In accordance with the
Treaty of Amiens, the British evacuated Alexandria in March 1803 leaving a power vacuum in Egypt.
Muhammad Bey al-Alfi had accompanied the British to lobby them to help restore the power of the
Mamelukes. In their attempts to return to power, the Mamelukes took
Minia and interrupted communication between
Upper and
Lower Egypt. About six weeks later, the legitimate
Ottoman governor of Egypt Koca Hüsrev Mehmed Pasha, finding himself in a financial bind and unable to pay all the troops under his command, attempted to disband his Albanian mercenaries or Albanian bashi-bazouks (or
Arnauts) without pay in order to be able to pay his regular other Otomans soldiers. The Albanians, led by Tahir Pasha, refused to disband, and instead surrounded the house of the
defterdar (finance minister), who appealed in vain to Hüsrev Pasha to satisfy their claims. Instead, the Pasha commenced an artillery bombardment from batteries located in and near his palace on the insurgent soldiers who had taken the house of the
defterdar, located in the
Ezbekia. The citizens of
Cairo, accustomed to such occurrences, immediately closed their shops and armed themselves. The tumult in the city continued all day, and the next morning a body of troops sent out by Hüsrev Pasha failed to quell it. Tahir Pasha then repaired to the
citadel, gaining admittance through an
embrasure, and from there began a counter bombardment of the pasha's forces over the roofs of the intervening houses. Soon thereafter, Tahir descended with his guns to the Ezbekia and then laid close siege to the governor's palace. The following day, Koca Hüsrev Mehmed Pasha fled with his women, servants, and regular troops to
Damietta along the Nile. == Acting Ottoman Governor of Egypt ==