Battle of Kumkale
{{Infobox military conflict
| conflict = Landing at Kumkale
| campaign = Gallipoli
| image = Orographical map of the Dardanelles reduced from captured Turkish maps.jpg
| image_size = 300
| caption = Kum Kale at bottom left: Orographical map of the Dardanelles reduced from captured Ottoman maps
| partof = the Gallipoli Campaign
| date = 25 April 1915
| place = Kumkale, Çanakkale, Ottoman Empire
| coordinates = {{Coord|39|58|50|N|26|14|13|E|display=INLINE,title}}
| map_type = Turkey
| map_size = 200
| map_caption = Map of modern Turkey showing Kum Kale
| map_label = Kum Kale
| result = Ottoman victory
| combatant1 = {{flagicon|France}} France
| combatant2 = {{flag|Ottoman Empire}}
| commander1 = Colonel Ruef
| commander2 = Lieutenant Colonel Nurettin Bey
| strength1 = 1 regiment and one battalion
| strength2 = 1 regiment
| casualties1 = 786 casualties
| casualties2 = 1,735 casualties
| campaignbox = {{Campaignbox Gallipoli}}
}}
The Battle of Kumkale was a World War I battle fought between Ottoman and French forces. It was a part of the Gallipoli Campaign fought on the Anatolian (Asian) part of the Dardanelles Strait as a diversion from the main landings on the Gallipoli peninsula (European side of the strait). Kumkale is the name of a village which now is a part of Troy national park.
Prelude
=Ottoman preparations=
The Ottoman side was aware of the landing plans and the landing force which was waiting in the island of Lemnos. A new Ottoman army (5th Army) was established. The German general Liman von Sanders, the military advisor of the Ottoman headquarters (later the commander of the 5th Army) determined that the main landing would be made in the Anatolian side as well as in Bolayır, a narrow isthmus in the European side. So most of the 5th Army troops were situated in Anatolian side and in Bolayır. Although Mustafa Kemal, then the commander of the 19th Division saw the Gallipoli peninsula in the European side as the main landing area, he couldn't persuade the headquarters. Thus three Ottoman divisions of the 5th Army (3, 5 and 11) were situated in the Anatolian side of the strait.
=Allied preparations=
General Ian Hamilton, the commander of the Allied landing forces decided to land in two points, both in Gelibolu peninsula. But he also decided to make lesser landings in two places just as von Sanders anticipated. The purpose of these two lesser landings was to deceive the Ottoman side and delay any support to the Ottoman forces in the main landing sites. Another purpose of the Anatolian side campaign was to prevent the Ottoman Anatolian artillery to bombard the Allied troops in the Landing at Cape Helles (Seddülbahir) in Gelibolu peninsula. Hamilton commissioned the French troops for this task. However, there was disagreement about the exact location of the landing site. Albert d'Amade, commander of the French forces proposed a larger scale operation with landing in Edremit, situated far to the south. Hamilton however insisted on a landing closer to the strait. The commander of the landing forces was Colonel Ruef.{{sfn|Mütercimler|2005|pp=271–278}} He had the three battalions of the 6th Mixed Colonial Regiment (from the Corps expéditionnaire d'Orient) as well as a battalion and auxiliary units under his command. The naval forces which supported this regiment consisted of 3 cruisers and 9 destroyers. While HMS Prince George was tasked to bomb the artilleries at the Anatolian side of the strait, the French battleships supported the landing.
Battle
=Landing at Kumtepe=
File:Naval landing party coming to Kum Kaleh (Dardanelles) LOC 7656199902.jpg
The naval bombardment began at 5.15 on 25 April 1915 by the French battleships Jauréguiberry and Henri IV, the French armoured cruiser Jeanne d’Arc and the Russian cruiser Askold. The target of the bombardment was the village of Kumkale at {{coord|39|59|N|26|11|E}}.[http://www.haritatr.com/harita/Kumkale/11072 Kumkale map] Kumkale is situated at the southern end of the Anatolian side of the strait. At 10.00 the first French troops (10th and 11th Senegalese companies) landed at Kumkale. In Kumkale there was only one Ottoman platoon.{{Cite web |url=http://canakkale2015.gov.tr/tr/100-yil-interaktif-harita/1915/kara-savaslari/kumkale |title=Military history page |language=tr |access-date=22 January 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151117095956/http://www.canakkale2015.gov.tr/tr/100-yil-interaktif-harita/1915/kara-savaslari/kumkale |archive-date=17 November 2015 |url-status=dead }} Towards the night the French regiment formed a bridgehead at Kumkale.
=Clashes in Kumkale=
Because of Beşige bombardment (see below), and fear of another landing in Beşige, another possible landing site to the south, most of the 11th Ottoman division was unable to deploy in Kumkale. But Lieutenant Colonel Nurettin Bey, the commander of the 39th Ottoman regiment, counterattacked two times during the night, which resulted in failure, mostly due to friendly fire. Towards the morning, 39th regiment finally defeated the French forces. The French side sued for surrender. However, during negotiations, which were hampered by the language barrier, the sun rose and the navy opened fire, resulting in heavy casualties on the Ottoman side. The Ottoman regiment withdrew to reorganise. On the other hand, after the French withdrawal from Beşige, 11th division also prepared to attack. Hamilton ordered retreat from Anatolian positions and on the night of 26/27 April, Kumkuyu was evacuated by the French forces.{{sfn|Mütercimler|2005|pp=271–278}}
=Beşige/Besika Bay=
On the night of {{nowrap|25/26 April,}} six French troop transports, with two destroyers and a torpedo boat, appeared off Besika Bay (now Beşik Bay, Çanakkale), about {{convert|10|km|mi}} south of Kumkale. The warships commenced a bombardment and boats were lowered from the transports, to simulate a disembarkation. At {{nowrap|8:30 a.m.,}} the cruiser Jeanne d'Arc arrived and joined in the bombardment, before the force was recalled to Bozcaada at {{nowrap|10:00 a.m.}}{{sfn|Aspinall-Oglander|1929|p=264}}[http://www.haritatr.com/harita/Besige-Burnu/31112 Beşige map]
Aftermath
=Analysis=
The Ottoman garrison was detained in the area until 27 April, although the Turkish Official Account recorded that the landings at Kum Kale and the demonstration at Besika Bay had been recognised as ruses. Transfers of troops from the Asiatic shore was delayed by lack of boats and the fear of Allied submarines, rather than apprehension about landings on the Asiatic side. It was not until 29 April, that troops from the area appeared on the Helles front.{{sfn|Aspinall-Oglander|1929|p=264}}[http://www.haritatr.com/harita/Besige-Burnu/31112 Beşige map] After the landings, the Ottoman commander, General Weber Pasha was criticised for being caught unprepared, poor tactics, failures of communication and leadership, although the flat terrain had made accurate bombardment from offshore much easier.{{sfn|Travers|2001|p=77}}
=Casualties=
Casualties of the Ottoman side (including missing) were 1,735 men and French casualties were 786.{{sfn|Mütercimler|2005|pp=271–278}}{{Cite web |url=http://www.canakkale.gov.tr/tr/canakkale-savaslari/kara-savaslari/kumkale-oyalama-cikarmasi |title=Çanakkale Governor's page |language=tr |access-date=22 January 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160128094433/http://www.canakkale.gov.tr/tr/canakkale-savaslari/kara-savaslari/kumkale-oyalama-cikarmasi |archive-date=28 January 2016 |url-status=dead }}
Footnotes
{{reflist|20em}}
References
- {{cite book |series=History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence |title=Military Operations Gallipoli: Inception of the Campaign to May 1915 |volume=I |last=Aspinall-Oglander |first=C. F. |year=1929 |publisher=Heinemann |location=London |edition=1st |oclc=464479053}}
- {{cite book |last=Broadbent |first=Harvey |author-link=Harvey Broadbent |year=2005 |title=Gallipoli: The Fatal Shore |publisher=Viking/Penguin |location= Camberwell, Victoria |isbn=0-670-04085-1 }}
- {{cite book |last=Fromkin |first=David | author-link = David Fromkin |title=A Peace to End All Peace: The Fall of the Ottoman Empire and the Creation of the Modern Middle East |year=1989 |publisher=Henry Holt |location=New York |isbn=0-8050-0857-8 }}
- {{cite journal|last=Hart |first=Peter |title=The Day It All Went Wrong: The Naval Assault Before the Gallipoli Landings |journal=Wartime |publisher=Australian War Memorial |location=Canberra |issue=62 |year=2013a |pages=8–13 |issn=1328-2727 }}
- {{Cite book
|editor1-last=Lepetit
|editor1-first=Vincent
|editor2-last=Tournyol du Clos
|editor2-first=Alain
|editor3-last=Rinieri
|editor3-first=Ilario
| title=Les armées françaises dans la Grande guerre. Tome VIII. La campagne d'Orient (Dardanelles et Salonique) Premier Volume. (février 1915-août 1916) [8,1]
| work=Ministère De la Guerre, Etat-Major de l'Armée - Service Historique
| publisher =Imprimerie Nationale
| location =Paris
| date=1923
| language=fr
| url=https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k6374254b/f9.image
| oclc=491775878}}
- {{cite book |last=Mütercimler |first=Erol |title=Korkak Abdul'den Coni Türk'e: Gelibolu 1915 |trans-title=From Cowardly Abdul to Johnny Turk: Gallipoli 1915 |date=2005 |publisher=Alfa |location=Cağaloğlu, İstanbul |language=tr |isbn=975-297-610-7 }}
- {{cite book |last=Rhodes James |first=Robert Rhodes |author-link=Robert Rhodes James |title=Gallipoli: A British Historian's View |year=1995 |publisher=Department of History, University of Melbourne |location=Parkville, Victoria |isbn=0-7325-1219-0 |orig-year=1965 }}
- {{cite book |last=Stevens |first=David |title=The Royal Australian Navy |series=The Australian Centenary History of Defence |volume=III |year=2001 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=South Melbourne, Victoria |isbn=0-19-555542-2 }}
- {{cite book |last=Travers |first=Tim |title=Gallipoli 1915 |publisher=Tempus |year=2001 |location=Stroud |isbn=0-7524-2551-X}}
External links
{{commons category}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20111208030746/http://www.cgsc.edu/CARL/nafziger/915DCAA.pdf Allied-Turkish Forces Beginning of the Dardanelles Campaign March 1915]
- [http://www.turkishculturalfoundation.org/education/files/gallipoli-in-the-first-world-war.pdf Gallipoli in the First World War Prof. Dr. Recep Boztemur, Middle East Technical University]
{{Ottoman battles in the 20th century}}
{{World War I}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2017}}
Category:History of Çanakkale Province