First Expedition of Blida | |||||||
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Part of French conquest of Algeria | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Kingdom of France |
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Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Louis Auguste Victor de Bourmont | Mohamed ben Zamoum | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
1,500 soldiers 4 cannons 150 chasseurs | 5,000 [3] [4] | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
15 killed 43 wounded [5] [6] [7] | 200 killed [8] [9] (French claim) Low [2] (Algerian claim) |
The First Expedition of Blida took place from 22 to 24 July 1830, [1] during the French conquest of Algeria.
On 22 July 1830, Marshal de Bourmont organized a reconnaissance expedition on the city of Blida. On the early morning of 23 July, the French force consisting of 1,500 men and a squadron of 150 chasseurs departed from Algiers. [10] The French reached the city at around 5:00 pm [10] and were welcomed by locals who offered them fruits and drinks. [11] Marshal de Bourmont installed himself in a large house bordered by a luxurious garden of orange trees not far from the city gates, while the troops made camp in the garden and the nearby cemetery. [12]
The night was quiet, but around 10:00 am on 24 July, a returning French party that had gone on a reconnaissance mission in the nearby gorge earlier in the morning was fired at from bushes and two French soldiers were wounded. [13] General d'Esprez took six chasseurs and went about a mile up the river where he saw many armed men on the mountain. [14] Although they merely observed the small French party without attacking, Desprez chose to head back to the city rather than go any further. Marshal de Bourmont decided it would be wiser to return to Algiers and ordered troops to get ready to depart at 1:00 pm. [13]
Two French artillerymen who had brought their horses to drink in a stream at the foot of the mountain were surprised and beheaded by kabyle warriors. [15] At around midday, a firefight broke out in the city and baron Alphonse Blouquier de Trélan, Marshal de Bourmont's aide-de-camp, was mortally wounded after receiving a bullet in the lower abdomen. [15] The French rapidly gathered in column formation and started marching back toward Algiers as thousands of kabyle warriors came down from mountain, soon joined by some inhabitants of Blida. [16] [15] [17]
The French column marched at regular pace, stopping occasionally to allow their artillery to fire into their pursuers. From 2:00 pm until the end of the day, the Algerians followed the French across the Mitidja plain, always kept at bay by the chasseurs on the flanks. Whenever they would get too close, French cavalry would charge to drive them away. [18] The Prince of Schwarzenberg notably slayed two kabyle warriors with his sword. [19]
The last action of the day took place in a small oleanders grove North-East from Boufarik, after which the Algerian forces withdrew as night fell. After a one-hour resting halt, the French column resumed marching toward Algiers and reached Birtouta around 11:00 pm. [20] They spent the night in the town, where de Bourmont officially received his marshal baton from the hands of Viscount de Bois-le-Comte who had arrived from France earlier during the day. [21] [22] No fighting occurred on the next day and the French column reached Algiers by 1:00 pm on 25 July. [20] The French troops withdrew in an orderly manner.
The fleeing of the French troops from Blida bolstered popular support for resistance against the French invaders. [23] [24] This was the first victory achieved by the Algerians since the French army landed at Sidi Fredj.
Ahmed Bey ben Mohamed Sherif, also known as Ahmed Bey or Hadj Ahmed Bey was the last bey of Constantine in the Regency of Algiers, ruling from 1826 to 1848. He was the successor of Mohamed Menamenni Bey ben Khan. As head of state, he led the local population in a fierce resistance to the French occupation forces. With the position vacant, in 1833 he adopted the title of leader of Algeria, and dey in exile، although this was not recognized by any other country. In 1837 Constantine was taken by the French after an intense siege. He retreated into the Aurès Mountains from where he continued to wage a low-intensity conflict with tribes still loyal to him, until he capitulated in 1848.
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Charles-Marie Denys, comte de Damrémont was a French general and military governor of French Algeria. He was killed in combat during the siege of Constantine.
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The Shipwreck of Dellys took place in May 1830, during the French conquest of Algeria. It involved French troupes coloniales, under captains Félix-Ariel d'Assigny (1794-1846) and Armand Joseph Bruat (1796-1855), who were captured by the resistance fighters of the town of Dellys in Kabylia of the Igawawen.
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Mohamed ben Zamoum was a Kabyle marabout who participated in the Algerian resistance against the French conquest of Algeria.