Mokrani Revolt | |||||||
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Part of French conquest of Algeria | |||||||
![]() Tribes under the Mokrani revolt. Source : Djilali Sari, L'insurrection de 1871, SNED, Alger, 1972, p.29. | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Algerian rebels:![]() Sultanate of Tuggurt ![]() Algerian peasantry |
France:![]() Native auxiliaries | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
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Units involved | |||||||
100,000 Kabyle cavalry, and 100,000 other fighters[1] | Army of Africa (86,000 men) plus native auxiliaries | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
≈ 2,000 dead[2] | 2,686 dead[3] |
The Mokrani Revolt (Arabic: مقاومة الشيخ المقراني, lit. 'Resistance of Cheikh El-Mokrani'; Berber languages: Unfaq urrumi, lit. 'French insurrection') was the most important local uprising against France in Algeria since the conquest in 1830.
The revolt broke out on March 16, 1871, with the uprising of more than 250 tribes, around a third of the population of the country. It was led by the Kabyles of the Biban mountains commanded by Cheikh Mokrani and his brother Bou-Mezrag el-Mokrani and El hadj Bouzid who was the cousin of Mokrani as well as Cheikh El Haddad, head of the Rahmaniyya Sufi order.
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