PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Fall of Baghdad (1917)
rdfs:comment
  • After the surrender of the Kut garrison on 29 April 1916, the British Army in Mesopotamia underwent a major overhaul. A new commander, Lieutenant General Sir Frederick Stanley Maude was given the job of restoring Britain's military reputation. General Maude spent the rest of 1916 rebuilding his army. Most of his troops were recruited in India and then sent by sea to Basra. While these troops were being trained, British military engineers built a field railway from the coast up to Basra and beyond. General Maude also obtained a small force of armed river boats and river supply ships.
owl:sameAs
Strength
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Partof
  • Mesopotamian Campaign of Middle Eastern theatre
Date
  • --03-08
Commander
  • Khalil Pasha
  • Sir Frederick Stanley Maude
Caption
  • --03-11
Casualties
  • Over 9,000 taken prisoner
  • Unknown, but small
Result
  • British victory.
combatant
  • Ottoman Empire
  • British India
Place
  • Diyala River, just below Baghdad, Mesopotamia
Conflict
  • Fall of Baghdad
abstract
  • After the surrender of the Kut garrison on 29 April 1916, the British Army in Mesopotamia underwent a major overhaul. A new commander, Lieutenant General Sir Frederick Stanley Maude was given the job of restoring Britain's military reputation. General Maude spent the rest of 1916 rebuilding his army. Most of his troops were recruited in India and then sent by sea to Basra. While these troops were being trained, British military engineers built a field railway from the coast up to Basra and beyond. General Maude also obtained a small force of armed river boats and river supply ships. The British launched their new campaign on 13 December 1916. The British had some 50,000 well-trained and well-equipped troops: mostly British India troops of the Indian Expeditionary Force D together with the 13th (Western) Division of the British Army forming the Mesopotamia Expeditionary Force. The Indian divisions of the Indian III Corps (also called the Tigris Corps) included British Army units. The Ottoman forces were smaller, perhaps around 25,000 strong under the overall command of Khalil Pasha.
is Battles of