Battle of Issers explained

Conflict:Battle of Issers (1519)
Place:Issers
Date:1519
Result:Victory of the Kingdom of Kuku
Combatants Header:Belligerents
Combatant1: Kingdom of Kuku
Combatant2: Sultanate of Algiers
Commander1:Sidi Ahmed
Commander2:Hayreddin Barbarossa
Units1:Unknown
Units2:Unknown
Casualties1:Unknown
Casualties2:Unknown

The Battle of Issers was a conflict that took place in 1519 between the forces of Sultan Ahmed of Kuku and Hayreddin Barbarossa of the Sultanate of Algiers.

In 1518 Sultan Ahmed and Oruç Reis led a joint expedition against the Spaniards in Tlemcen which failed and resulted in the death of Oruç Reis.[1] Hayreddin Barbarossa resented Ahmed as his troops had seemingly abandoned Oruç Reis.

Hayreddin Barbarossa assumed military command of Algiers and immediately organised an expedition against Sultan Ahmed which led to a sharp conflict. The Hafsids had sent reinforcements to Ahmed. Sultan Ahmed attacked the troops of the Sultanate of Algiers from behind and inflicted heavy losses on the army of Hayreddin Barbarossa. The battle was described as bloody.[2] [3] Sultan Ahmed won the battle and went on to capture Algiers the following year.

Notes and References

  1. Hugh Roberts, Berber Government: The Kabyle Polity in Pre-colonial Algeria, IB Tauris
  2. Mohamed Seghir Feredj and Chikh Bouamrane, History of Tizi-Ouzou and its region: from the origins to 1954
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=8SkKAQAAIAAJ L'Algérie sous les Turcs