Battle of Leybar Bridge

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Date21 April 1855
Location
Outskirts of Saint-Louis, Senegal
15°58′51″N 16°28′59″W / 15.9807°N 16.4831°W / 15.9807; -16.4831
Result French victory
Battle of Leybar Bridge
Part of the Second Franco-Trarza War

The defense of the tower of Leybar Bridge
Date21 April 1855
Location
Outskirts of Saint-Louis, Senegal
15°58′51″N 16°28′59″W / 15.9807°N 16.4831°W / 15.9807; -16.4831
Result French victory
Belligerents
France France Emirate of Trarza
Commanders and leaders
Sergeant Brunier Mohammed al-Habib
Strength
14 soldiers[1] Over 1,000 warriors[2][3]
Casualties and losses
3 wounded[3][4] 127 killed or wounded[5]

The Battle of Leybar Bridge was fought on 21 April 1855 between the Trarza army of Mohammed al-Habib and the French garrison of the tower on Leybar Bridge, outside of Saint-Louis in the French colony of Senegal, during the Second Franco-Trarza War.

After his striking victory against a combined Trarza-Waalo force in late February 1855, French governor Louis Faidherbe tried to negotiate a peace with Emir Mohammed al-Habib, in which he demanded the abolition of taxes paid by France to the Trarza for the right to use the Senegal River, the end of Trarza raids on Waalo and the renunciation of the claim the Emir's son had on the throne of Waalo.[6][7] The Emir responded that his own conditions were the increase of existing taxes, the removal of all French forts alongside the river, the establishment of new taxes and the dismissal of Faidherbe as governor.[8][9]

On 12 April 1855, following a Trarza attack against the French outpost of Richard Toll, Faidherbe departed from Saint-Louis with 1,500 men, virtually the entirety of French forces in Senegal, for a punitive expedition in Trarza territory.[10][11][12] Upon finding out about the French expedition, the Emir decided to bring his forces to Saint-Louis to attack the undefended city.[13][14][12]

Battle

Aftermath

References

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