Battle of Alma (Algeria)

The Battle of Alma or Battle of Boudouaou, which broke out on 19 April 1871, was a battle of the Mokrani Revolt by Algerian rebels against France, which had been the colonial power in the region since 1830.[1]

Battle of Alma
Part of the Mokrani Revolt
Date19-22 April 1871
Location36°43′34″N 3°24′41″E / 36.7261264°N 3.4114237°E / 36.7261264; 3.4114237
Result French victory
Belligerents
Flag of Kingdom of ait abbas Kingdom of Ait Abbas
Islamic Zawiyas
Rahmaniyya
 France
Commanders and leaders
Flag of Kingdom of ait abbas Cheikh Mokrani
Cheikh Boumerdassi
Cheikh Boushaki
Cheikh Zamoum
France Louis Henri
France Alexandre Fourchault
France General Lallemand
Strength
2,000 warriors 2,300 infantrymen

Presentation

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The rebels of the Mokrani Revolt, after several successes, headed for Algiers via Alma (Boudouaou) after having taken control of Palestro (Lakhdaria), Laazib Zamoum (Naciria), Bordj Menaïel, the Issers and the Col des Beni Aïcha (Thenia).[2]

It was the Marabout Cheikh Boumerdassi, Cheikh of the Zawiyet Sidi Boumerdassi, and Marabout Cheikh Boushaki, Cheikh of the Zawiyet Sidi Boushaki, who led this Algerian attack against the French colonies in Lower Kabylia.[3]

Advancing from Palestro towards Algiers, the fighters were stopped at Boudouaou (Alma) on 22 April 1871.[4]

The Algerian rebels then made a fatal error in their advance towards Algiers, by igniting a fire in the woods around Reghaïa which alerted the French garrison.[5]

French counter-attack

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The Governor General of Algiers, Louis Henri de Gueydon, decided to retake the colony of Alma by sending on April 21, 1871, an expeditionary unit tasked with stopping the march of the Algerian masses who were threatening the Mitidja.[6]

The unit consisted of 2,300 infantrymen made up of Zouaves, Algerian riflemen, militiamen from Algiers, mobiles from Hérault, over 200 Chasseurs d'Afrique, a few spahis and 4 mounted howitzers.[7]

This unit moved towards the village of Alma, located 37 kilometers from Algiers, and sighted the first Algerian rebels the day before, April 20.[8]

It was Colonel Alexandre Fourchault who took charge of the counter-attack of the Troupes coloniales, to push back the Algerians who were going to overtake Boudouaou to begin the conquest of Mitidja.[9]

The Algerian rebels trying to invade Mitidja were only stopped in Alma by the French-Algerian unit, and Colonel Fourchault's snipers.[10]

Colonel Fourchault and his snipers, after having stopped the Algerian insurrection in Alma on April 22, 1871, then marched on the Col des Beni Aïcha to dislodge the Algerian resistance fighters and punish the Kabyle population who supported them, before clearing and freeing Palestro and discovering the massacre of European settlers by supporters of Cheikh Mokrani.[11]

See also

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Bibliography

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References

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  1. ^ Rinn, Louis (1891). "Histoire de l'insurrection de 1871 en Algérie".
  2. ^ "Statistique générale de l'Algérie". 1874.
  3. ^ Dominique, L. C. (1909). "Un gouverneur général de l'Algérie: l'Amiral de Gueydon".
  4. ^ Cheyron, Alfred Du (1873). "Bordj-Bou-Arreridj pendant l'insurrection de 1871 en Algerie. Journal d'un officier".
  5. ^ "Revue des deux mondes". 1873.
  6. ^ Balazuc, Jean (2015). Guerre d'Algérie: Une chronologie mensuelle : Mai 1954-décembre 1962. ISBN 9782343066851.
  7. ^ Watbled, Ernest (December 26, 1873). "Un Épisode de l'insurrection Kabyle. — L'Alma, Palestro". 2e période: 625–640.
  8. ^ Buloz, François; Buloz, Charles; Brunetière, Ferdinand; Doumic, René; Charmes, Francis; Chaumeix, André (1873). "Revue des deux mondes".
  9. ^ Merle, Claude. "FOURCHAULT". www.histoire-de-guerre.net.
  10. ^ "Histoire: La Légion face à la révolte Kabyle en 1871". FSALE.
  11. ^ Watbled, Ernest (1873). "Un Épisode de l'Insurrection Kabyle de 1871: l'Alma. — Palestro". Revue des Deux Mondes (1829-1971). 108 (3): 625–640. JSTOR 44741875.