Siege of Mankera (1821–1822) explained

Conflict:Siege of Mankera
Place:Mankera
Partof:Afghan-Sikh Wars
Date:7 December 1821-1 January 1822
(25 days)
Result:Sikh victory
Territory:Mankera annexed to the Sikh Empire
Combatant1: Sikh Empire
Assisted by
Tiwanas of Mitha Tiwana
Combatant2: Kingdom of Mankera
Commander1: Maharaja Ranjit Singh
Hari Singh Nalwa
Misr Diwan Chand
Akali Phula Singh
Faqir Azizuddin
Fateh Singh Ahluwalia
Kirpa Ram
Gurmukh Singh
Dal Singh Bharania
Khushal Singh
Javala Singh Padhania
Jhanda Singh Butalia
Dhanna Singh Malvai
Gajja Singh
Mangal Singh
Ahmad Yar Khan Tiwana
Commander2: Nawab Hafiz Ahmad Khan
Strength1:3,000 under Maharaja Ranjit Singh
15,000 under Khushal Singh[1]
8,000 under Misr Dewan Chand[2]
6,500 under Hari Singh Nalwa
Unknown under Ahmad Yar Khan
Strength2:25,000[3]
Casualties1:Unknown
Casualties2:Unknown

The siege of Mankera, also known as the fall of Mankera was a conflict from 7 December 1821 to 1 January 1822 between the Sikh forces led by Maharaja Ranjit Singh and the Mankera forces led by Nawab Hafiz Ahmad Khan.

Background

The Sindh Sagar Doab was fully under the rule of the Kingdom of Mankera and Mitha Tiwana. The chief of Mankera Nawab Hafiz Ahmad Khan had the most control over the region.[4] Mohammad Khan, the previous chief of Mankera, had built 12 forts outside the Mankera fort to make direct invasion of the main fort impossible.[5] The fort used to be a part of the Bhangi Misl until they lost it and an independent state was formed.[6] Instead of paying taxes to the Sikh Empire, the Nawab paid tribute to the Durrani Empire in Kabul. Furthermore, Mankera held the 3 important towns of Leiah, Bhakkar and Dera Ismail Khan, and the caravan route from Iran and Baluchistan also went through the territory of the Nawab. This made Mankera an important asset for the Sikh Empire to have.[7] Therefore in the Dusshera of 1821, Ranjit Singh headed with his army to Mankera to annex it.[4]

Ahmad Yar Khan Tiwana decided to aid the Sikh forces during the battle to settle old scores with the Nawab.[8] Hari Singh Nalwa was invited to join the expedition. As he was heading to join the Maharaja with 7,000 troops, Nawla was challenged by 25,000 Pashtun and Hazara tribesmen and their leader, Mohammad Khan Tarain, who opposed the Sikh's passage from the area.[9] This led to the Battle of Mangal in which Nalwa defeated the tribesmen and continued towards the Maharaja until meeting him at Mitha Tiwana.[10] [11]

Battle

The Sikh forces arrived at Mankera on 9 November 1821. They took Bhakkar without a fight and Dera Ismail Khan and Leiah were taken by the Sikhs with a fight.[12] [13] [14] Next the entire army regathered and laid siege to the fort of Mankera.[15] Since Mankera was situated in the middle of a sandy desert, the Sikhs dug up 25 wells for people to drink from.[1] Nawab Hafiz along with Sakhi jan jadoon, Khan knowing that he could not resist any longer offered terms of surrender. These terms stated to be able to leave the fort with personal things and to be given the town of Dera Ismail Khan as a jagir.[2] The terms were accepted and the Nawab came out after 25 days of being besieged.

Aftermath

After this siege, the land between the Jhelum and the Indus was annexed by the Sikh Empire.[7] [16] It was also the key of having influence over the Derajat region.[17] The Maharaja was impressed by the contribution of the Tiwanas during the battle and asked for him to take on horsemen with him to Lahore.[8]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Campaigns Of Hari Singh Nalwa. Gurbachan Singh Nayyar. 1995. 96. 9788173801419.
  2. Book: History Of The Sikhs Vol. V The Sikh Lion of Lahore (Maharaja Ranjit Singh, 1799-1839). Hari Ram Gupta. 1991. 75. 9788121505154.
  3. Book: Johar . Surinder Singh . Hari Singh Nalwa . 1982 . Sagar Publications . 84 .
  4. Book: International Journal of Research. Shashikant Nishant Sharma. 25 March 2014. 9781304977151. 7. Lulu.com.
  5. Book: State Formation and the Establishment of Non-Muslim Hegemony. Rishi Singh. 2014. SAGE Publications India . 9789351505044.
  6. Book: Gulabnama. Sukhdev Singh Charak. 1977. 99.
  7. Book: Singh, Khushwant . A History Of The Sikhs, Vol. 1, 1469-1839. Oxford University Press. 2004. 256–257.
  8. Book: The Encyclopedia Of Sikhism - Volume I A-D. Harbans Singh. 1995. 26. 9788173801006.
  9. Book: Sandhu, Autar Singh . General Hari Singh Nalwa 1791-1837 (1935) . 1935 . Cunningham Historical Society, Lahore . 23–24.
  10. Book: Art of Generalship. K.K Khanna. 2015. Vij Books India Pvt . 9789382652922.
  11. Book: General Hari Singh Nalwa. Autar Singh Sandhu. 1987. 23. Uppal Publishing House. 9788185024301.
  12. Book: History of the Panjáb from the Remotest Antiquity to the Present Time. Muhammad Latif. 1891. 425.
  13. Book: Maharaja Ranjit Singh. Madanjit Kaur. 2003. 83. Unistar Books. 9788189899547.
  14. Book: World Famous Wars and Battles. Vikas Khatri. Pustak Mahal. 9788122312812.
  15. Singh . Gulcharan . General Hari Singh Nalwa. The Sikh Review . 24 . 274 . 138. October 1976 .
  16. Book: Advanced study in History of the Punjab. 2. G.S. Chhabra. 1960. 65.
  17. Book: The Sikhs. Patwant Singh. 2000. 125. 9780375407284.