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Revision as of 06:20, 11 April 2012


Capture of Damascus (1918)
Part of Final Campaign
Date26 September to 1 October 1918
LocationAdvance from Tiberias and Deraa to Damascus
Result British Empire victory
Belligerents

 British Empire
 British India
 Australia
 New Zealand
Indian Princely states

 Arab Revolt
 France
 Ottoman Empire
 German Empire
Commanders and leaders
United Kingdom Edmund Allenby
Australia Henry Chauvel
German Empire Liman von Sanders
Ottoman Empire Mustafa Kemal Atatürk
Ottoman Empire Jevad Pasha
German Empire Oberst von Oppen
Units involved
Desert Mounted Corps Fourth Army
Seventh Army
Eighth Army
Asia Corps
Sinai and Palestine Campaign
Sinai
Southern Palestine
Judean Hills
Transjordan
Northern Palestine
Syria
Arab Revolt

Arab Revolt

World War I
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European
Middle Eastern
African
Asian and Pacific
Naval warfare
Principal
participants
Entente Powers
Central Powers
Timeline
Pre-War conflicts
Prelude
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
Co-belligerent conflicts
Post-War conflicts
Aspects
Warfare
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Casualties /
Civilian impact
Disease
Occupations
POWs
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Declarations of war
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Other

The Capture of Damascus occurred on 1 October 1918.

Background

On 24 September, Allenby received a communication from Sir Henry Wilson (CIGS):

Your success being so complete, I should like you to consider the possibility of a cavalry raid on ALEPPO, to be supported by infantry or not as the situation developed and as opportunities offered.

The War Cabinet was prepared to take full responsibility for any "risks involved," but Allenby hesitated as Aleppo was about 300 miles (480 km) from Nazareth and informed Wilson that such a raid did not seem feasible unless supported by large–scale military and naval operations at Alexandretta. Allenby envisaged his next advance would be to the Damascus–Beirut line.

Populations living on the battlefields

At the time the peoples of the area varied greatly in their background, religious beliefs and political outlook. North of these in the Southern Lebanon, four varieties of Christians; the Maronite, Greek Uniats, Greek and Syrian Orthodox (Jacobite) lived alongside many Protestants, Druses and Metawala. Living in the Southern Bukaa and on the western slope of Mount Hermon, were more Druses, while in the Bukaa, Metawala and Syrian Orthodox Christians lived. In the Northern Lebanon, besides the same sects of Christians as in the south, more Metawala and an exclusive set of Shiahs, the Ismailiyah lived. In the Eastern Hauran, the bulk of the Druses lived while in Jaulan, more Circassians, Metawala and some Algerian colonists lived. North of Damascus many Syrian Christians and to both the north and the south, some Metawola, while east of all these peoples, the Bedouin Arab lived.

Capture of Dera'a 27 September (by Hedjaz Arab forces)

Citations

  1. Wilson to Allenby received 24 September 1918 in Woodward p. 203
  2. Wilson to Allenby, received 24 September and Allenby to Wilson, 25 September 1918 in Woodward pp. 203–4
  3. Handbook 9/4/18 p. 61

References

  • Great Britain, Army, Egyptian Expeditionary Force (1918). Handbook on Northern Palestine and Southern Syria (1st provisional 9 April ed.). Cairo: Government Press. OCLC 23101324.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Woodward, David R. (2006). Hell in the Holy Land World War I in the Middle East. Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0-8131-2383-7.

External links

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