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European conquest (1798-1802)
The armies of Napoleon crushed the
Mamlukes at Imbaba and occupied Cairo. Napoleon's aim was to block British
trade routes to India and to establish a Franco phonic society in Egypt. He
imposed a French administrative system and implemented public works projects to
clean up and renovate the long-neglected country, clearing blocked canals,
cleaning the streets and building bridges. Napoleon claimed to have respect for
Islam and the Qur'an but the Egyptians did not believe him.
For all his attempts at
"civilizing" the country, Napoleon failed to win the respect or
allegiance of his subjects. His quixotic mission was doomed from the outset.
Within a month of entering Egypt the British, under Admiral Nelson, attacked
and destroyed the French fleet moored at Abu Qir Bay in Alexandria and the
Ottoman sultan threatened war against the French. Napoleon returned to France,
leaving his armies behind. But his commander, General Kléber, was assassinated,
leaving the army to General Menou, who claimed to have converted to Islam and
declared Egypt, a French protectorate. At this, the British occupied Alexandria
and with the Ottomans captured Damietta and Cairo, forcing the French to
surrender.
The Napoleonic invasion of Egypt had
profound repercussions for the Arab and Muslim world, which continue to
influence the region's political and social development. This was the first
European conquest of a major Arab country in the history of Islam and it
signaled the rapid decline of Islam as a world political power. Although it
could be said that the Ottoman Empire was by this time already a spent force,
the humiliation of Napoleon's entry into Egypt was a devastating blow to
pan-Islamic pride. It has been said that contemporary Muslim fundamentalism
traces its psychological origins to this initial shattering defeat.
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