Fall of Tlemcen (1518)
| Fall of Tlemcen | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of Spanish–Ottoman wars | |||||||||
| |||||||||
| Belligerents | |||||||||
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Regency of Algiers Kingdom of Kuku[1] |
Kingdom of Spain Kingdom of Tlemcen | ||||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||||
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Oruç Reis † Ahmed el Kadi[1] |
Don Martin d'Argote Abu Hammou | ||||||||
| Strength | |||||||||
| 6,500 soldiers | 10,000 soldiers | ||||||||
The fall of Tlemcen occurred in 1518, when the Ottoman admiral Oruç Barbarossa captured the city of Tlemcen from its sultan, Abu Zayan, the last member of the Banu Zayan lineage.[2]
The fall of Tlemcen followed the capture of Ténès, also by Oruç and his brother, Hayreddin.[2] The Sultan of Tlemcen then fled to Fez in Morocco.[2] Oruç crowned himself king of Tlemcen.[2] The only survivor of Abu Zayan's dynasty was Sheikh Buhammud, who escaped to Oran and called for Spain's assistance.
This victory put Oruç in control of the backcountry behind the Spanish base of Oran, which greatly threatened their usual supply routes.[2] This victory put Oruç in control of a considerable territory, the size of colonial French Algeria.[3]
The Spanish, however, soon reacted in 1518 by launching an attack under the governor Martín d'Argote against Tlemcen, which was 70 miles (110 km) away from Oran, and managed to corner and kill Oruç. They took possession of the region of Tlemcen.[2] According to the diary of Hayreddin Barbarossa, Oruç died as a result of his sympathy for the inhabitants of Algiers and Tlemcen who formed part of his army.[4] Hayreddin declared that Oruç returned to fight with his soldiers until he died, as he could not bear to hear the cries of those who had fallen into the hands of the Spanish forces.[4] Oruç Barbarossa died at age 45 probably near Oujda.[5]
The Spanish continued their offensive stance in the following year with an expedition in 1519 against Algiers led by Hugo de Moncada, however Hayreddin Barbarossa with an army composed of 20,000 Algerians and 800 Turks was able to rout the invading forces.[6]
References
- ^ a b Benoudjit, Youssef (1997). La Kalaa des Béni Abbès au XVIe siècle. Algeria: Dahlab. p. 179.
- ^ a b c d e f "The town of Tenes fell into the hands of the brothers, with an immense booty, and then Uruj marched on Tlemcen. The Sultan of Tlemcen, the last of the royal race of the Banu Zayan, did not await the coming of the corsair." in Sea-Wolves of the Mediterranean by E. Hamilton Currey p. 72ff
- ^ "With the fall of Tlemcen Uruj became master of a territory as large as the modern French colony of Algeria, and his exploits made many of the rulers about the Mediterranean quake in their shoes." in The book of pirates Henry Gilbert, 207-208
- ^ a b Alenezi, Meshal (2022). "The Spanish Campaigns against the Kingdom of Tlemcen's Cities and the Resistance Movements from 1516 to 1530" (PDF). International Journal of Euro-Mediterranean Studies 15, no. 1. 15 (1): 96.
- ^ Boyer, P. (1989). "Aruj". Encyclopédie berbère. 6.
- ^ Touati, Houari (2010). ""Ottoman Maghrib." Chapter 18.". The New Cambridge History of Islam. Cambridge University Press. p. 508. ISBN 9781139056151.