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| conflict = Battle of the Pyramids| | | conflict = Battle of the Pyramids| | ||
| partof = the [[French Campaign in Egypt and Syria]] during the [[War of the Second Coalition]] | | partof = the [[French Campaign in Egypt and Syria]] during the [[War of the Second Coalition]] | ||
| image = Louis- | | image = Francois-Louis-Joseph Watteau 001.jpg | ||
| caption = ''The Battle of the Pyramids'' <br /> [[François-Louis-Joseph Watteau]], 1799 | |||
| caption = ''The Battle of the Pyramids''<br /> | |||
| map_type = Lower Egypt#Mediterranean | | map_type = Lower Egypt#Mediterranean | ||
| map_relief = 1 | | map_relief = 1 | ||
| Line 16: | Line 15: | ||
| result = French victory | | result = French victory | ||
| combatant1 = {{flagdeco|First French Republic}} [[First French Republic|French Republic]] | | combatant1 = {{flagdeco|First French Republic}} [[First French Republic|French Republic]] | ||
| combatant2 = | | combatant2 = {{flag|Ottoman Empire|1793}} | ||
*{{flagicon image|Flag of the Mameluks.svg}} [[Mamluks]]{{sfn|Roberts|2015|p=132}}{{sfn|Chandler|2009|p=224}}{{sfn|Niox|1887|p=110}} | |||
}} | *Arab irregulars{{sfn|Roberts|2015|p=132}}{{sfn|Chandler|2009|p=224}}{{sfn|Niox|1887|p=110}} | ||
*{{flagicon image|Flag of the Mameluks.svg}} [[Mamluks]]{{sfn | Roberts | 2015 | p=132}}{{sfn | Chandler | 2009 | p=224}}{{sfn | Niox | 1887 | p=110}} | |||
*Arab irregulars{{sfn | Roberts | 2015 | p=132}}{{sfn | Chandler | 2009 | p=224}}{{sfn | Niox | 1887 | p=110}} | |||
| commander1 = {{Plainlist}} | | commander1 = {{Plainlist}} | ||
*{{flagdeco|French First Republic}} [[Napoleon|Napoleon Bonaparte]] | *{{flagdeco|French First Republic}} [[Napoleon|Napoleon Bonaparte]] | ||
| Line 38: | Line 35: | ||
*3,000 cavalry | *3,000 cavalry | ||
*17,000 infantry | *17,000 infantry | ||
| strength2 = 21, | | strength2 = 21,000–50,000{{efn|name=fn1}} | ||
---- | ---- | ||
*6,000+ cavalry | *6,000+ cavalry | ||
| Line 44: | Line 41: | ||
| casualties1 = 289 killed or wounded{{sfn | Chandler | 2009 | p=226}} | | casualties1 = 289 killed or wounded{{sfn | Chandler | 2009 | p=226}} | ||
| casualties2 = 10,000 killed or wounded{{sfn | Strathern | 2008 | p=128}}{{sfn | Niox | 1887 | p=110}} | | casualties2 = 10,000 killed or wounded{{sfn | Strathern | 2008 | p=128}}{{sfn | Niox | 1887 | p=110}} | ||
| campaignbox | | campaignbox = {{Campaignbox Egypt-Syria}} | ||
}} | }} | ||
| | The '''Battle of the Pyramids''' ({{Langx|fr|Bataille des Pyramides}}), also known as the '''Battle of Embabeh''' ({{Lang|fr|bataille d'Embabech}}), was fought on 21 July 1798 during the [[French campaign in Egypt and Syria|French invasion of Egypt]], near the village of [[Imbaba]], across the [[Nile]] from [[Cairo]] and was named by Napoleon Bonaparte after the distant [[Great Pyramid of Giza]]. | ||
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After capturing [[Alexandria]] and advancing toward [[Cairo]], Napoleon’s army confronted [[Murad Bey]]’s [[Mamluk]]-led forces. The French deployed into large divisional squares that withstood repeated cavalry charges before storming the fortified village of Embabeh. French losses were reported at about 300, while estimates for Mamluk–Ottoman casualties vary widely, from several thousand to as many as 10,000. The defeat shattered Murad’s field army, forcing him to retreat to [[Upper Egypt]]. | |||
The victory opened the way to [[Cairo]], where Napoleon established a new administration, though local uprisings soon followed. It also marked the decline of Mamluk rule in Egypt. Its strategic impact was blunted when Admiral [[Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson|Nelson]] destroyed the French fleet at the [[Battle of the Nile]] ten days later. The battle has since been depicted in art and popular culture, often with historical inaccuracies. | |||
==Prelude== | |||
After landing in Ottoman-controlled Egypt and capturing [[Alexandria, Egypt|Alexandria]] on 2 July 1798, the French army under General Bonaparte marched across the desert toward [[Cairo, Egypt|Cairo]]. Their objective was to break the power of the Mamluk beys who dominated Egypt and secure control of the capital before Ottoman reinforcements could arrive. | |||
Murad Bey and Ibrahim Bey, two [[Georgians|Georgian]] Mamluks who commanded the country’s military forces, prepared to oppose the advance. Their army included elite, heavily armoured [[cavalry]] supported by [[Fellah#In Egypt|fellahin]] militia serving as infantry.{{sfn|Chandler|2009|p=224}} | |||
| | |||
| | |||
| | The French encountered the Mamluks about {{convert|9|mi|km|abbr=off}} from the Pyramids and {{convert|4|mi|km|abbr=off}} from Cairo.{{efn|Engulfed by the west bank of modern Cairo, nothing remains of the battlefield today.}} | ||
| | On 13 July, French scouts located Murad’s encampment near Shubra Khit. Bonaparte ordered an immediate advance, leading to the [[Battle of Shubra Khit|skirmish at Shubra Khit]] (also called Chobrakit). French artillery destroyed the Mamluk flagship on the Nile and forced a retreat, giving Bonaparte his first victory and demonstrating the effectiveness of concentrated firepower against cavalry charges.{{sfn|Chandler|2009|p=224}} | ||
==Battle== | |||
On 21 July, after marching all night, the French reached the vicinity of the village of [[Imbaba|Embabeh]]. After a short rest, Napoleon ordered his troops to form for battle. Each of the five divisions was organised into hollow rectangles with cavalry and baggage in the centre and cannon at the corners. He exhorted his men to remain steady when facing the Mamluk cavalry:{{sfn|Roberts|2015|p=132}} | |||
After | |||
{{Blockquote|text=Soldiers! You came to this country to save the inhabitants from barbarism, to bring civilisation to the Orient and subtract this beautiful part of the world from the domination of England. From the top of those pyramids, forty centuries are contemplating you.|author=General Bonaparte, Order of the Day|source={{sfn|Roberts|2015|p=132}}}} | |||
{{Blockquote|text= | |||
The French | The French advanced south in echelon, with the right flank leading and the left secured by the [[Nile River|Nile]]. From right to left, the divisions were commanded by [[Louis Charles Antoine Desaix|Louis Desaix]], [[Jean Reynier|Jean-Louis-Ébénézer Reynier]], [[Charles Dugua|Charles-François-Joseph Dugua]], [[Honoré Vial]], and [[Louis André Bon]]. Desaix also sent a detachment to occupy the nearby village of Biktil. Murad anchored his right on the Nile at Embabeh, which was fortified with infantry and artillery, and his left on Biktil with additional guns. His [[Mamluks|Mamluk]] cavalry deployed in the centre. Across the Nile, the army of [[Ibrahim Bey (Mamluk)|Ibrahim Bey]] watched the battle unfold but was unable to cross and intervene. Murad’s plan was to hold the French on his fortified flanks and then strike their centre with cavalry. | ||
Repeated cavalry charges were directed against the French squares. One armoured rider advanced to within a few steps of the French lines and demanded a duel, but was shot down by musket fire.{{sfn| Armoush |2018}} | |||
At about 15:30 Murad ordered his [[wikt:defterdar|defterdar]], Ayyub Bey, to lead a mass assault. The divisions of Desaix, Reynier, and Dugua held firm, repelling the horsemen with musketry and artillery. Some of the Mamluks then attempted to attack Desaix’s detached force, but without success.{{sfn|Holbrook|2018|pp=62—63}} | |||
{{Blockquote|text= | {{Blockquote|text=The Column that moved forward to attack Murad Bey divided in a way known to them during wartimes, and they got closer to the barricades where they then surrounded all the soldiers, front and back, and they beat their drums and started to shoot their guns and cannons; the winds blew strong, and dust flew, and the skies darkened from the dust and gun smoke; people were deafened by the drum beats and people thought that the Earth had moved like a quake and that the skies had fallen; the war and the fighting continued for about three-quarters of an hour and then there was defeat on the Western Front.|author=|title=ʻAbd al-Rah̤mān al-Jabartī's History of Egypt, recounting how the Mamlouks were defeated at the gates of Cairo{{sfn|Holbrook|2018|pp=62—63}}}} | ||
Near the river, Bon’s division deployed into attack columns and stormed Embabeh. The garrison broke, with many fleeing into the Nile where hundreds drowned. French reports listed 29 killed and 260 wounded. Murad’s losses were far heavier, with thousands killed or wounded, including Ayyub Bey and perhaps 3,000 of the elite Mamluk cavalry.{{sfn|Strathern|2008|p=128}} Murad himself was wounded in the cheek by a saber but escaped with several thousand cavalry to [[Upper Egypt]], where he waged a [[guerrilla]] campaign before being defeated by Desaix in late 1799.{{sfn|Clodfelter|2017|p=105}} | |||
==Aftermath== | ==Aftermath== | ||
Upon hearing news of the defeat of their legendary cavalry, the waiting Mamluk armies in Cairo dispersed to [[Syria]] | Upon hearing news of the defeat of their legendary cavalry, the waiting Mamluk armies in Cairo dispersed to [[Syria]]. Bonaparte entered the conquered capital of Egypt on 24 July.{{sfn|Chandler|2009|p=224}} On 11 August French forces caught up with [[Ibrahim Bey (Mamluk)|Ibrahim Bey]] and inflicted a crushing defeat at Salalieh.{{sfn|Chandler|2009|p=224}} | ||
After the Battle of the Pyramids, Napoleon instituted French administration in [[Cairo]] and suppressed subsequent rebellions with force. Although he tried to co-opt the local ''[[ulama]]'', scholars such as [[Abd al-Rahman al-Jabarti|Al-Jabarti]] poured scorn on the cultural claims of the [[First French Republic|French]].{{sfn|Bellaigue|2017|pp=4–12}} Despite official proclamations of goodwill, and instances of French soldiers converting to [[Islam]] to marry locally, clerics like [[Abdullah al-Sharqawi]], who headed Napoleon’s Cairo [[divan]],{{sfn|Cole|2007|p=159}} later described the occupiers as “materialist, libertine philosophers … [who] deny the resurrection, and the afterlife, and … [the] prophets.”{{sfn|Bellaigue|2017|p=14}} | |||
For their part, French officials such as mathematician [[Joseph Fourier]] lamented that “the Muslim religion would on no account permit the development of the mind.”{{sfn|Bellaigue|2017|p=14}} | |||
The Battle of the Pyramids signalled the beginning of the end of seven centuries of Mamluk dominance in Egypt. Yet its strategic effect was short-lived: ten days later Admiral [[Horatio Nelson]] destroyed the French fleet at the [[Battle of the Nile]], cutting Napoleon’s army off from France and curtailing his ambitions in the region.{{sfn|Russell|2022|p=27}} | |||
==In literature and the arts== | |||
The battle has been a frequent subject in art. It was depicted by [[François-André Vincent]] in a preparatory sketch and painting,{{sfn|the MET}} and later by artists including [[Antoine-Jean Gros]], [[Carle Vernet]], and [[François-Louis-Joseph Watteau]].{{sfn|Berna|Thomsen|2024|p=58}} | |||
In popular culture, the battle appears in Ridley Scott’s 2023 historical drama [[Napoleon (2023 film)|Napoleon]]. The film’s depiction has been criticised for historical inaccuracies, such as showing French troops firing on the pyramids.{{sfn|Kotb|2023}} | |||
{{Gallery|align=center|width=280 | |||
{{Gallery|align=center | |||
|File:Baron Antoine-Jean Gros-Battle Pyramids 1810.jpg|''[[The Battle of the Pyramids (painting)|The Battle of the Pyramids]]'' by [[Antoine-Jean Gros]] | |File:Baron Antoine-Jean Gros-Battle Pyramids 1810.jpg|''[[The Battle of the Pyramids (painting)|The Battle of the Pyramids]]'' by [[Antoine-Jean Gros]] | ||
|File:Bataille des Pyramides, 21 juillet 1798 - Francois André Vincent.jpg|[[François-André Vincent]] | |File:Bataille des Pyramides, 21 juillet 1798 - Francois André Vincent.jpg|[[François-André Vincent]] | ||
|File: | |File:Louis-François Baron Lejeune 001.jpg|[[Louis-François Lejeune]]}} | ||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
| Line 143: | Line 97: | ||
==Sources== | ==Sources== | ||
* {{Cite book |last=Armoush |first=Muhammad |title=Modern contemplations of the French campaign |year=2018}} | |||
* {{cite web | title=Battle of the Pyramids, July 21, 1798 | website=metmuseum.org | date=1800 | url=https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/339816/ | ref={{sfnref | the MET}}}} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Bellaigue | first=Christopher De | title=The Islamic Enlightenment: The Modern Struggle Between Faith and Reason | publisher=Vintage | date=2017 | isbn=978-1-84792-241-0 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bTDUwAEACAAJ }} | |||
* {{cite book | last1=Berna | first1=Cristina | last2=Thomsen | first2=Eric | title=Napoleon Military Campaigns In Art | publisher=BOD GmbH DE | date=2024-08-20 | isbn=978-84-1174-792-9 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JjQbEQAAQBAJ&pg=PA58}} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Chandler | first=D.G. | title=The Campaigns of Napoleon | publisher=Scribner | year=2009 | isbn=978-1-4391-3103-9 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hNYWXeVcbkMC}} | * {{cite book | last=Chandler | first=D.G. | title=The Campaigns of Napoleon | publisher=Scribner | year=2009 | isbn=978-1-4391-3103-9 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hNYWXeVcbkMC}} | ||
* {{cite | * {{cite book | last=Clodfelter | first=Micheal | title=Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492-2015, 4th ed. | publisher=McFarland | date=2017-04-24 | isbn=978-1-4766-2585-0 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kNzCDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA105}} | ||
* {{cite book | last=Cole | first=Juan | title=Napoleon's Egypt: Invading the Middle East | publisher=Macmillan + ORM | date=2007-08-07 | isbn=978-0-230-60741-5 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8rzGxWUQiKkC}} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Holbrook | first=Donald | title=Al-Qaeda 2.0: A Critical Reader | publisher=Oxford University Press | date=2018-01-15 | isbn=978-0-19-091149-2 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=n2lNDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA62}} | |||
* {{cite web | last=Kotb | first=Muhammed | title=Napoleon Did Not Shoot the Pyramids As Ridley Scott Might Have You Believe | website=Egyptian Streets | date=2023-12-03 | url=https://egyptianstreets.com/2023/12/03/napoleon-did-not-shoot-the-pyramids-as-ridley-scott-might-have-you-believe}} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Niox | first=G.L. | title=Géographie militaire | publisher=Dumaine | issue=v. 6 | year=1887 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9-8fNPOsB7sC&pg=PA110 | language=fr}} | * {{cite book | last=Niox | first=G.L. | title=Géographie militaire | publisher=Dumaine | issue=v. 6 | year=1887 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9-8fNPOsB7sC&pg=PA110 | language=fr}} | ||
* {{cite book | last=Roberts | first=A. | title=Napoleon: A Life | publisher=Penguin Publishing Group | year=2015 | isbn=978-0-14-312785-7 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3JdPEAAAQBAJ}} | * {{cite book | last=Roberts | first=A. | title=Napoleon: A Life | publisher=Penguin Publishing Group | year=2015 | isbn=978-0-14-312785-7 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3JdPEAAAQBAJ}} | ||
* {{cite book | last=Russell | first=Quentin | title=Mediterranean Naval Battles That Changed the World | publisher=Pen and Sword Maritime | date=2022-04-01 | isbn=978-1-5267-1601-9 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=shIZEAAAQBAJ&pg=PT27}} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Strathern | first=P. | title=Napoleon in Egypt: 'the Greatest Glory' | publisher=Vintage | year=2008 | isbn=978-1-84413-917-0 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZGn9g6hNyGkC}} | * {{cite book | last=Strathern | first=P. | title=Napoleon in Egypt: 'the Greatest Glory' | publisher=Vintage | year=2008 | isbn=978-1-84413-917-0 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZGn9g6hNyGkC}} | ||
==Further reading== | ==Further reading== | ||
* [[J. Christopher Herold|Herold, J. Christopher]], ''Bonaparte in Egypt'' – London, Hamish Hamilton, 1962. | * [[J. Christopher Herold|Herold, J. Christopher]], ''Bonaparte in Egypt'' – London, Hamish Hamilton, 1962. | ||
* Herold, J. Christopher, ''The Age of Napoleon''. New York, American Heritage, 1963. | * Herold, J. Christopher, ''The Age of Napoleon''. New York, American Heritage, 1963. | ||
| Line 167: | Line 128: | ||
[[Category:Conflicts in 1798]] | [[Category:Conflicts in 1798]] | ||
[[Category:1798 in Egypt]] | [[Category:1798 in Egypt]] | ||
[[Category:Battles commanded by Napoleon]] | [[Category:Battles commanded by Napoleon]] | ||
[[Category:Battles inscribed on the Arc de Triomphe]] | [[Category:Battles inscribed on the Arc de Triomphe]] | ||
Latest revision as of 08:23, 18 October 2025
Template:Short description Template:Use Oxford spelling Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Infobox military conflict".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
The Battle of the Pyramids (Template:Langx), also known as the Battle of Embabeh (Script error: No such module "Lang".), was fought on 21 July 1798 during the French invasion of Egypt, near the village of Imbaba, across the Nile from Cairo and was named by Napoleon Bonaparte after the distant Great Pyramid of Giza.
After capturing Alexandria and advancing toward Cairo, Napoleon’s army confronted Murad Bey’s Mamluk-led forces. The French deployed into large divisional squares that withstood repeated cavalry charges before storming the fortified village of Embabeh. French losses were reported at about 300, while estimates for Mamluk–Ottoman casualties vary widely, from several thousand to as many as 10,000. The defeat shattered Murad’s field army, forcing him to retreat to Upper Egypt.
The victory opened the way to Cairo, where Napoleon established a new administration, though local uprisings soon followed. It also marked the decline of Mamluk rule in Egypt. Its strategic impact was blunted when Admiral Nelson destroyed the French fleet at the Battle of the Nile ten days later. The battle has since been depicted in art and popular culture, often with historical inaccuracies.
Prelude
After landing in Ottoman-controlled Egypt and capturing Alexandria on 2 July 1798, the French army under General Bonaparte marched across the desert toward Cairo. Their objective was to break the power of the Mamluk beys who dominated Egypt and secure control of the capital before Ottoman reinforcements could arrive. Murad Bey and Ibrahim Bey, two Georgian Mamluks who commanded the country’s military forces, prepared to oppose the advance. Their army included elite, heavily armoured cavalry supported by fellahin militia serving as infantry.Template:Sfn
The French encountered the Mamluks about Script error: No such module "convert". from the Pyramids and Script error: No such module "convert". from Cairo.Template:Efn On 13 July, French scouts located Murad’s encampment near Shubra Khit. Bonaparte ordered an immediate advance, leading to the skirmish at Shubra Khit (also called Chobrakit). French artillery destroyed the Mamluk flagship on the Nile and forced a retreat, giving Bonaparte his first victory and demonstrating the effectiveness of concentrated firepower against cavalry charges.Template:Sfn
Battle
On 21 July, after marching all night, the French reached the vicinity of the village of Embabeh. After a short rest, Napoleon ordered his troops to form for battle. Each of the five divisions was organised into hollow rectangles with cavalry and baggage in the centre and cannon at the corners. He exhorted his men to remain steady when facing the Mamluk cavalry:Template:Sfn
<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
Soldiers! You came to this country to save the inhabitants from barbarism, to bring civilisation to the Orient and subtract this beautiful part of the world from the domination of England. From the top of those pyramids, forty centuries are contemplating you.
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The French advanced south in echelon, with the right flank leading and the left secured by the Nile. From right to left, the divisions were commanded by Louis Desaix, Jean-Louis-Ébénézer Reynier, Charles-François-Joseph Dugua, Honoré Vial, and Louis André Bon. Desaix also sent a detachment to occupy the nearby village of Biktil. Murad anchored his right on the Nile at Embabeh, which was fortified with infantry and artillery, and his left on Biktil with additional guns. His Mamluk cavalry deployed in the centre. Across the Nile, the army of Ibrahim Bey watched the battle unfold but was unable to cross and intervene. Murad’s plan was to hold the French on his fortified flanks and then strike their centre with cavalry. Repeated cavalry charges were directed against the French squares. One armoured rider advanced to within a few steps of the French lines and demanded a duel, but was shot down by musket fire.Template:Sfn
At about 15:30 Murad ordered his defterdar, Ayyub Bey, to lead a mass assault. The divisions of Desaix, Reynier, and Dugua held firm, repelling the horsemen with musketry and artillery. Some of the Mamluks then attempted to attack Desaix’s detached force, but without success.Template:Sfn
<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
The Column that moved forward to attack Murad Bey divided in a way known to them during wartimes, and they got closer to the barricades where they then surrounded all the soldiers, front and back, and they beat their drums and started to shoot their guns and cannons; the winds blew strong, and dust flew, and the skies darkened from the dust and gun smoke; people were deafened by the drum beats and people thought that the Earth had moved like a quake and that the skies had fallen; the war and the fighting continued for about three-quarters of an hour and then there was defeat on the Western Front.
Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
Near the river, Bon’s division deployed into attack columns and stormed Embabeh. The garrison broke, with many fleeing into the Nile where hundreds drowned. French reports listed 29 killed and 260 wounded. Murad’s losses were far heavier, with thousands killed or wounded, including Ayyub Bey and perhaps 3,000 of the elite Mamluk cavalry.Template:Sfn Murad himself was wounded in the cheek by a saber but escaped with several thousand cavalry to Upper Egypt, where he waged a guerrilla campaign before being defeated by Desaix in late 1799.Template:Sfn
Aftermath
Upon hearing news of the defeat of their legendary cavalry, the waiting Mamluk armies in Cairo dispersed to Syria. Bonaparte entered the conquered capital of Egypt on 24 July.Template:Sfn On 11 August French forces caught up with Ibrahim Bey and inflicted a crushing defeat at Salalieh.Template:Sfn After the Battle of the Pyramids, Napoleon instituted French administration in Cairo and suppressed subsequent rebellions with force. Although he tried to co-opt the local ulama, scholars such as Al-Jabarti poured scorn on the cultural claims of the French.Template:Sfn Despite official proclamations of goodwill, and instances of French soldiers converting to Islam to marry locally, clerics like Abdullah al-Sharqawi, who headed Napoleon’s Cairo divan,Template:Sfn later described the occupiers as “materialist, libertine philosophers … [who] deny the resurrection, and the afterlife, and … [the] prophets.”Template:Sfn For their part, French officials such as mathematician Joseph Fourier lamented that “the Muslim religion would on no account permit the development of the mind.”Template:Sfn The Battle of the Pyramids signalled the beginning of the end of seven centuries of Mamluk dominance in Egypt. Yet its strategic effect was short-lived: ten days later Admiral Horatio Nelson destroyed the French fleet at the Battle of the Nile, cutting Napoleon’s army off from France and curtailing his ambitions in the region.Template:Sfn
In literature and the arts
The battle has been a frequent subject in art. It was depicted by François-André Vincent in a preparatory sketch and painting,Template:Sfn and later by artists including Antoine-Jean Gros, Carle Vernet, and François-Louis-Joseph Watteau.Template:Sfn
In popular culture, the battle appears in Ridley Scott’s 2023 historical drama Napoleon. The film’s depiction has been criticised for historical inaccuracies, such as showing French troops firing on the pyramids.Template:Sfn
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See also
Notes
References
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Sources
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Further reading
- Herold, J. Christopher, Bonaparte in Egypt – London, Hamish Hamilton, 1962.
- Herold, J. Christopher, The Age of Napoleon. New York, American Heritage, 1963.
- Moorehead, Alan, The Blue Nile New York, Harper & Row, 1962.
External links
Template:Ottoman battles Template:Giza Template:Authority control