Difference between revisions of "Muhammad Ali Pasha the Great" - New World Encyclopedia

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Turkish language Mehmet Ali  (1769-August 2, 1849), was a viceroy of Egypt, and is sometimes considered the founder of modern Egypt.  Muhammad Ali was an [[Albania|Albanian]] born in Kavala. In 1798 [[Napoleon]] destroyed the [[Mameluke]] rulers' army at the Battle of the Pyramids. Napolean himself soon left Egypt, and his troops there were defeated by the British at the Battle of the Nile, a mainly naval affair, August 1st 1791.  By 1801 the French had withdrawn from Egypt, which effectively left a power vacuum, which Muhammad Ali filled. He was appointed [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] governor (''wali'') of Egypt in 1805 and famously (and treacherously) massacred the [[Mameluke]] leaders. He introduced sweeping reforms to Egypt: he built an army from Egyptian peasants through conscription, using this force to expand Egypt's borders; he built much infrastructure, such as canals and roadways; and he established Egypt as one of the world's largest cotton producers. Muhammad `Ali also introduced significant social reforms, including the creation of modern educational institutions. Most of his efforts, however, were focused on his successful strengthening of Egypt's armed forces. Egypt became temporarily a powerful modernized force in the Middle East.
 
Turkish language Mehmet Ali  (1769-August 2, 1849), was a viceroy of Egypt, and is sometimes considered the founder of modern Egypt.  Muhammad Ali was an [[Albania|Albanian]] born in Kavala. In 1798 [[Napoleon]] destroyed the [[Mameluke]] rulers' army at the Battle of the Pyramids. Napolean himself soon left Egypt, and his troops there were defeated by the British at the Battle of the Nile, a mainly naval affair, August 1st 1791.  By 1801 the French had withdrawn from Egypt, which effectively left a power vacuum, which Muhammad Ali filled. He was appointed [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] governor (''wali'') of Egypt in 1805 and famously (and treacherously) massacred the [[Mameluke]] leaders. He introduced sweeping reforms to Egypt: he built an army from Egyptian peasants through conscription, using this force to expand Egypt's borders; he built much infrastructure, such as canals and roadways; and he established Egypt as one of the world's largest cotton producers. Muhammad `Ali also introduced significant social reforms, including the creation of modern educational institutions. Most of his efforts, however, were focused on his successful strengthening of Egypt's armed forces. Egypt became temporarily a powerful modernized force in the Middle East.
  
Throughout his reign he was the nominal vassal of the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] sultan, but he acted independently. He aided the sultan in fighting in the [[Greek War of Independence]], but lost part of his navy at the Battle of Navarino. He put down a [[Wahhabi]] revolt in [[Arabia]] for the sultan. Later he and the sultan fell out, going to war in 1831. Under his son Ibrahim of Egypt, Muhammad `Ali's armies seized [[Palestine]] and [[Syria]] and were within a few days march of [[Constantinople]]. [[Russia]] intervened, leading to a negotiated solution in 1833, leaving Muhammad Ali in control of Syria and Palestine.
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Throughout his reign he was the nominal vassal of the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] sultan, but he acted independently. He aided the sultan in fighting in the [[Greek War of Independence]], but lost part of his navy at the Battle of Navarino. He put down a [[Wahhabi]] revolt in [[Arabia]] for the sultan. Later he and the sultan fell out, going to war in 1831. Under his son Ibrahim of Egypt, Muhammad `Ali's armies seized [[Palestine]] and [[Syria]] and were within a few days march of [[Constantinople]]. [[Russia]] intervened, leading to a negotiated solution in 1833, leaving Muhammad Ali in control of Syria and Palestine. In return for withdrawing opposition, the Sultan made the governership of Egypt an hereditory office.
  
 
==Rise to Power==
 
==Rise to Power==
  
The process of Muhammad Ali's seizure of power in Egypt was a long three way civil war between the [[Ottoman Turks]], Egyptian [[Mamluk]]s, and [[Albania]]n mercenaries. The war was a result of Napolean's invasion of Egypt.  After the French defeat by the British a power vacuum was created in Egypt when the latter withdrew their troops from Cairo in March 1803.  The Mamelukes had governed Egypt before the French invasion and still had much power in the area.  Officially, the Mamluk's were subordinate to the Pasha or Grand Vizier appointed by the Ottomans but in practice they owned most of the land and controlled the economy.  They now attempted to not only to resume control, but to do so as independent rulers.  distrupting communication between Upper and Lower Egypt. Egypt still had many Turkish troops who had been deployed against the French.  Many of the best troops were from Albania, then a province of the Ottoman Empire.  These troops, however, has not been paid and began to demand their pay from the ''defterdar'', or finance minister still officially answerable to the Mamluk pasha. The pasha opened fire from the artillery of his palace on the insurgent soldiers who had taken the house of the ''defterdar'', which was across the Ezbekia  gradens from the palace. The citizens of [[Cairo]], accustomed to such occurrences, immediately closed their shops, and every man who possessed any weapon armed himself. The tumult in the city continued all day, and the next morning a body of troops sent out by the pasha failed to quell it. Thir, the commander of the Albanians, then repaired to the citadel of Cairo, gained admittance through an embrasure, and, having obtained possession of it, began to cannonade the pasha over the roofs of the intervening houses, and then descended with guns to the Ezbekia and laid close siege to the palace. On the following day Ottoman commander Mahommed Khosrev made good his escape, with his women and servants and his regular troops, and fled to Damietta by river.  
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The process of Muhammad Ali's seizure of power in Egypt was a long three way civil war between the [[Ottoman Turks]], Egyptian [[Mamluk]]s, and [[Albania]]n mercenaries. The war was a result of Napolean's invasion of Egypt.  Napolean's invasion, and rapid personal withdrawl, from Egypt remains something of a mystery.  He himself told the Egyptian people, in a Proclamation on 2nd July 1798 that the Mamluks had exploited them as well as 'insulted the French nation and injured its merchants' therfore the French, who were lovers of liberty, had come to restore their rights and to 'punish the usurpoers'.  Moreover, God has ordered that the 'rabble of slaves', who had 'tyrannized the people', should rule no longer [French in Egypt]. After the French defeat by the British a power vacuum was created in Egypt when the latter withdrew their troops from Cairo in March 1803, although a team of French administrators stayed on.  The Mamelukes had governed Egypt since 1250, although from 1517 they were subjects of the Ottomans and in theory the senior offical in Egypt was the Pasha, appointed from Istanbul. Before the French invasion and still had much power in the area.  In practice the Mamluks owned most of the land and controlled the economy.  They now attempted to not only to resume control, but to do so as independent rulers. The British were sympathetic towards this goal, seeing it as an opportunity to increase their influence in the region at the expense of the Ottomans. One of the Mamluk beys, Mahommed Bey al-Alfi (called the Great) was in England at the time. Egypt still had many Turkish troops who had been deployed against the French.  Many of the best troops were from Albania, then also a province of the Ottoman Empire.  These troops had not been paid, and began to demand their pay from the ''defterdar'', or finance minister who still officially answerable to the Pasha. The soldiers took possession of the minister's offical residence. The Pasha opened fire from the artillery of his palace on he ''defterdar'''s house, which was across the Ezbekia  gardens from the palace. The Albanians, under their commander, Thir, succeeded in seizing the government. The Pasha, Khosrev Pasha, fled. Just twenty-three days later, Thir met with his death from exactly the same cause as that of the overthrow of his predecessor. He refused to pay some of the Turkish troops, and was immediately assassinated.  A desperate conflict ensued between the Albanians and Turks  and the palace was set on fire and plundered. Mohammed Ali now succeeded to the leadership of the Albanians, and found himself caught between the Mamluks who were trying to wrestle back power for themselves while also fighting an internal battle between two factions, one led by  Mahommed Bey al-Alfi (called the Great who had returned from England, the other by Osman Bey al-Bardisi, and the various Pashas appointed by the Ottomans. One of these, Ahmed Pasha had happened to be passing through Egypt on his way to take up an appointment in Arabia. Ali remained loyal to the Sultan but also allied himself with the Mamluks, since they had not formally broken with the Sultan eitherBy attempting to protect the general population and keep the peace, Ali endeared himself to the people of Egypt who were at the same time suffering from a high tax burden to pay for the military struggleAt one point in the compex series of military engagement and swings of power backwards and forwards between the Pasha and the Mamluks, with the Albanians in the middle, the Sultan offered to give the Mamluks an annual pension and other privileges if they recognized that the Pasha was the senior and supreme offical in Egypt. They agreed to negotiate terms but on this occassion suspected treachery and rebelled against Khosrev Pasha, who was once again technically in power.
 
 
Thir Pasha then assumed the government, but in twenty-three days he met with his death from exactly the same cause as that of the overthrow of his predecessor. He refused to pay some of the Turkish troops, and was immediately assassinated.  A desperate conflict ensued between the Albanians and Turks  and the palace was set on fire and plundered.
 
 
 
==Ahmed Pasha and the Turks against the Albanians and Mamelukes==
 
 
 
The masters of Egypt were now split into these two factions, animated with the fiercest animosity against each other. Muhammad Ali, then in command of an Albanian regiment, became the head of the Albanians, but his party was the weaker, and he therefore entered into an alliance with the Mameluke leaders Ibrahim Bey and Osman Bey al-Bardisi.  This revolt marks the beginning of the breach between the Albanians and Turks, which ultimately led to the expulsion of the latter, and of the rise to power of the Albanian '''Muhammad Ali''' who would go on to rule the country for nearly forty years.
 
 
 
Ahmed Pasha, who was in the region to become a governor of one of the Arabian provinces was quickly appointed pasha by the Ottomen, through the influence of the Turks and the favor of the sheiks. Muhammad Ali, who with his Albanians still held the citadel of Cairo refused to recognize the Pashato.  Meanwhile the Mamelukes moved  from El-Giza, where they had been invited by Thir Pasha and allied themselves with the Albanians.   
 
 
 
Ahmed Pasha set up his headquarters at the mosque of al-Zflhir, which the French had converted into a fortress but he was was soon compelled to surrender to the Albanians.  The Turkish leaders who had killed Thir Pasha were executed and Ahmed, the official Vizier of the Ottomans, was detained as a prisoner.
 
 
 
==Ali Pasha Jazirli in command of the Turks==
 
 
 
The Albanians handed the citadel over to the Mamelukes.  Soon after, these allies marched against Khosrev Pasha.  He had been joined by a considerable body of Turks and was occupying a well fortified position in Damietta. After much loss on both sides, he was taken prisoner and taken to Cairo by the Albanians.  The victorious soldiery Damietta, but Khosrev was treated with respect.
 
 
 
A few days later, Ali Pasha Jazirli landed at Alexandria with an imperial ''firman'' (decree or edict) making him pasha of Egypt. As such, he took control of the Turkish forces and threatened the Mamluk beys, who were now virtual masters of Upper Egypt, as well as of the capital and nearly the whole of Lower Egypt. Muhammad Ali and al-Bardisi marched on Rosetta, which had fallen into the hands of a brother of Ali Pasha.  The town and its commander was successfully captured by al-Bardisi, who then proposed to proceed against Alexandria, but his troops demanded arrears of pay which he was unable to giveDuring this delay the Ali Pasha had ordered the destruction of the dykes between the lakes of Aboukir and Mareotis, thus rendering the approach to Alexandria more difficult.  Al-Bardisi and Muhammad Ali therefore returned to Cairo.
 
 
 
An insufficient flood of the Nile now added to Egypt's troubles, aggravated by the taxation to which the beys were compelled to resort in order to pay their troops.  Riots and violence continued in the capital, with much of the soldiery being under little or no control. 
 
 
 
Meanwhile, Ali Pasha received a ''halt-isherif'' from the sultan, which he sent by his secretary to Cairo. This offered the Mamluk beys an annual pension and other privileges, but decreed that the government should be in the hands of the pasha. The beys agreed to negotiate terms with the Pasha.  Their forces, with the Albanians, encamped near Shalakan, while Ali Pasha set up his camp at Zufeyta.
 
 
 
However, the Albanians were suspicious when they saw how many troops the Pasha had assembled, and challenged his sincerity. The Pasha had indeed planned treachery but his men men refused to fight, withdrawing to Syria. He still attempted to negotiate with the Mamluks but they sent him under armed escort to the Syrian frontier. About a week after, he was killed in a skirmish with some of his own soldiers.
 
  
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An insufficient flood of the Nile also added to Egypt's troubles, aggravated by the taxation to which the beys were compelled to resort in order to pay their troops.  Riots and violence broke out in the capital, with much of the soldiery being under little or no control. It was Mohomet Ali who managed to discipline his troops so that some of the violence could be constrained. Although a foreigner, he emerged as a popular figure amidst the chaos and anarchy.  The Pasha was escorted to Syria, where some of his troops were encamped and met his death there during a skirmish involving his own soldiers.
  
  
 
==The Mamluk-Albanian Alliance==
 
==The Mamluk-Albanian Alliance==
Following an internal Mamluk struggle for power, Al-Bardisi emerged as victor against his rival, al-Alfi.  His fortune, however, was temporary. In order to satisfy the demands of the Albanian soldirers for their pay he gave orders to levy heavy contributions from the citizens of Cairo.  This incited them to rebellion. The Albanians, alarmed for their own safety, assured the populace that they would not allow civil disorder, and Muhammad Ali himself issued a proclamation to this effect.  
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The left Al-Bardisi, who had emerged as victor against his rival, al-Alfi, in charge of Egypt.  His fortune, however, was temporary. In order to satisfy the demands of the Albanian soldirers for their pay he gave orders to levy heavy contributions from the citizens of Cairo, which incited them to rebellion. The Albanians, alarmed for their own safety, assured the populace that they would not allow civil disorder, and Muhammad Ali himself issued a proclamation to this effect. Al-Bardisi fled from Cairo. Three days later (March 12, 1804) the Albanians attacked al-Bardisi's house, who escaped with difficulty.  Still loyal to the Ottoman, Ali recognized the Sultan's offical, Mahommed Khosrev, as pasha of Egypt. He enjoyed the title for about a day and a half before friends of the late Thir Pasha succeeded in killing him.  He was succeeded as Pasha by Ahmed Khorshid.  
 
 
Three days later (March 12, 1804) the Albanians attacked al-Bardisi's house, who escaped with difficulty.   
 
Muhammad Ali then proclaimed Mahommed Khosrev as pasha of Egypt. He enjoyed the title for about a day and a half before friends of the late Thir Pasha succeeded in killing him. Ahmed Pasha Khorshid was procliamed Vizier.
 
 
 
The forces loyal to al-Bardisi were now ravaging the country a few miles south of the capital and intercepting corn supplies on the riverThey captured and plundered several towns and villages. Cairo was itself in a state of tumult, suffering from the scarcity of grain.  A series of confrontations followed between the Muhamamd Ali-led Albanians, and al-Bardisi's troops.  Al-Bardisi was joined in defending the Mamluk government by his former rival, al-Alfi.
 
  
Al-Bardisi passed to the south of Cairo, and the Mamelukes gradually retreated towards Upper Egypt. There the pasha despatched three successive expeditions (one of which was commanded by Muhammad Ali), and many battles were fought, but without decisive result.
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Meanwhile, forces loyal to al-Bardisi were ravaging the country a few miles south of the capital, intercepting corn supplies on the river and capturing several towns and villages, which they plundered. Cairo was itself still in a state of tumult, suffering especially from the scarcity of grain. A series of confrontations followed between the Muhamamd Ali-led Albanians, and al-Bardisi's troops, now joined by his former rival, al-Alfi.  Muhammad Ali, now fighting under the Pasha, was engaged against the Mamluks.
  
The offical Vizier, Khorshid Pasha, attempting to exert his power, summoned the assistance of 3000 Kurdish troops from [[Syria]]. However, instead of aiding Khorshid, the Kurds caused his overthrow.  Cairo was ripe for revolt. At this juncture a ''firman'' arrived from Constantinople conferring on Muhammad Ali the pashalic of Jedda but within a few days he became Pasha of all Egypt.
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Attempting to exert his power, Khorshid summoned the assistance of 3000 Kurdish troops from [[Syria]]. However, instead of aiding Khorshid, the Kurds caused his overthrow.  Cairo was ripe for revolt. At this juncture a ''firman'' arrived from Constantinople conferring on Muhammad Ali the pashalic of Jedda but within a few days he became Pasha of all Egypt.
  
 
==Muhammad Ali ousts Khorshid==
 
==Muhammad Ali ousts Khorshid==
  
On the May 12, 1805 the sheiks, with an immense concourse of the inhabitants, assembled in the house of the 1~alI; and the ''[[ulema]]'', amid the prayers and cries of the people, wrote a full statement of the wrongs which they had endured under the administration of the pasha. The ''ulema'', in answer, were to go to the citadel; but they were apprised of the treachery; and on the following day, having held another council at the house of the ki4i, they proceeded to Muhammad Ali and informed him that the people would no longer submit to Khorshid. Then whom will ye have? said he. We will have thee, they replied, to govern us according to the laws; for we see in thy countenance that thou art possessed of justice and goodness. Muhammad Ali seemed to hesitate, and then complied, and was at once invested.
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On the May 12, 1805 the ulama (religious leaders), accompanied by a large number of Cairo residents, submitted to Muhammad Ali a list of the wrongs they had endured under the administration of the pasha and told him that the people would no longer submit to Khorshid. When he asked them to whom would they submit, they said they would submit to him. They could see from his appearnace that he would govern with justuice and compassion, and according to the law. Muhammad hesitated, then consented, and was invested into office. Khorshid, hearing this news, began to prepare for battle and some of the Albanian troops joined his side, not wishing to oppose the Suktan. Many of his own soldiers, on the other hand, deserrted. Muhammad Ali's advantage lay in the support of the citizens of Cairo, who now saw him as a deliverer. Many citizens were also armed.  
 
 
On this a bloody struggle began between the two pashas began. Khorshid, being informed of the insurrection, immediately prepared to withstand a siege in the citadel. Two chiefs of the Albanians joined his party, but many of his soldiers deserted. Muhammad Ali's great strength lay in the devotion of the citizens of Cairo, who looked on him as a deliverer from their afflictions; and great numbers armed themselves having the [[sayyid Omar]] and the sheiks at their head and guarding the town at night.  
 
 
 
On the 19th of the same month Muhammad Ali began to besiege Khorshid. After the siege had continued many days, Khorshid gave orders to cannonade and bombard the town. For six days his commands were executed with little interruption, the citadel itself also lying between two fires.
 
 
 
Muhammad Ali's position at this time became very precarious.  His troops became mutinous for their pay; the silhdar, who had commanded one of the expeditions against the Mamelukes, advanced to the relief of Khorshid; and the latter ordered the Dells to march to his assistance. The firing ceased on the Friday, but began again on the eve of Saturday and lasted until the next Friday.  
 
  
On the clay following ([[May 28]]) news came of the arrival at Alexandria of a messenger from Constantinople. The ensuing night in Cairo presented a curious spectacle; many of the inhabitants, believing that this envoy would put an end to their miseries, fired off their weapons as they paraded the streets with bands of music. The silihdar, imagining the noise to be a fray, marched in haste towards the citadel, while its garrison sallied forth and began throwing up entrenchments in the quarter of [[Arab al-Yesgr]], but were repulsed by the armed inhabitants and the soldiers stationed there; and during all this time the cannonade and bombardment from the citadel, and on it from the batteries on the hill, continued unabated.
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On the 19 May, Muhammad Ali laid seige to Khorshid's citadel. Khorshid gave orders to cannonade and bombard the town. Muhammad Ali's position at this time became very precarious, with his own soldiers once again demanding pay.
  
The envoy brought a firman confirming Muhammad Ali and ordering Khorshid to go to Alexandria, there to await further orders; bu this he refused to do, on the ground that he had been appointed by a ''[[Hatt-i Sharif]]''. The firing on the citadel ceased on the following day, but the troubles of the granted people were rather increased than assuaged; murders the and robberies were daily committed by the soldiery, the shops were all shut and some of the streets barricaded.  
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On 28 May 28 news came of the arrival at Alexandria of a messenger from Constantinople.  This message proved to be a firman (imperial decree) confirming Muhammad Ali as Pasha and ordering Khorshid to go to Alexandria and to await further orders there, which he refused to do. Next, the Mamluk troops advanced on Cairo, this time in response to a request for help from the Pasha. Muhammad Ali forced them to retreat. Next, a squadron under the command of the Turkish high admiral arrived with despatches confirming Ali's appointment, and authorizing Muhammad Ali to continue to discharge the functions of governor. Khorshid again refused to yield. Finally, on condition that his troops should be paid, he evacuated the citadel and left Cairo for Rosetta.
 
 
While these scenes were being enacted, al-Alfi was besieging Damanhur, and the other beys were returning towards Cairo, Khorshid laving called them to his assistance, but Muhammad Ali forced them to retreat.
 
 
 
Soon after this, a squadron under the command of the Turkish high admiral arrived at [[Aboukir Bay]], with despatches confirming the former envoy, and authorizing Muhammad Ali to continue to discharge the functions of governor. Khorshid at first refused to yield; but at length, on condition that his troops should be paid, he evacuated the citadel and embarked for [[Rosetta]].
 
  
 
==Defeat of the Mamelukes==
 
==Defeat of the Mamelukes==
 
[[image:mohammed-ali-basha-mosque.jpg||300px|thumb|The Mosque of Muhammad Ali in [[Cairo]], [[Egypt]].|right]]
 
[[image:mohammed-ali-basha-mosque.jpg||300px|thumb|The Mosque of Muhammad Ali in [[Cairo]], [[Egypt]].|right]]
  
Muhammad Ali now possessed the title of Governor of Egypt, but beyond the walls of Cairo his authority was everywhere disputed by the beys, who were joined by the army of the silihdar of Khorshid; and many Albanians deserted from his ranks. To replenish his empty coffers he was also compelled to levy exactions, principally from the [[Copts]].
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Muhammad Ali now possessed the title of Governor of Egypt, but beyond the walls of Cairo his authority was everywhere disputed by the Mamluk beys, who also had support from some Alkbanian deserters and from elements of Khorshid's army. Muhamamd Ali had no choice but raise income through taxation, and he chose to do so mainly by increasing the jizya (tribute) paid by the Coptic Chrfistian minority.
 
 
An attempt was made to ensnare certain of the beys, who were encamped north of Cairo. On [[August 17]], [[1805]] the dam of the canal of Cairo was to be cut, and some chiefs of Muhammad Ali's party wrote, informing them that he would go forth early on that morning with most of his troops to witness the ceremony, inviting them to enter and seize the city, and, to deceive them, stipulating for a certain sum of money as a reward.
 
 
 
The dam, however, was cut early in the preceding night, without any ceremony. On the following morning, these beys, with their Manfelukes, a very numerous body, broke open the gate of the suburb [[al-Husainia]], and gained admittance into the city from the north, through the gate called [[B~b el-Futl~]]. They marched along the principal street for some distance, with kettle-drums behind each company, and were received with apparent joy by the citizens. At the mosque called the [[Ashrafia]] they separated, one party proceeding to the Azhar and the houses of certain sheiks, and the other continuing along the main street, and through the gate called [[BI-b Zuwla]], where they turned up towards the citadel. Here they were fired on by some soldiers from the houses; and with this signal a terrible massacre began.
 
 
 
Falling back towards their companions, they found the side streets closed; and in that part of the main thoroughfare called [[Bain al-Kasrain]] they were suddenly placed between two fires. Thus shut up in a narrow street, some sought refuge in the collegiate mosque [[Barkukia]], while the remainder fought their way through their enemies and escaped over the city-wall with the loss of their horses.
 
 
 
Two Mamelukes had in the meantime succeeded, by great exertions, in giving the alarm to their comrades in the quarter of the Azhar, who escaped by the eastern gate called [[Bib al-Ghoraib]]. A horrible fate awaited those who had shut themselves up in the Barkukia. Having begged for quarter first and surrendered, they were immediately stripped nearly massacre naked, and about fifty were slaughtered on the spot; of the and about the same number were dragged away. Among them were four beys, one of whom, driven to madness by Muhammad Ali's mockery, asked for a drink of water; his hands were untied that he might take the bottle, but he snatched a dagger from one of the soldiers, rushed at the pasha, and fell covered with wounds. The wretched captives were then chained and left in the court of the pashas house; and on the following morning the heads of their comrades who had perished the day before were skinned and stuffed with straw before their eyes. One bey and two others paid their ransom and were released; the rest, without exception, were tortured and put to death in the course of the ensuing night. Eighty-three heads (many of them those of Frenchmen and Albanians) were stuffed and sent to Constantinople, with a boast that the Mameluke chiefs were utterly destroyed. Thus ended Muhammad Ali's first massacre of his too confiding enemies.
 
 
 
The beys, after this, appear to have despaired of regaining their ascendancy; most of them retreated to Upper Egypt, and an attempt at compromise failed. Al-Alfi offered his submission on the condition of the cession of the [[Fayum]] and other provinces; but this was refused, and that chief gained two successive victories over the pashas troops, many of whom deserted to him.
 
 
 
At length, in consequence of the remonstrances of the English, and a promise made by al-Alfi of 1500 purses, the Porte consented to reinstate the twenty-four beys and to place al-Alfi at their head; but this measure met with the opposition of Muhammad Ali and the determined resistance of the majority of the Mamelukes, who, rather than have al-Alfi at their head, preferred their present condition; for the enmity of al-Bardisi had not subsided, and he commanded the voice of most of the other beys. In pursuance of the above plan, a squadron under Salih Pasha, shortly before appointed high admiral, arrived at Alexandria on the 1st of July 1806 with 3000 regular troops and a successor to Muhammad Ali, who was to receive the pashalik of [[Salonika]].
 
 
 
This wily chief professed his willingness to obey the commands of the Porte, but stated that his troops, to whom he owed a vast sum of money, opposed his departure. He induced the ''ulema'' to sign a letter, praying the sultan to revoke the command for reinstating the beys, persuaded the chiefs of the Albanian troops to swear allegiance to him, and sent 2000 purses contributed by them to Constantinople.
 
 
 
Al-Alfi was at that time besieging Damanhur, and he gained a signal victory over the pashas troops; but the dissensions of the beys destroyed their last chance of a return to power. Al-Alfi and his partisans were unable to pay the sum promised to the Porte; [[Salih Pasha]] received plenipotentiary powers from Constantinople, in consequence of the letter from the ulema; and, on the condition of Muhammad Ali's paying 4000 purses to the Porte, it was decided that he should continue in his post, and the reinstatement of the beys was abandoned. Fortune continued to favor the pasha. In the following month al-BardisI died, aged forty-eight years; and soon after, a scarcity of provisions excited the troops of al-Alfi to revolt. They very reluctantly raised the siege of Damanhur, being in daily expectation of the arrival of an English army; and at the village of Shubra-ment he was attacked by a sudden illness, and died on [[January 30]], [[1807]], at the age of fifty-five. Thus was the pasha relieved of his two most formidable enemies; and shortly after he defeated Shahin Bey, with the loss to the latter of his artillery and baggage and 300 men killed or taken prisoners.
 
 
 
On [[March 17]], [[1807]] a British fleet appeared off Alexandria, having on board nearly 5000 troops, under the command of General [[A. Mackenzie Fraser]]; and the place, The being disaffected towards Muhammad Ali, opened its British gates to them. Here they first heard of the death expedition of al-Alfi, upon whose co-operation they had founded their chief hopes of success; and they immediately despatched messengers to his successor and to the other beys, inviting them to Alexandria. The British resident, Major Missett, having represented the importance of taking Rosetta and Rahmanieh,to secure supplies for Alexandria, General Fraser, with the concurrence of the admiral, Sir [[John Duckworth]], detached the 31st regiment and the [[Chasseurs Britanniques]], accompanied by some field artillery under Major-General Wauchope and Brigadier-General Meade, on this service; and these troops entered Rosetta without encountering any opposition; but as soon as they had dispersed among the narrow streets, the garrison opened a deadly fire on them from the latticed windows and the roofs of the houses. They effected a retreat on Aboukir and Alexandria, after a very heavy loss of 185 killed and 281 wounded, General Wauchope and three officers being among the former, and General Meade and nineteen officers among the latter. The heads of the slain were fixed on stakes on each side of the road crossing the Ezbekia in Cairo.
 
  
Muhammad Ali, meanwhile, was conducting an expedition against the beys in Upper Egypt, and he had defeated them near Assiut, when he heard of the arrival of the British. In great alarm lest the beys should join them, especially as they were far north of his position, he immediately sent messengers to his rivals, promising to comply with all their demands if they should join in. expelling the invaders; and this proposal being agreed to, both armies marched towards Cairo on opposite sides of the river.
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On August 17, 1805 the Mamluks and the deposed Pasha succeeded in entering Cairo while Ali's attention had been diverted towards a ceremonial opening of a new dam.  They were routed, however, by a combined force of citizens and soldiers, and many members of the Mamluk family were slaughtered.  Ali then sent 83 heads (some were French) to Istanbul with a message that the Mamluks had been crushed.  The Sultan, though, at the request of the English, re-instated the surviving Mamluks, and on 1st July 1896 sent Admiral Salih Pasha to Egpyt with a replacement Pasha and a firman appointing Ali as governor of Salonika. Ali responded by persuading the ulama to petition for his retention as Pasha, and in opposition to the re-instatement of the Mamluks.  Ali also said that while he was willing to depart for Salonika, his troops, whom he owed money, did not want him to leave.  A compromise was reached by which Ali had to pay an agreed sum of money to the Sultan in return for retaining the Governorship of Egypt, which he did. The following month al-BardisI died, aged forty-eight years; and soon after, a scarcity of provisions led al-Alfi's troops revolting. Al-Alfi still expected English support but himelf died through a sudden nillness on January 30, 1807, at the age of fifty-five. This removed two of Ali Pasha's chief opponents.
  
To return to the unfortunate British expedition. The possession of Rosetta being deemed indispensable, Brigadier-Generals Sir [[William Stewart]] and Oswald were despatched thither with 2500 men. For thirteen days a cannonade of the town was continued without effect; and on April 20, news having come in from the advanced guard at Hamad of large reinforcements to the besieged, General Stewart was compelled to retreat; and a dragoon was despatched to Lieutenant-colonel Macleod, commanding at [[Hamad]], with orders to fall back. The messenger, however, was unable to penetrate to the spot; and the advanced guard, consisting of a detachment of the 31st, two companies of the 78th, one of the 35th, and De Rolls regiment, with a picquet of dragoons, the whole mustering 733 men, was surrounded, and, after a gallant resistance, the survivors, who had expended all their ammunition, became prisoners of war. General Stewart regained Alexandria with the remainder of his force, having lost, in killed, wounded and missing, nearly 900 men. Some hundreds of British heads were now exposed on stakes in Cairo, and the prisoners were marched between these mutilated remains of their countrymen.
+
On March 17, 1807 a British fleet appeared off Alexandria carrying 5000 troops, under the command of General A. Mackenzie Fraser, with the intent of supporting the now dead al-Alfi. Instead, they invited the survving Mamluks to join forces. A military engagement followed at Rosetta and Rahmanieh, aimed at securing supplies for their base in Alexandria. The British suffered a surprising defeat, losing some senior officers and 185 men with a further 281 wounded. The heads of the slain were fixed on stakes on each side of the road crossing the Ezbekia in Cairo.
  
The beys became divided in their wishes, one party being desirous of co-operating with the British, the other with the pasha. These delays proved ruinous to their cause; and General Fraser, despairing of their assistance, evacuated Alexandria on [[September 14]]. From that date to the spring of 1811 the beys from time to time relinquished certain of their demands; the pasha on his part granted them what before had been withheld; the province of the Fayum, and part of those of Giza and [[Beni-Suef]], were ceded to Shahin; and a great portion of the Said, on the condition of paying the land-tax, to the others. Many of them took up their abode in Cairo, but tranquillity was not secured; several times they met the pashas forces in battle and once gained a signal victory. Early in the year I 811, the preparations for an expedition against the Wahhbis in Arabia being complete, all the Mameluke beys then in Cairo were invited to the ceremony of investing Muhammad Ali's favorite son, [[Tuslin]], with a pelisse and the command of the army. As on the former occasion, the unfortunate Mamelukes fell into the snare. On the 1st of March, Shahin Bey and the other chiefs (one only excepted) repaired with their retinues to the citadel, and were courteously received by the pasha. Having taken coffee, they formed in procession, and, preceded and followed by the pashas troops, slowly descended the steep and narrow road leading to the great gate of the citadel; but as soon as the Mamelukes arrived at the gate it was suddenly closed before them. The last of those to leave before the gate was shut were Albanians under [[Salih Kush]]. To these troops their chief now made known the pashas orders to massacre all the Mamelukes within the citadel; therefore, having returned Final by another way, they gained the summits of the walls massacre and houses that hem in the road in which the Mameof the lukes were confined, and some stationed themselves upon the eminences of the rock through which that road is partly cut. Thus securely placed, they began a heavy fire on their victims; and immediately the troops who closed the procession, and who had the advantage of higher ground, followed their example. Of the betrayed chiefs, many were laid low in a few moments; some, dismounting, and throwing off their outer robes, vainly sought, sword in hand, to return, and escape by some other gate. The few who regained the summit of the citadel experienced the same fate as the rest, for no quarter was given. Four hundred and seventy Mamelukes entered the citadel; and of these very few, if any, escaped. One of these is said to have been a bey. According to some, he leapt his horse from the ramparts, and alighted uninjured, though the horse was killed by the fall; others say that he was prevented from joining his comrades, and discovered the treachery while waiting without the gate. He fled and made his way to Syria. This massacre was the signal for an indiscriminate slaughter of the Mamelukes throughout Egypt, orders to this effect being transmitted to every governor; and in Cairo itself the houses of the beys were given over to the soldiery. During the two following days the pasha and his son TUsun rode about the streets and tried to stop the atrocities; but order was not restored until 500 houses had been completely pillaged. The heads of the beys were sent to Constantinople.
+
Muhammad Ali, meanwhile, was conducting an expedition against the Mamluk beys in Upper Egypt, winning a victory near Assiut.  He heard of the arrival of the British, and was alarmed that the beys might join them. He immediately sent messengers to his rivals, promising to comply with all their demands if they should join him expelling the invaders. They agree, and both armies marched towards Cairo on opposite sides of the river. The British were still tyring to take Rosetta but finally, on April 20, retreated to Alexandria having lost 900 men. The Mamluks were now also divided between those who wanted to help the British, and those who wanted to assist Ali.  By September 14, however, the British had evacuated Alexandria. Ali Psha then met various demands from the Mamluks, reinstating some of their privileges, amounting to controll of the revenues of certain provinces. Several members of the family took up residence in Cairo.  In early 1811, Ali was preparing to send troops to Arabia in support of the Sultan who was crushing a Wahhabi-led rebellion there.  Ali was sending one of his own sons as commander of a regiment, and invited the Mamluks to attend the ceremony at which his son would receive his military commission. Many of them took up their abode in Cairo, but tranquillity was not secured; several times they met the pashas forces in battle and once gained a signal victory. On 1st March, all but one of the Mamluks attened the procession, and were courteously received by the pasha in the Citadel. Having taken coffee, they formed in procession, and, preceded and followed by the pasha's troops, they slowly descended the steep and narrow road leading to the great gate of the citadel. However, as soon as the Mamelukes arrived at the gate it was suddenly closed before them. The last of those to leave before the gate was shut were Albanian soldiers. Ali had secretly ordered these troop to massacre all the Mamelukes within the citadel. Four hundred and seventy Mamelukes entered the citadel; very few, if any, escaped. One did, and found his way to Syria. This massacre was the signal for an indiscriminate slaughter of the Mamelukes throughout Egypt, with orders to this effect being sent to every regional governer. The pasha and his son tried to stop the rioting but order was not restored until 500 houses had been completely pillaged. The heads of the beys were sent to Constantinople. A remnant of the Mamluks went to [[Bubia]].  
  
 
==Final Skirmishes==
 
==Final Skirmishes==
  
A remnant of the Mamelukes fled to [[Nubia]], and a tranquillity was restored to Egypt to which it had long been unaccustomed.
+
In the year following the massacre, the exiles in Nubia were attacked by Ibrahim Pasha, Ali Pasha's eldest son.  Some survivers continued to live in Nubia.  Some scattered throughout the region. In 1820 he invaded Sudan.  He also aided the Sultan in a number of battles, including against European forces in Greece in 1827. In 1831 he added Syria to the territory over which he had control.  this, though, alarmed the Ottoman Sultan, who requested Russian help against him. The British and French then intervened, and in 1833 a compromise was reached by which Ali withdrew from some of his territory but Ibrahim, his son, became Governor of Syria. In 1839 he fell out with the Sultan, and attacked Turkey. However, he was repulsed by multilateral European intervention (including the British Navy blockading the Nile Delta coast) that required Muhammad Ali and Ibrahim to give up Syria in 1841. The Sultan, though, confirmed Ali in his Governorship and also declared that it would be an hededitory office.
 
 
In the year following the massacre the unfortunate exiles were attacked by [[Ibrahim Pasha]], the eldest son of Muhammad Ali, in the fortified town of Ibrim, in Nubia. Here the want of provisions forced them to evacuate the place; a few who surrendered were beheaded, and the rest went farther south and built the town of New D,ongola (correctly Dunkulah), where the venerable Ibrahim Bey died in 1816, at the age of eighty. As their numbers thinned, they endeavoured to maintain their little power by training some hundreds of blacks; but again, on the approach of Ismail, another son of the pasha of Egypt, sent with an army in 1820 to subdue Nubia and Sennar, some returned to Egypt and settled in Cairo, while the rest, amounting to about 100 persons, fled in dispersed parties to the countries adjacent to Senngr.
 
 
 
In 1839 Sultan Mahmud II resumed the war, but was decisively defeated by Ibrahim at Konya and died shortly thereafter. Once again, Egyptian armies neared Constantinople, and this time were turned back by multilateral European intervention (including the British Navy blockading the Nile Delta coast) that required Muhammad Ali and Ibrahim to give up Syria in 1841.
 
 
 
Muhammad `Ali was deposed in July 1848 on account of mental weakness, and died in August 1849. He was succeeded by two of his sons Ibrahim and Sa'id of Egypt, but both were weak rulers, and, in large part because of his excesses, Egypt fell under the domination of Europeans.
 
 
 
==See also==
 
*[[Fraser campaign]]
 
 
 
[[Category:History of Egypt]]
 
  
==See also==
+
==Legacy==
{{Wikisource1911Enc|Aali, Mehemet}}
+
Meanwhile, Ali had modernized his army based on the French draft system.  He emplyed French officers to train his troops, and to teach military science.  He also established a Staff College.  He also introduced irrigation systems and general administrative reforms but lost much of his initial popularity by taxing heavily to pay for these.  Due to the high demand for cotton in Europe, he turned almost all agricultural production  over to cottom, making Egypt a major supplier.  This became his personal monopoly.  He also tried to develop manufacturing but this was not very successful.
* [[Muhammad Ali's seizure of power]]
 
* [[Egypt under Mehemet Ali and his successors]]
 
* [[History of Ottoman Egypt]]
 
* [[List of Rulers of Modern Egypt]]
 
  
==Reference==
+
He retired in July 1848, and died in August 1849. He was succeeded by his sons Ibrahim (1789-1848) and Said (1769-1863), then by his grandson, Abbas (1849-1854). Egypt increasingly fell under the domination of Europeans, whose bank-loans and expertise were originally used to compensate for lack of funds to finance the necessary reforms but soon resulted in the British and French demanding privileges. Ismail Pasha (1830-1895), the first Khedive of Egypt (the new title conferred by the Sultan in 1867, also Ali's grandson, continuied modernization but was forced to sell his most of his own stock in the Suez canal (opened in 1858) to Britain. mBy 1876, Egyptian finances were controlled by a British-French debt commission and by 1883, real power was in the hands of the British Consul-General.  The British more or less assumed power because Egypt was in their financial debt, and, according to them, could not govern itself properly. Ali's great-grandson, Fuad I became King of Egypt in 1922, when Britain granted 'independence', although as a client state.Nominally, Ali's successors ruled Egypt until 1953, when King Farouk was deposed.
*{{1911}}
 
  
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==
 
* [http://www.islamicarchitecture.org/architecture/muhammadali.html Muhammad Ali Al-Pasha Mosque] Islamic Architecture review (IAORG)
 
* [http://www.islamicarchitecture.org/architecture/muhammadali.html Muhammad Ali Al-Pasha Mosque] Islamic Architecture review (IAORG)
  
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{{succession box|title=[[Rulers and heads of state of Egypt|Governor of Egypt]]|before=uncertain due to war|after=[[Ibrahim Pasha]]|years=[[1805]]–[[1848]]}}
 
{{succession box|title=[[Rulers and heads of state of Egypt|Governor of Egypt]]|before=[[Ibrahim Pasha]]|after=[[Abbas I of Egypt]]|years=[[1848]]–[[1849]]}}
 
{{end box}}
 
  
[[Category:Field Marshals]]
 
[[Category:1769 births|Muhammad Ali]]
 
[[Category:1849 deaths|Muhammad Ali]]
 
[[Category:Egyptian heads of state|Muhammad Ali]]
 
[[Category:Ottoman Empire]]
 
 
[[Category: History and biography]]
 
[[Category: History and biography]]
{{Link FA|ja}}
 
  
[[ar:محمد علي (والي)]]
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[[de:Muhammad Ali Pascha]]
 
[[fr:Mehemet Ali]]
 
[[he:מוחמד עלי (שליט מצרים)]]
 
[[nl:Mohammed Ali van Egypte]]
 
[[ja:ムハンマド・アリー]]
 
[[sq:Muhamed Ali Pasha-Egjipt]]
 
[[sv:Muhammad Ali (pascha)]]
 
 
{{credit2|Muhammad_Ali_of_Egypt|24549803|Muhammad_Ali's_seizure_of_power|51851397}}
 
{{credit2|Muhammad_Ali_of_Egypt|24549803|Muhammad_Ali's_seizure_of_power|51851397}}

Revision as of 17:59, 13 June 2006


Muhammad `Alī

Muhammad `Ali; Pasha the Great; (many spelling variations, including Turkish language Mehmet Ali (1769-August 2, 1849), was a viceroy of Egypt, and is sometimes considered the founder of modern Egypt. Muhammad Ali was an Albanian born in Kavala. In 1798 Napoleon destroyed the Mameluke rulers' army at the Battle of the Pyramids. Napolean himself soon left Egypt, and his troops there were defeated by the British at the Battle of the Nile, a mainly naval affair, August 1st 1791. By 1801 the French had withdrawn from Egypt, which effectively left a power vacuum, which Muhammad Ali filled. He was appointed Ottoman governor (wali) of Egypt in 1805 and famously (and treacherously) massacred the Mameluke leaders. He introduced sweeping reforms to Egypt: he built an army from Egyptian peasants through conscription, using this force to expand Egypt's borders; he built much infrastructure, such as canals and roadways; and he established Egypt as one of the world's largest cotton producers. Muhammad `Ali also introduced significant social reforms, including the creation of modern educational institutions. Most of his efforts, however, were focused on his successful strengthening of Egypt's armed forces. Egypt became temporarily a powerful modernized force in the Middle East.

Throughout his reign he was the nominal vassal of the Ottoman sultan, but he acted independently. He aided the sultan in fighting in the Greek War of Independence, but lost part of his navy at the Battle of Navarino. He put down a Wahhabi revolt in Arabia for the sultan. Later he and the sultan fell out, going to war in 1831. Under his son Ibrahim of Egypt, Muhammad `Ali's armies seized Palestine and Syria and were within a few days march of Constantinople. Russia intervened, leading to a negotiated solution in 1833, leaving Muhammad Ali in control of Syria and Palestine. In return for withdrawing opposition, the Sultan made the governership of Egypt an hereditory office.

Rise to Power

The process of Muhammad Ali's seizure of power in Egypt was a long three way civil war between the Ottoman Turks, Egyptian Mamluks, and Albanian mercenaries. The war was a result of Napolean's invasion of Egypt. Napolean's invasion, and rapid personal withdrawl, from Egypt remains something of a mystery. He himself told the Egyptian people, in a Proclamation on 2nd July 1798 that the Mamluks had exploited them as well as 'insulted the French nation and injured its merchants' therfore the French, who were lovers of liberty, had come to restore their rights and to 'punish the usurpoers'. Moreover, God has ordered that the 'rabble of slaves', who had 'tyrannized the people', should rule no longer [French in Egypt]. After the French defeat by the British a power vacuum was created in Egypt when the latter withdrew their troops from Cairo in March 1803, although a team of French administrators stayed on. The Mamelukes had governed Egypt since 1250, although from 1517 they were subjects of the Ottomans and in theory the senior offical in Egypt was the Pasha, appointed from Istanbul. Before the French invasion and still had much power in the area. In practice the Mamluks owned most of the land and controlled the economy. They now attempted to not only to resume control, but to do so as independent rulers. The British were sympathetic towards this goal, seeing it as an opportunity to increase their influence in the region at the expense of the Ottomans. One of the Mamluk beys, Mahommed Bey al-Alfi (called the Great) was in England at the time. Egypt still had many Turkish troops who had been deployed against the French. Many of the best troops were from Albania, then also a province of the Ottoman Empire. These troops had not been paid, and began to demand their pay from the defterdar, or finance minister who still officially answerable to the Pasha. The soldiers took possession of the minister's offical residence. The Pasha opened fire from the artillery of his palace on he defterdar's house, which was across the Ezbekia gardens from the palace. The Albanians, under their commander, Thir, succeeded in seizing the government. The Pasha, Khosrev Pasha, fled. Just twenty-three days later, Thir met with his death from exactly the same cause as that of the overthrow of his predecessor. He refused to pay some of the Turkish troops, and was immediately assassinated. A desperate conflict ensued between the Albanians and Turks and the palace was set on fire and plundered. Mohammed Ali now succeeded to the leadership of the Albanians, and found himself caught between the Mamluks who were trying to wrestle back power for themselves while also fighting an internal battle between two factions, one led by Mahommed Bey al-Alfi (called the Great who had returned from England, the other by Osman Bey al-Bardisi, and the various Pashas appointed by the Ottomans. One of these, Ahmed Pasha had happened to be passing through Egypt on his way to take up an appointment in Arabia. Ali remained loyal to the Sultan but also allied himself with the Mamluks, since they had not formally broken with the Sultan either. By attempting to protect the general population and keep the peace, Ali endeared himself to the people of Egypt who were at the same time suffering from a high tax burden to pay for the military struggle. At one point in the compex series of military engagement and swings of power backwards and forwards between the Pasha and the Mamluks, with the Albanians in the middle, the Sultan offered to give the Mamluks an annual pension and other privileges if they recognized that the Pasha was the senior and supreme offical in Egypt. They agreed to negotiate terms but on this occassion suspected treachery and rebelled against Khosrev Pasha, who was once again technically in power.

An insufficient flood of the Nile also added to Egypt's troubles, aggravated by the taxation to which the beys were compelled to resort in order to pay their troops. Riots and violence broke out in the capital, with much of the soldiery being under little or no control. It was Mohomet Ali who managed to discipline his troops so that some of the violence could be constrained. Although a foreigner, he emerged as a popular figure amidst the chaos and anarchy. The Pasha was escorted to Syria, where some of his troops were encamped and met his death there during a skirmish involving his own soldiers.


The Mamluk-Albanian Alliance

The left Al-Bardisi, who had emerged as victor against his rival, al-Alfi, in charge of Egypt. His fortune, however, was temporary. In order to satisfy the demands of the Albanian soldirers for their pay he gave orders to levy heavy contributions from the citizens of Cairo, which incited them to rebellion. The Albanians, alarmed for their own safety, assured the populace that they would not allow civil disorder, and Muhammad Ali himself issued a proclamation to this effect. Al-Bardisi fled from Cairo. Three days later (March 12, 1804) the Albanians attacked al-Bardisi's house, who escaped with difficulty. Still loyal to the Ottoman, Ali recognized the Sultan's offical, Mahommed Khosrev, as pasha of Egypt. He enjoyed the title for about a day and a half before friends of the late Thir Pasha succeeded in killing him. He was succeeded as Pasha by Ahmed Khorshid.

Meanwhile, forces loyal to al-Bardisi were ravaging the country a few miles south of the capital, intercepting corn supplies on the river and capturing several towns and villages, which they plundered. Cairo was itself still in a state of tumult, suffering especially from the scarcity of grain. A series of confrontations followed between the Muhamamd Ali-led Albanians, and al-Bardisi's troops, now joined by his former rival, al-Alfi. Muhammad Ali, now fighting under the Pasha, was engaged against the Mamluks.

Attempting to exert his power, Khorshid summoned the assistance of 3000 Kurdish troops from Syria. However, instead of aiding Khorshid, the Kurds caused his overthrow. Cairo was ripe for revolt. At this juncture a firman arrived from Constantinople conferring on Muhammad Ali the pashalic of Jedda but within a few days he became Pasha of all Egypt.

Muhammad Ali ousts Khorshid

On the May 12, 1805 the ulama (religious leaders), accompanied by a large number of Cairo residents, submitted to Muhammad Ali a list of the wrongs they had endured under the administration of the pasha and told him that the people would no longer submit to Khorshid. When he asked them to whom would they submit, they said they would submit to him. They could see from his appearnace that he would govern with justuice and compassion, and according to the law. Muhammad hesitated, then consented, and was invested into office. Khorshid, hearing this news, began to prepare for battle and some of the Albanian troops joined his side, not wishing to oppose the Suktan. Many of his own soldiers, on the other hand, deserrted. Muhammad Ali's advantage lay in the support of the citizens of Cairo, who now saw him as a deliverer. Many citizens were also armed.

On the 19 May, Muhammad Ali laid seige to Khorshid's citadel. Khorshid gave orders to cannonade and bombard the town. Muhammad Ali's position at this time became very precarious, with his own soldiers once again demanding pay.

On 28 May 28 news came of the arrival at Alexandria of a messenger from Constantinople. This message proved to be a firman (imperial decree) confirming Muhammad Ali as Pasha and ordering Khorshid to go to Alexandria and to await further orders there, which he refused to do. Next, the Mamluk troops advanced on Cairo, this time in response to a request for help from the Pasha. Muhammad Ali forced them to retreat. Next, a squadron under the command of the Turkish high admiral arrived with despatches confirming Ali's appointment, and authorizing Muhammad Ali to continue to discharge the functions of governor. Khorshid again refused to yield. Finally, on condition that his troops should be paid, he evacuated the citadel and left Cairo for Rosetta.

Defeat of the Mamelukes

The Mosque of Muhammad Ali in Cairo, Egypt.

Muhammad Ali now possessed the title of Governor of Egypt, but beyond the walls of Cairo his authority was everywhere disputed by the Mamluk beys, who also had support from some Alkbanian deserters and from elements of Khorshid's army. Muhamamd Ali had no choice but raise income through taxation, and he chose to do so mainly by increasing the jizya (tribute) paid by the Coptic Chrfistian minority.

On August 17, 1805 the Mamluks and the deposed Pasha succeeded in entering Cairo while Ali's attention had been diverted towards a ceremonial opening of a new dam. They were routed, however, by a combined force of citizens and soldiers, and many members of the Mamluk family were slaughtered. Ali then sent 83 heads (some were French) to Istanbul with a message that the Mamluks had been crushed. The Sultan, though, at the request of the English, re-instated the surviving Mamluks, and on 1st July 1896 sent Admiral Salih Pasha to Egpyt with a replacement Pasha and a firman appointing Ali as governor of Salonika. Ali responded by persuading the ulama to petition for his retention as Pasha, and in opposition to the re-instatement of the Mamluks. Ali also said that while he was willing to depart for Salonika, his troops, whom he owed money, did not want him to leave. A compromise was reached by which Ali had to pay an agreed sum of money to the Sultan in return for retaining the Governorship of Egypt, which he did. The following month al-BardisI died, aged forty-eight years; and soon after, a scarcity of provisions led al-Alfi's troops revolting. Al-Alfi still expected English support but himelf died through a sudden nillness on January 30, 1807, at the age of fifty-five. This removed two of Ali Pasha's chief opponents.

On March 17, 1807 a British fleet appeared off Alexandria carrying 5000 troops, under the command of General A. Mackenzie Fraser, with the intent of supporting the now dead al-Alfi. Instead, they invited the survving Mamluks to join forces. A military engagement followed at Rosetta and Rahmanieh, aimed at securing supplies for their base in Alexandria. The British suffered a surprising defeat, losing some senior officers and 185 men with a further 281 wounded. The heads of the slain were fixed on stakes on each side of the road crossing the Ezbekia in Cairo.

Muhammad Ali, meanwhile, was conducting an expedition against the Mamluk beys in Upper Egypt, winning a victory near Assiut. He heard of the arrival of the British, and was alarmed that the beys might join them. He immediately sent messengers to his rivals, promising to comply with all their demands if they should join him expelling the invaders. They agree, and both armies marched towards Cairo on opposite sides of the river. The British were still tyring to take Rosetta but finally, on April 20, retreated to Alexandria having lost 900 men. The Mamluks were now also divided between those who wanted to help the British, and those who wanted to assist Ali. By September 14, however, the British had evacuated Alexandria. Ali Psha then met various demands from the Mamluks, reinstating some of their privileges, amounting to controll of the revenues of certain provinces. Several members of the family took up residence in Cairo. In early 1811, Ali was preparing to send troops to Arabia in support of the Sultan who was crushing a Wahhabi-led rebellion there. Ali was sending one of his own sons as commander of a regiment, and invited the Mamluks to attend the ceremony at which his son would receive his military commission. Many of them took up their abode in Cairo, but tranquillity was not secured; several times they met the pashas forces in battle and once gained a signal victory. On 1st March, all but one of the Mamluks attened the procession, and were courteously received by the pasha in the Citadel. Having taken coffee, they formed in procession, and, preceded and followed by the pasha's troops, they slowly descended the steep and narrow road leading to the great gate of the citadel. However, as soon as the Mamelukes arrived at the gate it was suddenly closed before them. The last of those to leave before the gate was shut were Albanian soldiers. Ali had secretly ordered these troop to massacre all the Mamelukes within the citadel. Four hundred and seventy Mamelukes entered the citadel; very few, if any, escaped. One did, and found his way to Syria. This massacre was the signal for an indiscriminate slaughter of the Mamelukes throughout Egypt, with orders to this effect being sent to every regional governer. The pasha and his son tried to stop the rioting but order was not restored until 500 houses had been completely pillaged. The heads of the beys were sent to Constantinople. A remnant of the Mamluks went to Bubia.

Final Skirmishes

In the year following the massacre, the exiles in Nubia were attacked by Ibrahim Pasha, Ali Pasha's eldest son. Some survivers continued to live in Nubia. Some scattered throughout the region. In 1820 he invaded Sudan. He also aided the Sultan in a number of battles, including against European forces in Greece in 1827. In 1831 he added Syria to the territory over which he had control. this, though, alarmed the Ottoman Sultan, who requested Russian help against him. The British and French then intervened, and in 1833 a compromise was reached by which Ali withdrew from some of his territory but Ibrahim, his son, became Governor of Syria. In 1839 he fell out with the Sultan, and attacked Turkey. However, he was repulsed by multilateral European intervention (including the British Navy blockading the Nile Delta coast) that required Muhammad Ali and Ibrahim to give up Syria in 1841. The Sultan, though, confirmed Ali in his Governorship and also declared that it would be an hededitory office.

Legacy

Meanwhile, Ali had modernized his army based on the French draft system. He emplyed French officers to train his troops, and to teach military science. He also established a Staff College. He also introduced irrigation systems and general administrative reforms but lost much of his initial popularity by taxing heavily to pay for these. Due to the high demand for cotton in Europe, he turned almost all agricultural production over to cottom, making Egypt a major supplier. This became his personal monopoly. He also tried to develop manufacturing but this was not very successful.

He retired in July 1848, and died in August 1849. He was succeeded by his sons Ibrahim (1789-1848) and Said (1769-1863), then by his grandson, Abbas (1849-1854). Egypt increasingly fell under the domination of Europeans, whose bank-loans and expertise were originally used to compensate for lack of funds to finance the necessary reforms but soon resulted in the British and French demanding privileges. Ismail Pasha (1830-1895), the first Khedive of Egypt (the new title conferred by the Sultan in 1867, also Ali's grandson, continuied modernization but was forced to sell his most of his own stock in the Suez canal (opened in 1858) to Britain. mBy 1876, Egyptian finances were controlled by a British-French debt commission and by 1883, real power was in the hands of the British Consul-General. The British more or less assumed power because Egypt was in their financial debt, and, according to them, could not govern itself properly. Ali's great-grandson, Fuad I became King of Egypt in 1922, when Britain granted 'independence', although as a client state.Nominally, Ali's successors ruled Egypt until 1953, when King Farouk was deposed.

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