The Battle of Manupur was fought between the Mughal Empire and the Durrani Empire in March 1748 at the frontiers of Sirhind which ended in victory for the Indian coalition.
Battle of Manupur | |||||||
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Part of Indian Campaign of Ahmad Shah Durrani | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Sikh Misls | Durrani Empire | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Ahmad Shah Bahadur Itimad-ad-Daula, Qamar-ud-Din Khan † Mir Mannu Adina Beg Safdar Jang Ishwari Singh Charat Singh Jassa Singh Ahluwalia Ala Singh |
Ahmad Shah Durrani Jahan Khan | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
Disputed 200,000 men 70,000 men 60,000 men Hundreds of thousands of non-combatants |
Disputed 30,000 12,000 |
Background
Main article: Battle of Lahore (1748)Following the assassination of Nader Shah, last Emperor of the Persian Afsharid dynasty, Ahmad Shah Durrani took control of Persian Afghanistan. In late 1747, he began operations against the declining Mughal Empire, taking Kabul, Peshawar, and, on 18 January 1748, Lahore, over which he established a governor.New coins were minted in the name of Ahmad Shah Durrani. Thousands of Punjabi men were conscripted into the Afghan army, and thousands of women and children were enslaved.
By February 1748, a Mughal army under Prince Ahmad Shah Bahadur and Qamaruddin Khan, the Subahdar of Lahore province, had assembled and was moving to drive out the Durrani army. On 1 March 1748, Ahmad Shah began searching for the Mughal army, making contact with them on 10 March outside the village of Manupur where the fighting began and continued into a war between "Durrani Afghan" frontiersmen and the "Great Mogul" emperor of India.
Battle
When the Mughal commander, Qamaruddin Khan, was killed by artillery in an early exchange of fire, his son, Moin-ul-Mulk, also known as Mir Mannu, continued the battle. Ahmad Shah's Afghan troops swept aside the Rajput flank and raided their baggage train.
A Mogul rocket struck the Durrani artillery store, causing an explosion that led thousands of soldiers to retreat, thus forcing Ahmad Shah Durrani's return to Afghanistan.
Aftermath
After the retreat of Durrani, the panicked Mughal were unable to pursue, however Sikh bands under Charat Singh, Jassa Singh Ahluwalia and Ala Singh continued to harass them as they retreated to Kabul. Thus, the first invasion of Shah proved a failure but it gave an opportunity to the Sikhs to organize themselves into Dal Khalsa, an army of Sikh Confederacy, at Amritsar in March 1748.
References
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A huge army of 2 lakhs under Wazir Qamar-ud-din Khan was sent to check the progress of the Afghans.
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