Anglo-Egyptian War

Anglo-Egyptian War
Part of the ʻUrabi revolt and Scramble for Africa and dissolution of the Ottoman Empire

French map of the military operations in Egypt
DateJuly–September 1882
Location
Result

British victory

Belligerents
Egypt
Commanders and leaders
Strength
40,560 regulars
Casualties and losses
  • 800–900 killed
  • 600+ wounded[2]
2,000–4,000 killed or wounded (British estimates)[3]

The British conquest of Egypt (1882), also known as the Anglo-Egyptian War (Arabic: الاحتلال البريطاني لمصر, romanizedal-iḥtilāl al-Brīṭānī li-Miṣr, lit.'British occupation of Egypt'), occurred in 1882 between Egyptian and Sudanese forces under Ahmed ‘Urabi and the United Kingdom. It ended a nationalist uprising against the Khedive Tewfik Pasha. It established firm British influence over Egypt at the expense of the Egyptians, the French, and the Ottoman Empire, whose already weak authority became nominal.

  1. ^ Featherstone, Donald (1993). Tel El-Kebir 1882. Osprey Publishing. pp. 40–41.
  2. ^ There are no exact British casualty figures. The official War Office history gives a total of 83 killed, 607 wounded and 30 'missing', not including Royal Navy losses at Alexandria. Colonel J. F. Maurice, Military History of the Campaign of 1882 in Egypt (HMSO, 1887: new ed. 1908) Appendix VI. See, however, Peter Duckers, Egypt 1882: Dispatches, Casualties, Awards (Spink, 2001).
  3. ^ Wright, William (2009). A Tidy Little War: The British Invasion of Egypt, 1882. Spellmount.

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