Ethiopian–Egyptian War

The Ethiopian–Egyptian War was a war between the Ethiopian Empire and the Khedivate of Egypt from 1874 to 1876, resulting in an Ethiopian victory.

Ethio-Egyptian War

Yohannes IV of Ethiopia and Isma'il Pasha of Egypt.
Date1874 –1876
Location
Result

Ethiopian

victory
Belligerents
 Egypt  Ethiopia
Commanders and leaders
Isma'il Pasha
[1]
Adolf Arendrup  
Werner Munzinger  
Count Zichy

Yohannes IV

Ras Alula
Walda Mika'il Solomon
Strength
10,000[2] 70,000[2] – 80,000[3]
Casualties and losses
1500-1800[4] 30,000

Background

Egypt under the rule of the Ottoman Empire, led by Isma'il Pasha, the Khedive of Egypt, sought to expand his reign to the land of Abyssinia and control the Blue Nile.[5][6] Isma'il Pasha became the ruler of Egypt in 1863. After annexing Darfur in 1875, he turned his attention to Ethiopia. He wished to create an empire covering the whole of the Nile River, part of which, the Blue Nile, is located within Ethiopia, and to do this he built a large army, recruiting many European and American officers. [7] Meanwhile, Emperor Yohannes IV became the emperor of Ethiopia in 1872 after defeating Tekle Giyorgis II in battle. He worked on modernizing his army, some of whom were trained by the British adventurer John Kirkham.

The Battle of Gundet

The Egyptians under Arakil Bey and Danish Colonel Ahrendrup invaded from their coastal possessions in what is now Eritrea. Following some skirmishes, the armies of Yohannes and Isma'il met at Gundet on the morning of 16 November 1876. Not only were the Egyptians vastly outnumbered, they were also taken completely by surprise as they were marching through a narrow mountain pass. [8][9] The mass of Ethiopian warriors sallied forth from their hiding places up the slope and swiftly charged down upon the shocked Egyptian columns, nullifying the latter's advantage in firepower and causing many of the unenthusiastic fellahin soldiers to rout. The Egyptian forces were defeated.[10]

The Battle of Gura

Following the botched invasion, the Egyptians again attempted a conquest of Ethiopia, this time with an army of about 13,000 men. The forces of Isma'il Pasha, now under Ratib Pasha, arrived at Massawa on December 14, 1875. [11]By March, they had arrived near the plain of Gura, and set up two forts, one in the Plains of Gura, and the other at the Khaya Khor mountain pass a few kilometres away. The Ethiopians, with a force of some 50-60,000 (of whom only about 15,000 could fight at one time due to battlefield layout) engaged them on the 7th of March, 1875, and Ratib ordered just over 5,000 out of 7,700 men stationed at Fort Gura to leave the fort and engage the Ethiopians. [12]This force was quickly surrounded by the Ethiopian advance guard, probably commanded by Ras Alula, and quickly broke. The Ethiopians then fell back, and, on the 10th of March, mounted a secondary attack on Fort Gura, which was repelled. The Ethiopian force dissolved the next day, and the devastated Egyptians soon withdrew.[13]

DYE(1880) p519 The Battle Field of Gura

European involvement

Several foreigners were involved in the war. These include a British adventurer John Kirkham on the Ethiopian side, and the Dane Adolph Arendrup as well as a Swiss explorer Werner Munzinger on the Egyptian side. [14][15]Munzinger led one of the Egyptian attacks against Ethiopia, marching inland from Tadjoura, but his troops were overwhelmed by the army of Mahammad ibn Hanfadhe, Sultan of Aussa, and he was killed in battle.[1] [16]

American involvement

Several ex-Confederate officers as well as some Union officers participated in the conflict. The Egyptian Khedive was introduced to the idea of hiring American officers to reorganize his army when he met Thaddeus Mott, an ex-Union artillery officer, and adventurer in the sultan’s court in Constantinople in 1868. Mott regaled Ismail with testimonies about the advances the Americans had achieved in technology and tactics during the US Civil War that he convinced the Khedive to hire American veterans to oversee the modernisation of Egypt’s armed forces. In 1870, the first of these military overseers, ex-Confederate officers Henry Hopkins Sibley and William Wing Loring, arrived in Egypt. Loring was appointed by the Khedive as Inspector-General of the Egyptian army, and in 1875 was promoted to chief of staff to the commander-in-chief of the Egyptian military expedition in Ethiopia. A year later, Loring would play a decisive role at the Battle of Gura. [17]

Aftermath

Ethiopia and Egypt remained in a state of tension, which largely abated after the 1884 Hewett Treaty. [18][19] Ras Alula, however, had shown himself to be a reliable general, and was promoted by Yohannes IV to the rank of Ras, and appointed governor of the Mareb Malash.[20]

See also

References

  1. Edward Ullendorff, The Ethiopians: An Introduction to Country and People, second edition (London: Oxford University Press, 1965), p. 90. ISBN 0-19-285061-X.
  2. http://www.historynet.com/first-italo-abyssinian-war-battle-of-adowa.htm
  3. "The Ethiopian-Egyptian War: 1874–1876". Retrieved 2016-12-21.
  4. Jesman, Czeslaw (January 1959). "Egyptian Invasion of Ethiopia". African Affairs. Oxford University Press. 58 (230): 75–81. JSTOR 718057.
  5. http://www.ethiopiantreasures.co.uk/pages/yohannes.htm?fbclid=IwAR2AZrAJmCqmp1AroiS9a5jh7IUgn1Dac9Nd487yo3lWDNDBnb4GDgSZhoo
  6. https://ethiopianhistory.com/Yohannes_IV/?fbclid=IwAR2jplhHVblKE7MrB6SZnJ-Kr-uooZ6gBo3JQblA6h6Ton4gYG0V41eQKn0
  7. https://www.linkethiopia.org/article/1-the-reign-of-emperor-yohannes-iv/?fbclid=IwAR0xoHrVrj8l1Z1GF1QHfIAfEB445PibG-Rj5qMDZJjf_PVP_-miVtiNKAI
  8. https://ethiopianhistory.com/Yohannes_IV/?fbclid=IwAR2jplhHVblKE7MrB6SZnJ-Kr-uooZ6gBo3JQblA6h6Ton4gYG0V41eQKn0
  9. https://www.linkethiopia.org/article/1-the-reign-of-emperor-yohannes-iv/?fbclid=IwAR0xoHrVrj8l1Z1GF1QHfIAfEB445PibG-Rj5qMDZJjf_PVP_-miVtiNKAI
  10. http://www.ethiopiantreasures.co.uk/pages/yohannes.htm?fbclid=IwAR2AZrAJmCqmp1AroiS9a5jh7IUgn1Dac9Nd487yo3lWDNDBnb4GDgSZhoo
  11. https://ethiopianhistory.com/Yohannes_IV/?fbclid=IwAR2jplhHVblKE7MrB6SZnJ-Kr-uooZ6gBo3JQblA6h6Ton4gYG0V41eQKn0
  12. https://www.linkethiopia.org/article/1-the-reign-of-emperor-yohannes-iv/?fbclid=IwAR0xoHrVrj8l1Z1GF1QHfIAfEB445PibG-Rj5qMDZJjf_PVP_-miVtiNKAI
  13. http://www.ethiopiantreasures.co.uk/pages/yohannes.htm?fbclid=IwAR2AZrAJmCqmp1AroiS9a5jh7IUgn1Dac9Nd487yo3lWDNDBnb4GDgSZhoo
  14. https://ethiopianhistory.com/Yohannes_IV/?fbclid=IwAR2jplhHVblKE7MrB6SZnJ-Kr-uooZ6gBo3JQblA6h6Ton4gYG0V41eQKn0
  15. http://www.ethiopiantreasures.co.uk/pages/yohannes.htm?fbclid=IwAR2AZrAJmCqmp1AroiS9a5jh7IUgn1Dac9Nd487yo3lWDNDBnb4GDgSZhoo
  16. https://www.linkethiopia.org/article/1-the-reign-of-emperor-yohannes-iv/?fbclid=IwAR0xoHrVrj8l1Z1GF1QHfIAfEB445PibG-Rj5qMDZJjf_PVP_-miVtiNKAI
  17. William Wing Loring, A Confederate Soldier in Egypt: Late Colonel in U.S. Army, Major-General in the Confederate Service, (Berlin: Jazzybee Verlag , 2016). ISBN 3849681009.
  18. https://ethiopianhistory.com/Yohannes_IV/?fbclid=IwAR2jplhHVblKE7MrB6SZnJ-Kr-uooZ6gBo3JQblA6h6Ton4gYG0V41eQKn0
  19. https://www.linkethiopia.org/article/1-the-reign-of-emperor-yohannes-iv/?fbclid=IwAR0xoHrVrj8l1Z1GF1QHfIAfEB445PibG-Rj5qMDZJjf_PVP_-miVtiNKAI
  20. http://www.ethiopiantreasures.co.uk/pages/yohannes.htm?fbclid=IwAR2AZrAJmCqmp1AroiS9a5jh7IUgn1Dac9Nd487yo3lWDNDBnb4GDgSZhoo
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