- Battle of Konya
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Battle of Konya
partof=
caption=
date=December 21 ,1832
place=Konya ,Turkey
result=Egyptian Victory
combatant1=Egypt
combatant2=Ottoman Empire
commander1=Ibrahim Pasha
commander2=Reşid Mehmed Pasha
strength1=50,000 men
48 guns
strength2=54,000 men
100 guns
casualties1=262 dead
530 wounded
casualties2=3,000 dead
5,000 taken prisoner|The Battle of Konya was fought inDecember 21 ,1832 , betweenEgypt and theOttoman Empire , just outside the city ofKonya in modern-dayTurkey . TheEgyptians were led by Ibrahim Pasha, while the Ottomans were led byReşid Mehmed Pasha . The Egyptians were victorious.Prelude
The Egyptian campaign to occupy Syria began on October 29, 1831, starting the
First Turko-Egyptian War . Two armies set out from Egypt, one by land under GeneralIbrahim Yakan , and the other by sea, landing atJaffa , under Ibrahim Pasha. The Egyptians rapidly occupiedJerusalem and the coastal regions ofPalestine andLebanon , except for Acre, which had impregnable walls and a stronggarrison of about 3,000 hardened fighters with much artillery. Acre, under the OttomanPaha Abdullah Elgazar , held out against a long and bloodysiege before finally falling to the Egyptians on May 27, 1832.The final battle of the campaign of 1831/1832, came at
Konya on December 18-21, 1832. Several minor clashes between advanced elements and scouting parties of the two armies took place on December 18 and 19, and the main battle described below was on December 21.Opposing armies
Egyptian Forces: Ibrahim Pasha commanded a total of about 50,000 men in all of
Greater Syria , including recent Syrian recruits and about 7,000 Arabauxiliaries and irregulars. The regular forces were organised into teninfantry brigade s, twelvecavalry brigades and theartillery and engineers. Much of this force was spread out on his supply lines, and only 27,000 regular troops were available at the battle of Konya. However, these were the most experienced and disciplined of his army. At the battle, Ibrahim had 20 infantrybattalion s, 28 cavalrysquadron s, and 48gun s.Ottoman Forces: Reshid Pasha commanded an army of 80,000 from various Ottoman provinces, including many
Albanians and Bosnians. At the battle Reshid had a total of about 54,000 men, of which about 20,000 were irregulars: 54 infantry battalions, 28 cavalry squadrons, and 100 guns.Field and order of battle
The main battle took place on December 21, 1832, astride the Konya-Istanbul road, just north of the ancient walled town of Konya, which, in 1832, had a population of about 20,000. The battlefield is bounded on the west by hills and on the east by
marsh es andswamp s, with aplateau about two miles (3 km) wide in between. The Egyptian army had its back to the town and faced North, and the Ottoman army approached from the North astride the road, facing South. December 21 was an intenselyfog gy day.Ibrahim's army was organised into three rows astride the road. The first row consisted of the 13th and 18th Infantry Brigades with three artillery batteries under
Selim Elmansterly . The second row, five hundred paces behind the first, consisted of the 12th and 14th Infantry Brigades with two artillery batteries underSoliman Elfaransawy (Elfaransawy = "the Frenchman" the formerColonel Sèves ). The third row, consisted of the Guards Brigade and one artillery battery in reserve and the 1st and 2nd Cavalry Brigades, under Selim bey. Ibrahim posted two battalions in square formation at the flanks to guard againstencirclement .Reshid's army was organised into four rows advancing astride the road. Leading the advance were two regular cavalry brigades and the Guards Infantry brigade in open formation. These were followed by a second row of two infantry and two cavalry brigades, then a third and fourth row each consisting of an infantry brigade. Large numbers of irregulars made up the rear. Artillery was distributed amongst the army.
At about noon the advancing Ottoman's artillery opened fire when the front lines were about convert|600|yd apart. With the heavy fog, the range was spotty, and the Egyptian artillery held their fire until they could guess the Ottomans' positions from the sound of their cannonade, and so could find their range more precisely. As the artillery exchange thundered on, Ibrahim advanced with his scouts to a well east of the road to survey the Ottoman positions. During a momentary lifting of the fog, he noticed a gap in the Ottoman formation between their cavalry and infantry on their left flank, to the East. He rapidly called his reserves (the Guards Brigade and the two cavalry Brigades) and personally led them into this gap between the road and the marshes, causing confusion in the Ottoman left flank by this sudden onslaught, as some of their cavalry was trapped and scattered in the foggy marshes. As the Ottoman left flank collapsed, the grand vizier Reshid Pasha personally moved to their midst to rally them, but in the foggy confusion found himself surrounded by Egyptians and captured. The capture of their supreme commander deepened the confusion amongst the Ottomans, and some units lost cohesion and broke ranks as the Egyptian artillery and cavalry advanced around their left flank to their rear, enveloping the now disorganised units and continuing a relentless slaughter from three directions, South, East and North. As night fell, the new Ottoman commander managed to rally some units and organised a desperate counter-attack from the West against the Egyptian left flank, but this failed as the Egyptian centre wheeled to face them with an organised barrage of artillery and as this attack broke, the remaining Ottomans scattered.
Aftermath
Konya was Ibrahim's greatest victory. He lost 262 dead and 530 wounded, whereas the Ottomans lost 3,000 dead and over 5,000 taken prisoner, including many senior officers. The Egyptians remained in possession of the field and took 46 guns, and the Ottoman army was scattered. Nothing remained between Ibrahim's army and
Istanbul after the battle. However, it was time forpolitics , and Ibrahim's father, Muhammad Ali parleyed with Sultan Mahmoud and with the European Powers, and ended up signing thePeace Agreement of Kutahya at theConvention of Kutahya , whereby the Sultan ceded greater Syria to Muhammad Ali for his lifetime, and ceded Egypt's rule to Muhammad Ali's dynasty in perpetuity, with nominal vassalhood to the Ottoman Sultan, butde facto independence . This dynasty only ended in July, 1952 with the abdication of King Farouk after the army coup led by Colonel Gamal Abd el Nasser.As a postscript to Konya, it should be added that seven years later, the Ottoman Sultan Mahmoud abrogated the Peace of Kotahiya and attacked the Egyptian forces again, but was again routed by the Egyptians at the battle of Nizib, on the frontier between Turkey and Syria, on June 24, 1839.
References
Chapter by Colonel Abd El-Rahman Zaki, published in Arabic in the volume commemorating Ibrahim Pasha on the centennial of his death, published in 1948 by the Egyptian Royal Society for Historical Studies. Republished 1998 by Madbouli Press, Cairo. The article cites numerous original sources in Arabic, including official archives, as well as several principal European references, all in French.
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