Keelung campaign | |||||||
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Part of the Sino-French War | |||||||
French forces land at Keelung, 1 October 1884 | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
France | Qing Empire | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Amédée Courbet Sébastien Lespès Jacques Duchesne |
Liu Mingchuan[1] Sun Kaihua Su Desheng Zhang Gaoyuan Cao Zhizhong Lin Chaodong Wang Shizheng | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
20+ warships 4,500 to 10,000 infantry (by March 1885) | 20,000 to 35,000 infantry (by March 1885) | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
~700 dead, several hundred wounded | Several thousand killed and wounded |
The Keelung campaign (August 1884–April 1885) was a controversial military campaign undertaken by French forces in northern Formosa (Taiwan) during the Sino-French War. After making a botched attack on Keelung in August 1884, the French landed an expeditionary corps of 2,000 men and captured the port in October 1884. Unable to advance beyond their bridgehead, they were invested inside Keelung by superior Chinese forces under the command of the imperial commissioner Liu Mingchuan. In November and December 1884 cholera and typhoid drained the strength of the French expeditionary corps, while reinforcements for the Chinese army flowed into Formosa via the Pescadores Islands, raising its strength to 35,000 men by the end of the war. Reinforced in January 1885 to a strength of 4,500 men, the French won two impressive tactical victories against the besieging Chinese in late January and early March 1885, but were not strong enough to exploit these victories. The Keelung campaign ended in April 1885 in a strategic and tactical stalemate. The campaign was criticised at the time by Admiral Amédée Courbet, the commander of the French Far East Squadron, as strategically irrelevant and a wasteful diversion of the French navy.