Revolutions - 3.49- The Egyptian Expedition

Episode Date: August 31, 2015

In July 1798 Bonaparte and his healthy, hopeful army arrived in Egypt. In August 1799 Bonaparte ditched his now demoralized, plague-ridden army and sailed for home....

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, and welcome to revolutions. Episode 3.49, the Egyptian Expedition. So as promised, this week we are going to spend the entire episode covering Napoleon Bonaparte's expedition to Egypt. We are going to stick with him for a whole year, all the way through August 1799, when Bonaparte decides that for the good of France, he must abandon his army and sail home to control of the disintegrating situation back in Europe that we will discuss in detail next week. I know, by the way, what I really mean is that we're going to stick with Bonaparte through August 1799 when he decides that for the good of his own damn self, he must abandon his army,
Starting point is 00:00:50 because by then their situation would not just be deteriorating, it would be utterly hopeless. And Bonaparte knew if he stuck around, that would be the end of him. So we left off in June 1798, with Bonaparte's massive fleet sailing from Malta to to Alexandria, having somehow managed to slip by Admiral Nelson's little squadron without being detected. The French soldiers now knew that they were headed to Egypt and were likely licking their chops at the possibilities that lay before them. They were nearly 40,000 strong, well supported by a large fleet, led by the best general in France, and sailing towards a land of ancient wealth that was likely to be easily conquered. Personally, I would have been stoked to have been assigned
Starting point is 00:01:37 to this expedition, but oh, how everyone would come to regret it. As the fleet approached Alexandria, Bonaparte ensured that his men would approach the coming campaign not merely with the utmost military skill, but also with the utmost political skill. This was not just going to be a smash-and-grab job. Bonaparte wanted to establish a permanent French occupation, so he absolutely forbade any kind of looting or pillaging that might antagonize the natives, and further ordered that every man was to go out of his way to show respect and deference to Islam. A major part of Bonaparte's political strategy was to ingratiate himself with the local imams, that is, the Muslim religious leaders. He couldn't have undisciplined soldiers out there
Starting point is 00:02:24 ruining things by desecrating mosques or like spitting on the high priests. The other big component of Bonaparte's political strategy, though, was to paint the French expedition as an army of liberation? An army of liberation? How were a bunch of French Republicans going to sell themselves as liberators in Egypt? I mean, who on earth did the Egyptians need to be liberated from? The answer is the Mammalukes. Okay, so what the heck is a Mammaluk? Now, the word Mammaluk just meant slave, and oddly enough, that's what they were. Slave. But a very special kind of slave. Warrior slaves. Purchased as children and raised into an elite warrior caste, the Mammalukes acted as standing armies or permanent bodyguards for rulers across the Muslim world. And in some cases,
Starting point is 00:03:20 their power and prestige became so great that these warrior slaves were able to push aside the nominal rulers and wield power directly, as was the case in Egypt. The Mammelukes wound up seizing Egypt way back in 1250, setting up what's called the Mameluk Sultanate that ruled an independent Egypt until 1517. At that point, they were conquered by the Ottoman Turks, and the independent Sultanate was dissolved. But once inside the Greater Ottoman Empire, the Mamelukes in Egypt carved out a great deal of autonomy for themselves. And by the time Napoleon arrived, Egypt was once again basically a self-governing unit, ruled by two Mammaluk leaders who shared power with each other. one guy named Murad Bay, who ran the military, and his partner, Ibrahim Bay, who handled civilian
Starting point is 00:04:08 administration. And just so you know, no, they are not brothers, Bay just means governor inside the Ottoman Empire. But the thing to keep in mind here is that the Mamalukes are foreigners. They are purchased into service from places like the Caucasus or the Balkans, and they are not native Egyptians. So when the French landed in July 1798, Bonaparte circulated a proclamation to the native Egyptians that said the French were here to rid them of the tyrant Mamelukes. And then that's what he set out to do. The French landed near Alexandria on July the 1st, and Bonaparte was informed that Alexandria was preparing to resist. So he rushed 5,000 men ashore and then ran them ahead that very first night right up under the walls of the city.
Starting point is 00:04:56 So when the Alexandrians woke up the next morning, they found the French at the gates and their defensive arrangements not yet complete. The soldiers garrisoning Alexandria ditched out the back door, and the French entered the city. With the port captured, Bonaparte then landed the rest of his army without incident. But the real target was the Mammalute capital, Cairo, located a couple hundred miles up the Nile into the Egyptian interior. So without ever really even pausing to catch his breath. Bonaparte broke his army up into two and sent them marching towards Cairo from two directions. The division led by Bonaparte, hugged the coastline, and then turned and followed the Nile due south along the west bank of the river. The other division plunged southeast out of Alexandria
Starting point is 00:05:44 headed straight across the desert, and this was not the route you wanted to get sent on. Not only was it the hottest and driest part of the year, but the French column was harassed the entire way by Bedouin raiders. Pity the Frenchman who strayed from the pack. And the guys coming up the Nile were accompanied by a small flotilla of gunboats. But obviously the rest of the fleet couldn't just sail up the Nile. So while he marched into the interior, Bonaparte told the French Admiral to anchor at Abu Kier Bay, about 20 miles northeast of Alexandria, and stay put. But only to stay put if the fleet was absolutely free of any potential danger.
Starting point is 00:06:26 If there was even a hint of trouble, they were to sail all the way to Corfu, an island off the west coast of Greece in the Ionian Sea, so like basically all the way back to Italy. The army would be able to take care of itself for a while, but it was imperative in the long run that the French fleet remain intact. The worst possible thing that could happen would be for the fleet to be destroyed by the British. And that, I believe, is what they call foreshadowing. The Mameluk military commander, Murad Bay, made his first little stand against the French coming up the Nile, outside the town of Shubra Kitt, on July the 13th. And though the French outnumbered them 23,000 to 14,000, the Mamalukes had a massive cavalry advantage. And not only that, heavy cavalry was the particular speciality of the Mamalukes. It was what they did best, and it was why they ruled Egypt.
Starting point is 00:07:21 but this was a new world, and it was a new world that Napoleon was helping to create right there on the spot. To counter the Mammalute cavalry, Bonaparte formed his divisions into rectangular formations, somewhat imprecisely dubbed divisional squares. These rectangles were six men deep and hollow at the center, which is where all the baggage and supplies and senior officers went. Artillery was then positioned at each corner, and everyone was told to hold their ground and fire at the charging cavalry as soon as they came into range. As it turned out, the divisional square was virtually impregnable. And in terms of Napoleon's contributions to modern military tactics, the divisional square is right up there with the attack on the rear and the strategy of the central position. By the end of the Napoleonic Wars, everyone would be using divisional squares. Once Murad Bay realized that his cavalry charges were getting all his men killed and were doing exactly zero damage to the French, he retreated further up the Nile.
Starting point is 00:08:27 After Schubert Kitt, the French army coming up the Nile linked with the army coming out of the desert, and they all made the final push towards Cairo together. Now, Old Cairo was located on the east side of the river, so Murad Bay massed 25,000 men on the west side of the river to prevent the French from crossing. Inside Cairo, Ibrahim Bey was waiting with reinforcements, but he could not get those reinforcements across the river in time to join the fight. On July the 21st, the two armies met outside the fortress city of Embabae. But about nine miles off in the distance, the pyramids of Giza were visible. And so after the battle was won, Bonaparte decided that the Battle of the Pyramids sounded way cooler than the Battle of Embabae, or the Battle of Armabae, or the Battle of
Starting point is 00:09:15 Cairo, which is why we call it the Battle of the Pyramids. The battle itself was basically just a repeat of Schubertit on a larger scale. The French formed into five massive divisional squares and repelled every cavalry charged thrown against them. The Mamalook army lost a literally uncounted number of men. Napoleon would write home that the number was 20,000, which is, you know, insane, but thousands and thousands and thousands at least, and most of them, elite cavalry. The French reported 29 dead and 260 wounded.
Starting point is 00:09:50 Murad Bay fled with the remnants of his army deep into the Upper Nile. Meanwhile, his partner, Ibrahim Bey, abandoned Cairo and fled northeast. Bonaparte then set off in pursuit of Ibrahim Bay, caught up with him, and after a quick battle, sent the remaining Mammalukes running clear out of Egypt and up into Syria. And this effectively ended 500 years of Mammaluk rule in Egypt. So things are looking great for Bonaparte. But little does he know that just a week and a half later, all of his fancy plans are going to get blown to smithereens.
Starting point is 00:10:28 As instructed, the French admiral had taken his 13 ships of the line, each with 74 guns and four frigates that had 36 or 40 guns apiece, into Abacier Bay. But he disagreed with Bonaparte's assessment that the army could live without the Navy. And when he surveyed the scene, he decided that he could anchor his fleet in such a way that he would be able to repel any British attack. The critical point was that he thought that his line, which was arrayed northwest to southeast, was anchored to the northwestern shoals so tightly that the British could only approach from the east, which was not only at the strongest part of the French fleet, but against the prevailing winds.
Starting point is 00:11:10 This, however, is not how it is going to go. On August 1, 1798, Admiral Nelson arrived at Alexandria with a fleet that was basically the same size as the French. He had 1374 gun ships of the line and a fourth rate, which is a ship of the line with 50 guns. But of course, when he got to Alexandria, all he found was some light ships and a few transports. The main fleet was gone. But his ships scouted around and one of them finally, finally, finally spotted the French fleet they had all. all been looking for for two and a half months. Nelson's fleet arrived at Abacier Bay at about 6 p.m. on August 1st. Now, the French admiral cited them, but assumed it was too late for an attack,
Starting point is 00:11:56 and that he would have the night to make preparations for a battle in the morning. But instead, Nelson just charged right in. Focusing all his attention on the northwest side of the French line, that supposedly impregnable northwest side of the line, the British were able to double and triple team the targeted French ships, while their brethren arrayed down to the southeast, struggled against the winds to join the fight. And then came the real thing. One of the British captains recognized that there was a navigable gap between the French line and the Western Scholes, and on his own initiative he sailed through, soon followed by three more ships. The French were now surprised, surrounded and getting blasted from all sides. The French Admiral was
Starting point is 00:12:43 mortally wounded in the initial attack by a cannon blast. The French attempted valiantly to hold out, but their morale was crushed when a fire broke out on the deck of the Orient, the great flagship of the French fleet. At about 10 o'clock that night, the Orient just exploded. Kaboom! It sunk to the bottom, and as treasure hunters know well, it took with it a huge load of Maltese gold that has never been recovered. Apparently, fighting stopped everywhere for about 10 minutes as a result of this massive explosion. But when the fighting resumed, it practically turned into a mere mop-up operation for the British.
Starting point is 00:13:25 With half the French fleet already destroyed or captured, the other half tried to make good their escape. But the British were right on top of them and trapped them inside the bay. Only two ships of the line and two frigates escaped. Of the 17 ships of the French fleet, 14 were either destroyed or captured. The British lost none. It was a spectacular victory for Admiral Nelson and a crushing defeat for the French. So Bonaparte was on his way back to Cairo from his pursuit of Ibrahim Bay when the messengers arrived with news of the disastrous loss of the fleet.
Starting point is 00:14:06 But though this must have been a knife to the gut, Bonaparte, affect. a cocky posture. Basically, no big deal. We'll stay, do what we came here to do, and when we leave, I guess we'll just have to conquer our way home. I mean, Caesar did it. That was the Vinny Vidi Viti Vichy campaign. But in private, he had to have known how much the loss of the fleet wrecked everything. And on top of everything else, the British victory at the now so-called Battle of the Nile convinced the Ottoman Empire to join a new anti-French coalition, the second coalition, which we'll talk about next week. But Bonaparte continued to proceed as if it was all good. The first step would be a reorganization of the Egyptian political system now that the French were in charge.
Starting point is 00:14:53 Well, maybe not a complete reorganization. What Bonaparte wanted to do was graft a new top-level administration on top of the existing system. So he appointed new DeVans, to run various districts in prominent city. These divans, which is a word meaning a member of the Ottoman Privy Council, were natives, but personally selected by Bonaparte to tie their loyalty not just to the French, but to him personally. He hoped eventually to create semi-representative ruling councils that would advise each divan, but the plans never got that far.
Starting point is 00:15:29 And then as I mentioned, he considered the buy-in from local Muslim leaders to be critical. and so he bent over backwards to flatter and cultivate them as allies. He gave them all kinds of favors and gifts and special perks. His letters are filled with professions of respect and admiration for Islam. And when the prophet Muhammad's birthday came round on August the 21st, Napoleon personally led a huge celebration in Cairo. Aside from his political operations, Bonaparte also cut loose with an array of modernization projects, spearheaded by all the science and engineering nerds attached to the expedition.
Starting point is 00:16:08 So the French arrival in Egypt is occasionally pointed to as the beginning of, quote-unquote, modern Egypt, because of all the new stuff the French introduced. They pioneered new urban sanitary measures, they rebuilt canals, founded an official postal service, they brought in windmills, started working on a system of structured irrigation to replace the flood inundation that had been the basis of Egyptian agriculture for, I don't even know how many thousands of years. And the French also brought in the first printing press and launched the first newspapers, mostly as organs of pro-French propaganda. But still, this is a pretty big deal. The French science nerds then formed themselves into a society called the Egyptian Institute,
Starting point is 00:16:51 where they headquarters in Cairo, where they would house, catalog, and analyze all the material they planned to go out and study. And these guys were interested in everything. Archaeology, anthropology, botany, zoology, geology, hydraulics, linguistics, you name it, they were into it. They set up a main library, an astronomical observatory, laboratories, a botanical garden, a menagerie, and eventually their accumulated artifacts, data, observations, drawings, notes, were all compiled into a series of volumes that were called the Description of Egypt. Now, the series did not start publication until 1809, but after that, 37 volumes were published before it ceased in 1826. And the Egyptian Institute, by the by, disbanded in 1801 after the final
Starting point is 00:17:45 French surrender, but it was revived in 1836 as a little coalition of French, English, and German academics, and it still exists in Cairo today. It used to house something like 200,000 super rare manuscripts, many of them gathered by Napoleon's original crew, until it was burned down by an errant Molotov cocktail during the Egyptian uprising in 2011. Protesters and soldiers apparently both rushed inside to save what they could, but they only managed to pull out 30,000 to 40,000 documents. Sigh. Oh, also, ISIS just blew up the Temple of Balshman in Paul Meyer the other day. Double sigh. And just to jump ahead a little bit while we're on the topic, by far the biggest discovery by the French expedition was the Rosetta Stone, which was discovered in
Starting point is 00:18:37 April 1799 by an engineering officer assisting in the re-fortification of the port city of Rosetta. He basically unearthed this large slab of black rock covered in ancient scribbles and said, hmm, this looks important. I think I'll go tell one of the science nerds. And yes, it turned out to be pretty important. The Rosetta Stone is a decree that was carved in 196 BC during the reign of the Hellenistic King Ptolemy V. It was written in three different languages. Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs, pictograms that no one yet understood, Demotic Egyptian, a rarely used and little understood, left to right reading phonetic script, and then ancient Greek, which everyone understood. Members of the Egyptian Institute guessed, correctly as it turned out, that it was the same
Starting point is 00:19:28 passage written in three languages, and that because they all knew Greek, that this might be the key to cracking the hieroglyphs. And it was, though it would be another 20 years before they were finally deciphered, and most of the credit going to the Englishman Thomas Young and the Frenchman Jean-Francois Champolion, but now we're straying away from the story. They found the Rosetta Stone. Now we can read hieroglyphs. It was a big deal. Anyway, despite Napoleon's cultivation of the Muslim leaders, they were paying more
Starting point is 00:20:01 attention to his deeds than his words. And to them, all of these French modernization efforts looked mostly like cultural imperialism by atheist Europeans trying to wipe out traditional Islamic culture. But even if they didn't think that, they couldn't help but notice the vast array of new taxes being imposed by the French. And I doubt they would have taken much solace in the knowledge that the French weren't doing anything different to Muslims in Egypt than they were doing to, say, Catholics in Belgium. The local religious leaders were helped along in their brewing hatred of the French by contact with the British and the Ottoman Turks, both of whom were saying, don't believe a word Bonaparte says. Revolutionary France is about naked conquest and sack religious atheism. So the leaders in Cairo started to talk amongst themselves about booting the French out.
Starting point is 00:20:53 Then they got a hold of some weapons and started to actively plot how to boot the French out. In mid-October, the imams began to spread guns throughout the native population of Cairo and urging everyone to join in a holy insurrection to expel the foreign invaders. On October the 22nd, 1798, they launched an armed uprising using the Great Mosque as a base. It was a semi-organized bloodbath, and any Frenchman caught out in the open was simply killed, and that included the French general in charge of the garrison and one of Napoleon's aide-de-camps. Bonaparte himself was outside the city when the uprising began, but it did not take him long to rally a force to come pacify the city. He pushed his way in, and then his men tore through the city.
Starting point is 00:21:39 the hastily erected Egyptian barricades. The French army then marched street by street, clearing everything in front of them, and pushing the insurrectionaries back towards the great mosque. A brief standoff at the mosque ensued, but Bonaparte, who was in a wee bit of a mood, opened up with the heavy guns. The French blasted their way in and killed everyone inside. So I guess we're not worried about desecrating mosques anymore. In total, the French lost about 300 men the local Egyptians somewhere on the order of 5 to 6,000. As further punishment, Cairo was hit with a punitive tax. Their local divan was replaced by a direct French military commissioner,
Starting point is 00:22:22 and anyone identified as a leader in the uprising was arrested and executed. These were harsh measures, but for the rest of the time Bonaparte was in Egypt, there were no more revolts. So at the end of 1798, the French occupation of Egypt was relatively secure, though how permanent it could possibly be given that they were completely cut off from Europe was an open question. Bonaparte, though, kept acting like it was going to be permanent. And in December, he gathered up a company of about 300 guys and headed down to Suez, the main port on the north end of the Red Sea. Now, as I mentioned last week, one of the great dreams of the European
Starting point is 00:23:05 powers was to carve out a canal that would link the Red Sea to the Mediterranean. As it stood right then, if you wanted to travel entirely by sea from Europe to India and China, you had to go around the tip of Africa, a long and arduous journey. You could cut the distance by something like 4,000 miles if you sailed up into the Red Sea, put in at Suez, and handed everything off to hired porters or sold it to Arab middlemen, and had them carry it up to the Mediterranean ports. But just adding those couple of hundred miles by land, jacked up the price, of everything. I mean, just do the math on how many men and camels it would take to carry off the
Starting point is 00:23:44 cargo that was loaded into just a single big ship. It was doable, and the British in particular were doing it. They used the Red Sea as a primary link to India, and this is one of the big reasons Bonaparte was so interested in Egypt. It would force the British to rely entirely on that long route around the Cape of Good Hope, making it much easier to run out, say, a combined navy of Spanish, Dutch, and French ships to isolate the British home island completely. And then, if the French could build a canal from Suez to the Mediterranean, the sea route would be cut by 4,000 miles and the French would have a near monopoly on the Asian trade. So like I say, Bonaparte had big fancy plans here.
Starting point is 00:24:29 Now, what his little expedition to Suez was looking for in particular was the legendary canal of the pharaohs that had been attested to in numerous ancient sources. It had allegedly been built back in the 500s BC, running west to the Nile, rather than north directly to the Mediterranean. This legendary canal was abandoned after it was cut off from the Nile by shifts in the course of the river, but after some methodical searching, the party actually found the remains of the canal of the pharaohs, and they set to work studying its course and construction. Now, unfortunately, for Bonaparte, he personally had to leave the mission in January 1799 because messengers arrived bearing the news that the Ottomans had finally been convinced to throw their whole weight
Starting point is 00:25:16 against the French. They were massing to invade Egypt on two fronts, a land army swinging down through Syria and a sea army massing at roads that would sail down and put in at Alexandria. Napoleon likely expected something like this ever since the Ottomans had joined the war because it took him no time to launch a bold preemptive strike against the Ottoman army coming down through Syria. Rather than waiting for the Ottomans to come to him, he collected 13,000 men in February 1799 and marched them north into Syria to halt the Ottoman advance before they got anywhere near Egypt. And while he was at it, he would be able to capture a bunch of ports to strengthen the French position in the east. On March the 3rd, 1799, Bonaparte hit
Starting point is 00:26:04 his first major objective, the port city of Jaffa, which is roughly where modern Tel Aviv is. Taking Jaffa was critical because the rest of Bonaparte's campaign was premised on floating up heavy guns and siege equipment rather than hauling it overland through the desert, and for that he needed a local port. Bonaparte expected Jopha to just give up, but they refused. And not only did they refuse, but they beheaded the Turkish envoy Napoleon had sent in to negotiate their surrender. This insult infuriated Bonaparte. The French assaulted the city for four days until they finally fought their way in on March the 7th. Bonaparte let his guys run wild for two straight days on a non-stop terror campaign. Thousands were killed in the looting and
Starting point is 00:26:52 destruction that followed. So I guess we're not worried about pillaging the natives anymore. The siege and occupation of Jopha was also right around the time the first first. The first French army was hit with a problem that would plague them, not just for the rest of this campaign, but for the rest of their time in the east. The plague, literally, the plague. In March 1799, the plague started spreading ominously through the ranks of the French army, which impacted not just the basic health of the soldiers, but also their morale. The plague is a scary business. So before leaving Jaffa, Bonaparte set up a plague hospital to quarantine sick troops. and allegedly went and visited the victims personally to prove to the rest of his men that there was
Starting point is 00:27:39 nothing to fear. And there's a famous painting creatively called Bonaparte visiting plague victims at Jaffa that depicts him laying hands on a sick man. But it is entirely possible that the entire visit was concocted propaganda. Napoleon personally commissioned this painting in 1804 on the eve of his self-coronation as emperor. And if there's one solid staple of semi-divine rule across time and space, it's the power of the ruler to heal the sick. After depositing a garrison to hold Jaffa, Bonaparte marched with the rest of his army north to the city of Akre, where a good portion of the incoming Ottoman army were stationed, awaiting further reinforcements from Damascus.
Starting point is 00:28:22 The French began a siege on March the 20th, and Bonaparte confidently predicted that Ackre would fall in a matter of days, and then they could all move on. But instead, this was as far as his army was going to go in the Syrian campaign. The Ottoman defenders were well led by a French emigre officer, who also happened to be a former classmate of Bonaparte. Supplied by the British Navy with provisions and equipment, the garrison at Akre settled in to outlast the French. And then came the critical blow. The flotilla bringing in the French siege equipment was captured by the British Navy, leaving Napoleon with only infantry to carry out his siege and no, and way to prevent the British from resupplying the city at will. To add insult to injury,
Starting point is 00:29:09 the British then delivered the captured guns to Akre, where they were used against the French. With the siege stalled out, Bonaparte then got news that a huge relief army was on the way from Damascus. Napoleon dispatched 2,000 men under General Jean-Baptiste Claibere, a guy who I have been ignoring so far in the show in the interest of narrative clarity. But Claibébert, has been around for a while now. He was part of that Mainz garrison that was forced to surrender way back in the summer of 1793 and was then transferred over to the Von Day, where they played a crucial role in defeating the insurrectionary Catholic and Royal Army later that year. General Claibere was one of the lead Republican generals in that run of battles out in the West in
Starting point is 00:29:56 September, October 1793. Well, now he's with Napoleon in Egypt, and he's off with 2,000 men to face 35,000 Ottomans, and despite the insane numerical difference, he actually liked his chances so much that he decided to go on the offensive. Claybear located the relief army camped at the base of Mount Tabor, and he scheduled a night raid for the wee hours of April the 16th that would hopefully confuse and scatter the enemy. But unfortunately, it took Claibair longer to get into position than he planned. And so when dawn broke on the 16th, the little army was spotted. The surprise raid botched, Claibair formed his army into two compact divisional squares, and for the next 10 hours, fought off wave after wave of Mammalute cavalry. Now, holding out was actually pretty easy,
Starting point is 00:30:49 but by the end of the day, the French were running low on food, water, and ammunition. But that is when Bonaparte showed up leading another 2,000 men. Having heard of the pickle Claibair had gotten himself into, Bonaparte scrambled a relief effort. And when Napoleon arrived at Mount Tabor, his idea was to attack the Ottoman baggage and forced them to divert attention away from Claibair. And this worked beyond his wildest expectations, because when Bonaparte attacked the baggage, the Ottoman soldier suddenly believed that they were surrounded. So they panicked and retreated south. And as soon as they started to run, both Bonaparte and Claibor's armies pursued them and turned the retreat into a chaotic route.
Starting point is 00:31:35 Just like that, this huge Ottoman relief army was busted and scattered to the four winds, leaving thousands of dead behind. But though they had stopped the relief army from coming, the siege of Akre still ended in failure for the French. The plague was continuing to spread, and they had no real way of breaking into the city. After one last ditch assault on May the 10th, Bonaparte decided to give up. Sort of. He announced to his men that since they had defeated the Ottomans and taken a string of cities,
Starting point is 00:32:08 that their work here was done. They were victorious already and didn't need dumb old Akre anyway. Basically, he declared victory and left. But the march home was pretty brutal. All the sick had to be kept quarantined in the back of the army, and the wounded could only move so fast. Their slow progress exposed the retreating French to repeated Ottoman raids. So eventually, anyone who couldn't keep up was just abandoned.
Starting point is 00:32:35 And there is a story that after passing back through Jaffa, that Bonaparte ordered a surgeon to administer lethal doses of laudanum to men infected with plague, but the doctor refused to do it. At the end of June, though, Bonaparte arrived back in Cairo, and, keeping up appearances, he entered the city like some conquering hero. But the four-month campaign had cost him 600 dead of the plague, 1,200 killed in action, and 2,000 wounded, none of whom could be replaced.
Starting point is 00:33:06 And it netted him only a temporary reprieve from an Ottoman offensive via Syria. Because meanwhile, this other 20,000-man Ottoman army was being ferried by the British Navy from Rhodes down to Alexandria. And I have to think that right about now is the time Bonaparte looks around and says, says this is a hopeless situation. I'm cut off. I have no hope of reinforcement. I'm governing a probably hostile native population with a dwindling army weakened by plague. There is very little chance of permanent success to be had here. But there was nothing he could do about his situation at the moment, except try to counter this seaborne Ottoman invasion. On July the 14th, 1799,
Starting point is 00:33:51 that is the 10th anniversary of the fall of the Bastille, the British Navy landed the Ottoman army at Alexandria, and easily established a beachhead and captured the city, which was not particularly well garrisoned. On July the 25th, Bonaparte arrived with about 7,000 infantry and 1,000 cavalry and saw that the Ottomans were deploying themselves in two defensive lines with their backs to the sea, which Napoleon quickly deduced left them nowhere to run if it got bad for them. So he ordered his men to attack, and they broke through the first Ottoman line before it had a chance to fully form.
Starting point is 00:34:26 They had a tougher time cracking the inner line, but the French cavalry general, Joachim Murat identified a weak point on the Ottoman flank, turned it, and charged in behind them. Murat charged so fast that he broke into the tent of the Ottoman High Command and personally captured the Ottoman Commander-in-Chief, taking a gunshot to jaw for his trouble. but Mirrah will live, as we'll see. The broken Ottomans tried to flee, scatter, swim back to the British ships, whatever. Of the 18,000 who put to shore, 6,000 died, 1,500 were captured, and 2,000 just went missing. The French casualties, again, numbered in the mere hundreds.
Starting point is 00:35:13 But though here we are, with Bonaparte having won every open battle he fought in Egypt and Syria, and won them all in pretty spectacular fashion. None of it changed the larger strategic picture. Bonaparte's army was still cut off from home and could expect no relief or reinforcement. And then the British Admiral running the fleet that had been blockading Bonaparte from all possible relief decided it was high time to let news from Europe finally get through to the French. He forwarded dispatches that spelled out the scope of the disasters that had befallen the French army in the year since Bonaparte had left for Egypt. Disasters he had no knowledge of until that moment,
Starting point is 00:35:54 and disasters that we will pick our way through next week. Napoleon concluded that if France was going to be saved, and more importantly, if his glorious personal ambitions were going to be saved, that he was going to have to ditch the men he had dragged to Egypt and sail for home. And with this latest resounding victory against the Ottomans, he could return home bearing good tidings of his unbroken string of triumphs. Now, he did not dare tell his men he was leaving, though. Pretending to be headed merely on a scouting expedition to the Nile Delta, Bonaparte boarded a frigate with a small company of loyal associates as night fell on August
Starting point is 00:36:33 22, 1799. Then, he sailed for France. The next morning, General Claibere got up and read the proclamation, announcing Bonaparte's departure, and that he himself had been pointed commander-in-chief. Now this practically led to a riot, but Claibair told him, no, no, guys, it's cool. He's just going home to get reinforcements, I swear. But this was a bald-faced lie. Bonaparte is not coming back.
Starting point is 00:37:03 So all those men who had been licking their chops as they sailed from Malta to Alexandria in June 1798 and who counted themselves as lucky ducks for getting picked to go off on this grand adventure with Napoleon Bonaparte were utterly abandoned into their fate. Those that weren't already dead of the plague or had been killed in battle or in native uprisings, that is. Now, just to wrap up the fate of these poor guys, since it will extend beyond the scope of the show, the French occupation went pretty much as you'd expect. His army dwindling, and with no expectation that Bonaparte was ever coming back, Claibere opened up negotiations with the British and Ottomans, promising to abandon Egypt if they were all just allowed to go home to France. But after,
Starting point is 00:37:49 you're agreeing to these terms, the British reneged in March 1800 and landed a huge Mamalook army to destroy the supposedly fatally weakened French army. But Claibor won the subsequent battle of Heliopolis, but then he himself was assassinated by an angry native in June. The demoralized French hung out until 1801, when the last of them finally wound up hold up in Alexandria, besieged by a British expeditionary force that finally secured the French surrender in September 1801. And we'll end today by noting that this surrender is the reason why the Rosetta Stone sits today in the British Museum, and not the Louvre.
Starting point is 00:38:30 The details are sketchy, but it appears that the British knew all about the stone and just straight up jacked it and sailed it back to London, where it remains to this day. Next week, we will wind back the clock a bit and pick up that deteriorate. situation back in Europe that I've now hinted out a few times, a deteriorating situation that led to the formation of the second coalition, a coalition that now included the Russians and the Ottomans, and which General Bonaparte was convinced that it was his destiny to save France from, so that he himself could proceed with everything else he believed destiny had in store for him.

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