern day Istanbul received news of the French fleet s destruction at Aboukir and believed this spelled the end for Bonaparte and his expedition trapped in Egypt Sultan Selim III decided to wage war against France and sent two armies to Egypt The first army under the command of Jezzar Pasha had set out with 12 000 soldiers but was reinforced with troops from Damascus Aleppo Iraq 10 000 men and Jerusalem 8 000 men The second army under the command of Mustafa Pasha began on Rhodes with about eight thousand soldiers He also knew he would get about 42 000 soldiers from Albania Constantinople Asia Minor and Greece The Ottomans planned two offensives against Cairo from Syria across the desert of El Salheya Bilbeis Al Khankah and from Rhodes by sea landing in the Aboukir area or the port city of Damietta French response edit In January 1799 during the canal expedition the French learned of the hostile Ottoman movements and that Jezzar had seized the desert fort of El Arish 16 km 10 mi from Syria s frontier with Egypt which he was in charge of guarding Certain that war with the Ottoman sultan was imminent and that he would be unable to defend against the Ottoman army Bonaparte decided that his best defence would be to attack them first in Syria where a victory would give him more time to prepare against the Ottoman forces on Rhodes He prepared around 13 000 soldiers who were organised in divisions under the command of Generals Reynier with 2 160 men Kleber with 2 336 Bon 2 449 Lannes 2 938 a cavalry division under General Murat 900 a brigade of infantry and cavalry under Brigade chief Bessieres 400 a camel company 89 artillery under Dommartin 1 387 and engineers and sappers under Caffarelli 3 404 Every infantry and cavalry division had 6 cannons Napoleon took 16 siege cannons which were placed on ships in Damietta under the command of Captain Standelet He also ordered contre amiral Perree to Jaffa with siege artillery pieces The total artillery sent on the campaign was 80 cannon Reynier and the vanguard quickly arrived before Arish captured it destroyed part of the garrison and forced the rest to take refuge in the castle At the same time he caused Ibrahim s mamluks to flee and captured their camp Bonaparte s French forces left Egypt on 5 February and seven days after leaving Cairo Bonaparte too arrived at Arish and bombarded one of the castle towers The garrison surrendered two days later and some of the garrison joined the French army Jaffa edit Main article Siege of Jaffa After marching 100 kilometres 60 mi across the desert the army arrived in Gaza where it rested for two days and then moved onto Jaffa This city was surrounded by high walls flanked by towers Jezzar had entrusted its defence to elite troops with the artillery manned by 1 200 Ottoman gunners The city was one of the ways into Syria its port could be used by his fleet and a large part of the expedition s success depended on its fall This meant Bonaparte had to capture the city before advancing further and so he laid siege to it from 3 7 March All the outer works were in the besiegers power and a breach could be produced When Bonaparte sent a Turk to the city s commander to demand his surrender the commander beheaded him despite the envoy s neutrality and ordered a sortie He was repulsed and on the evening of the same day the besiegers cannonballs caused one of the towers to crumble Despite the defenders desperate resistance Jaffa fell Two days and two nights of carnage were enough to assuage the French soldiers fury editorializing 4 500 prisoners were shot or beheaded by an executioner taken on in Egypt This vengeful execution found apologists who wrote that Napoleon could neither afford to hold such a large number of prisoners nor let them escape to rejoin Jezzar s ranks nbsp Napoleon visiting the plague victims of Jaffa by Antoine Jean GrosBefore leaving Jaffa Bonaparte set up a divan for the city along with a large hospital on the site of the Carmelite monastery at Mount Carmel to treat those of his soldiers who had caught the plague whose symptoms had been seen among them since the start of the siege A report from generals Bon and Rampon on the plague s spread worried Bonaparte To calm his army it is said he went into the sufferers rooms spoke with and consoled the sick and touched them saying See it s nothing then left the hospital and told those who thought his actions unwise It was my duty I m commander in chief Some later historians state that Napoleon avoided touching or even meeting plague sufferers to avoid catching it and that his visits to the sick were invented by later Napoleonic propaganda For example long after the campaign Antoine Jean Gros produced the commissioned painting Bonaparte Visiting the Plague Victims of Jaffa in 1804 This showed Napoleon touching a sick man s body modelling him on an Ancien Regime king healer touching sufferers from the King s Evil during his coronation rites this was no coincidence since 1804 was the year Napoleon Bonaparte crowned himself emperor Mount Tabor edit Main article Battle of Mount Tabor 1799 nbsp Battle of Mount Tabor against the Ottomans nbsp The monument to Napoleon s soldiers at Stella Maris Monastery HaifaFrom Jaffa the army set off for the coastal town of Acre En route it captured Haifa and the munitions and provisions stored there along with the castle at Jaffe the castle at Nazareth and even the town of Tyre much farther up the coast The siege of Acre began on 18 March but the French were unable to take it and it was here that the Syrian campaign came to an abrupt halt The city was defended by newly created Ottoman modern elite infantry Nizam i Cedid under the command of Jezzar Pasha and was right on the coast enabling it to be reinforced and resupplied by the British and Ottoman fleets After sixty days repeated attacks and two murderous and inconclusive assaults the city remained uncaptured Even so it was still awaiting reinforcements by sea as well as a large army forming up in Asia on the sultan s orders to march against the French To find out the latter s movements Jezzar ordered a general sortie against Bonaparte s camp This sortie was supported by its own artillery and a naval bombardment from the British With his usual impetuosity Bonaparte pushed Jezzar s columns back against their own walls and then went to help Kleber who was retrenched in the ruins with 4 000 Frenchmen under his command against 20 000 Ottomans at Mount Tabor Bonaparte conceived a trick which used all the advantages offered him by the enemy position sending Murat and his cavalry across the River Jordan to defend the river crossing and Vial and Rampon to march on Nablus while Bonaparte himself put his troops between the Ottomans and the magazines These manoeuvres were successful in what was known as the Battle of Mount Tabor The enemy army taken by surprise at many points at once was routed and forced to retreat leaving their camels tents provisions and 5 000 dead on the battlefield Acre edit Main article Siege of Acre 1799 Returning to besiege Acre Bonaparte learned that Rear Admiral Perree had landed seven siege artillery pieces at Jaffa Bonaparte then ordered two assaults both vigorously repulsed A fleet was sighted flying the Ottoman flag and Bonaparte realised he must capture the city before that fleet arrived with reinforcements A fifth general attack was ordered which took the outer works planted the French tricolour on the rampart pushed the Ottomans back into the city and forced the Ottoman fire to relent Acre was thus taken or about to capitulate One of those fighting on the Ottoman side was the French emigre and engineer officer Phelippeaux one of Bonaparte s classmates at the Ecole Militaire Phelippeaux ordered cannon to be placed in the most advantageous positions and new trenches dug as if by magic behind the ruins which Bonaparte s forces had captured At the same time Sidney Smith commander of the British fleet and his ships crews landed These factors renewed the courage of the besieged and they pushed Bonaparte s force back with stubborn fury on both sides Three final consecutive assaults were all repulsed convincing Bonaparte that it would be unwise to continue trying to capture Acre He raised the siege in May and consoled his soldiers with the proclamation After feeding the war for three months in the heart of Syria with a handful of men taking forty guns fifty flags 10 000 prisoners razing the fortifications of Gaza Kaiffa Jaffa Acre we shall return to Egypt Retreat from Acre edit The French force s situation was now critical the enemy could harass its rear as it retreated it was tired and hungry in the desert and it was carrying a large number of plague sufferers To carry these sufferers in the middle of the army would spread the disease so they had to be carried in the rear where they were most at risk from the fury of the Ottomans keen to avenge the massacres at Jaffa There were two hospital depots one in the large hospital on Mount Carmel and the other at Jaffa On Bonaparte s orders all those at Mount Carmel were evacuated to Jaffa and Tantura The gun horses were abandoned before Acre and Bonaparte and all his officers handed their horses over to the transport officer Daure with Bonaparte walking to set an example To conceal its withdrawal from the siege the army set off at night Arriving at Jaffa Bonaparte ordered three evacuations of the plague sufferers to three different points one by sea to Damietta one by land to Gaza and another by land to Arish During the retreat the army picked clean all the lands through which they passed with livestock crops and houses all being destroyed Gaza was the only place to be spared in return for remaining loyal to Bonaparte To speed the retreat Napoleon suggested the controversial step of euthanizing his own soldiers who were terminally ill with plague between 15 and 50 sources vary and not expected to recover through an opium overdose to relieve their suffering ease the retreat prevent the spread of the disease and prevent the torture and executions the soldiers left behind would have received if captured by the enemy his doctors refused to carry out such orders 36 37 38 but there is also evidence in the form of first hand testimonies that claim the mass euthanasia did take place and the matter remains one for debate 39 40 Back in Egypt edit Finally after four months away from Egypt the expedition arrived back at Cairo with 1 800 wounded having lost 600 men to the plague and 1 200 to enemy action In the meantime Ottoman and British emissaries had brought news of Bonaparte s setback at Acre to Egypt stating that his expeditionary force was largely destroyed and Bonaparte himself was dead On his return Bonaparte scotched these rumours by re entering Egypt as if he was at the head of a triumphal army with his soldiers carrying palm branches emblems of victory In his proclamation to the inhabitants of Cairo Bonaparte told them He is back in Cairo the Bien Garde the head of the French army general Bonaparte who loves Mahomet s religion he is back sound and well thanking God for the favours he has given him He has entered Cairo by the gate of Victory This day is a great day no one has ever seen its like all the inhabitants of Cairo have come out to meet him They have seen and recognised that it is the same commander in chief Bonaparte in his own person but those of Jaffa having refused to surrender he handed them all over to pillage and death in his anger He has destroyed all its ramparts and killed all those found there There were around 5 000 of Jezzar s troops in Jaffa he destroyed them all Campaigns in Upper Egypt editThe French were determined to exterminate the Mamluks or to expel them from Egypt By that time the Mamluks were driven out of Faiyum to Upper Egypt General Desaix informed Bonaparte of his situation and soon received a reinforcement of 1 000 cavalry and three light artillery pieces commanded by General Davout On 29 December 1798 the French army arrived at Girga capital of Upper Egypt and waited there for a flotilla to bring them ammunition However twenty days passed without hearing of the flotilla In the meantime Mourad Bey had contacted chieftains from Jeddah and Yanbu to cross the Red Sea and to exterminate a handful of infidels who have come to destroy the religion of Mohammed He also sent emissaries to Nubia to bring reinforcements and Hassan Bey Jeddaoui who also conjured to join against the enemies of the Quran Upon hearing these endeavours General Davout mobilized his forces on 2 3 January 1799 where he met a multitude of armed men near the village of Sawaqui 41 The insurgents were easily routed and eight hundred of them remained on the battlefield However the locals kept gathering around Asyut to combat the French On 8 January Davout met another local forces at Tahta where he killed a thousand men and put the rest to flight 42 In the meantime Mourad Bey s army was reinforced by a thousand sheriffs arriving from beyond the Red Sea two hundred and fifty Mamluks led Hassan bey Jeddaoui and Osman bey Hassan in addition to Nubians and North Africans led by Sheikh Al Kilani where they encamped near the village of Houe all supported by the inhabitants of Upper Egypt and the Cataracts of the Nile 42 Battle of Samhud edit The combined Muslim army marched on 21 January 1799 in the desert until they reached Samhud near Qena On 22 January Desaix formed three squares two infantry and one cavalry The latter was placed in the centre of the other two in order to be protected The French were scarcely drawn up in line as the enemy cavalry completely surrounded them while a column of Arabs from Yanbu fired continuously on their left Desaix instructed the riflemen of the 96th Infantry Regiment to attack them while Rapp and Savary at the head of a squadron of cavalry would charge the enemy in flank 43 The Arabs were attacked so vividly which forced them to flee leaving about thirty of their own in the square both killed and wounded Afterwards the Arabs of Yanbu having rallied came back to attack and wanted to capture the village of Samhud but the riflemen of the 96th Infantry Regiment assaulted them viciously and directed against them such a sustained fire in which they were obliged to withdraw after having lost many people 43 However the numerous Muslim forces were advancing uttering frightful cries and the Mamluks swooped down on the squares commanded by the generals Friant and Belliard but they were so strongly repulsed by artillery and musketry fire that they had to withdraw leaving the battlefield strewn with their dead 43 Mourad Bey and Osman bey Hassan who commanded the Mamluk corps could not stand against the charge of Davout s cavalry They abandoned their positions and dragged the whole army in their flight The French pursued their enemies until the next day and did not stop until after having pushed them beyond the Cataracts of the Nile 43 Battle of Aswan edit Desaix continued to march south as he reached Esneh on 9 February Meanwhile Osman bey Hassan had stationed his forces at the foot of a mountain near Aswan On 12 February General Davout discovered the enemy positions and immediately made his military arrangements He formed his cavalry in two lines and in this order of battle he swooped down on the Mamluks Osman bey Hassan was dangerously wounded as he saw his horse killed under him The French cavalry rushed with such impetuosity on the Muslims and the fight turned into fury However the Mamluks were defeated and forced to abandon the battlefield 44 Massacre of Qena edit By the end of February 1799 Sherif Hassan and 2 000 Infantry arrived from Mecca When Desaix and his forces reached Asyut his flotilla was left behind near Qena On 3 March Muslims launched an attack on the flotilla which was called L Italie led by Captain Morandi with 200 marines and 300 wounded and blind on board Morandi tried to manoeuvre but the vessel was boarded by hundreds of invaders in which he ordered that the vessel to be set on fire He was later killed by rain of hostile bullets However all on board were eventually mutilated and killed 45 Battle of Abnud edit On 8 March 1799 General Belliard led his forces to fight 3 000 Meccan Infantry and 350 Mamluks in the plain of Abnud located on the right bank of the Nile to the south of Qena The French with their square formation managed to advance on the Muslims forces who later garrisoned themselves in the houses of Abnud The fighting lasted for hours afterward the French managed to reach the courtyard of the village and set the houses on fire The Muslims were forced to escape and the remaining injured were all killed 46 Battle of Beni Adi edit The Mamluks maintained with their strategy of inciting the locals against the French forces On 1 May 1799 General Davout s forces killed at least 2 000 fellahin at Beni Adi near Asyut 47 However as they were pursuing Murad Bey into Upper Egypt the French discovered the monuments at Dendera Thebes Edfu and Philae Capture of Kosseir edit On 29 May 1799 General Belliard managed to capture Kosseir on the Red Sea after he marched through the desert to halt further incoming of Meccan troops or any possible invasion from the English 48 Abukir to withdrawal editLand battle at Abukir edit nbsp Bonaparte Before the Sphinx c 1868 by Jean Leon Gerome Hearst CastleAt Cairo the army found the rest and supplies it needed to recover but its stay there could not be a long one Bonaparte had been informed that Murad Bey had evaded the pursuit by Generals Desaix Belliard Donzelot and Davout and was descending on Lower Egypt Bonaparte thus marched to attack him at Giza also learning that 100 Ottoman ships were off Aboukir threatening Alexandria Without losing time or returning to Cairo Bonaparte ordered his generals to make all speed to meet the army commanded by the pasha of Rumelia Said Mustapha which had joined up with the forces under Murad Bey and Ibrahim Before leaving Giza where he found them Bonaparte wrote to Cairo s divan stating Eighty ships have dared to attack Alexandria but beaten back by the artillery in that place they have gone to anchor in Aboukir Bay where they began disembarking troops I leave them to do this since my intention is to attack them to kill all those who do not wish to surrender and to leave others alive to be led in triumph to Cairo This will be a handsome spectacle for the city First Bonaparte advanced to Alexandria from which he marched to Aboukir whose fort was now strongly garrisoned by the Ottomans Bonaparte deployed his army so that Mustapha would have to win or die with all his family Mustapha s army was 18 000 strong and supported by several cannons with trenches defending it on the landward side and free communication with the Ottoman fleet on the seaward side Bonaparte ordered an attack on 25 July and the Battle of Abukir ensued In a few hours the trenches were taken 10 000 Ottomans drowned in the sea citation needed and the rest captured or killed Most of the credit for the French victory that day goes to Murat who captured Mustapha himself Mustapha s son was in command of the fort and he and all his officers survived but were captured and sent back to Cairo as part of the French triumphal procession Seeing Bonaparte return with these high ranking prisoners the population of Cairo superstitiously welcomed him as a prophet warrior who had predicted his own triumph with such remarkable precision Bonaparte leaves Egypt edit The land battle at Abukir was Bonaparte s last action in Egypt partly restoring his reputation after the French naval defeat at the same place a year earlier During the prisoner exchange at Aboukir and notably via the Gazette de Francfort Sidney Smith had sent him he was in communication with the British fleet from which he had learned of events in France As Bonaparte saw and later mythologised France was thrown back into retreat its enemies had recaptured France s conquests France was unhappy at its dictatorial government and was nostalgic for the glorious peace it had signed in the Treaty of Campo Formio as Bonaparte saw it this meant France needed him and would welcome him back With the Egyptian campaign stagnating and political instability developing back home a new phase in Bonaparte s career was beginning he felt that he had nothing left to do in Egypt which was worthy of his ambition and that as had been shown by the defeat at Acre the forces he had left to him there were not sufficient for an expedition of any importance outside of Egypt Bonaparte thus spontaneously decided to return to France According to an accusatory letter by General Kleber his successor in Egypt Napoleon also foresaw that the army was getting yet weaker from losses in battle and to disease and would soon have to surrender and be taken prisoner by its enemies which would destroy all the prestige he had won by his many victories 49 He only shared the secret of his return with a small number of friends whose discretion and loyalty were well known He left Cairo in August on the pretext of a voyage in the Nile Delta without arousing suspicion accompanied by the scholars Monge and Berthollet the painter Denon and generals Berthier Murat Lannes and Marmont On 23 August a proclamation informed the army that Bonaparte had transferred his powers as commander in chief to General Kleber This news was taken badly with the soldiers angry with Bonaparte and the French government for leaving them behind but this indignation soon ended since the troops were confident in Kleber who convinced them that Bonaparte had not left permanently but would soon be back with reinforcements from France As night fell the frigate Muiron silently moored by the shore with three other ships escorting her Some became worried when a British corvette was sighted at the moment of departure but Bonaparte cried Bah We ll get there luck has never abandoned us we shall get there despite the English Bonaparte s voyage to France edit On their 41 day voyage back they did not meet a single enemy ship to stop them with some sources suggesting that Bonaparte had purchased the British fleet s neutrality via a tacit agreement though others hold this unlikely since many would argue that he also had a pact with Nelson to leave him to board on the Egyptian coast unopposed with the fleet bearing his large army It has been suggested that Sidney Smith and other British commanders in the Mediterranean helped Napoleon evade the Royal Navy blockade thinking that he might act as a Royalist element back in France but there is no solid historical evidence in support of this conjecture citation needed On 1 October Napoleon s small flotilla entered port at Ajaccio where contrary winds kept them until 8 October when they set out for France This was the last time Napoleon set foot upon his birthland 50 When the coast came in sight ten British ships were sighted Contre amiral Ganteaume suggested changing course towards Corsica but Bonaparte said No this manoeuvre would lead us to England and I want to get to France This courageous act saved them and on 8 October 16 vendemiaire year VIII the frigates anchored in the roads off Frejus As there were no sick men on board and the plague in Egypt had ended six months before their departure Bonaparte and his entourage were allowed to land immediately without waiting in quarantine At 6 pm he set off for Paris accompanied by his chief of staff Berthier He stopped off at Saint Raphael where he built a pyramid commemorating the expedition Siege of Damietta edit On 1 November 1799 the British fleet commanded by Admiral Sidney Smith unloaded an army of Janissaries near Damietta between Lake Manzala and the sea The garrison of Damietta 800 infantry and 150 cavalry strong commanded by General Jean Antoine Verdier encountered the Turks According to Kleber s report 2 000 to 3 000 Janissaries were killed or drowned and 800 surrendered including their leader Ismael Bey The Turks also lost 32 standards and 5 cannons 51 End of the campaign edit nbsp Assassination of Kleber painting in the Musee historique de Strasbourg nbsp British victory over the French at the Battle of Alexandria in 1801The troops Bonaparte left behind were supposed to be honourably evacuated under the terms of the Convention of El Arish Kleber had negotiated with Smith and the Ottoman commander Kor Yusuf in early 1800 but Britain refused to sign and Kor Yusuf sent an amphibious assault force of 30 000 Mamlukes against Kleber Kleber defeated the Mamlukes at the battle of Heliopolis in March 1800 and then suppressed an insurrection in Cairo On 14 June 26 prairial a Syrian student called Suleiman al Halabi assassinated Kleber with a dagger in the heart chest left forearm and right thigh Command of the French army passed to General Menou who held command from 3 July until August 1801 Menou s letter was published in Le Moniteur on 6 September with the conclusions of the committee charged with judging those responsible for the assassination The committee after carrying through the trial with all due solemnity and process thought it necessary to follow Egyptian customs in its application of punishment it condemned the assassin to be impaled after having his right hand burned and three of the guilty sheikhs to be beheaded and their bodies burned The Anglo Ottomans then commenced their land offensive the French were defeated by the British in the Battle of Alexandria on March 21 surrendered at Fort Julien in April and then Cairo fell in June Finally besieged in Alexandria from 17 August 2 September Menou eventually capitulated to the British Under the terms of his capitulation the British General John Hely Hutchinson allowed the French army to be repatriated in British ships Menou also signed over to Britain all Egyptian antiquities such as the Rosetta Stone which the French had collected After initial talks in Al Arish on 30 January 1802 the Treaty of Paris on 25 June ended all hostilities between France and the Ottoman Empire returning Egypt to the Ottomans Scientific expedition edit nbsp The Egyptian Expedition under the orders of Bonaparte painting by Leon Cogniet early 19th centuryAn unusual aspect of the Egyptian expedition was the inclusion of an enormous contingent of scientists and scholars savants assigned to the invading French force 167 in total This deployment of intellectual resources is considered as an indication of Napoleon s devotion to the principles of the Enlightenment and by others as a masterstroke of propaganda obfuscating the true motives of the invasion the increase of Bonaparte s power These scholars included engineers and artists members of the Commission des Sciences et des Arts the geologist Dolomieu Henri Joseph Redoute the mathematician Gaspard Monge a founding member of the Ecole polytechnique the chemist Claude Louis Berthollet Vivant Denon the mathematician Jean Joseph Fourier who did some of the empirical work upon which his analytical theory of heat was founded in Egypt the physicist Etienne Malus the naturalist Etienne Geoffroy Saint Hilaire the botanist Alire Raffeneau Delile and the engineer Nicolas Jacques Conte of the Conservatoire national des arts et metiers Their original aim was to help the army notably by opening a Suez Canal mapping out roads and building mills to supply food 7 They founded the Institut d Egypte with the aim of propagating Enlightenment values in Egypt through interdisciplinary work including improving its agricultural and architectural techniques A scientific review was created under the title Decade egyptienne and in the course of the expedition the scholars also observed and drew the flora and fauna in Egypt and became interested in the country s resources The Egyptian Institute saw the construction of laboratories libraries and a printing press The group worked prodigiously and some of their discoveries were not finally cataloged until the 1820s 52 A young engineering officer Pierre Francois Bouchard discovered the Rosetta Stone in July 1799 Many of the antiquities discovered by the French in Egypt including the stone were signed over to the British at the end of the campaign by Menou as part of his treaty with Hutchinson The French scholars research in Egypt gave rise to the 4 volume Memoires sur l Egypte published from 1798 to 1801 A subsequent and more comprehensive text was Description de l Egypte published on Napoleon s orders between 1809 and 1821 Publications such as these of Napoleon s discoveries in Egypt gave rise to fascination with Ancient Egyptian culture and the birth of Egyptology in Europe The scientists also tested methods in hot air ballooning while in Egypt Several months after the revolt of Cairo in 1798 inventor Nicolas Jacques Conte and mathematician Gaspard Monge built a hot air balloon from paper coloured with the tricolour red white and blue of the French Republic They launched the balloon above Azbakiyya Square above a crowd of spectators but the balloon soon fell to earth causing panic among the spectators 53 The French had also planned to demonstrate hot air balloon flight during their celebrations of the anniversary of the founding of the French Republic in 1798 but the scientists had lost their equipment due to the Battle of the Nile 26 Printing press editSee also Global spread of the printing press The printing press was first introduced to Egypt by Napoleon 54 He brought with his expedition a French Arabic and Greek printing press which were far superior in speed efficiency and quality to the nearest presses used in Istanbul In the Middle East Africa India and even much of Eastern Europe and Russia printing was a minor specialised activity until the 18th century at least From about 1720 the Mutaferrika Press in Istanbul produced substantial amounts of printing some of which the Egyptian clerics were aware of at the time Juan Cole reports that Bonaparte was a master of what we would now call spin and his genius for it is demonstrated by reports in Arabic sources that several of his more outlandish allegations were actually taken seriously in the Egyptian countryside 54 Bonaparte s initial use of Arabic in his printed proclamations was rife with error In addition to much of the awkwardly translated Arabic wording being unsound grammatically often the proclamations were so poorly constructed that they were undecipherable 55 The French Orientalist Jean Michel de Venture de Paradis plausibly with the help of Maltese assistants was responsible for translating the first of Napoleon s French proclamations into Arabic The Maltese language is distantly related to the Egyptian dialect and classical Arabic differs greatly in grammar vocabulary and idiom Venture de Paradis who had lived in Tunis understood Arabic grammar and vocabulary but did not know how to use them idiomatically The Sunni Muslim clerics of the Al Azhar University in Cairo reacted incredulously to Napoleon s proclamations 54 Abd al Rahman al Jabarti a Cairene cleric and historian received the proclamations with a combination of amusement bewilderment and outrage 56 57 58 He berated the French s poor Arabic grammar and the infelicitous style of their proclamations Over the course of Napoleon s invasion of Egypt al Jabarti wrote a wealth of material regarding the French and their occupation tactics Among his observations he rejected Napoleon s claim that the French were muslims the wrong noun case was used in the Arabic proclamation making it a lower case m and poorly understood the French concept of a republic and democracy words which did not exist at the time in Arabic 54 Analysis editIn addition to its significance in the wider French Revolutionary Wars the campaign had a powerful impact on the Ottoman Empire in general and the Arab world in particular The invasion demonstrated the military technological and organisational superiority of the Western European powers to the Middle East This led to profound social changes in the region The invasion introduced Western inventions such as the printing press and ideas such as liberalism and incipient nationalism to the Middle East eventually leading to the establishment of Egyptian independence and modernisation under Muhammad Ali Pasha in the first half of the 19th century and eventually the Nahda or Arab Renaissance To modernist historians the French arrival marks the start of the modern Middle East 59 Napoleon s astonishing destruction of the conventional Mamluk soldiers at the Battle of the Pyramids served as a reminder for modernising Muslim monarchs to implement wide ranging military reforms 60 While the Egyptian Islamic scholar and historian Al Jabarti was critical of Napoleon and the French he preferred them over the Ottomans To Jabarti Napoleon was compassionate towards Muslims and poor folk and he safeguarded the lives of innocents and civilians This was at odds with the arrogance cruelty and tyranny of Ottoman rule which he characterised as an un Islamic system marked by corruption backwardness and summary executions Although critical of the French Republic and French Revolution both Jabarti and his disciple Hassan Al Attar were astonished by French technological advancements and appreciated the fair trials in the French judicial system 61 The campaign ultimately ended in failure with 15 000 French troops killed in action and 15 000 by disease Napoleon s reputation as a brilliant military commander remained intact and continued to increase despite some of his failures during the campaign This was due to his expert propaganda such as his Courrier de l Egypte set up to propagandise the expeditionary force itself and support its morale Such propaganda spread back to France where news of defeats such as at sea in Aboukir Bay and on land in Syria were suppressed Defeats could be blamed on the now assassinated Kleber leaving Napoleon free from blame and with a burnished reputation This opened his way to power and he profited from his reputation by engineering his becoming First Consul in the coup d etat of 18 brumaire November 1799 Charges of imperialism editNapoleonic invasion of Egypt is widely regarded in contemporary academic circles to be the first act of modern European imperialism and also criticised for its role in shaping the civilizing mission narrative of 19th century European colonial empires 62 According to Professor Edward W Said Napoleonic invasion led to the dominance of Orientalist narratives of the Muslim world with Napoleon s occupation of Egypt processes were set in motion between East and West that still dominate our contemporary cultural and political perspectives And the Napoleonic expedition with its great collective monument of erudition the Description de l Egypte provided a scene or setting for Orientalism Napoleon s invasion of Egypt in 1798 and his foray into Syria have had by far the greater consequence for the modern history of Orientalism 63 Mamelukes in French service editColonel Barthelemy Serra took the first steps towards creating a Mameluke Corps in France On September 27 1800 he wrote a letter from Cairo to the first consul couched in an Oriental style He regretted being very far away from Napoleon and offered his total devotion to the French nation and expressed the Mamelukes wish to become the bodyguard to the first consul They wished to serve him as living shields against those who would seek to harm him The first consul became receptive of admitting a unit of carefully selected cavalrymen as his personal guard He had an officer pay appropriate respects to the foreign troops and provided Napoleon himself with a full report to the number of refugees 64 French order of battle editMain article Order of battle of the Armee d Orient 1798 British order of battle editBritish Army edit The British Army in Egypt as it was known was the colloquial name of the forces under command of General Ralph Abercromby the armies order of battle in March 1800 was 65 Commanding General General Ralph Abercromby Chief of Staff Lieutenant General H Hutchinson Cavalry Division Cavalry Brigade commanded by Brigadier General Edward Finch 11th Light Dragoons 12th The Prince of Wales s Light Dragoons 26th Light Dragoons Hompesch s Hussars 3 Sqns Infantry Division Guards Brigade commanded by Major General Ludlow 1st Battalion Coldstream Regiment of Foot Guards 1st Battalion 3rd Regiment of Foot Guards 1st Brigade commanded by Major General Eyre Coote 1st Royal Regiment of Foot 54th West Norfolk Regiment of Foot 92nd Gordon Highlanders Regiment of Foot 2nd Brigade commanded by Major General John Cradock 1st Baron Howden 8th The King s Regiment of Foot 13th 1st Somersetshire Prince Albert s Light Infantry Regiment of Foot 90th Regiment of Foot Perthshire Volunteers 3rd Brigade commanded by Major General Richard Lambart 7th Earl of Cavan 2nd Queen s Royal Regiment of Foot 50th Queen s Own Regiment of Foot 79th Queen s Own Cameron Highlanders Regiment of Foot 4th Brigade commanded by Major General Sir John Doyle 1st Baronet 18th The Royal Irish Regiment of Foot 30th Cambridgeshire Regiment of Foot 44th East Essex Regiment of Foot 89th Princess Victoria s Regiment of Foot 5th Brigade commanded by Major General Charles Stuart mostly foreign troops Minorca Regiment Regiment de Roll French royalist emigre Dillon s Regiment French royalist emigre 6th Brigade commanded by Major General John Moore 23rd Royal Welsh Fusiliers Regiment of Foot 28th North Gloucestershire Regiment of Foot 40th the 2nd Somersetshire Regiment of Foot 3 coys 42nd Highland Regiment of Foot The Black Watch 58th Rutlandshire Regiment of Foot Royal Corsican Rangers Artillery amp Engineers commanded by Brigadier General Robert Lawson No 5 Company 1st Battalion Royal Artillery under Captain William Mudge No 7 Company 1st Battalion Royal Artillery under Captain John Lemoine No 1 Company 2nd Battalion Royal Artillery under Captain Thomas Charleton No 5 Company 3rd Battalion Royal Artillery under Captain William Bentham No 5 Company 5th Battalion Royal Artillery under Captain F M Sproule No 6 Company 5th Battalion Royal Artillery under Captain G Cookson No 7 Company 5th Battalion Royal Artillery under Captain I Wood detachments No 2 Company 2nd Battalion Royal Artillery under Captain Daniel Gahan detachments No 4 Company 2nd Battalion Royal Artillery under Captain Henry Thomson detachments No 3 Company 4th Battalion Royal Artillery under Captain W Wilson Maltese Pioneers 500 sailors assigned to the artillery Coming from Egypt troops commanded by Major General Sir David Baird 1st Baronet moving from British Raj India 66 84th York and Lancaster Regiment of Foot 2nd Bombay Native Infantry 13th Bombay Native Infantry detachment Madras Artillery detachment Bombay Artillery detachment Madras Sappers and MinersRoyal Navy edit The Royal Navy squadron still in the area cruising off Alexandria was organised into 67 Squadron commanded by Captain Samuel Hood HMS Zealous 74 guns HMS Goliath 74 guns HMS Swiftsure 74 guns HMS Seahorse 38 guns HMS Emerald 36 guns HMS Alcmene 32 guns HMS Bonne Citoyenne 20 guns HMS Fortune 18 guns HMS Legere 2 guns HMS Toride 2 guns Timeline and battles edit nbsp Battle at Nazareth April 1799 by Gros nbsp General Murat at the battle of Abukir July 1799 where thousands of Ottoman soldiers drowned in the Nile nbsp Battle of Heliopolis March 1800 1798 19 May 30 Floreal year VI Departure from Toulon 11 June 23 Prairial year VI Capture of Malta 1 July 13 Messidor year VI Landing at Alexandria 13 July Battle of Shubra Khit French victory 21 July 3 Thermidor year VI Battle of the Pyramids French land victory 1 and 2 August 14 15 Thermidor year VI Battle of the Nile British naval victory over French squadron anchored in Aboukir Bay 10 August Battle at Salheyeh French victory 7 October Battle of Sediman French victory 21 October 30 Vendemiaire Cairo Revolt 1799 11 19 February Siege of El Arish French victory 7 March Siege of Jaffa French victory 8 April Battle at Nazareth French victory Junot with 500 defeats 3000 Ottoman soldiers 11 April Battle of Cana French victory Napoleon wins a great battle against Ottomans 16 April 27 Germinal year VII Bonaparte relieves the troops under Kleber just as the latter are about to be overwhelmed at the foot of Mount Tabor 20 May 1 Prairial an VII Siege of Acre French troops retire after eight assaults 1 August 14 Thermidor year VII Battle of Abukir French victory 23 August 6 Fructidor year VII Bonaparte embarks on the frigate Muiron and abandons command to Kleber 1800 24 January 4 Pluviose year VIII Kleber concludes the Convention of El Arish with the British admiral Sidney Smith February Pluviose Ventose year VIII French troops begin their withdrawal but the British admiral Keith refuses to recognize the convention s terms 20 March 29 Ventose year VIII Battle of Heliopolis Kleber wins one last victory against a force of 30 000 Ottomans 14 June 25 Prairial year VIII A Kurd named Suleiman al Halabi assassinates Kleber in his garden in Cairo General Menou a convert to Islam takes over command 3 September 16 Fructidor year VIII The British recapture Malta from the French 1801 8 March 17 Ventose year IX British landing near Aboukir 21 March 30 Ventose year IX Battle of Alexandria French defeat army under Menou digs in at Alexandria ready for the siege of Alexandria 31 March 10 Germinal year IX Ottoman army arrives at El Arich 19 April 29 Germinal year IX British and Ottoman forces capture Fort Julien at Rosetta after a four day bombardment opening the Nile 27 June 8 Messidor year IX General Belliard surrenders in Cairo 31 August 13 Fructidor year IX Siege of Alexandria ends in Menou s surrenderIn popular culture editThe 2010 video game Napoleon Total War features an Egyptian Campaign where players can control French armies throughout the campaigns in Egypt and Syria Adieu BonaparteSee also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Expedition d Egypte Mediterranean campaign of 1798 Anglo Turkish War 1807 1809 Crusader invasions of Egypt 1154 116 References edit Strathern 2008 p 351 Daniel Panzac 2005 Barbary Corsairs Brill ISBN 9789004125940 a b Warfare and Armed Conflicts A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures 1492 2015 in French p 106 Barthorp 1992 p 6 a b c d James T G H 2003 Napoleon and Egyptology Britain s Debt to French Enterprise Enlightening the British Knowledge Discovery and the Museum in the Eighteenth Century British Museum Press p 151 ISBN 0 7141 5010 X a b Watson William E 2003 Tricolor and Crescent France and the Islamic World Greenwood pp 13 14 ISBN 0 275 97470 7 Retrieved 9 October 2010 a b c in French La Campagne d Egypte de Bonaparte Archived 2010 07 26 at the Wayback Machine Emission Deux mille ans d Histoire by France Inter 22 July 2010 a b Amini Iradj 1999 Napoleon and Persia Franco Persian Relations Under the First Empire Mage p 12 ISBN 0 934211 58 2 Retrieved 9 October 2010 a b c d Cole Juan 2007 Napoleon s Egypt Invading the Middle East Palgrave Macmillan pp 8 10 ISBN 978 1 4039 6431 1 Palazzo Parisio foreignaffairs gov mt Archived from the original on 6 January 2018 Retrieved 2 May 2018 Napoleon s bedroom at Palazzo Parisio in Valletta Malta Weather Site Blog blog maltaweathersite com Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 2 May 2018 MaltaToday archive maltatoday com mt Archived from the original on 21 August 2015 Retrieved 2 May 2018 Original text Napoleon Bonaparte ed C A Fischer Collection Generale et Complete de lettres de Napoleon le Grand Leipzig H Graff 1808 pp 58 59 Available at Archived copy Archived from the original on 7 April 2016 Retrieved 11 March 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Wikisource Full text of the Declaration du general Bonaparte au peuple egyptien 1798 in French Fr wikisource org Archived from the original on 1 September 2010 Retrieved 9 October 2010 Cairo Nezar AlSayyad p 174 De Bellaigue Christopher 2017 1 Cairo The Islamic Enlightenment The Struggle Between Faith and Reason 1798 to Modern Times New York Liveright Publishing Corporation p 2 ISBN 978 0 87140 373 5 Bainville 1997 p 31 a b c Tulard 1999 p 64 Smith 1998 p 140 Chandler David The Campaigns of Napoleon New York Macmillan 1966 Bonaparte chapter 6 Archived 2010 08 13 at the Wayback Machine in Charles Mullie Biographie des celebrites militaires des armees de terre et de mer de 1789 a 1850 1852 De Bellaigue Christopher 2017 Chapter 1 Cairo The Islamic Enlightenment The Struggle Between Faith and Reason 1798 to Modern Times New York Liveright Publishing Corporation pp 4 12 ISBN 978 0 87140 373 5 De Bellaigue Christopher 2017 Chapter 1 Cairo The Islamic Enlightenment The Struggle Between Faith and Reason 1798 to Modern Times New York Liveright Publishing Corporation pp 12 13 ISBN 978 0 87140 373 5 Cherfils 1914 pp 105 125 Bonaparte and Islam George Mason University Center for History and New Media Archived from the original on 28 June 2011 Retrieved 11 October 2008 a b Scurr Ruth 2022 Napoleon A Life in Gardens and Shadows Vintage p 77 Scurr Ruth 2022 Napoleon A Life in Gardens and Shadows Vintage p 78 Mu allem Jirjis Al Jawhari Islam Napleon Bonaparte and the Copt s cashmere turban copticliterature wordpress com 13 October 2011 سير القديسين والشهداء في الكنيسة القبطية الأرثوذكسية المعلم جرجس الجوهري st takla org Napoleon Bonaparte s declaration to the Coptic nation on 7 December 1798 a new social contract copticliterature com 17 October 2011 Bernede 1998 p 61 a b Bernede 1998 p 62 a b c d Bernede 1998 p 63 a b Pigeard 2004 Egypt History French Occupation Period Touregypt net 20 June 2011 Retrieved 5 March 2014 Rachlin Harvey 2013 The Rosetta Stone Lucy s Bones Sacred Stones amp Einstein s Brain The Remarkable Stories Behind the Great Objects and Artifacts of History From Antiquity to the Modern Era Garrett County Press p 57 ISBN 978 1939430915 Ludwig Emil 1927 The Torrent Poisoning the plague stricken Napoleon Unwin Brothers Ltd pp 135 136 Snodgrass Mary Ellen 2017 The Chronology Summer 1798 1800 World Epidemics A Cultural Chronology of Disease from Prehistory to the Era of Zika McFarland p 118 ISBN 978 1476671246 Strathern Paul 2008 The Retreat from Acre Napoleon in Egypt Random House Publishing Group p 353 ISBN 978 0553905885 Roberts Andrews 2014 Acre Napoleon A Life Penguin Random House Publishing Group p 188 ISBN 978 0698176287 Societe de militaires et de marins 1818a p 31 a b Societe de militaires et de marins 1818b p 443 a b c d Societe de militaires et de marins 1818b p 444 Societe de militaires et de marins 1818a pp 74 75 Herold 1962 p 255 Herold 1962 p 256 Herold 1962 p 259 Herold 1962 p 261 Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne 1831 Memoirs of Napoleon Bonaparte Scribners ISBN 9780342283217 Roberts Andrew 2015 Napoleon A Life Penguin ISBN 978 0698176287 Journal de Paris Bibliotheque municipale de Lyon 2012 pp 521 522 Frank McLynn Napoleon a biography Pimlico 1998 pp 180 183 Scurr Ruth 2022 Napoleon A Life in Gardens and Shadows Vintage p 80 a b c d Cole Juan 2007 Napoleon s Egypt Invading the Middle East Palgrave Macmillan p 148 Cole Juan 2007 Napoleon s Egypt Invading the Middle East Palgrave Macmillan p 31 Abd al Rahman Al Jabarti 2000 Ta rikh Muddat al faransis bi misr Cairo Dar al Kitab al Jami i pp 33 41 Shmuel Moreh 1995 Napoleon in Egypt Al Jabarti s Chronicle of the French Occupation 1798 Markus Wiener Publishing pp 27 33 Cole Juan 2007 Napoleon s Egypt Invading the Middle East Palgrave Macmillan p 32 Cleveland William L 2004 A history of the modern Middle East Michigan University Press p 65 ISBN 0 8133 4048 9 De Bellaigue Christopher 2017 The Islamic Enlightenment The Struggle Between Faith and Reason 1798 to Modern Times New York Liveright Publishing Corporation p 227 ISBN 978 0 87140 373 5 Moreh Shmuel 2004 Napoleon in Egypt Al Jabarti s Chronicle of the French Occupation 1798 Expanded Edition Princeton New Jersey Markus Wiener Publishers pp 183 184 192 195 198 ISBN 978 1 55876 337 1 A Bell David 2015 Epilogue 1815 the Present Napoleon A Concise Biography New York Oxford University Press p 111 ISBN 978 0 19 026271 6 W Said Edward 1979 1 The Scope of Orientalism Orientalism New York Vintage Books pp 42 43 76 ISBN 0 394 74067 X Pawly Ronald 2006 Napoleon s Mamelukes New York Osprey Publishing p 9 George Nafziger British Army in Egypt 1 March 1800 United States Army Combined Arms Center Major A C Lovett The Armies of India 1911 Delhi India pp 23 amp 329 George Nafziger Royal Navy Squadron Cruising off Alexandria August 1798 United States Army Combined Arms Center Sources editNapoleon Was Here An interactive journey following Napoleon s expedition to Egypt The National Library of Israel Bainville Jacques 1997 Bonaparte en Egypte poeme in French Paris Balland ISBN 2 7158 1135 7 Barthorp Michael 1992 Napoleon s Egyptian Campaigns 1798 1801 Volume 79 of Men at arms series Osprey Publishing ISBN 9780850451269 Bernede Allain 1998 Gerard Jean Chaduc Christophe Dickes Laurent Leprevost eds La campagne d Egypte 1798 1801 Mythes et realites in French Paris Musee de l Armee ISBN 978 2 901 41823 8 Burleigh Nina Mirage Harper New York 2007 ISBN 978 0 06 059767 2 Cherfils Christian 1914 Bonaparte et l Islam d apres les documents francais amp arabes Pedone OCLC 253080866 Cole Juan 2007 Napoleon s Egypt Invading the Middle East Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 4039 6431 1 Herold J Christopher 1962 Bonaparte in Egypt New York Harper amp Row Jourquin Jacques Journal du capitaine Francois dit le dromadaire d Egypte 2 vol introduction critique et annexes par Jacques Jourquin editions Tallandier couronne par l Academie francaise 1984 new edition 2003 Karabell Zachary 2003 Parting the desert the creation of the Suez Canal Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0 375 40883 5 Mackesy Piers British Victory in Egypt 1801 The End of Napoleon s Conquest Routledge 2013 ISBN 978 1134953578 Miot Jacques Narrative of the French expedition in Egypt and the operations in Syria Translated from the French 1816 Miot Jacques Francois Memoires pour servir a l histoire des expeditions en Egypte et en Syrie Deuxieme edition 1814 Review of Memoires pour servir a l Histoire des Expeditions en Egypte et en Syrie by J Miot The Quarterly Review 13 1 55 April 1815 Pigeard Alain 2004 Dictionnaire des batailles de Napoleon 1796 1815 in French Paris Tallandier ISBN 2 84734 073 4 Rickard J French Invasion of Egypt 1798 1801 2006 Smith Digby 1998 The Greenhill Napoleonic Wars Data Book Actions and Losses in Personnel Colours Standards and Artillery 1792 1815 London Greenhill Books ISBN 1 85367 276 9 Societe de militaires et de marins 1818a Dictionnaire historique des batailles sieges et combats de terre et de mer qui ont eu lieu pendant la Revolution Francaise in French Menard et Desenne Societe de militaires et de marins 1818b Dictionnaire historique des batailles sieges et combats de terre et de mer qui ont en lieu pendant la revolution Francaise Volume 3 in French Menard et Desenne Strathern Paul Napoleon in Egypt The Greatest Glory Jonathan Cape Random House London 2007 ISBN 978 0 224 07681 4 online Tulard Jean 1999 Dictionnaire Napoleon in French Paris Fayard ISBN 2 213 60485 1 Melanie Ulz Auf dem Schlachtfeld des Empire Mannlichkeitskonzepte in der Bildproduktion zu Napoleons Agyptenfeldzug Marburg Jonas Verlag 2008 ISBN 978 3 89445 396 1 Napoleonic Egypt Digital Collection Rare Books and Special Collections Library the American University in CairoExternal links edit nbsp Media related to Expedition d Egypte at Wikimedia CommonsPreceded byFrench invasion of Switzerland French Revolution Revolutionary campaignsFrench campaign in Egypt and Syria Succeeded byIrish Rebellion of 1798 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title French campaign in Egypt and Syria amp 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