Battle of Sig
Battle of Sig | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of French conquest of Algeria | |||||||
| |||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
Kingdom of France | Emirate of Mascara | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Camille Alphonse Trézel | Emir Abdelkader | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
2,500 | 8,000 cavaliers,4 000 infantrymen | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
52 killed, 189 wounded[2] (French claim) | Unknown |
- v
- t
- e
- War against the Deylik (1830–1837)
- Pre-invasion
- Bay of Algiers (1827)
- Dellys (1830)
- Sidi Fredj (1830)
- Staouéli (1830)
Sidi Khalef (1830)- Bordj Moulay Hassan (1830)
- Mitidja (Beylik of Titteri)
- 1st Blida (1830)
- Médéa (1830)
- Médéa (1831)
- El Harrach (1831)
- El Harrach (1832)
- Hadjout (1834)
- Beylik of Oran
- Oran (1831)
- Beylik of Constantine
- Annaba (1832)
- 1st Béjaia (1831)
- 2nd Béjaia (1833)
- 3rd Béjaia (1835)
- 1st Constantine (1836)
- 2nd Constantine (1837)
- War against Abdelkader (1832–1847)
- First Kaderian war (1832–1834)
- Kheng-Nettah (1832)
- Second Kaderian war (1835–1838)
- Sig (1835)
- Macta (1835)
- Habrah (1835)
- Mascara (1835)
- Tlemcen (1836)
- Sikkak (1836)
- Reghaia (1837)
- Beni Aicha (1837)
- Boudouaou (1837)
- Issers (1837)
- Somah (1837)
- Third Kaderian war (1839–1847)
- Mitidja (1839)
- Ammal (1840)
- Beni Mered (1842)
- Smala (1843)
- Tadmaït (1844)
- Dellys (1844)
- Sidi Brahim (1845)
- Issers (1846)
- Oued Aslaf (1847)
- Agueddin (1847)
- Zaatcha (1849)
- Laghouat (1852)
- Sebaou River (1854)
- Tachekkrit (1854)
- Mokrani Revolt
- Palestro (1871)
- Touggourt (1871)
- Flatters expeditions
- Battle of Tit
35°24′44″N 0°04′49″E / 35.4121°N 0.0802°E / 35.4121; 0.0802In the Battle of Sig (26-27 June 1835), French forces, assisted by the Douair and Smela tribes, fought the Algerian resistance led by Emir Abdelkader in the forest of Moulay-Ismaël near Sig.[1]
On June 26, General Trézel's column, consisting of 2,500 men, arrived on the banks of the Sig, ten leagues from Oran. There, he encountered Abdelkader's army, consisting of 8,000 cavalrymen and 4,000 infantrymen.[1] After the French vanguard folded under the impetuous charge of the Algerian cavalry, Trézel ceded the place to the Algerians and retreated some distance away to avoid total defeat.[1]
On June 27, Trézel and his forces set off to return to Oran.[1] The day after, they were ambushed by Abdelkader near the marshes of the Macta.[1]
See also
References
This article about a battle in French history is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e
This African history–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e