After the insurrection of 30 July 1907, thousands of warriors from the Chaouia, apparently allied with
Ma al-'Aynayn, took Casablanca. France was surprised because of poor intelligence and urgently sent for a fleet, which left from
Algeria. Saint Aulaire, the diplomat in charge of the French Legation in
Tangier, acted under instruction from
Paris and called a number of warships to Casablanca, including the , which was dispatched from Tangier that very night and arrived on 1 August, and the cruiser , which arrived on 4 August from
Toulon. The morning of 5 August. 66 men disembarked from
Galilée to protect the French consulate, a move that was criticised by other European powers present in Casablanca, as it aggravated the situation in the city. Foreign warships arrived on the scene, including the British cruiser and the Spanish gunboat , which landed 30 men to protect the Spanish consulate. Houses of worship, including the great mosque and the sanctuary of the
Mausoleum of Allal al-Qairawani, were not spared. The gates to the medina were especially targeted to prevent the entrance of Chaoui combatants. The bombardment continued through the night and into the morning of 6 August, with 31 soldiers disembarking from
Du Chayla and 44 from
Forbin. The Moroccans, despite the considerable losses suffered from the incessant bombardment, continued to fight, which inspired unease within the French troops. The squadron of Rear-Admiral
Joseph-Alphonse Philibert brought General
Antoine Drude's troops, including French and
Algerian tirailleurs, to shore at the beach of Sidi Belyout, where they were met with Moroccan fire. On 7 August the disembarked troops of General Drude and the marine riflemen of Philibert, after fierce combat, retook control of the city. According to eyewitnesses and diplomatic sources, a "revolution" seemed to have started in Morocco. Some had the premonition that was only the beginning of a long war between the French and the Moroccans. , captive on the French cruiser Galilée, which bombed Casablanca from 5–7 August 1907. Over three days of bombs raining down from the French warships, followed by carnage and pillaging from troops on the ground, what had been a prosperous city of 30,000 inhabitants was transformed into a field of rubble with nothing spared except for the European neighbourhood. French sources put the death toll at a conservative 600 to 1,500, but German sources estimate 2,000 to 3,000. Moroccan sources, supported by European testimonies, attest that only a few rare inhabitants of the city survived after the carnage. The city—and particularly the
Mellah, inhabited by
the city's Jewish population—was pillaged after the landing of the French troops. The victims were primarily Jewish, though there were also Muslim victims. According to testimony from the director of the school of the
Alliance Israélite Universelle: ''From the first cannon round, the soldiers of the
Makhzen advanced towards the mellah, followed by the general populace, and the looting began. The 5,000–6,000 tribesmen who had been waiting outside the gates entered the city and swept throughout the mellah as well as the medina, stealing, pillaging, raping, killing, and burning... brought the 400 Jews who had fled at the beginning of the insurrection back to Casablanca from Tangier and Gibraltar. for
Cairo Punch. The cartoon refers to the Bombardment of Casablanca and the
Denshawai incident. == Gallery ==