- Battle of the Pyramids
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Battle of the Pyramids
partof=theFrench Revolutionary Wars
caption="Battle of the Pyramids" byWojciech Kossak (1857–1942)
date=July 21 ,1798
place=Embabeh, nearCairo ,Egypt
result=Decisive French victory
combatant1=flagicon|France French Republic
combatant2=flagicon|Ottoman Empire|1453Ottoman Empire
commander1=Napoleon Bonaparte
commander2=Murad Bey
strength1=20,000Smith "The Greenhill Napoleonic Wars Data Book". Greenhill Books, 1998. p. 140] Connelly. "Blundering to Glory: Napoleon’s Military Campaigns". Rowman & Littlefield Pub., 2006. 3rd ed. p.50.]
strength2=60,000
casualties1=40
casualties2=20,000The Battle of the Pyramids, also known as the Battle of Embabeh was a battle fought on
July 21 ,1798 between the French army inEgypt under Napoleon Bonaparte and localMamluk forces. It occurred during the French Invasion of Egypt and was the battle where Bonaparte put into use one of his significant contributions to tactics, the massive divisional square. Actually a rectangle, the first and second demi-brigades of the division formed the front and rear faces, while the third demi-brigade formed the two sides. Napoleon named the battle after theEgyptian pyramids , although they were only faintly visible on the horizon when the battle took place.Prelude
In July of
1798 , Napoleon was marching from Alexandria toward Cairo after invading and capturing the former. He met the forces of the rulingMamluks nine miles (15 km) from the Pyramids, and only four miles (6 km) from Cairo. The Mamluk forces were commanded byMurad Bey andIbrahim Bey and had powerful and highly developedcavalry . This fight also known asThe Battle of Chobrakit .Napoleon realized that the only Egyptian troops of any worth on the battlefield were the cavalry. He exhorted his troops, saying, "Forward! Remember that from those monuments yonder forty centuries look down upon you."
Battle
Napoleon ordered an advance on Murad's army with each of the five divisions of his army organized into hollow rectangles with
cavalry and baggage at the center and cannon at the corners.The French divisions advanced south in echelon, with the right flank leading and the left flank protected by the Nile. From right to left, Napoleon posted the divisions of Desaix, Reynier, Dugua, Vial and Bon. In addition, Desaix sent a small detachment to occupy the nearby village of
Biktil , just to the west. Murad anchored his right flank on the Nile at the village ofEmbabeh , which was fortified and held with infantry and some ancient cannons. His Mamluk cavalry deployed on the desert flank. Ibrahim, with a second army, watched helplessly from the east bank of the Nile, unable to intervene. (Chandler asserts that Napoleon's 25,000-strong army outnumbered Murad's 6,000 Mamluks and 15,000 infantry.)At about 3:30 pm, the Mamluk cavalry hurled itself at the French without warning. The divisional "squares" of Desaix, Reynier and Dugua held firm and repelled the horsemen with point-blank musket and artillery fire. Unable to make an impression on the French formations, some of the frustrated Mamluks rode off to attack Desaix's detached force. Even this was a failure. Meanwhile, nearer the river, Bon's division deployed into attack columns and charged Embabeh. Breaking into the village, the French routed the garrison. Trapped against the river, many of the Mamluks and infantry tried to swim to safety, but hundreds drowned. Napoleon reported a loss of 29 killed and 260 wounded. Murad's losses were far heavier, perhaps as many as 3,000 of the irreplaceable Mamluk cavalry and unknown numbers of infantry. Murad escaped to
Upper Egypt , where he carried on an active guerilla campaign before being run to earth by Desaix in late 1799.Aftermath
Upon the news of the defeat of their legendary cavalry, the waiting Mamluk armies in Cairo dispersed to
Syria to reorganize. The Battle of the Pyramids signalled the beginning of the end of 700 years of Mamluk rule in Egypt. Despite this auspicious beginning, AdmiralHoratio Nelson 's victory in theBattle of the Nile ten days later ended Napoleon's hopes for a conquest of theMiddle East .Engulfed by the west bank portion of the city of Cairo, nothing remains of the battlefield today.
Notes
ee also
*
History of Ottoman Egypt References
* Chandler, David, "The Campaigns of Napoleon" New York, Macmillan, 1966.
* Cole, Juan, "Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle East" Palgrave Macmillan, 2007. [ISBN 1403964319]
* Herold, J. Christopher, "The Age of Napoleon". New York, American Heritage, 1963.
* Moorehead, Alan, "The Blue Nile" New York, Harper & Row, 1962.
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