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The French Invasion of Algeria - 1830

  • Ahmed Badran
  • Oct 20, 2016
  • 3 min read

Updated: Jun 15, 2022

This is a summary of the major points from a history course on the middle east (source at the bottom).


Background

  • Algeria was a province of the Ottoman Empire since 1516

    • Conquered for the Ottomans by admiral Oruç Reis—known as Barbarossa, or Red Beard

  • Remoteness from Constantinople meant that ambitious Ottoman appointee created their own dynastic rule.

  • By the early 1700s, Ottomans had very little influence in Algeria

  • Pirating and privateering was common on the Atlantic and Mediterranean coast of North Africa

    • Privateers operate with permission from one government or another

  • Northern Algeria was agricultural and very rich

  • In 1796, Napoleon bought large quantities of grain, on credit, from two Algerian merchants.

    • By the 1820s, the French government paid only a small portion of the debt

    • Later, the French government refused to settle the bill

    • The two merchants, in turn, owed money to the Ottoman ruler in Algeria

    • The Fan Affair

      • During a heated argument, It is said that the Ottoman ruler touched or struck the French consul with a fan

      • King Charles X considered it insulting and demanded an apology and a blockage of Algeria

      • Charles X not being popular in France, saw an opportunity to boost his reputation

The Invasion

  • The economic sanctions against Algeria backed fired in France and impacted French merchants more

  • Charles X sent a negotiator to fix the situation

    • In response, the Algerians fired warning shots against the blockading ships

    • This was considered a provocation by the French

  • In June, 1830, a full invasion was under way and Algeria would be occupied for 132 years.

    • 600 ships and 34,000 troops

    • With artillery and modern weaponry, the French defeated the defending forces

  • The July Revolution in France ousted Charles X

    • The new regime did not approve of the occupation

    • However, patriotic fervor made the masses want it to continue

  • Looting and plundering was done at massive scale by French troops in Algeria

  • With the quick removal of Ottoman government and power structure, disorder and anarchy followed

    • France had to commit more troops and more brutal tactics

    • French Foreign Legion was created with foreign fighters who were not wanted in France

  • 1830-1870: Some estimated that 850,000 Algerians died as a result

    • Men, women and children were burned alive

    • Many died due to starvation and famine as France expropriated farmland

The Resistance

  • By 1848, France declared Algeria part of metropolitan France - French Algeria

  • Fierce resistance continued and one of its icon was Abd al-Qadir Al-Jazairi

    • Abd al-Qadir - a sufi and Islamic scholar - was 22 at the time of the French invasion

    • He was declared Emir to lead a war of resistance against the French in 1832

  • Private and official French accounts attest to Abd al-Qadir chivalry and ethical conduct

    • He once ordered a cash reward to anyone who captures a French soldier

    • The soldier must be brought to him alive

    • No reward if the soldier complained about mistreatment

    • Asked about reward for a severed French head, he replied "Twenty-five blows with a baton on the soles of your feet.”


Abd al-Qadir in Exile

  • In December 1847, he was forced to surrender

  • The French agreed to terms where Abd al-Qadir goes to exile in the Middle East

  • He later settled in Damascus by 1860 during a period of turmoil and sectarian violence

  • It is believed that Abd al-Qadir saved over 10,000 people during this period of rioting

    • He along with his men rescued Christian nuns, priests, merchants, and entire families

    • Even consuls from the United States, Britain, France, and elsewhere.

    • He was honored by the British and French governments and by President Abraham Lincoln among others

  • The town of Elkader, Iowa in the United States is named after him

Impact

  • The Ottoman Empire became known as the "Sick Man of Europe"

  • The rise of nationalism in Europe drove more imperial expansions

  • 1884: “Scramble for Africa”, saw many European powers (after meeting in Berlin) divide Africa between them

    • Shift to more permanent conquest and settlement in Africa and the Middle East

    • This involved pressing for changes in local cultures, identity and language

  • Algeria gained independence in 1962

Source: "Turning Points in Middle Eastern History" by professor Eamonn Gearon of Johns Hopkins University (TheGreatCourses.com) Lecture 31

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© 2023 by Ahmed Badran

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