Battle of Ngomano

Battle of Ngomano
Part of East African Campaign

Breakthrough of the Schutztruppe at the Rovuma
Date25 November 1917[1]
Location11°25′42″S 38°29′37″E / 11.42833°S 38.49361°E / -11.42833; 38.49361
Result German victory
Belligerents

German Empire Germany

First Portuguese Republic Portugal

Commanders and leaders
German Empire Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck First Portuguese Republic João Teixeira Pinto 
Strength
1,500–2,000 men 900 men
Casualties and losses
4 killed
Few wounded
200 killed and wounded[2]
700 captured

The Battle of Ngomano or Negomano was fought between Germany and Portugal during the East African Campaign of World War I. A force of Germans and Askaris under Paul Emil von Lettow-Vorbeck had recently won a costly victory against the British at the Battle of Mahiwa, in present-day Tanzania and ran very short of food and other supplies. As a consequence, the Germans invaded Portuguese East Africa to the south, both to supply themselves with captured Portuguese materiel and escape superior British forces to the north.

Portugal was part of the Entente and a belligerent, employing troops in France and Africa; so a force under Major João Teixeira Pinto was sent to stop von Lettow-Vorbeck from crossing the border. The Portuguese were flanked by the Germans, while encamped at Ngomano on 25 November 1917. The battle saw the Portuguese force nearly destroyed, with many troops killed and captured. The capitulation of the Portuguese enabled the Germans to seize a large quantity of supplies and continue operations in East Africa until the end of the war.

  1. ^ Downes 1919, p. 179.
  2. ^ Chisholm 1922, p. 885.

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