First Battle of Gaza | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of the Middle Eastern theatre of World War I | |||||||
Ottoman officers who successfully defended Gaza during the first battle |
|||||||
|
|||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
British Empire |
Ottoman Empire German Empire Austria-Hungary |
||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Archibald Murray Philip Chetwode Charles Dobell |
Tala Bey (nominal) Friedrich Freiherr Kress von Kressenstein (actual) |
||||||
Units involved | |||||||
|
|
||||||
Strength | |||||||
2,000 almost doubled by reinforcements | |||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
523 killed 2932 wounded 512 missing |
16 dead or wounded, 41 missing 300 dead, 750 wounded, 600 missing |
The First Battle of Gaza was fought on 26 March 1917, during the first attempt by the Egyptian Expeditionary Force (EEF) to invade the south of Palestine in the Ottoman Empire during the Sinai and Palestine Campaign of the First World War. Fighting took place in and around the town of Gaza on the Mediterranean coast when infantry and mounted infantry from the Desert Column, a component of the Eastern Force, attacked the town. Late in the afternoon, on the verge of capturing Gaza, the Desert Column was withdrawn due to concerns about the approaching darkness and large Ottoman reinforcements. This British defeat was followed a few weeks later by the even more emphatic defeat of the Eastern Force at the Second Battle of Gaza in April 1917.
In August 1916 the EEF victory at Romani ended the possibility of land-based attacks on the Suez Canal, first threatened in February 1915 by the Ottoman Raid on the Suez Canal. In December 1916, the newly created Desert Column's victory at the Battle of Magdhaba secured the Mediterranean port of El Arish and the supply route, water pipeline, and railway stretching eastwards across the Sinai Peninsula. In January 1917 the victory of the Desert Column at the Battle of Rafa completed the capture of the Sinai Peninsula and brought the EEF within striking distance of Gaza.