N & E
Napoléon & Empire

Date and place

  • July 21, 1798 (3 Thermidor Year VI) at Embabeh on the Giza plateau, near the three great pyramids of Giza, on the left bank of the Nile (nowadays in the metropolis of Cairo, Egypt).

Involved forces

  • French Army of the East (20,000 to 30,000 men according to sources) commanded by General Napoleon Bonaparte. 
  • 40,000 Egyptian-Turks, Janissaries and Mamluks under the command of Mourad Bey, on behalf of the Ottoman Empire. 

Casualties and losses

  • French army of the Orient: c. 40 dead, 300 wounded. 
  • Turkish army: 10,000 dead (including 7,000 Mamluks), 40 guns (according to Bonaparte). 

This major battle, during the French Invasion of Egypt, saw the French army under Napoleon Bonaparte win a decisive victory against the Egyptian army.

Overall situation

After disembarking near Alexandria, on July 1, 1798, Napoleon Bonaparte quickly took the city and then almost immediately set off for Cairo, the key city of Egypt, whose possession would give him control of the country. On the way, on the 14th, he inflicted on the Mamelukes a first defeat during the Chebreiss fight. The vanquished retreated to their capital, where they chose to wait for the invader and confront him with all their forces in a decisive battle.

Enemy’s positions

Mourad Bey had approximately 40,000 men, including 12,000 Mamelukes, 8,000 Arabian horsemen and an infantry of some 20,000 janissaries. Present at Chébreis where he saw his troops outclassed by the French, the Egyptian general this time overcame his contempt for the enemy and made serious preparations: the left bank of the Nile, where the enemy would be presenting, got fortified; the village of Embabeh, located between the river and the Pyramids of Gizeh and on which rested the right of his camp, got surrounded by a trench protected by 30 guns on fixed carriages. Thus transformed into a redoubt, the village was defended by his infantry; the cavalry covered the desert from there to the pyramids. Plus, a reserve, commanded by Ibrahim Bey, remained on the right bank, near Cairo.

The French, numbering about 30,000, arrived in sight of the enemy on July 21 at daybreak. Without being bewildered by the spectacle of "gigantic pyramids" gilded by the morning sun, maybe even without pronouncing the famous "Soldiers, from the top of these pyramids forty centuries you contemplate" Bonaparte arranged them in squares by division, a tactic used during the fight of Chebreis and which gave excellent results. The sides of these squares were six rows of depth at the front and at the back, three on the lateral sides; at the angles stood the artillery; the center welcomed luggage and generals. These formations enjoyed a great mobility and their configuration put them in a position to face an assault from whichever direction. They could also detach the first three rows of their front and rear faces in a leading column, the rest then serving the latter support or as a fallback position.

The fights

On the left were the divisions of Jacques de Menou de Boussay and Louis-André Bon; in the center the division of Charles-François-Joseph Dugua; on the right, those of Louis Charles Antoine Desaix and Jean-Louis-Ébénézer Reynier. They were ordered to open fire only at close range. Bonaparte advanced with the Dugua division. His observations having revealed to him that the cannons of Embabeh could not be moved and that the Mamluk cavalry was out of their reach, he decided to concentrate his first efforts on his side. Once it would be repulsed, he could cut the way of retreat of the enemy, turn on the redoubt Embabeh and destroy it.

Mourad Bey tried to rev him up by commanding his riders to charge before the squares had finished forming. He launched 8,000 Mamluks on the French right. Too late ! The Desaix division had just finished putting itself in position when it received the shock of the attackers. They were greeted by a destructive fire that threw mounts and riders to the ground. The attackers, however, showed such impetuosity that they barely failed to break the front of the French division. Their ranks broken, the Mamelukes continued for some time to sacrifice themselves unnecessarily in disordered and sterile loads then fell back on the left French wing where Bon and Menou were waiting for them. In doing so, they offered their backs to the blows of the Dugua division which put them in rout.

Witnessing this fiasco disturbed the defenders of Embabeh. Bonaparte noticed this and sent his left wing to take possession of the village. The two squares advanced then detached into two columns of attack, under the orders of Antoine-Guillaume Rampon and Louis Viesse de Marmont, who started assaulting the entrenchments. The Mamluks who were there, came out to meet them, but in while doing so encountered the "living citadels" formed by the two formations that immediately organized into squares, with remarkable composure. Riders charged three times before becoming aware of the futility of their efforts. They hesitated for a moment then turned around and escaped.

The Embabeh garrison then attempted to escape and to join Mourad Bey. Doing so, it offered her flank to the French infantry who shot it. Panic settled in the Ottoman ranks and this was the final defeat. Mourad Bey, himself wounded, withdrew towards the south with the remaining 3,000 horsemen. Ibrahim, who cautiously kept himself safe from the river during the battle, collected the fugitives who had crossed the Nile swimming and then took the road to Syria.

Gizeh : the pyramids

The aftermath of the battle

Egypt was conquered. The French army had left less than 400 combatants on the ground counting killed and wounded; enemy losses may have reach or even exceed the tens of thousands (the sources are extremely divergent).

Bonaparte advanced his troops to Giza and set up his headquarters in Mourad Bey palace.

Picture - "The Battle of the Pyramids". Painted 1806 by Louis François Lejeune.

Napoleonic Battles - Picture of the battle of the Pyramids (Battle of Embabeh) -

It is Bonaparte himself who chose to give this fight the name of Battle of the Pyramids. This name seemed to him more prestigious than those of Battle of Cairo, or Embabeh, geographically more relevant, for which he could have also opted.

Photos Credits

 Photo of Lionel A. Bouchon Photos by Lionel A. Bouchon.
 Photo of Marie-Albe Grau Photos by Marie-Albe Grau.
 Photo of Floriane Grau Photos by Floriane Grau.
 Photo of Michèle Grau-Ghelardi Photos by Michèle Grau-Ghelardi.
 Photo of Didier Grau Photos by Didier Grau.
 Photo of various authors Photos made by people outside the Napoleon & Empire association.

Video credits