In 1798, Napoleon Buonaparte proposed a French invasion of Egypt and Syria. Since he wasn’t emperor yet, he had to ask permission from the Directoire, which was a panel of five people who were running France in the late days of the French Revolution. Napoleon’s pitch was that an invasion of Egypt would protect French interests and damage English trade, and also put France in a good position to start cutting deals with the princes of India, who were mostly under direct or indirect control of the English. France and England were at war at this time, so it sounded good to the Directoire. They gave him the troops and their blessing, however improbable Napoleon’s scheme was. The campaign in Egypt didn’t go as well as Napoleon had hoped. His troops wound up fighting both the English and the Ottoman Empire. Though they saw a lot of victories, Egypt was just too much to control, and those two empires were just too much to fight. The invasion res...