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| Siege of Medina | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part ofArab Revolt of theMiddle Eastern theatre of World War I | |||||||
Allegorical illustration byLouis Raemaekers on the Arabs' celebration of the surrender of Medina | |||||||
| |||||||
| Belligerents | |||||||
| Hejaz | Ottoman Empire | ||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
| Faisal bin Hussein Abdullah bin Hussein Ali bin Hussein | Fahreddin Pasha (POW) | ||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| 30,000 (1916)[1] 50,000 (1918)[2] | 3,000 (1916)[3] | ||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
| Heavy | 8,000 evacuated to Egypt[4] | ||||||
Thesiege of Medina lasted from 10 June 1916 to 10 January 1919, whenHejaziArab rebels surrounded theIslamic holy city, which was then under the control of theOttoman Empire.
The Ottoman Empire joined the war on the side of theCentral Powers under the leadership of the Ottoman Sultan,Mehmed V. In an attempt to weaken the Ottomans, theAllies provoked anArab Revolt within the empire led bySharif Hussein bin Ali of Mecca.
Sharif Hussein, supported byBritish andFrench agents, occupiedMecca and later besiegedMedina. The second holiest city in Islam was then guarded by an Ottoman battalion led byFahreddin Pasha, who resisted for two years and seven months, a persistent defense that lasted even afterthe war had ended.

In November 1914,British diplomats made contact with Sharif Hussain of Mecca, which would then be a two-year dialogue also known as theMcMahon–Hussein Correspondence. The British offered materiel support in exchange for Sharif Hussain to switch allegiance to the Allies and stage a revolt with a promise of a futureHashemite Caliphate fromAden toAleppo underBritish protectorate. With increasing fears that Ottomans were clamping down on subversiveArab nationalists, Sharif Hussain staged a region-wide revolt in June 1916.
The prime objectives of the initial revolt was to deprive the Ottomans of any legitimacy to the title ofCaliphate by capturing the two holy cities ofMecca andMedina. TheArabs began to capture Mecca against the surprised but well-equipped Ottoman defenders and culminated in theBattle of Mecca. Once Mecca is captured, the Arabs turned their attention to Medina, which was defended by an even bigger Ottoman force complemented by the strategicHejaz Railway.
The siege began in October 1916 when the Arabs led by Hussein's sonFaisal were repulsed with heavy losses by the Ottomans, who were fortified and armed withartillery in contrast to the mobile irregular Arab force. This would prove detrimental as the Ottomans reinforced the city of thousands of soldiers with necessary supplies. The Ottomans tried to recapture coastal ports that were used to supply the Arabs, but were foiled by theRoyal Navy.
At this point, Arab and Allied planners decided to lay siege to Medina instead of forcefully breaching it. The Ottomans were pinned down in the city whilst desperately protecting theHejaz Railway, the only means of supply. By pinning the 12,000 Ottomans in Medina, it would leave other fronts much easier to win, such as inPalestine,Sinai,Mesopotamia, andAqaba.
For this purpose,Nuri as-Said set about creating military training camps in Mecca under the direction of General'Aziz 'Ali al-Misri. Using a mix of Bedouin volunteers, Arab officers and Arab Ottoman deserters who defected to theArab Revolt, 'Aziz 'Ali created three infantry brigades, a mounted brigade, an engineering unit, and three different artillery groups made up of a patchwork of varying cannon and heavy caliber machine guns. Of his total force of 30,000, 'Aziz 'Ali proposed that it be divided into three armies:
These armies had elements of British and French officers attached to them who provided technical military advice. One of these officers was the famousT. E. Lawrence. Over the course of 1917-1918, the Arabs numerously attempted to sabotage the Hejaz Railway. Ottoman garrisons of the isolated small train stations withstood the continuous night attacks and secured the tracks against increasing number of strikes (around 130 major attacks in 1917 and hundreds in 1918 including exploding more than 300 bombs on 30 April 1918).[5] The Arabs aided the British wherever they can, their efforts paved the way for the British annexation of theLevant.
With the resignation of the Ottoman Empire from the war with theArmistice of Mudros betweenOttoman Empire andEntente on 30 October 1918, it was expected thatFahreddin Pasha would also surrender. He refused and did not surrender even after the end of the war despite pleas from the Ottoman sultan. He held the city until 72 days after the end of the war.
The British eventually understood that they couldn't defeatFahreddin Pasha with their military power. Instead, they bribed some of the soldiers in his army, who then arrested him on 10 January 1919.[6]Abdullah I of Jordan and his troops entered Medina on 13 January 1919.[4] After the surrender, the Arab troops looted the city for 12 days. Overall 4,850 houses which were locked and put under seal by Fahreddin Pasha were opened forcefully and looted.[4]
About 8,000 (519 officers and 7,545 soldiers) men of the Turkish garrison were evacuated toEgypt after their surrender.[4] Besides the evacuated some died of disease and others dispersed on their own to various areas.[4] The weapons and ammunition of the garrison were left to the besiegers.[4]