Zamzama | |
Origin: | Lahore, Durrani Empire |
Type: | Bombard |
Is Ranged: | yes |
Is Bladed: | no |
Is Explosive: | no |
Is Artillery: | yes |
Is Vehicle: | no |
Is Missile: | no |
Service: | 1761–1818 |
Used By: | Durrani Empire Sikh Empire |
Wars: | Battle of Panipat (1761) battle of Dinanagar (1775) Battle of Kasur (1807) Siege of Multan (1818) |
Designer: | Shah Nazir |
Production Date: | 1757 (years ago) |
Weight: | 4500kg (9,900lb) |
Length: | 14feet |
Diameter: | NaNinches |
Cartridge Weight: | 40kg (90lb)[1] |
Caliber: | 240mm |
Elevation: | none |
Traverse: | none |
The Zamzama Gun, also known as Kim's Gun and Bhangian di Top, is an 18th-century large-bore cannon. It was cast by the metalsmith Shah Nazir in about 1757 at Lahore, then under the Durrani control.[2] Currently on display in front of the Lahore Museum in Lahore, Pakistan, it is one of the largest pre-modern cannons in the world.
The gun is 14feet in length, with a bore at its aperture of NaNinches and weighs over 4500kg (9,900lb).[3] The gun, one of the largest ever made in the Indian subcontinent, was cast at Lahore along with another gun of the same size in 1757 by Shah Nazir (a metalsmith of the former Mughal viceroy of Lahore Subah, Muin-ul-Mulk), under the directions of Shah Wali Khan, who was the Vizier of Durrani ruler, Ahmad Shah.[3]
The copper and bronze needed to manufacture the cannon was obtained by melting household utensils collected from the Hindu and Sikh citizens of Lahore after imposing jizyah.[4] Shah Nazir completed the both massive cannons within three months at his karkhana in Mughalpura, where now Moghalpura Railway Workshops are located. The gun has the date of manufacture, name of the monarch and the technician along with verses in Persian moulded with floral patterns all over the barrel. The front inscription reads:
The longer inscription at the back eulogizes its bulk and invincibility: "A destroyer even of the strongholds of heaven." Verses at the end of the inscription contain a chronogram: "From reason I enquire of the year of its manufacture; Struck with terror it replied, 'Wert thou willing to surrender thine life, I would unfold unto thee the secret.' I agreed, and it said, laden with innuendo: – 'What a cannon! 'Tis a mighty fire dispensing dragon!'"[3]
The gun saw its first action in the battle of Panipat, on 14 January 1761. After the battle, on his way back to Kabul, Ahmad Shah left it at Lahore with his governor, Khawaja Ubed, as the carriage that was supposed to take the gun to Kabul was not ready. The other gun which he took with him was lost during the passage through River Chenab.
In 1762, the Bhangi Sardar Hari Singh went into battle with Khawaja Ubed. Bhangi attacked the then village of Khawaja Said, 2miles from Lahore (now a locality in the city of Lahore), where Khawaja Ubed had his arsenal, and seized his artillery, arms and ammunition, including the Zamzama Gun. It was renamed by its Sikh captors as Bhangian di Top.
For the next two years, it lay in the Shah Burj of the Lahore Fort. Thereafter, Sikh leaders Lehna Singh and Gujjar Singh Bhangi got hold of it after capturing Lahore and it was given to Charat Singh Shukerchakia as his share in the spoils. The Bhangi Sardars thought that Charat Singh would not be able to carry the gun with him and it would remain with them. Contrary to their expectations, Charat Singh successfully carried the gun to his fort at Gujranwala.
From Charat Singh, Zamzama was snatched by the Chatthas who took it to Ahmadnagar where it became a bone of contention between the brothers Ahmad Khan Chatha and Pir Muhammad Chatha. In the fight that ensued, two sons of Ahmad Khan and one of Pir Muhammad were killed. In this fight Gujjar Singh Bhangi sided with Pir Muhammad, and after the latter's victory, the gun was restored to Gujjar Singh. After two years, the gun was wrested by Charat Singh Shukerchakia from whom it was once again snatched by the Chatthas in 1772, and carried away to Rasulnagar.
Next year, Jhanda Singh Bhangi defeated the Chatthas and brought the gun to Amritsar. The cannon was used by Bhangis atleast once during the battle of Dinanagar in 1775. In 1802, Ranjit Singh, after defeating the Bhangis, got hold of the gun. He used it in the battles of Daska, Kasur, Sujanpur, Wazirabad and Multan.
During the siege of Multan, Zamzama was fired four times, and made two breaches in the walls of Multan Fort. From one of the breaches the Sikh army entered into the fort on 20 June 1818, and the fort fell. However, the gun was badly damaged after firing these shots.[1] [5]
After being severely damaged Zamzama had to be brought back to Lahore, but was found unfit for any further use. It was placed outside Delhi Gate, Lahore, where it remained until 1860. When in 1864, Maulawi Nur Ahmad Chishti compiled the Tahqiqat-i-Chishti, he found it standing in the Baradari of the garden of Wazir Khan, behind the Lahore Museum.[6]
In 1870, it found a new asylum at the entrance of the Lahore Museum, then located in the Tollinton Market. It was placed in this position on the occasion of the Duke of Edinburgh's visit to Lahore in 1870. When the present building of the museum was constructed it was removed further west and placed opposite the University Hall.[4]
Repaired in 1977, the cannon now rests on Mall Road with Pharmacy Department, University of the Punjab on one side, and National College of Arts (NCA) and Lahore Museum on the other.[6]
It came to be known as Kim's Gun after the protagonist in the novel Kim by Rudyard Kipling, in whose childhood memoirs it is frequently mentioned. The novel opens with Kim straddling the gun:[7] [8]
Zamzama's status as a "mighty fire dispensing dragon" caused a great deal of amusement at the Durrani court, giving rise to many crude puns. "Zamzama" is now a joking term for a man with considerable sexual prowess in Afghanistan.[9]
A life-size replica of the gun is displayed at the Gobindgarh Fort in Amritsar.