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Siege of Melilla
Part of the Hispano-Moroccan wars and Spanish-Barbary Wars
File:Melilla 1774.jpg
Engraving of the siege, 1774
Date9 December 1774 – 19 March 1775
LocationMelilla, Peñón de Vélez de la Gomera
Result

Treaty of Aranjuez (1780)

  • Spain ceded territories to Morocco[citation needed]
  • Morocco recognised Spanish rule over Melilla and Vélez de la Gomera
Belligerents
Spain Kingdom of Spain
Supported by:
Ottoman Flag Ottoman Empire
Flag of Morocco 1666 1915 Sultanate of Morocco
Supported by:
Union flag 1606 (Kings Colors) Kingdom of Great Britain
Commanders and leaders
Spain Juan Sherlocke
Spain Florencio Moreno
Flag of Morocco (1666–1915) Mohammed III
Flag of Morocco (1666–1915) Tahar Fenis
Strength
Spain 5,000[1] Flag of Morocco (1666–1915) 30,000–40,000[1]
Casualties and losses
600 killed or wounded[1] Unknown


The Siege of Melilla was an attempt by the Sultanate of Morocco, supported by Great Britain and Algerian mercenaries,[2] to capture the Spanish fortress of Melilla on the Moroccan Mediterranean coast. Mohammed ben Abdallah, then Sultan of Morocco, invested Melilla in December 1774 with a large army of Royal Moroccan soldiers and Algerian mercenaries. The city was defended by a small garrison under Irish-born Governor Don Juan Sherlocke until the siege was lifted by a relief fleet in March 1775.

Background[]

In 1773, the sultan Mohammed III sent the artillery commander Sidi Tahar Fenis as ambassador to Great Britain to acquire military equipment.[3]

Melilla 1752

Melilla in 1752

On September 19, 1774 he sent a letter to Carlos III with this matter, saying that peace between them could only be by sea. Therefore, Carlos III declared war on the sultanate on 23 October 1774.[3]

Then the governor of Melilla was José Carrión de Andrade. In the city, there was a scarce garrison, which consisted of the fixed regiment of Melilla, with the companies commanded by the captains Antonio Manso and Vicente de Alva, and detachments for the handling of the old iron artillery pieces.[4]

Between September and October 1774, a commission made up of the field marshal Luis Urbina Caneja, the engineer Luis Caballero (who was later during the siege) and the engineer commander Luis Ailmen, was in Melilla to prepare a report on defensive improvements in the square.[5]

Carlos III ordered to reinforce the defenses of Ceuta and Oran, due to a possible Ottoman attack. At the end of November, the Spanish learned that the sultan had planned to conquer Melilla.[3]

To reinforce the defense, Carlos III sent Juan Sherlock to Melilla as commander and reinforced the garrison.[3]

Siege[]

With the promise of British subsidies[6] and material aid for a war against Spain, Mohammed ben Abdallah assembled an army of 30,000 to 40,000 men and powerful artillery in 1774 and began a bombardment of Melilla.[1]

Plaza de Melilla, 1774-1775

The Plaza of Melilla during the siege

Juan Sherlock sent the mariner Juan Trinquini to Malaga to request reinforcements from Andalusia. On 11 December, a French ship arrived in Melilla with reinforcements from the peninsula. The ship left the city on 16 December with part of the civilian population.[3] For defense, 117 new guns and mortars were installed.[7] Tomás de Find, Carlos III's major artilleryman, took charge of the maintenance of the artillery. Two Spanish squads, commanded by Antonio Barceló and José Hidalgo de Cisneros, blocked the Strait of Gibraltar to prevent Great Britain from supplying weapons and ammunition to the Muslim troops. A small garrison under Florencio Moreno likewise resisted the Sultan's army at Peñón de Vélez de la Gomera.[7]

In 1775, a British convoy carrying war material en route to Melilla was intercepted and captured by the Spanish Navy and Spanish sail approached the beleaguered city; at the same time the Turks of the Ottoman Empire began to encroach on Morocco's eastern borders.[1]

Spanish troops resisted the attack over a period of 100 days, over which time some 12,000 projectiles were lobbed onto the city.[1] Sherlocke began to break the siege, a situation exacerbated by the desertion of ben Abdallah's Algerians. The siege ended on 19 March.

Aftermath[]

There was a meeting between Juan Sherlock and the diplomat Hamed al-Gazel, where he told him that the sultan wanted to maintain friendly relations and resume trade under more advantageous conditions than in the previous treaty. On 20 December 1777, Morocco recognised the United States as an independent nation. With the Peace of Aranjuez in 1780, Spain ceded territories to Morocco, however in return Morocco recognized Spanish rule of Melilla[citation needed] .

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Rezette, p. 42
  2. Rezette 1976, pp. 42–47
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Fernández 2017, p. 1.
  4. Domínguez 1993, p. 140-144.
  5. Domínguez 1993, p. 144-145.
  6. Rezette 1976, pp. 42–44
  7. 7.0 7.1 Domínguz 1993, p. 144-148.

Bibliography[]

Coordinates: 35°18′N 2°57′W / 35.3°N 2.95°W / 35.3; -2.95

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