Battle of Urfa
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| Battle of Urfa | |||||||
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| Part of the Franco-Turkish War | |||||||
Kurdish militias taking up arms against the occupying French forces | |||||||
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| Belligerents | |||||||
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| Strength | |||||||
| 3,000[1] | 473 | ||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
| Unknown | ~460 killed or captured | ||||||
The Battle of Urfa (Turkish: Urfa Muharebesi, French: Le guet-apens d'Ourfa) was an uprising in the spring of 1920 against the French army occupying the city of Urfa (modern Şanlıurfa) by the Turkish National Forces. The French garrison of Urfa held out for two months until it sued for negotiations with the Turks for safe conduct out of the city. The Turks reneged on their promises, however, and the French unit was killed in an ambush staged by the Turkish Nationalists during its retreat from Urfa.
The city of Urfa was occupied by the French army in the autumn of 1919 with the aim of incorporating this portion of the Ottoman Empire into the French Mandate of Syria. The designs of the French over the region of Cilicia were denounced by Mustafa Kemal Pasha, the leader of the newly formed Turkish National Movement. In the later part of 1919 Kemal and his supporters began to prepare to launch major insurrections against the thinly spread French units garrisoned in Marash, Aintab and Urfa to force the French to give up their territorial pretensions in the region. In January 1920, Ali Saip Bey, the deputy from Urfa to the Turkish National Congress, called on the Kurdish tribes of Urfa to close ranks against the French and resist.[2] His actions were coordinated with Kılıç Ali Bey (Kuluj Ali), a Kurdish army captain.