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Modern History of Egypt Thread, The French Invasion of Egypt in History; The French Invasion of Egypt 1798-1801 On July 1, 1798, a French invasion force under the command of Napoleon disembarked ...

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The French Invasion of Egypt
 
 
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The French Invasion of Egypt

1798-1801

On July 1, 1798, a French invasion force under the command of Napoleon disembarked near Alexandria. The invasion force, which had sailed from Toulon on May 19, was accompanied by a commission of scholars and scientists whose function was to investigate every aspect of life in ancient and contemporary Egypt.



France wanted control of Modern Egypt for two major reasons:
  • Its commercial and agricultural potential
  • Its strategic importance to the Anglo-French rivalry
During the eighteenth century, the principal share of European trade with Egypt was handled by French merchants. The French also looked to Egypt as a source of grain and raw materials. In strategic terms, French control of Egypt could be used to threaten British commercial interests in the region and to block Britain's overland route to India.
Conquering Modern Egypt . . .?
The French forces took Alexandria without difficulty, defeated the Mamluk army at Shubra Khit and Imbabah, and entered Cairo on July 25. Murad Bey fled to Upper Egypt while Ibrahim Bey and the Ottoman viceroy went to Syria. Mamluk rule in Egypt collapsed. Nevertheless, Napoleon's position in Egypt was precarious. The French controlled only the Delta and Cairo; Upper Egypt was the preserve of the Mamluks and the bedouins. In addition, Britain and the Ottoman government joined forces in an attempt to defeat Napoleon and drive him out of Egypt. On August 1, 1798, the British fleet under Lord Nelson annihilated the French ships as they lay at anchor at Abu Qir, thus isolating Napoleon's forces in Egypt.
The Declaration of War
On September 11, Sultan Selim III declared war on France. On October 21, the people of Cairo rioted against the French invasion of Egypt; they regarded them as occupying strangers, not as liberators. The rebellion had a religious as well as a national character and centered around Al Azhar mosque. Its leaders were the ulama, religiously trained scholars, whom Napoleon had tried to woo to the French side. During this period, the populace began to regard the ulama not only as moral but also as political leaders.
The French Retreat
To forestall an Ottoman invasion, Napoleon invaded Syria, but, unable to take Acre in Palestine, his forces retreated on May 20, 1799. On August 22, Napoleon, with a very small company, secretly left Egypt for France, leaving his troops behind and General Jean-Baptiste Kléber as his successor. Kléber found himself the unwilling commander in chief of a dispirited army with a bankrupt treasury. His main preoccupation was to secure the evacuation of his troops to France.
When Britain rejected the evacuation plan, Kléber was forced to fight. After Kléber's assassination by a Syrian, his command was taken over by General Abdullah Jacques Menou, a French convert to Islam. The occupation was finally terminated by an Anglo-Ottoman invasion force. The French forces in Cairo surrendered on June 18, 1801, and Menou himself surrendered at Alexandria on September 3. By the end of September, the last French forces had left the country.
As historian Afaf Lutfi al-Sayyid Marsot has written, the three-year French invasion of Egypt and its occupation was too short to exert any lasting effects on modern Egypt, despite claims to the contrary. Its most important effect on modern Egypt internally was the rapid decline in the power of the Mamluks.
The Consequences
The major impact of the French invasion of Egypt was the effect it had on Europe. Napoleon's invasion revealed the Middle East as an area of immense strategic importance to the European powers, thus inagurating the Anglo-French rivalry for influence in the region and bringing the British into the Mediterranean.
The French invasion of Egypt also had an important effect on France because of the publication of Description de l'Egypte, which detailed the findings of the scholars and scientists who had accompanied Napoleon to Egypt. This publication became the foundation of modern research into the history, society, and economics of modern Egypt.








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Modern History of Egypt Thread, The French Invasion of Egypt in History; The French Invasion of Egypt 1798-1801 On July 1, 1798, a French invasion force under the command of Napoleon disembarked ...

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