Selim Fathi Pasha
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Selim Fathi | |
|---|---|
| Native name | سليم فتحي |
| Born | early 19th-century |
| Died | 17 February 1855 |
| Cause of death | Killed in action |
| Buried | near Juma-Jami Mosque |
| Allegiance | |
| Branch | |
| Rank | Lieutenant general |
| Conflicts | Egyptian–Ottoman War (1831–1833) Egyptian–Ottoman War (1839–1841) Crimean War
|
Lieutenant general Selim Fathi Pasha (Egyptian Arabic: سليم فتحي باشا) (Probably born in the early 19th century and killed in the Crimean War on February 17, 1855) was an Egyptian military commander of Turkish and likely partly Albanian origin, who led the Egyptian ground forces in the Crimean War.[1]

Prince Omar Toussoun described Selim Pasha as the best student of Soliman Pasha al-Faransawi, to whom Mahammad Ali Pasha entrusted the establishment of the Egyptian army and was its chief of staff.[1] Selim Fathi Pasha participated in the wars of Ibrahim Pasha in the Levant and Anatolia, and was one of their heroes. During the reign of Mahammad Ali Pasha, he became head of the School of Staff of War, then in 1848 he was appointed commander of the infantry (bayada), and he was one of the closest Egyptian military leaders to European civilization.[1]
In the year 1853, Selim Fathi Pasha took command of the ground forces sent by Abbas I to aid the Ottoman Empire in the Crimean War. His army was composed of 6 Alai bayadas (infantry) totaling 15,704 soldiers, Alai Sawari (cavalry) composed of 1,291 soldiers, and Alai Tobgia (artillery) composed of 2,727 soldiers, numbering 12 batteries, each with six cannons, so the total number of its cannons was 72, and the total of this ground army was 19,722 soldiers.[1]
Family and children
He married Khadija Hanem al-Farwajiya (a noblewoman) and had two children. Among his most prominent grandchildren is the military historian Major General Staff of War Hassan Fathi (1921–2008), author of the encyclopedia “Arts of War in the Islamic Conquests, فنون الحرب في الفتوحات الإسلامية.”
Honoring

There is a bust of Lieutenant General Selim Fathi Pasha in the Egyptian National Military Museum located on Citadel Street in Cairo, and a large-sized color portrait.