Mohammed ben Abdallah assembled an army of 30,000 to 40,000 men and powerful
artillery in 1774 and began a bombardment of
Melilla.
Juan Sherlock sent the mariner Juan Trinquini to
Malaga to request reinforcements from
Andalusia. On 11 December, a
French ship arrived in Melilla with reinforcements from the peninsula. The ship left the city on 16 December with part of the civilian population. For defense, 117 new guns and mortars were installed. Tomás de Find, Charles III's major artilleryman, took charge of the maintenance of the artillery. Two Spanish squads, commanded by Antonio Barceló and José Hidalgo de Cisneros, blocked the
Strait of Gibraltar to prevent
Great Britain from supplying weapons and ammunition to the Muslim troops. A small garrison under Florencio Moreno likewise resisted the Sultan's army at
Peñón de Vélez de la Gomera. In 1775, war material promised from Britain was intercepted en route to Melilla and captured by the
Spanish Navy. Spanish sail approached the beleaguered city. At the same time the
Turks of the
Ottoman Empire began to encroach on Morocco's eastern borders. Spanish troops resisted the attack over a period of 100 days, over which time some 12,000 projectiles were lobbed onto the city. Sherlocke began to break the siege, a situation exacerbated by the desertion of ben Abdallah's
Algerians. The siege ended on 19 March. == Aftermath ==