Adanze Ayeni, When The Elephants Fight: The Great War in Africa (Abayomi; 1997)
While the campaigns of Sundaland and the Pacific Ocean turned many public heads in Europe and the Americas, it was Africa that truly formed much of our modern view of the Great War in the colonies. Far from the depressive and hellish tribulations of Europe, the African theatre was a campaign of empires under the blazing sun and savannah, fought across exotic jungles and waterways of imaginative (and exaggerated) nature. Instead of the drudgery and cynicism of political leadership back home, the African front – or rather, front
s – were accompanied with extraordinary tales of native kingdoms fighting for a side, or even for a right to just exist. While this view is somewhat accurate to an extent, it also glosses over the complexity of the ground situations that were faced by the combatants themselves…
…The first colony to fall weren’t those of North Africa or near the Ethiopian borderlands, but a tiny sliver of British-ruled territory surrounded by a voluminous chunk of French West Africa: the Gambia Colony. Comprised of nothing more but the banks of the Gambia River, the local garrison lasted less than 72 hours after the British declaration of war. Sierra Leone was next, but the invading
Armée Coloniale found the colony a tougher nut to crack as British authorities began smuggling goods and supplies from the neighbouring (and neutral) state of Liberia, helping Freetown to withstand its long siege. The Royal Navy’s prioritisation of West Africa also lent support in the form of armed convoys battling the French navy to relieve Sierra Leone and the Gold Coast, which also suffered from a besieged capital and an unruly hinterland.
The Horn of Africa also witnessed some early skirmishes for the French-led colonial force as British Somaliland came under attack from both its French and Italian namesakes. While the territory fell just as quickly, the presence of both the British and Ottoman navies on Suez and the Red Sea meant that the Somaliland coast was never fully pacified, and the nearby colonies of Aden and Oman halted any notion of a complete Franco-Italian sea. In fact, an attempted naval takeover of Perim and the Majerteen Sultanate in mid-August was repulsed barely a week later by a combined Anglo-Ottoman force with (distant) Indian support, securing the strategic capital of Alula and the naval bases there.
In short, what promised to be a quick colonial war devolved into tit-for-tat attacks from the Suez Canal to the Gulf of Aden which lasted for a large portion of 1905. Stymied on land and sea, both sides began to play-off the local Somali and Yemeni clans to fight one another or to switch sides, dangling the prospect of advancement and better treatment for their peoples once they’ve won...
…North Africa, given its proximity to Europe proper, received some of the more notable fighting. Ottoman Tunisia was particularly favoured by both France and Italy, with the latter having long-shelved plans for the region for the past two decades
[1]. Hoping to pre-empt the inevitable, orders were quickly given from Kostantiniyye for Tunisia’s troops to invade the local French and Italian-held seaports. Instead, this only brought the wrath of the two nations on the African Vilayets; Tunis quickly fell to a combined Franco-Italian assault while divisions of
askaris,
tirailleurs, and the French Foreign Legion plowed through the Vilayet of Tripolitania. Further west, the war breathed fresh attention to the ongoing Trans-Sahara railroad project as engineers raced to complete a now-strategic military route from Algiers to Timbuktu. Protecting this endeavour were companies of
Méharistes (French camel cavalry), whom streamed out into the vast wastelands of Ottoman Fezzan, aiming for Egypt and to link up with another colonial division that moved northwards from the French Congo.
Image of a French company receiving the surrender of a Bornu troop commander (left) and french soliders disembarking near British Gambia (right), circa 1905.
But here, too, rose resistance. The central and eastern Sahara have long been a bulwark of the Senussi order, a Sufi fraternity that controlled the mountains and oases of the vast expanse. The religious brotherhood have long been held in contempt by the Ottomans and their doctrines are considered somewhat wayward, but the advance of French forces did a lot to bridge the divide. The Algerian camel cavalries found itself attacked by Senussi and Toubou guerrillas as they reached the Tibesti Mountains, leading to costly operations of taking disparate oases and defending them against outside attacks, all in the midst of avoiding hit-and-run raids accentuated by the harsh and craggy terrain.
Similarly, the Sahelian states of Ouaddai and Kanem-Bornu saw the advancing French as a sure sign of peril and threw themselves into the fight, if not for the Ottomans than for themselves and the entrenched Senussi fraternity. The ruler of Ouaddai,
kolak Muhammad Salih, was a prominent Senussi member himself and rallied his state to fight the new threat that would surely trample the Sahel, diverting resources and weaponry that was previously used against the Dervishes (mostly in the form of incursions). But while the Saharan frontier was manageable, the French forces coming from the Congo were much better armed and prepared, and though both states managed to slow the advance considerably, they couldn’t stop it. By December, parts of Bornu and southern Ouaddai had fallen and both states seemed to be on the edge of collapse…
…Many have noted how the Royal Navy could have turned the tables earlier if it weren’t for Madagascar, and they were correct. The island formed a solid base for French forces in the Indian Ocean and checked the Royal Navy from going past the Cape Colony, as well as allowing the French to use
Jeune Ecole tactics to harass British Zanzibar. From shipping raids to surprise attacks, the British navy found itself massively overstretched across the African east coast as it tried to protect the commerce routes stretching to and from India and the Red Sea. Given the exporting nature of the Cape Colony and her neighbours, these actions provoked nothing less than outrage and alarum as the local economy floundered, and it wasn’t long before an expeditionary force was quickly hashed out from Cape Town.
However, the settler-comprised September Expedition would become an unambiguous catastrophe. Surrounded by French cutters and hampered by undersea banks, the attempted landing at Toliara become a bloodbath with over 7,000 South Africans dead and nearly 5,000 wounded before the force staged an ignominious retreat. So profound was the defeat that it would effectively kick-start the region’s political maturation, yet before the Cape Colony and her neighbours could cobble another white-led force, the cyclone season struck. Stretching from October to April, the choppy seas and rough weather forced both sides to hunker down and lull the fighting as a default, yet many knew that the bloodshed will resume once the southern summer ends…
Muhammad Yahaya bin Mahmud, Sokoto: Our History, (MPH Asa: 2016)
…Of all the conflict theatres, the Sokoto Caliphate formed the most surprising battlefront of 1905. Already under pressure from European ambitions, the empire’s emirates were alarmed by the onset of world war which would undoubtedly turn the caliphate into a massive stomping ground by their British and French neighbours, regardless of local protests. But being more numerous and populated than the Sahelian states, and possessing invaluable manpower that could be trained and directed, the French and British decided on a more devious tactic for Sokoto: getting the caliphate’s emirates to fight for them.
And indeed, the summer of 1905 was filled with foreign emissaries shunting to and from the capital and the surrounding polities, imploring them to fight for their side and offering sweet incentives for involvement. Both France and Britain offered acknowledgment of the caliphate’s independence, as well as preferential trade deals and an infusion of cash to facilitate internal development. Sokotan laws shall be upheld and there were even proposals to relax certain measures on anti-slavery, which had become a sore spot for the empire. Unsurprisingly, Sokoto’s many emirates bickered long and hard over the merits of involving themselves over the matter, with several even undergoing localised civil wars as prospective heirs fought for a right to involve themselves in the diplomatic squabble.
It was one such local conflict that finally tipped the pot. The emirate of Gwandu had always maintained an arm’s length of distance with the main metropole, with its emirs possessing a rather independent streak and being suzerain of several (smaller) emirates of its own. However, the preceding decade was unkind to Gwandu as French forces began peeling off polity after polity from under the state’s oversight. Now, France is offering to return them back and give a recognition of independence if Gwandu turns against Sokoto and fight the British down south. Highly controversial, the offer would lead the state to a month of turmoil as the emir’s family fought for their say, with a pro-French prince finally winning in mid-September.
This turnabout shocked Sokoto. That one of her emirates could break off is one thing, but to turn traitor and side with a colonial power to stomp on the caliphate? That was outrageous. It was this that precipitated the British intervention that halted a Franco-Gwandu force outside Sokoto’s very capital, leading to sultan Muhammadu Attahiru plunging the empire to war on the British side. Still, the following months saw massive casualties on its part as the caliphate’s emirates struggled to defend its borders against the
Armée coloniale, with probing attacks from the north and west costing precious armaments and thousands of lives. Despite being a military recipient of the Ottomans, the empire’s modern weapons were in desperate supply and whatever that was given from the British south was barely enough to maintain defensive positions.
But as the Royal Navy braved the dangerous Atlantic to offer fresh aid, and as British forces cut through French Dahomey to prevent a new front from arising against Lagos, and with Beninese runners carrying food and weapons up the Niger in record time, the caliphate held its ground. And in December, the first victory was tasted as Anglo-Sokotan forces stormed the northern French-toppled town of Zinder, which would be later added as the caliphate’s newest emirate…
Petru Nuñez, A History of Pacific Wars; The Great War, SW Cornellia: 1989)
…When news of the war declarations reached New Caledonia, it was met with shock and bafflement. Compared with the rising tensions over at Sundaland, life in the Pacific showed little of heightened tensions, save for the clunky and ever-quarrelsome neighbours that were Australia and… whatever was the New Hebrides. But even then, there was nothing that could ever merit a full-blown war.
And for weeks afterwards, it seemed the island would remain at peace. But that all changed with the arrival of the French and Italian gunships in early August. While the bulk of the belligerent navies roamed in the Atlantic, Mediterranean, and Sundaland theatres, a few managed to steam through to engage the British colonies in the vast southern ocean. Operating from Noumea, they would scour the surrounding straits and seas for British shipping, requisitioning their cargo before commandeering the vessels from the interned crews. The New Hebrides became a particular target, with the island chain quickly falling in a matter of days. In a twist, much of the British planter class was comparatively left alone, albeit after they swore allegiance to the new French administration – the threat of property confiscation was good enough an incentive to toe the new line.
This set the tone for much of the Great War’s Pacific theatre: speedy gunships raiding commercial vessels while claiming atolls and islands for the major alliances stuck in Europe. From the Solomon Islands to the shores off Hawaii, the British and French navies would try to bring each other to heel through cargo grabs and fast bombardments, nabbing whatever ports and facilities that were not under neutral protection to advance further. As colonial fronts went, this was the most annoying of them all, as the vast archipelagos of the equally cast Pacific rendered conventional sea battles into a game of cat-and-mouse hunts with accompanying hit-and-run attacks. Many cargo ships tried to form convoys to protect themselves, though such actions only served to slow them down and thus expose themselves to the warring belligerents.
For Australia and New Zealand, the arrival of the Great War to their front doors brought immediate anger. But with the newly formed Australian navy bearing so few gunships, the dangerous presence of Italian Papua, and the ongoing situation in the Indian Ocean, there wasn’t much room for anything to be done by the Australian parliament
[2]. In the end, it fell on Wellington to deal with New Caledonia with its own paltry fleet of ships against Franco-Italian firepower. Unsurprisingly, the latter remained triumphant throughout the southern winter.
The rest of the British and French Pacific territories remained in a state of flux, with some island chains changing status over a number of times. The Ellice Islands swapped hands at least twice in 1905, while any ships traversing from Fiji became subject to commerce raids. Further east, the Cook Islands effectively became an administrative part of French Polynesia, along with the Pitcairns. As with the New Hebrides, local British residents were encouraged to swear allegiance to the new administrators lest they suffer punishment, yet local life for the most part remained unchanged.
But amidst all this, New Zealand tried again. In November 3rd, a takeover of Fiji’s largest island, Suva, by the French navy was only repelled due to another expeditionary force embarking from Auckland, just before the cyclone season. As with southern Africa, the choppy seas and stormy weather halted the war temporarily on both sides, yet the arriving forces did not stay idle. A new strategy was planned between the dominions in which Fiji would become the new hub for British operations in the Pacific Ocean, a counterweight that could bring the attack to both New Caledonia and French Polynesia.
As the southern hemisphere welcomed the arrival of 1906, it was clear that the game of cat-and-mouse would continue on the Pacific azure…
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Notes:
Apologies for being late! The Africa part of this update took some time to put together, and it was hard to write a piece that wasn’t too complicated or too simple to understand. Even now, I feel like there were several potentially important places that were ignored for the sake of brevity (Benin and Egypt, just to name a few), which I’ll try to rectify in future updates. Same goes for the French-governed kingdom of Tahiti, as well.
[1] See post
#710.
[2] For more information, see the notes on post
#1434.