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{{Short description|1799 Siege during French Invasion of Egypt and Syria}} |
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{{About|the Siege of Acre (1799)|other sieges|Siege of Acre (disambiguation)}} |
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{{About|the siege in 1799|other sieges|Siege of Acre (disambiguation)}} |
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{{more footnotes|date=August 2011}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2017}} |
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{{Infobox military conflict |
{{Infobox military conflict |
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|conflict=Siege of Acre |
| conflict = Siege of Acre |
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|partof=the [[French Campaign in Egypt and Syria]] |
| partof = the [[French Campaign in Egypt and Syria]] during the [[War of the Second Coalition]] |
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| image=حصار-عكا.jpg |
| image = File:حصار-عكا.jpg |
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| caption = Failed siege of Acre by French forces led by Napoleon |
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| image_size = 300 |
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| date = 20 March – 21 May 1799 |
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|caption=Artistic representation of Napoleon's 1799 siege of Acre |
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| place = [[Acre, Israel|Acre]], [[Sidon Eyalet]], [[Ottoman Empire]] |
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|date=20 March – 21 May 1799 |
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| coordinates = {{coord|32.922|35.070|type:event_region:IL|display=inline,title}} |
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|place=[[Acre, Israel|Acre]], [[Sidon Eyalet]], [[Ottoman Empire]] |
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| territory = |
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|coordinates={{coord|32.922|35.070|type:event_region:IL|display=inline}} |
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| result = Anglo–Ottoman victory{{sfn|Bodart|1908|p=334}} |
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|territory= |
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| combatant1 = {{flagicon|Ottoman Empire|1793}} [[Ottoman Empire]]<br>{{flagicon|Kingdom of Great Britain}} [[Kingdom of Great Britain|Great Britain]] |
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|result= Ottoman-British victory |
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| combatant2 = {{flagicon|First French Republic}} [[First French Republic|French Republic]] |
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|combatant1={{flagicon|Ottoman Empire}} [[Ottoman Empire]]<br>{{flagicon|Kingdom of Great Britain}} [[Kingdom of Great Britain]] |
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| commander1 = {{flagicon|Ottoman Empire|1793}} [[Jazzar Pasha]]<br />{{flagicon|Ottoman Empire|1793}} [[Haim Farhi]]<br />{{flagicon image|Naval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg|23px}} [[Sidney Smith (Royal Navy officer)|Sidney Smith]]<br />{{flagicon|Kingdom of France}} [[Antoine de Phélippeaux]] |
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|combatant2={{flagicon|First French Republic}} [[First French Republic]] |
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| commander2 = {{flagicon|First French Republic}} [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon Bonaparte]]<br>{{flagicon|First French Republic}} [[Jean-Baptiste Kléber]]<br>{{flagicon|First French Republic}} [[Eugène de Beauharnais]]{{WIA}} |
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| strength1 = '''Garrison''': 5,000 men{{sfn|Bodart|1908|p=334}}{{sfn|Gilbert|2022}}<br>'''Relief army''' ([[Battle of Mount Tabor (1799)|Mt. Tabor]]): 35,000<ref>Smith, D. p.151</ref>–40,000<ref>Guerre d'Orient: Campagnes de Égypte et de Syrie - page 82</ref><br>'''Support''': 2 British [[Ship of the line|ships of the line]]{{sfn|Gilbert|2022}} |
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|commander2={{flagicon|First French Republic}} [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon Bonaparte]] |
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| strength2 = 12,000{{sfn|Bodart|1908|p=334}}–13,000{{sfn|Gilbert|2022}} |
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|strength1=30,000<ref>Guerre d'Orient: Campagnes de Égypte et de Syrie - page 80</ref> |
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| casualties1 = 2,000{{sfn|Bodart|1908|p=334}} (for the siege) |
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|strength2=13,000<ref>{{cite web |title=Siege of Acre |url=https://www.britannica.com/event/Siege-of-Acre-1799}}</ref> |
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| casualties2 = 4,000{{sfn|Bodart|1908|p=334}}<br>or 4,500{{sfn|Gilbert|2022}} |
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|casualties1=unknown<ref>{{cite web |title=Siege of Acre |url=https://www.britannica.com/event/Siege-of-Acre-1799}}</ref> |
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*2,300 killed |
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*2,200 wounded or ill |
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|campaign= |
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| campaign = |
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|casus= |
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| casus = |
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|campaignbox={{Campaignbox Egypt-Syria}} |
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| campaignbox = {{Campaignbox Egypt-Syria}} |
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| units1 = {{flagicon|Ottoman Empire|1793}} [[Nizam-i Djedid Army|Nizam-i Djedid]]<br /><small>(Garrison Force)</small><br />{{Navy|UK}} |
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| units2 = {{flagicon|First French Republic}} [[Order of battle of the Armée d'Orient (1798)|Armée d'Orient]] |
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| width = 300px |
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| map_type = Mediterranean |
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| map_relief = 1 |
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| map_size = 300 |
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}} |
}} |
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{{OSM Location map |
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| coord = {{coord|33|25}} |
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| zoom = 4 |
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| float = right |
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| nolabels = 1 |
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| width = 304 |
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| height = 160 |
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| title = [[War of the Second Coalition]]:<br>[[French campaign in Egypt and Syria|Egypt and Syria]] |
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| caption = {{legend|black|current battle}}{{legend|maroon|Napoleon in command till 23 August 1799}} |
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| shapeD = n-circle |
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[[File:Sidney Smith, Napoleon Siege of Acre, The Times, Friday, Aug 02, 1799.png|thumb|100px|right|Sidney Smith's description of the Siege of Acre, The Times, Aug 02, 1799]] |
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| shape-colorD = maroon |
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| shape-outlineD = white |
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| label-sizeD = 12 |
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| label-posD = left |
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| label-offset-xD = 0 |
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| label-offset-yD = 0 |
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| label1 = Malta |
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The '''Siege of Acre''' of 1799 was an unsuccessful French [[siege]] of the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] city of [[Acre, Israel|Acre]] (now Akko in modern [[Israel]]) and was the turning point of [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon's]] [[French campaign in Egypt and Syria|invasion of Egypt and Syria]], along with the [[Battle of the Nile]]. It was Napoleon's first decisive defeat in his career as three years previously he had been tactically defeated at the [[Second Battle of Bassano]]. As a result of the failed siege, Napoleon Bonaparte retreated two months later and withdrew to Egypt. |
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| mark-coord1 = {{coord|35.88|14.45}} |
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| mark-title1 = [[French invasion of Malta]] from 10 to 12 June 1798 |
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| label-pos1 = right |
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| label2 = Alexandria |
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| mark-coord2 = {{coord|31.2|29.91}} |
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| mark-title2 = [[Battle of the Nile]] from 1 to 3 August 1798<br>[[French campaign in Egypt and Syria#Bonaparte leaves Egypt|Napoleon's return to France]] from 23 August to 9 October 1799<br>[[Siege of Alexandria (1801)]] from 17 August to 2 September 1801 |
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| label3 = Cairo |
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| mark-coord3 = {{coord|30.04|31.25}} |
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| mark-title3 = [[Battle of the Pyramids]] on 21 July 1798<br>[[Revolt of Cairo]] from 21 to 22 October 1798<br>[[French campaign in Egypt and Syria#Bonaparte leaves Egypt|Napoleon's return to France]]<br>[[Siege of Cairo]] from May to June 1801 |
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| label4 = Jaffa |
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| mark-coord4 = {{coord|32.05|34.77}} |
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| mark-title4 = [[Siege of Jaffa]] from 3 to 7 March 1799 |
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| label5 = |
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| mark-coord5 = {{coord|32.92|35.07}} |
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| mark-title5 = Siege of Acre (1799) from 20 March to 21 May 1799 |
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| shape-color5 = black |
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| label-color5 = black |
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| label6 = |
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| mark-coord6 = {{coord|32.61|35.33}} |
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| mark-title6 = [[Battle of Mount Tabor (1799)]] on 16 April 1799 |
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}} |
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The '''siege of Acre''' of 1799 was an unsuccessful French [[siege]] of the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] city of [[Acre, Israel|Acre]] (now Akko in modern [[Israel]]) and was the turning point of [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon's]] [[French campaign in Egypt and Syria|invasion of Egypt and Syria]], along with the [[Battle of the Nile]]. It was Napoleon's third tactical defeat in his career, being defeated at the [[Second Battle of Bassano]] and the [[Battle of Caldiero (1796)|Battle of Caldiero]] three years previously during the Italian campaign, and his first major strategic defeat, along with the last time he was defeated in battle for 10 years. As a result of the failed siege, Napoleon Bonaparte retreated two months later and withdrew to Egypt. |
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==Background== |
==Background== |
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{{ |
{{Main|French campaign in Egypt and Syria}} |
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Acre was a site of significant strategic importance due to its commanding position on the route between Egypt and Syria. Bonaparte wanted to capture it following his invasion of [[Egypt]]. He hoped to incite a Syrian rebellion against the Ottomans and threaten British India. After the [[ |
Acre was a site of significant strategic importance due to its commanding position on the route between Egypt and Syria. Bonaparte wanted to capture it following his invasion of [[Egypt]]. He hoped to incite a Syrian rebellion against the Ottomans and threaten British India. After the [[siege of Jaffa]], which was followed by two days and nights of massacre and rape by the French forces,{{citation needed|date=April 2021}} the defenders of the citadel were even more determined to resist the French. |
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==Siege== |
==Siege== |
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The French attempted to lay siege on 20 March using only their [[infantry]]. Napoleon believed the city would capitulate quickly to him. |
The French attempted to lay siege on 20 March using only their [[infantry]]. Napoleon believed the city would capitulate quickly to him. In correspondence with one of his subordinate officers he voiced his conviction that a mere two weeks would be necessary to capture the linchpin of his conquest of [[the Holy Land]] before marching on to [[Jerusalem]]. |
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However, the troops of the capable [[Jezzar Pasha]], refusing to surrender, withstood the siege for one and a half months. [[Haim Farhi]], al-Jazzar's [[Jew]]ish adviser and right-hand man, played a key role in the city's defence, directly supervising the battle against the siege. After Napoleon's [[Siege of Jaffa|earlier |
However, the troops of the capable [[Jezzar Pasha]], refusing to surrender, withstood the siege for one and a half months. [[Haim Farhi]], al-Jazzar's [[Jew]]ish adviser and right-hand man, played a key role in the city's defence, directly supervising the battle against the siege. After Napoleon's [[Siege of Jaffa|earlier capture of Jaffa]], rampaging French troops had savagely sacked the captured city, and thousands of Albanian prisoners of war were ordered by Napoleon to be massacred on the sea-shore,{{sfn|Falk|2015|p=185}} prior to the French offensive further northwards. These facts were well known to the townspeople and defending troops (many of them [[Albanians]]) in Acre, and the prospect of being massacred is likely to have stiffened their resistance. |
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A [[Royal Navy]] |
A [[Royal Navy]] flotilla under Commodore [[Sidney Smith (Royal Navy officer)|Sidney Smith]], commanding {{HMS|Tigre|1795|2}}, helped to reinforce the Ottoman defences and supplied the city with additional cannon manned by sailors and marines. Smith used his command of the sea to capture the French [[Siege engine|siege artillery]] being sent by a flotilla of gunboats from Egypt and to bombard the coastal road from Jaffa.{{sfn|Rickard|2006}} The captured boats were:<ref>{{London Gazette|issue=15149 |pages=609–610 |date=18 June 1799}}</ref> |
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{{Anchor|Captured boats}}<!--[[List of gun-vessels Commodore Sir Sidney Smith captured at Acre in March 1799]] redirects here--> |
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{| class=" wikitable" |
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|- |
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! Name |
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! Fate |
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|- |
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| {{HMS|Dangereuse|1799|2}} |
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| Sold 1801 |
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|- |
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| {{ship||Deux Frères|1798 ship|2}} |
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| Lost in a gale in May 1799 |
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|- |
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| {{ship|French brig|Foudre|1796|2}} |
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| Sold 1801 |
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|- |
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| [[French tartane Marie-Rose (1798)|''Marie-Rose'']] |
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| Sold 1801 |
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|- |
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| {{HMS|Negresse|1799|2}} |
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| Sold 1802 |
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|- |
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| [[French gun-vessel Torride (1797)|''Torride'']] |
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| Last listed 1802 |
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|- |
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| {{ship||Vierge-de-Grâce|1798 ship|2}} |
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| Recaptured and scuttled May 1799 |
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|- |
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|} |
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An [[artillery]] expert from the fleet, [[Armée des Émigrés|French ''émigré'']] [[Antoine de Phélippeaux]], then redeployed against Napoleon's forces the artillery pieces which the British had intercepted.{{sfn|Rickard|2006}} |
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{{see also|List of gun-vessels Commodore Sir Sidney Smith captured at Acre in March 1799}} |
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Smith anchored the British ships {{HMS|Tigre|1795|2}} and [[HMS Theseus (1786)|''Theseus'']] so their broadsides could assist the Ottoman defence. British gunboats, which were of shallower draft, could come in closer, and together they helped repel repeated French assaults. |
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An [[artillery]] expert from the fleet, [[Antoine Le Picard de Phélippeaux]], then redeployed against Napoleon's forces the artillery pieces which the British had intercepted. |
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On 16 April an Ottoman relief force was fought off at [[Battle of Mount Tabor (1799)|Mount Tabor]]. By early May, replacement French siege artillery had arrived overland and a breach was forced in the defences. At the culmination of the assault, the besieging forces managed to make a breach in the walls.{{sfn|Rickard|2006}} |
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Smith anchored the British ships [[French ship Tigre (1793)|''Tigre'']] and [[HMS Theseus (1786)|''Theseus'']] so their broadsides could assist the Ottoman defence. British gunboats, which were of shallower draft, could come in closer, and together they helped repel repeated French assaults. |
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[[Image:Sir William Sidney Smith by John Eckstein.jpg|thumb|left|175px|Sidney Smith at the walls of Acre]] |
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However, after suffering many casualties to open this entry-point, Napoleon's soldiers found, on trying to penetrate the city, that Farhi and de Phélippeaux had, in the meantime, built a second wall, several feet deeper within the city where al-Jazzar's garden was. Discovery of this new construction convinced Napoleon and his men that the probability of them taking the city was minimal. Moreover, after the assault was again repelled, Ottoman reinforcements from [[Rhodes]] were able to land.{{sfn|Rickard|2006}} |
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On 16 April a Ottoman relief force was fought off at the [[Battle of Mount Tabor (1799)|Mount Tabor]]. By early May, replacement French siege artillery had arrived overland and a breach was forced in the defences. At the culmination of the assault, the besieging forces managed to make a breach in the walls. |
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[[Image:Sir William Sidney Smith by John Eckstein.jpg|thumb|left|175px|A painting of Sidney Smith at the walls of Jaffa]] |
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However, after suffering many casualties to open this entry-point, Napoleon's soldiers found, on trying to penetrate the city, that Farhi and de Phélippeaux had, in the meantime, built a second wall, several feet deeper within the city where al-Jazzar's garden was. Discovery of this new construction convinced Napoleon and his men that the probability of them taking the city was minimal. Moreover, after the assault was again repelled, Ottoman reinforcements from [[Rhodes]] were able to land. |
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Having underestimated the stubborn attitude of the defending forces combined with a British blockade of French supply harbours and harsh weather conditions, Napoleon's forces were left hungry, cold and damp. [[Bubonic plague|Plague]] had struck the French camp as a result of the desperate condition of the men, and had by now led to the deaths of about 2,000 soldiers. |
Having underestimated the stubborn attitude of the defending forces combined with a British blockade of French supply harbours and harsh weather conditions, Napoleon's forces were left hungry, cold and damp. [[Bubonic plague|Plague]] had struck the French camp as a result of the desperate condition of the men, and had by now led to the deaths of about 2,000 soldiers. |
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Line 55: | Line 133: | ||
Throughout the siege, both Napoleon and Jezzar sought in vain the assistance of the [[Shihab dynasty|Shihab]] leader, [[Bashir Shihab II|Bashir]]—ruler of much of present-day [[Lebanon]]. Bashir remained neutral. As things turned out, it was the French which suffered most from the attitude of Bashir, whose intervention on their side might have turned the balance of power in their favour. |
Throughout the siege, both Napoleon and Jezzar sought in vain the assistance of the [[Shihab dynasty|Shihab]] leader, [[Bashir Shihab II|Bashir]]—ruler of much of present-day [[Lebanon]]. Bashir remained neutral. As things turned out, it was the French which suffered most from the attitude of Bashir, whose intervention on their side might have turned the balance of power in their favour. |
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Finally, the siege was raised. Napoleon Bonaparte retreated two months later on 21 May after a failed final assault on 10 May, and withdrew to Egypt. |
Finally, the siege was raised. Napoleon Bonaparte retreated two months later on 21 May after a failed final assault on 10 May, and withdrew to Egypt.{{sfn|Rickard|2006}} |
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==Significance== |
==Significance== |
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[[File:Sidney Smith, Napoleon Siege of Acre, The Times, Friday, Aug 02, 1799.png|thumb|100px|right|Sidney Smith's description of the siege of Acre, The Times, Aug 02, 1799]] |
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In 1805, Napoleon asserted that if he had: <blockquote>been able to take Acre [in 1799], I would have put on a [[turban]], I would have made my soldiers wear big Turkish trousers, and I would have exposed them to battle only in case of extreme necessity. I would have made them into a [[Sacred Band of Thebes|Sacred Battalion]]--my [[Persian Immortals|Immortals]]. I would have finished the war against the Turks with Arabic, Greek, and Armenian troops. Instead of a battle in [[Moravia]], I would have won a [[Battle of Issus]], I would have made myself emperor of the East, and I would have returned to Paris by way of Constantinople.<ref>Napoleon Bonaparte, “On Religions” in ''The Mind of Napoleon: A Selection from His Written and Spoken Words'', ed. J. Christopher Herold (New York: Columbia University Press, 1955), 49.</ref></blockquote> |
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{{speculation|date=May 2023}} |
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In 1805, Napoleon asserted that if he had |
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The allusions from [[Classical Antiquity]] included in the speech are to the [[Sacred Band of Thebes]] and the [[Persian Immortals]]—elite units of, respectively, the city state of [[Ancient Thebes (Boeotia)|Thebes]] and the [[Achaemenid]] Kings of Persia; and to the [[Battle of Issus]] where [[Alexander the Great]] decisively defeated the latter. (In fact, though Acre was not conquered, Napoleon's [[Imperial Guard (Napoleon I)|Imperial Guard]] did come to be informally called "The Immortals."<ref>Georges Blond, ''La Grande Armée'', trans. Marshall May (New York: Arms and Armor, 1997), 48, 103, 470</ref>) |
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{{quote|been able to take Acre [in 1799], I would have put on a [[turban]], I would have made my soldiers wear big Turkish trousers, and I would have exposed them to battle only in case of extreme necessity. I would have made them into a [[Sacred Band of Thebes|Sacred Battalion]]—my [[Persian Immortals|Immortals]]. I would have finished the war against the Turks with Arabic, Greek, and Armenian troops. Instead of a battle in [[Moravia]], I would have won a [[Battle of Issus]], I would have made myself emperor of the East, and I would have returned to Paris by way of Constantinople.{{sfn|Bonaparte|1955|p=49}}}} |
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Some hold that a statement attributed to Napoleon during the war, according to which he promised to return the land to the Jews if he were to succeed in his conquest of Palestine, was meant to capture Farhi’s, a Syrian Jew, attention and betray his master by switching his support to the French. Whether this is true or not, Farhi defended the city with the rest of the Ottoman forces. |
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The allusions from [[Classical Antiquity]] included in the speech are to the [[Sacred Band of Thebes]] and the [[Persian Immortals]]—elite units of, respectively, the city state of [[Ancient Thebes (Boeotia)|Thebes]] and the [[Achaemenid]] Kings of Persia; and to the [[Battle of Issus]] where [[Alexander the Great]] decisively defeated the latter. (In fact, though Acre was not conquered, Napoleon's [[Imperial Guard (Napoleon I)|Imperial Guard]] did come to be informally called "The Immortals".){{sfn|Blond|1997|pp=48, 103, 470}} |
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However, Napoleon never showed any particular interest in winning over the Jews during his campaign,<ref>Henry Laurens, ''La Question de Palestine: L'invention de la terre sainte, 1799-1922'', Fayard, Paris 1999 p.18</ref> though the account of Las Cases in "Mémorial de Sainte Hélène" about Napoleon's military campaign records that a rumour among [[Syrian Jews]] had it that after Napoleon took Acre, he would go to Jerusalem and restore [[Solomon's temple]]<ref>Franz Kobler, ''Napoleon and the Jews'', Masada Press, Jerusalem,1975 p.51</ref> and decrees were passed in favour of Jews (and Coptic Christians and women) in French-controlled Egypt.<ref>Steven Englund, ''Napoleon: A Political Life'', Harvard University Press 2005 p.133</ref> Whatever Napoleon's actual intentions, these stories and rumors are considered to be among the earliest harbingers of what would become the [[Zionist Movement]]. |
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Whether or not Napoleon would have been able to carry out the above grand design, it is likely that had he taken Acre he might have remained a considerable further time in the East, would not have returned to France in 1799 and hence would not have carried out later that year the coup which established him in power as First Consul. He might have still taken power in France, later on and under different circumstances, or in his absence someone else might have overthrown the shaky rule of the Directorate. Either way, the later history of France and of Europe might have been substantially different. Also, whether or not Napoleon would have managed to make himself Emperor of the East and reach Constantinople, his energetically trying to do that would have certainly had a substantial effect on the Ottoman Empire's history. |
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Some hold{{weasel inline|date=May 2023}} that a statement attributed to Napoleon during the war, according to which he promised to return the land to the Jews if he were to succeed in his conquest of Palestine, was meant to capture the attention of Farhi, a Syrian Jew, and betray his master by switching his support to the French. Whether this is true or not, Farhi defended the city with the rest of the Ottoman forces. |
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Napoleon showed great interest in winning over the Jews during the campaign,{{sfn|Laurens|1999|p=18}} including the account of [[Emmanuel, comte de Las Cases|Las Cases]] in "[[The Memorial of Saint Helena|Mémorial de Sainte Hélène]]" about Napoleon's military campaign records that it was reported among [[Syrian Jews]] that after Napoleon took Acre, he would go to Jerusalem and restore [[Solomon's temple]]{{sfn|Kobler|1975|p=51}} and decrees were passed in favour of Jews (and Coptic Christians and women) in French-controlled Egypt.{{sfn|Englund|2005|p=133}} |
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==Legacy== |
==Legacy== |
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In present-day Acre, the hill on which Napoleon set his camp, south-east of the city walls of Acre, is still known as "Napoleon's Hill" (גבעת נפוליון). Acre also has a Napoleon Bonaparte Street (רחוב נפוליון בונפרטה), the only [[Israel]] |
In present-day Acre, the hill on which Napoleon set his camp, south-east of the city walls of Acre, is still known as "Napoleon's Hill" (גבעת נפוליון). Acre also has a Napoleon Bonaparte Street (רחוב נפוליון בונפרטה), the only city in [[Israel]] with such a street name. |
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Among the Arab population of the Old City of Acre, the knowledge of their forebears having successfully withstood the barrage of such a world-famous conqueror is a source of civic pride and local [[patriotism]]. In a folk tale circulated |
Among the Arab population of the Old City of Acre, the knowledge of their forebears having successfully withstood the barrage of such a world-famous conqueror is a source of civic pride and local [[patriotism]]. In a [[Folklore|folk tale]] circulated by Acre Arabs, Napoleon, upon lifting the siege of Acre, let a cannon shoot his hat into the city "so that at least a part of him would enter into Acre".{{sfn|Kempinsky|1968}} |
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==Gallery== |
==Gallery== |
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<gallery class="center" widths="200px" heights="175px"> |
<gallery class="center" widths="200px" heights="175px"> |
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File:Phelipoux.jpg|The remains of the internal fortification line erected by Farhi and |
File:Phelipoux.jpg|The remains of the internal fortification line erected by Farhi and [[Antoine de Phélippeaux|de Phélippeaux]] within the walls of Acre during Napoleon's siege, May 1799. |
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File:עכו והמפרץ תצלום אויר.JPG|The general outlook of Old Acre, seen here in a present-day view from above, has changed little since 1799 |
File:עכו והמפרץ תצלום אויר.JPG|The general outlook of Old Acre, seen here in a present-day view from above, has changed little since 1799 |
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File:PikiWiki Israel 4359 napoleons soldiers cemetery acre.jpg|Cemetery for Napoleon's soldiers in Acre, including the grave of General [[Louis-Marie-Joseph Maximilian Caffarelli du Falga|Caffarelli]] |
File:PikiWiki Israel 4359 napoleons soldiers cemetery acre.jpg|Cemetery for Napoleon's soldiers in Acre, including the grave of General [[Louis-Marie-Joseph Maximilian Caffarelli du Falga|Caffarelli]] |
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File:Farkhi.jpg|19th-century cannon, set in the wall of [[Acre, Israel|Acre]] near a sign commemorating Farhi. The Hebrew inscription on the sign reads: |
File:Farkhi.jpg|19th-century cannon, set in the wall of [[Acre, Israel|Acre]] near a sign commemorating Farhi. The Hebrew inscription on the sign reads: "Farhi vs. Napoleon. Jezzar's right hand in resisting [[Napoleon|Napoleon's]] harsh siege was the Jewish Haim Farhi, senior adviser and minister of finance" |
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</gallery> |
</gallery> |
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==Notes== |
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{{Reflist}} |
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==References== |
==References== |
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* {{Cite web | last=Gilbert | first=Adrian |author-link= Adrian Gilbert| year=2022 | url= https://www.britannica.com/event/Siege-of-Acre-1799 | title=Siege of Acre: Facts & Related Content | website=Encyclopedia Britannica}} |
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{{reflist}} |
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* {{Cite book | last=Bodart | first=Gaston |author-link=Gaston Bodart| date=1908 | title=Militär-historisches Kriegs-Lexikon (1618-1905) | url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_A0kNAAAAYAAJ | access-date=6 July 2022}} |
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* {{cite book|last=Falk|first=Avner|author-link= Avner Falk|title=Napoleon Against Himself: A Psychobiography|year=2015|publisher=Pitchstone Publishing|isbn=9781939578723|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_Q-eCwAAQBAJ&q=albanians}} |
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* {{cite book|last=Bonaparte|first=Napoleon|editor=J. Christopher Herold |editor-link= J. Christopher Herold| title=Mind of Napoleon: A Selection of His Written and Spoken Words |year=1955|at=On Religions | publisher=New York: Columbia University Press}} |
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* {{cite book|last=Blond|first=Georges|author-link= Georges Blond | title=La Grande Armée |year=1997 | publisher=New York: Arms and Armor | translator-last=May | translator-first=Marshall}} |
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* {{cite book|last=Laurens|first=Henry|author-link= Henry Laurens (scholar)| title=[[La Question de Palestine]]: L'invention de la terre sainte, 1799-1922 | year=1999 | publisher=Fayard | location=Paris}} |
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* {{cite book | last=Kobler | first=Franz | title=Napoleon and the Jews | year=1975 | publisher=Masada Press | location=Jerusalem}} |
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* {{cite book | last=Englund | first=Steven | title=Napoleon: A Political Life | year=2005 | publisher=Harvard University Press}} |
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* {{cite book | last=Kempinsky | first=Mordechai | title=Sipurey Hatzafon (הצפון סיפורי) | year=1968 | publisher=Masada Press | location=Tel Aviv | language=Hebrew}} |
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* {{cite web | last=Rickard | first=J. | url=http://www.historyofwar.org/articles/wars_french_egypt.html | title=French Invasion of Egypt, 1798-1801 | year=2006}} |
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[[Category:Conflicts in 1799]] |
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[[Category:Sieges of Acre, Israel]] |
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Latest revision as of 21:07, 19 October 2024
Siege of Acre | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of the French Campaign in Egypt and Syria during the War of the Second Coalition | |||||||
Failed siege of Acre by French forces led by Napoleon | |||||||
| |||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
Ottoman Empire Great Britain | French Republic | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Jazzar Pasha Haim Farhi Sidney Smith Antoine de Phélippeaux |
Napoleon Bonaparte Jean-Baptiste Kléber Eugène de Beauharnais (WIA) | ||||||
Units involved | |||||||
Nizam-i Djedid (Garrison Force) Royal Navy | Armée d'Orient | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
Garrison: 5,000 men[1][2] Relief army (Mt. Tabor): 35,000[3]–40,000[4] Support: 2 British ships of the line[2] | 12,000[1]–13,000[2] | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
2,000[1] (for the siege) |
| ||||||
The siege of Acre of 1799 was an unsuccessful French siege of the Ottoman city of Acre (now Akko in modern Israel) and was the turning point of Napoleon's invasion of Egypt and Syria, along with the Battle of the Nile. It was Napoleon's third tactical defeat in his career, being defeated at the Second Battle of Bassano and the Battle of Caldiero three years previously during the Italian campaign, and his first major strategic defeat, along with the last time he was defeated in battle for 10 years. As a result of the failed siege, Napoleon Bonaparte retreated two months later and withdrew to Egypt.
Background
[edit]Acre was a site of significant strategic importance due to its commanding position on the route between Egypt and Syria. Bonaparte wanted to capture it following his invasion of Egypt. He hoped to incite a Syrian rebellion against the Ottomans and threaten British India. After the siege of Jaffa, which was followed by two days and nights of massacre and rape by the French forces,[citation needed] the defenders of the citadel were even more determined to resist the French.
Siege
[edit]The French attempted to lay siege on 20 March using only their infantry. Napoleon believed the city would capitulate quickly to him. In correspondence with one of his subordinate officers he voiced his conviction that a mere two weeks would be necessary to capture the linchpin of his conquest of the Holy Land before marching on to Jerusalem.
However, the troops of the capable Jezzar Pasha, refusing to surrender, withstood the siege for one and a half months. Haim Farhi, al-Jazzar's Jewish adviser and right-hand man, played a key role in the city's defence, directly supervising the battle against the siege. After Napoleon's earlier capture of Jaffa, rampaging French troops had savagely sacked the captured city, and thousands of Albanian prisoners of war were ordered by Napoleon to be massacred on the sea-shore,[5] prior to the French offensive further northwards. These facts were well known to the townspeople and defending troops (many of them Albanians) in Acre, and the prospect of being massacred is likely to have stiffened their resistance.
A Royal Navy flotilla under Commodore Sidney Smith, commanding Tigre, helped to reinforce the Ottoman defences and supplied the city with additional cannon manned by sailors and marines. Smith used his command of the sea to capture the French siege artillery being sent by a flotilla of gunboats from Egypt and to bombard the coastal road from Jaffa.[6] The captured boats were:[7]
Name | Fate |
---|---|
Dangereuse | Sold 1801 |
Deux Frères | Lost in a gale in May 1799 |
Foudre | Sold 1801 |
Marie-Rose | Sold 1801 |
Negresse | Sold 1802 |
Torride | Last listed 1802 |
Vierge-de-Grâce | Recaptured and scuttled May 1799 |
An artillery expert from the fleet, French émigré Antoine de Phélippeaux, then redeployed against Napoleon's forces the artillery pieces which the British had intercepted.[6]
Smith anchored the British ships Tigre and Theseus so their broadsides could assist the Ottoman defence. British gunboats, which were of shallower draft, could come in closer, and together they helped repel repeated French assaults.
On 16 April an Ottoman relief force was fought off at Mount Tabor. By early May, replacement French siege artillery had arrived overland and a breach was forced in the defences. At the culmination of the assault, the besieging forces managed to make a breach in the walls.[6]
However, after suffering many casualties to open this entry-point, Napoleon's soldiers found, on trying to penetrate the city, that Farhi and de Phélippeaux had, in the meantime, built a second wall, several feet deeper within the city where al-Jazzar's garden was. Discovery of this new construction convinced Napoleon and his men that the probability of them taking the city was minimal. Moreover, after the assault was again repelled, Ottoman reinforcements from Rhodes were able to land.[6]
Having underestimated the stubborn attitude of the defending forces combined with a British blockade of French supply harbours and harsh weather conditions, Napoleon's forces were left hungry, cold and damp. Plague had struck the French camp as a result of the desperate condition of the men, and had by now led to the deaths of about 2,000 soldiers.
Throughout the siege, both Napoleon and Jezzar sought in vain the assistance of the Shihab leader, Bashir—ruler of much of present-day Lebanon. Bashir remained neutral. As things turned out, it was the French which suffered most from the attitude of Bashir, whose intervention on their side might have turned the balance of power in their favour.
Finally, the siege was raised. Napoleon Bonaparte retreated two months later on 21 May after a failed final assault on 10 May, and withdrew to Egypt.[6]
Significance
[edit]This article possibly contains unsourced predictions, speculative material, or accounts of events that might not occur. Information must be verifiable and based on reliable published sources. (May 2023) |
In 1805, Napoleon asserted that if he had
been able to take Acre [in 1799], I would have put on a turban, I would have made my soldiers wear big Turkish trousers, and I would have exposed them to battle only in case of extreme necessity. I would have made them into a Sacred Battalion—my Immortals. I would have finished the war against the Turks with Arabic, Greek, and Armenian troops. Instead of a battle in Moravia, I would have won a Battle of Issus, I would have made myself emperor of the East, and I would have returned to Paris by way of Constantinople.[8]
The allusions from Classical Antiquity included in the speech are to the Sacred Band of Thebes and the Persian Immortals—elite units of, respectively, the city state of Thebes and the Achaemenid Kings of Persia; and to the Battle of Issus where Alexander the Great decisively defeated the latter. (In fact, though Acre was not conquered, Napoleon's Imperial Guard did come to be informally called "The Immortals".)[9]
Whether or not Napoleon would have been able to carry out the above grand design, it is likely that had he taken Acre he might have remained a considerable further time in the East, would not have returned to France in 1799 and hence would not have carried out later that year the coup which established him in power as First Consul. He might have still taken power in France, later on and under different circumstances, or in his absence someone else might have overthrown the shaky rule of the Directorate. Either way, the later history of France and of Europe might have been substantially different. Also, whether or not Napoleon would have managed to make himself Emperor of the East and reach Constantinople, his energetically trying to do that would have certainly had a substantial effect on the Ottoman Empire's history.
Some hold[weasel words] that a statement attributed to Napoleon during the war, according to which he promised to return the land to the Jews if he were to succeed in his conquest of Palestine, was meant to capture the attention of Farhi, a Syrian Jew, and betray his master by switching his support to the French. Whether this is true or not, Farhi defended the city with the rest of the Ottoman forces.
Napoleon showed great interest in winning over the Jews during the campaign,[10] including the account of Las Cases in "Mémorial de Sainte Hélène" about Napoleon's military campaign records that it was reported among Syrian Jews that after Napoleon took Acre, he would go to Jerusalem and restore Solomon's temple[11] and decrees were passed in favour of Jews (and Coptic Christians and women) in French-controlled Egypt.[12]
Legacy
[edit]In present-day Acre, the hill on which Napoleon set his camp, south-east of the city walls of Acre, is still known as "Napoleon's Hill" (גבעת נפוליון). Acre also has a Napoleon Bonaparte Street (רחוב נפוליון בונפרטה), the only city in Israel with such a street name.
Among the Arab population of the Old City of Acre, the knowledge of their forebears having successfully withstood the barrage of such a world-famous conqueror is a source of civic pride and local patriotism. In a folk tale circulated by Acre Arabs, Napoleon, upon lifting the siege of Acre, let a cannon shoot his hat into the city "so that at least a part of him would enter into Acre".[13]
Gallery
[edit]-
The remains of the internal fortification line erected by Farhi and de Phélippeaux within the walls of Acre during Napoleon's siege, May 1799.
-
The general outlook of Old Acre, seen here in a present-day view from above, has changed little since 1799
-
Cemetery for Napoleon's soldiers in Acre, including the grave of General Caffarelli
-
19th-century cannon, set in the wall of Acre near a sign commemorating Farhi. The Hebrew inscription on the sign reads: "Farhi vs. Napoleon. Jezzar's right hand in resisting Napoleon's harsh siege was the Jewish Haim Farhi, senior adviser and minister of finance"
Notes
[edit]- ^ a b c d e Bodart 1908, p. 334.
- ^ a b c d Gilbert 2022.
- ^ Smith, D. p.151
- ^ Guerre d'Orient: Campagnes de Égypte et de Syrie - page 82
- ^ Falk 2015, p. 185.
- ^ a b c d e Rickard 2006.
- ^ "No. 15149". The London Gazette. 18 June 1799. pp. 609–610.
- ^ Bonaparte 1955, p. 49.
- ^ Blond 1997, pp. 48, 103, 470.
- ^ Laurens 1999, p. 18.
- ^ Kobler 1975, p. 51.
- ^ Englund 2005, p. 133.
- ^ Kempinsky 1968.
References
[edit]- Gilbert, Adrian (2022). "Siege of Acre: Facts & Related Content". Encyclopedia Britannica.
- Bodart, Gaston (1908). Militär-historisches Kriegs-Lexikon (1618-1905). Retrieved 6 July 2022.
- Falk, Avner (2015). Napoleon Against Himself: A Psychobiography. Pitchstone Publishing. ISBN 9781939578723.
- Bonaparte, Napoleon (1955). J. Christopher Herold (ed.). Mind of Napoleon: A Selection of His Written and Spoken Words. New York: Columbia University Press. On Religions.
- Blond, Georges (1997). La Grande Armée. Translated by May, Marshall. New York: Arms and Armor.
- Laurens, Henry (1999). La Question de Palestine: L'invention de la terre sainte, 1799-1922. Paris: Fayard.
- Kobler, Franz (1975). Napoleon and the Jews. Jerusalem: Masada Press.
- Englund, Steven (2005). Napoleon: A Political Life. Harvard University Press.
- Kempinsky, Mordechai (1968). Sipurey Hatzafon (הצפון סיפורי) (in Hebrew). Tel Aviv: Masada Press.
- Rickard, J. (2006). "French Invasion of Egypt, 1798-1801".
External links
[edit]- Media related to Siege of Acre (1799) at Wikimedia Commons
Preceded by War of the Second Coalition |
French Revolution: Revolutionary campaigns Siege of Acre (1799) |
Succeeded by Battle of Ostrach |