Today
 is Cinco de Mayo, a holiday more widely celebrated in the United States
 as an excuse to drink Mexican beer, than it is in Mexico, where it's 
mostly confined to the state of Puebla. (I can't partake this year as I'm having surgery later this week and must avoid alcohol.)
It commemorates a Mexican 
victory over the French in 1862. The French, however, came back stronger
 and eventually installed the Emperor Maximilian. And that gives me an 
excuse to bring up once again the little-known subject of my 2012 post: "A Sudanese-Egyptian Battalion in Maximilian's Mexico." 
I repeat the original post here:

 The caption on the illustration of military uniforms above, left, 
though it may be difficult to read, says "Egyptian Battalion in Mexico 
1863-1867." This has to be one of the more curious expeditions in the 
history of European colonialism.
The strange French 
adventure in Mexico during the American Civil War, in which Louis 
Napoleon installed a Hapsburg Prince, Maximilian, as Emperor of Mexico, 
is a strange interlude, one that ended badly for Maximilian (in the 
firing squad sense of "badly"). Benito Juarez and Mexican 
Revolutionaries on the one hand, and the United States on the other 
(which, once the Civil War ended, decided to enforce the Monroe Doctrine
 and get rid of a European Emperor in Mexico) spelled the end of the 
strange adventure. But if a Hapsburg Emperor of Mexico installed by a 
Bonaparte wasn't strange enough, part of Maximilian's Army was a 
battalion of Egyptian troops (mostly Sudanese enlisted men with Egyptian
 officers), the bright idea of someone who thought Sudanese troops would
 be more easily acclimated to the Mexican heat than Frenchmen.
|  | 
| Said Pasha, Wali of Egypt 1854-1863 | 
The Egyptian Wali Said Pasha agreed to provide an 
"Auxiliary Battalion" of 447 men in four companies. They sailed from 
Alexandria on January 9, 1863, aboard the troopship 
Seine. Said 
Pasha died nine days later, succeeded as Wali by his nephew Ismail. (The
 title Khedive, though in popular use, was not officially recognized by 
the Ottoman Sultan until 1867.)
|  | 
| Arrival in Veracruz | 
The expedition suffered severely from disease en 
route: a typhus outbreak aboard ship, a yellow fever outbreak after 
arrival in Veracruz, that killed the commanding officer, and other bouts
 with dysentery and pulmonary diseases. The force did see action against
 the 
Juaristas, and their French commander is said to have 
remarked that they fought like lions. The French used some Algerian 
troops as translators.
|  | 
| The Egyptian Battalion Arrives in Paris | 
In 1867, the 326 survivors of the Egyptian battalion 
sailed from Mexico after the fall of Maximilian. Louis Napoleon reviewed
 them in Paris before their return to Egypt.  Accounts of the Egyptian 
battalion 
here and 
here; a 
contemporary New York Times report here.
 
1 comment:
Best wishes for a successful operation.
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