Alexandria expedition of 1807

Summary

Alexandria expedition of 1807
Part of the Anglo-Turkish War and campaigns of Muhammad Ali of Egypt

Battle of Rosetta
Date18 March – 25 September 1807
Location
Result

Egyptian victory[1]

Belligerents
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland United Kingdom Egypt Egypt Eyalet
Commanders and leaders
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland General Alexander Mackenzie-Fraser
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Major-General Patrick Wauchope of Edmonstone 
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Admiral Sir John Duckworth, 1st Baronet[2]
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Brigadier the Hon. Robert Meade (WIA)[3]
Egypt Muhammad Ali Pasha
Ottoman Empire Umar Makram
Ottoman Empire Tabuzoglu Pasha
Ottoman Empire Hassan Pasha
Egypt Ali Bey Al-Slanki
Strength
6,000–8,000 British regulars under Mackenzie-Fraser, +1500 British reinforcements under John Coape Sherbrooke,[4] 5000+ mercenary troops of the Roll's Regiment, Chasseurs Britanniques, Sicilian, Greek and Balkan mercenaries 4,000–6,000 infantry (Tabuzoglu division), 1,500 cavalry (Hassan Pasha division), 700 infantry (Rosetta's garrison) and an unknown but large numbers of Egyptian irregular troops and armed civilians (fellahin)
Casualties and losses
+900 killed, 282 wounded and 520 captured (at Rosetta) (British Regulars and Roll's Regiment only), 3600+ prisoners (entire campaign) Unknown but lighter than the British

The Alexandria expedition of 1807, also known as the Fraser expedition, (Arabic: حملة فريزر), was an unsuccessful attempt by the British to capture the Egyptian city of Alexandria during the Anglo-Turkish War. The aim was to secure a base of operations against the Ottoman Empire and the French Empire in the Mediterranean Sea. It was part of a larger strategy against the Ottoman-French alliance of the Ottoman Sultan Selim III.[5][6]

Although Alexandria was briefly captured and occupied, attempts to proceed inland were rebuffed, with British forces being twice defeated in battles at Rosetta (Rashid, the port that guarded the entrance to the Nile), at a cost of over 900 officers and men killed. Many were captured at the second siege of Rosetta alone. Captured British soldiers were marched to Cairo, where many hundreds of the severed heads of their slain comrades were displayed between rows of stakes. British captives were then condemned to hard labour or were sold into slavery.[5]

The remaining British forces in Egypt were forced to retreat to Alexandria, where they remained besieged and unable to gather supplies. Using this trapped army and the numerous prisoners as a bargaining tool, Viceroy Muhammad Ali compelled the British commanders to cease further operations in Egypt. The British were then forced to embark on their transports again and leave Alexandria, not having gained any significant position of influence in Egypt or reached any specific goals towards influencing the Ottoman Empire's improving relations with France. In Egypt, the expedition had the effect of uniting the populace behind Muhammad Ali, who seized power in Egypt. It also convinced the British government to support Egypt remaining as part of the Ottoman Empire.[5]

Background edit

The expedition began in mid-February 1807 when a force of British troops, deployed in Calabria and Sicily, was ordered by General Fox in Messina[7] to embark on transports. The mission was rumoured to be destined for Constantinople. Meanwhile, John Thomas Duckworth, appointed second in command of the Mediterranean Fleet, sailed for Constantinople. However, he failed to provide effective support for Dmitry Senyavin's Imperial Russian Navy during the Dardanelles Operation. After departing from Constantinople, Duckworth, as an Admiral of the White Squadron,[8] was to rendezvous with the transports in Aboukir Bay. By 17 March, the fleet of transports, with nearly 6,000 British troops embarked, approached Alexandria under the command of General Alexander Mackenzie-Fraser.[9]

Occupation of Alexandria edit

 
View of Pompey's Pillar with Alexandria in the background in c. 1850
 
Front view of Qaitbay Citadel

The appearance of the British transports off Alexandria was unexpected. On 20 March, HMS Tigre captured two Ottoman frigates, Uri Bahar (40 guns) and Uri Nasard (34 guns), and the corvette Fara Numa (16 guns).[10][Note 1] HMS Apollo, along with 19 other transports, had separated from the main force on 7 March and did not participate in the initial landings.

At this time, the city garrison consisted of Albanian troops, with the French Consul-General, Bernardino Drovetti, attempting to force them to repel the British landing west of the city.[10][Note 2] Despite the rough waves, nearly 700 troops with five field guns, along with 56 seamen commanded by Lieutenant James Boxer, were able to disembark without opposition near the ravine running from Lake Mareotis to the sea.[15] These troops breached the palisaded entrenchments at eight on 18 March. Fortunately for the British, they did not encounter serious resistance because the lines stretching from Fort des Baines to Lake Mareotis included eight guns in three batteries and 13 guns in the fort on the right flank.[10] British casualties were light; however, the Pompey Gate (also known as Pompey's Pillar), was barricaded and defended by about 1,000 Ottoman troops and armed volunteers, forcing the British troops to set up camp to the south. Two detachments were sent to occupy Aboukir Castle and the "Cut", Qaitbay Citadel, a castle in Alexandria between Lakes Maadia and Mareotis. The detachment's mission was to prevent Ottoman reinforcements from reaching the city. The next day, 20 March, the rest of the transports appeared off Alexandria, and an Arab messenger was sent with an offer of capitulation that was accepted by the city authorities. Sir John Thomas Duckworth appeared on 22 March,[10] off Alexandria in his flagship HMS Royal George,[16] with a part of his squadron,[15] further bolstering the confidence of the British troops.

Upon the occupation of the city, Fraser and his staff first heard of the death of Muhammad Bey al-Alfi, upon whose cooperation they had founded their hopes of further success. Messengers were immediately dispatched to his successor and other local Beys, inviting them to Alexandria. The British Resident, Major Missett, with support from Duckworth, was able to convince General Mackenzie-Fraser of the importance of occupying Rosetta (Reshee'd) and Rahmanieh (Er-Rahhma'nee'yeh) to secure supplies for Alexandria because they controlled the canal by which supplies were brought to the city via the Nile.[17]

Manoeuvring against Muhammad Ali edit

Muhammad Ali, meanwhile, was conducting an expedition against the Beys in Upper Egypt (he later defeated them near Assiut) when he heard of the arrival of the British. In great alarm, lest the Beys should join them, especially as they were far north of his position, he immediately sent messengers to his rivals. Ali promised to comply with all the Beys' demands if they should join his campaign against the British; this proposal being agreed to, both armies marched towards Cairo on opposite sides of the river.

Battle of Rosetta edit

 
Alexander Mackenzie Fraser

On 21 March 1807, the local Ottoman force in Rashid, led by its governor Ali Bey Al-Selaniki, confronted the advancing British troops led by General Fraser, two years after Muhammad Ali assumed power in Egypt. The British had arrived in Egypt during the struggles between the governor Muhammad Ali and the Mamluks. The British signed a treaty with Muhammad Bey Al-Alfy, the leader of the Mamluks, to ensure his support of the British campaign in exchange for a British guarantee that the Mamluks would establish control over Egypt if the British expedition were successful. However, Al-Alfy died before this expedition reached Egypt.

The plan was for the Mamluks to march to Cairo to occupy it. At the same time, the British would capture several strategically important Egyptian ports, and then march to the Delta and occupy Cairo, provided that the Mamluks assisted their forces in Egypt, especially the Millennium Front. General Fraser was in Alexandria, had received a report from the British Consul in Rashid on the state of Egypt and its forces, which made him march overland to Rashid to occupy it and establish a military base for his forces, and assigned the commander 'and is serving' this military mission.

Five hundred troops of the 31st Foot and the Chasseurs Britanniques were detached, accompanied by a section of Royal Artillery, under Major-General Patrick Wauchope[18] and Brigadier-General the Honourable Robert Meade.

Wauchope moved in 2,500 soldiers from Alexandria to Rashid. The Governor of Rashid, Ali Bey Al-Selaniki, and his 700 soldiers, mustered to oppose the British advance. Sheikh Hassan Crere mobilised the general public to support the Egyptian forces, so he ordered the removal of the Egyptian boats from the front of the Nile, Rashid, to the eastern bank opposite the Green Island and a spindle tower in the Moutoubis county to prevent the people from getting over them and fleeing the city, so that his garrison men do not find a way to retreat, surrender or withdraw, as the Alexandria garrison did before. The garrison among the people became concealed in the homes inside the city of Rashid, as in front of them would only be skirmishing, and ordered them not to move or fire unless after the issuance of an agreed signal, so the British advanced and did not find any Egyptian troops. Hence, they believed that the city would surrender as the garrison of Alexandria did, so they safely entered the city's streets. They took a rest after walking in the sand from Alexandria to Rashid and spread in the city streets and markets to find places to take refuge and rest in. They almost did not rest until the call to the call to prayer issued by the Selaniki order was launched from the minaret of the Sidi Zaghloul mosque, chanting: 'Allah Akbar! (God is great) For jihad!' Residents and Rashid's garrison fire broke out from the windows and rooftops, killing several British officers and soldiers; those who were not killed proceeded to retreat.[citation needed]

The British losses amounted to 185 dead, 282 wounded, and 120 captured at Rashid's garrison. Muhammad Ali arrived with his forces after the British withdrew to Alexandria. Muhammad Ali Pasha and General Fraser negotiated the withdrawal from Egypt and he left with the remaining British forces. 19 September, the date of the battle, became a national holiday in the Beheira province.[citation needed]

Battle of Al Hammad edit

 
Omar Makram

The Battle of Al-Hammad, one of the battles of the Fraser Campaign, took place on 21 April 1807, between the British forces led by General Fraser and the Ottoman forces led by Muhammad Ali Pasha near the village of Al-Hammad in the lake. The British were unable to prevent the Ottoman cavalry from outflanking them.

The Battle of Rashid was a severe defeat for the British expedition. The British casualties numbered 185 dead, 282 wounded, and 120 captives at Rashid's garrison. General Fraser, the campaign's leader, sought to erase the impact of his defeat in that battle. He planned to equip another army that resumed marching towards Rashid and pledged to lead it to General Stuart. Meanwhile, Muhammad Ali Pasha arrived in Cairo, returning from Upper Egypt, and he reached it on the night of 12 April 1807 (3 Safar in 1222 AH). He was briefed on the news received about the defeat of the British in Rashid, so he was somewhat reassured but did not rely on what happened in that battle and saw with insight that the British might resume their march to Rashid given the fact that it was not heavily defended, so he mobilised an army to fight them and prevent them from any progress, and his men completed the fortifying works that began with him before his presence, and he continued working in digging trenches between Bab Al-Hadid and Bulaq to establish a defence line from Cairo from the north and cutting grooves in the front of the trenches connected to the Nile to fill with water and obstruct the progress of the British troops, and scuttled several boats between the island of Bulaq and the beach to prevent the passage of British ships in the Nile if they came from Rashid, and the installation of cannons in Shubra and Imbaba and the island of Bulaq, and the scholars and local people participated in work with them.

He managed to get the money needed for the army's expenses, and Umar Makram and the scholars helped him collect the money so he could manage, so they collected nine hundred bags of gold from the capital's residents, which they allocated for the expenses of advance. The campaign was prepared, and it consisted of 4,000 infantry fighters and 1,500 horsemen, who marched to Rashid, led by Tabuzoglu. As for General Stuart's army, it numbered about four thousand soldiers equipped with artillery, various types of firearms, and ammunition. This army moved from Alexandria on 3 April, advancing against Rashid. When it became close to it, a battalion occupied Al-Hammad, which is located south of Rashid between the Nile and Lake Idku. The purpose of its occupation was to encircle Rashid, preventing the city's garrison from being reinforced with supplies from the south and securing local sources of water for the British. The British also captured Akam Abi Mandour, and installed cannons near the village to bombard Rashid. Most of the army was camped west and south of Rashid, and surrounded it (7 April) and bombarded it with artillery.[citation needed]

The British commanders assumed that a continued bombardment would cause a loss of morale among the city's garrison and compel them to surrender. The British dispatched a messenger to the city, informing them that if the demand of surrender was refused, a naval and land bombardment would commence. The Egyptians' prior victory at the Battle of Rashid had convinced them of the futility of a possible British bombardment, which commenced soon after the messenger's return to the British forces. The garrison occasionally left the city during the bombardment to skirmish with the British troops encamped on land. The bombardment lasted twelve days but could not achieve any results, and the city remained Egyptian.

The British were waiting for the Mamluks to find them. In the meantime, the villagers approached the British positions in Al-Hammad. General Stuart dispatched several soldiers, and the Egyptians also positioned artillery on the eastern shore and began bombarding the British army's positions on the western mainland. Two hundred and fifty British soldiers succeeded in capturing the Egyptian positions and the artillery. The Egyptians were then halted for some time, allowing MacDonald to return to the mainland.

The fighting and the siege continued until the arrival of the force sent by Muhammad Ali Pasha, led by Tabuzoglu, which substantially changed the war situation. Tabuzoglu's force comprised two divisions: the first was infantry led by Tabuzoglu himself on the eastern mainland of the Nile, and the other was cavalry led by Hassan Pasha on the western mainland. The two divisions were moving along the road of the two beaches when they came close to Rashid. The forces of Hassan Pasha on the western mainland were facing Al-Hammad, and the other was encamped in Barnbal on the eastern beach. The soldiers of the two divisions were able to see each other.

On the morning of 20 April, the Egyptian army's advance guards from the cavalry (Hassan Pasha's division) advanced towards the British positions in Al-Hammad. They encountered a battalion among the farms. The battalion attempted to retreat to the village, but their withdrawal was not controlled, and they were surrounded by the Egyptian Cavalry. Some were killed while others were captured. Upon learning of this initial collision, General Stuart sent Colonel Patrick Macleod, along with several soldiers and cannons, to Al-Hammad to establish forward positions fortified with artillery. He was entrusted with commanding the force stationed there.

The location of this village was of great importance, and the axis of the fighting revolved around it because it is situated in the isthmus between the Nile and Lake Idku. To the north, there is a canal that was then dry, reaching from the Nile to near the lake. If the British had strengthened the defence of their position there, they could have blocked the road in front of the Egyptian army, preventing them from passing that isthmus, nor reaching Rashid to provide relief.

The colonels arranged the positions of their soldiers to defend this isthmus. Their number was eight hundred fighters, with their facilitation based on the Nile under the command of Major Wigsland. Their direction near Lake Idku was led by Captain Tarleton, and the heart in the village of Al-Hammad was led by Major Moore. The majority of the British army were stationed around Rashid to besiege it.

20 April passed, and the Egyptian forces did not target the British site in Al-Hammad. Colonel Macleod was assured of his position. However, General Stuart inevitably noticed the impact of the defence line in Al-Hammad (the night of 21 April) that it was not possible in some of his destinations to pressure the Egyptian army if its numbers increased. He then entrusted Colonel Macleod to defend his positions as much as possible. In the event of the proliferation of Egyptian cavalry forces, he was to return to the original British positions around Rashid.

General Stuart realised that the Egyptian forces, after reaching them, had become more numerous than the British army. He decided to wait until the next day (21 April), and if the Mamluk help did not reach him, he would withdraw from Al-Hammad, lift the siege on Rashid, and retreat to Alexandria.

As for Tabuzoglu, the Egyptian army commander, he was stationed in Barnabal on the eastern mainland, hesitating over which path to take. Would he go straight to the rescue of Rashid to lift the siege on it, or would he first attack the British position in Al-Hammad? He was encouraged by the victory that the Cavalry of Hassan Pasha achieved on the western mainland in the first collision, so he intended to follow the latter plan. He crossed the Nile at night with his soldiers, and the boats transported them to the left enemy, where they joined the Hassan Pasha contingent in preparation to attack Al-Hammad on the morning of 21 April.

In the morning, Colonel Macleod observed the Egyptian army forces multiply their number, and the plain was filled with men. He immediately sent General Stuart the news and asked him to decide to withdraw to the British army's positions around Rashid. He sent him a message, approving his plan, and sent it with a platoon of soldiers. However, the messenger did not reach Al-Hammad, because the Egyptian army's cavalry descended on the plain and cut off the transportation between Al-Hammad and Rashid. Macleod intended to withdraw from his defence line, but he did not finalise his plan, and his forces were dispersed. The Egyptian army cavalry managed to pounce on them one by one, while the Egyptian infantry occupied the village of Al-Hammad.

The Cavalry tracked down the three forces and surrounded them from every direction, killing most of its men, including Colonel Macleod. They also surrounded the right flank, killing its commander Captain Tarleton, and most of its soldiers. Those who survived were taken captive and numbered 50 men.

As for the British left flank, it resisted a little but was surrounded by cavalrymen from all sides. Its commander, Major Wigsland, appeared to surrender, so he and the rest of the British surrendered, and that was the end of the battle. The battle started at seven in the morning. It lasted three hours, during which the fighting broke out, and it ended with the defeat of the British army stationed in Al-Hammad. No one survived it. Those who did not die in the fighting could not escape captivity, and their losses reached about 416 dead and 400 prisoners.

General Stuart was stationed during the battle south of Rashid and with the rest of the British army. When he realised the magnitude of the catastrophe that had befallen his forces in Al-Hammad, he quickly lifted the siege on Rashid. He took the initiative to withdraw before the Egyptian army attacked him. He spiked his cannons that he could not carry and retreated to Abu Qir in disappointment. Despite concealing the withdrawal measures, the people of Rashid and the neighbouring towns harassed him during his withdrawal until he reached Lake Idku. Skirmishes took place on the shore of the lake between him and the Egyptians, which ended in the retreat of the Egyptian skirmishers. Despite this, the British continued to withdraw until they reached Abu Qir. From there, they boarded waiting Royal Navy ships and sailed back to Alexandria.

Siege of Alexandria edit

The defeat at Rosetta compelled Mackenzie-Fraser to reassess his position. British troops were instructed to reoccupy Alexandria, which was promptly besieged by Egyptian and Mamluk forces from Cairo.[19] Using his feigned goodwill as a pretext, Muhammad Ali then offered the British the liberty to receive supplies from Duckworth's transports, as well as a grain trade agreement with added assurances of security for any trade routes to India, in exchange for recognition of his independence from the Ottoman Empire. The grain agreement was accepted, and supplies continued to be delivered to the British troops in Alexandria. However, the British government did not formally recognise independence, as it had no intention of seeing the Ottoman Empire dismantled in the face of an expansionist Russia.[19]

Departure from Alexandria edit

Colonel Dravetti, now advising Muhammad Ali in Cairo, persuaded the ruler to release the British prisoners of war as a gesture of goodwill, sparing them the usual fate of becoming slaves to their captors.[14] In September, when no further use could be derived from the occupation of Alexandria, General Mackenzie-Fraser was allowed to surrender the city[5] and retreat to Sicily on the 25th.[3]

Expedition Order of Battle edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The Royal Navy commissioned Uri Nasard and Fara Numa circa January 1808 and disposed of all three in 1809. Uri Bahar had twenty-eight 18-pounder guns on her upper deck, and six 8-pounder guns and six 18-pounder carronades on her QD and Fc.[11] Captain George Hony (or Honey) took command of Uri Nasard. She was armed with twenty-six 12-pounder guns on her upper deck, and eight 6-pounders (QD/Fc).[12] Commander Samuel Fowell became captain of Fara Numa.[13]
  2. ^ Drovetti was a Piedmontese colonel who had served in the Egyptian campaign with Napoleon.[14]
  3. ^ Hollowell was the naval commander of the expedition.[20]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Aksan, Virginia. The Ottomans 1700-1923: An Empire Besieged. United Kingdom: Taylor & Francis, 2021. “the British made one more attempt to land at Alexandria in March 1807 but were repelled by the Ottoman garrison at Rosetta.”
  2. ^ General Patrick Wauchope, Burke’s Peerage;
    The Scots Magazine and Edinburgh Literary Miscellany, Band 69, 1807, S. 638 (Deaths).
  3. ^ a b Russell & Jones, p. 520.
  4. ^ Lloyd, Ernest Marsh (1897). "Sherbrooke, John Coape" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 52. pp. 70–71.
  5. ^ a b c d Harrison 1996, p. 25.
  6. ^ Darwish, Prof. Mahmoud Ahmed Darwish. "The fortified Walls around Rosetta, field study in the maps of the French Campaign 1798-1801". International Journal of Cultural Inheritance & Social Sciences (IJCISS).
  7. ^ Yeo, p. 684.
  8. ^ Lysons, pp. 108–122.
  9. ^ Scott, p. 141.
  10. ^ a b c d The Literary Panorama, p. 609.
  11. ^ Winfield (2008), p. 183.
  12. ^ Winfield (2008), p. 216.
  13. ^ Winfield (2008), p. 273.
  14. ^ a b Manley & Ree, p. 76.
  15. ^ a b James, p. 313.
  16. ^ "George Thom". Archived from the original on 2008-07-18. Retrieved 2008-08-09. George Thom
  17. ^ Bell & Balbis, p. 308.
  18. ^ of Edmonston
  19. ^ a b Harrison 1996, p. 26.
  20. ^ [1] Archived 2020-11-15 at the Wayback Machine Sir Benjamin Hallowell (1761–1834).
  21. ^ Hart, p. 287.

Sources edit

  • Alsager Pollock, Arthur William, ed. (1837). The United Service Magazine, Notes of an Expedition to Alexandria of the year 1807, H. Colburn [etc.]
  • Scott, Walter (1827). The Life of Napoleon Buonaparte, Emperor of the French: With a Preliminary View of the French Revolution, vol.II, Carey, Lea & Carey, Philadelphia
  • The Monthly Magazine; or British Register, Vol.XXIII, Part I for 1807, July 1, Richard Phillips, London
  • The Literary Panorama, Vol.II, Letter from Major General [Mackenzie-]Fraser to Viscount Castlereagh, London, Charles Taylor, 1807
  • Manley, Deborah & Ree, Peta (2001). Henry Salt: Artist, Traveller, Diplomat, Egyptologist, Libri Publications Ltd.
  • Harrison, Robert T. (1996). "Alexandria, British occupation of (1807)". In Olson, James Stuart; Shadle, Robert (eds.). Historical Dictionary of the British Empire. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780313279171.
  • Hart, H. G. (1848). The New Annual Army Lists for 1848, Ninth annual volume, containing the dates of Commissions, and statement of the war services and wounds of nearly every officer in the Army, Ordnance and Marines, John Murray, London (includes Militia List, and Imperial Yeomanry List)
  • Russell, William & Jones, William (1839). The History of Modern Europe: With a View of the Progress of Society from the Rise of the Modern Kingdoms to the Peace of Paris, in 1763, Vol.III, Harper & brothers, New York
  • Bell, James (1832). A System of Geography, Popular and Scientific: Or A Physical, Political, and Statistical Account of the World and Its Various Divisions, Vol. III, Archibald Fullarton and Co., Glasgow
  • Hassan, Hassan & Fernea, Robert, In the House of Muhammad Ali: A Family Album, 1805-1952, American University in Cairo Press, 2000
  • Lane, Edward William & Thompson, Jason (2000). Description of Egypt: Notes and Views in Egypt and Nubia, Made During the Years 1825, -26, -27, and -28 ..., American University in Cairo Press
  • James, William. Naval history of Great Britain, Vol. IV, [2]
  • Winfield, Rif (2008). British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793–1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. Seaforth. ISBN 978-1-86176-246-7.
  • Yeo, Richard R. (1999). The Edinburgh Encyclopaedia, Routledge.