Battle of Assaye
Battle of Assaye | |||||||
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Part of the Second Anglo-Maratha War | |||||||
Major General Wellesley (mounted) commanding his troops at the Battle of Assaye (J.C. Stadler after W. Heath) | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
East India Company |
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Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Arthur Wellesley |
Daulatrao Scindia | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
9,500 (including two British infantry regiments and one cavalry regiment) 17 cannon |
10,800 European trained Indian infantry 10,000–20,000 Irregular Infantry 30,000–40,000 Irregular Cavalry 100+ cannon | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
428 killed[1] 1,138 wounded[1] 18 missing[1] |
Total casualties of 6,000 killed and wounded or 1,200 confirmed killed and many more wounded,[2][3][4] 98 cannons lost | ||||||
The Battle of Assaye was a major battle of the
From August 1803, Wellesley's army and a separate force under the command of his subordinate, Colonel
Wellesley's victory at Assaye, preceded by the capture of Ahmednagar and followed by victories at Argaon and Gawilghur, resulted in the defeat of Scindia and Berar's armies in the Deccan. Wellesley's progress in the Deccan was matched by Lieutenant General Gerard Lake's successful campaigns in northern India and led to the British becoming the dominant power in the heartland of India.
Background
Feuding between the two dominant powers within the
The treaty gave offence to the other Maratha leaders, who deemed that the system of
Prelude
The
The Maratha army in the Deccan was largely composed of fast-moving cavalry able to live off the land. Consequently, Wellesley planned to work in conjunction with a separate force under Colonel Stevenson to enable his slower troops to outmanoeuvre the Maratha army and force it into a position where it could not avoid a
Wellesley reached Ahmednagar later the same day after a 7-mile (11 km) march and immediately ordered an
Maratha reinforcements
The Marathas slipped past Stevenson and advanced on Hyderabad. After receiving reports of their movement on 30 August, Wellesley hurried east down to the Godavari to intercept.
After several weeks of chasing down the Maratha army, Wellesley and Stevenson met at Budnapoor on 21 September and received intelligence that the Maratha army was at Borkardan, around 30 miles (48 km) to the north. They agreed on a plan by which their two armies – moving separately along either side of a range of hills with Wellesley to the east and Stevenson to the west – would converge on Borkardan on 24 September. Wellesley's force reached Paugy on the afternoon of 22 September and departed camp before dawn. By noon, the army had marched 14 miles (23 km) to Naulniah, a small town 12 miles (19 km) south of Borkardan, where they intended to rest before joining Stevenson to attack the Maratha army the next day.[28] At this point, Wellesley received further intelligence that, rather than being at Borkardan, the Maratha army was camped just 5 miles (8.0 km) north, but their cavalry had moved off and the infantry were about to follow.[29]
At about 13:00, Wellesley went forward with a cavalry escort to reconnoitre the Maratha position. The rest of his army followed closely behind, apart from a battalion of sepoys left at Naulniah to guard the baggage.[30] In all, Wellesley had 4,500 troops at his disposal, plus 5,000 Mysore and Maratha horse and 17 cannon.[31] Aware that the British were nearby, the Maratha chiefs had positioned their army in a strong defensive position along a tongue of land stretching east from Borkardan between the Kailna River and its tributary the Juah. However, Scindia and Berar did not believe Wellesley would attack with his small force and had moved away from the area in the morning.[30] Command of their army was given to Pohlmann, who had positioned his infantry to the east of the Maratha camp in the plains around the village of Assaye on the southern bank of the Juah.[32]
To his surprise, Wellesley found the entire combined army before him. Nevertheless, he resolved to attack at once, believing that if he waited for Stevenson, the Marathas would have the chance to slip away and force the pursuit to drag on.[30] Wellesley was also eager to forge a reputation for himself, and despite his numerical disadvantage, he was confident that the Maratha's irregular forces would be swept aside by his disciplined troops, and only Scindia's regular infantry could be expected to stand and fight.[28]
Battle
Initial manoeuvres
At around 15:00, the British crossed to the northern bank of the Kaitna unopposed apart from a distant harassing fire from the Maratha cannon which was largely inaccurate but succeeded in decapitating Wellesley's dragoon orderly.[35] Once across, Wellesley ordered his six infantry battalions to form into two lines, with his cavalry as a reserve in a third. His allied Maratha and Mysore cavalry were ordered to remain south of the Kaitna to keep in check a large body of Maratha cavalry which hovered around the British rear. Pohlmann soon recognised Wellesley's intentions and swung his infantry and guns through 90 degrees to establish a new line spread approximately 1 mile (1.6 km) across the isthmus with their right flank on the Kaitna and the left on Assaye.[36] Although the new position secured the Maratha flanks, it restricted Pohlmann from bringing his superior numbers into action.[37]
The Maratha redeployment was swifter and more efficient than Wellesley had anticipated and he immediately reacted by extending his front to deny Pohlmann the opportunity to outflank him.[38] A battalion of pickets and the 74th Highlanders, which formed the right of the first and second lines, were ordered to move obliquely to the right.[39] This allowed the 78th to anchor the left flank and Madras infantry battalions (the 1/10th, 1/8th, 1/4th and 2/12th) to form the centre of the British line.[38] Wellesley's intention was to force back the Marathas from their guns and then – operating by his left to avoid the heavily defended Assaye – throw them back on the Juah and complete their destruction with his cavalry.[40]
British infantry attack
The Maratha cannonade intensified as the British redeployed. Although British artillery was brought forward to counter, it was ineffective against the mass firepower of the Maratha guns and quickly disabled through the weight of shot directed against it. British casualties mounted as the Maratha guns turned their attention to the infantry and subjected them to a barrage of
The Maratha cannonade punched holes in the British line, but the infantry maintained a steady pace, closing up the gaps in their ranks as they advanced. The 78th Highlanders were the first to reach the enemy in the southern sector next to the River Kailna. They paused 50 yards (46 m) from the Maratha gunners and unleashed a volley of musket fire before launching into a bayonet charge.[43] The four battalions of Madras infantry to the right of the 78th, accompanied by the Madras Pioneers,[44] reached Pohlmann's line shortly afterwards and attacked in the same fashion. The gunners stood by their cannon but were no match for the bayonets of the British and Madras troops who swiftly pressed on towards the Maratha infantry.[45] However, instead of meeting the charge, the Maratha right broke and fled northwards towards the Juah, causing the rest of the southern half of the line to follow.[46] The officers of the Madras battalions temporarily lost control as the sepoys, encouraged by their success, pushed too far in pursuit. Maratha cavalry momentarily threatened to charge, but were checked by the 78th, who remained in order and re-formed to face the danger.[46]
In the northern sector of the battlefield however, Wellesley's right flank was in turmoil. The commander of the pickets, Lieutenant Colonel William Orrock, had mistaken his orders and continued his oblique path directly towards Assaye.[45] Major Samuel Swinton of the 74th Regiment was ordered to support the pickets and followed close behind. This created a large gap in the centre of the British line and brought the two battalions under a barrage of cannonade from the artillery around the village and the Maratha left.[47] The two battalions began to fall back in disarray, and Pohlmann ordered his remaining infantry and cavalry forward to attack. The Marathas gave no quarter;[48] the pickets were virtually annihilated, but the remnants of the 74th were able to form a rough square behind hastily piled bodies of dead.[49] Realising that the destruction of his right would leave his army exposed and outflanked, Wellesley ordered a detachment of British cavalry under Colonel Patrick Maxwell, consisting of the 19th Light Dragoons and elements of the 4th and 5th Madras Native Cavalry, into action.[47] From their position at the rear, the cavalry dashed directly towards the 74th's square, crashed into the swarming attackers and routed them. Maxwell pressed his advantage and continued his charge into the Maratha infantry and guns on the right, driving them backwards and across the Juah "with great slaughter".[50][51]
Culmination
A number of Maratha gunners who had feigned death when the British advanced over their position re-manned their guns and began to pour cannon fire into the rear of the 74th and Madras infantry.[45] Wellesley ordered his four sepoy battalions to re-form and ward off any threat from the Maratha infantry and cavalry while the 78th were sent back to retake the Maratha gun line.[52] Wellesley, meanwhile, galloped back to 7th Madras Native Cavalry, which had been held back in reserve to the east, and led a cavalry charge from the opposite direction.[53] The gunners again stood their ground but were eventually driven from their guns and this time it was ensured that all those who remained were dead.[54]
While Wellesley was preoccupied with re-taking the gun line, Pohlmann rallied his infantry and redeployed them into a semicircle with their backs to the Juah; their right flank across the river and their left in Assaye.[55] However, most of the Maratha cannon, which had inflicted heavy losses on Wellesley's infantry, had been captured or lay abandoned on the battlefield. Reluctant to join the fray, the Maratha cavalry lingered in the distance to the west. Most were Pindarries: loosely organised and lightly armed horsemen whose traditional role was to cut down fleeing enemy troops, harass convoy lines and carry out raids into enemy territory. They were not trained to attack well-formed infantry or heavily armed European cavalry, and did not play a further part in the battle.[56]
With the remanned Maratha artillery silenced, Wellesley turned his attention to Pohlmann's reformed infantry. Although Maxwell had suffered heavy losses, he had rallied his cavalry and returned to the field of battle. Wellesley ordered him to charge the Maratha left flank, while the infantry moved forward as a single line to meet the centre and right.[53] The cavalry spurred forward but were met with a volley of canister shot which struck Maxwell, killing him instantly. Their momentum lost, the cavalry did not complete their charge, but veered away from the Maratha line at the last moment.[53] The British and Madras infantry marched on against the Maratha position. Pohlmann's men, their morale low, did not wait for the attack and instead retreated northwards across the Juah. Maratha sources claim the line marched away from the battlefield in an orderly manner on Pohlmann's orders, but British accounts claim the Maratha infantry fled in an uncontrolled panic.[57] Berar's irregulars inside Assaye, now leaderless and having witnessed the fate of the regular infantry, abandoned the village and marched off northwards at around 18:00, followed shortly afterwards by the Maratha cavalry.[57] Wellesley's troops were exhausted and in no condition to pursue, and the native allied cavalry which had remained on the south bank of the Kailna and had not been engaged, refused to pursue without the support of the British and Madras cavalry.[58][59]
Aftermath
"The whole country [was] strewn with killed and wounded, both Europeans and natives, ours as well as the enemies."
— An unnamed British cavalry officer in the aftermath of Assaye[60]
The East India Company and British Army casualties amounted to 428 killed, 1,138 wounded and 18 missing; a total of 1,584 – over a third of the force engaged in combat.[1] The 74th and the picket battalion were decimated; from a strength of about 500, the 74th lost ten officers killed and seven wounded, and 124 other ranks killed and 270 wounded.[61] The pickets lost all their officers except their commander, Lieutenant Colonel William Orrock, and had only about 75 men remaining.[49] Of the ten officers forming the general's staff, eight were wounded or had their horses killed.[62] Wellesley himself lost two horses; the first was shot from underneath him and the second was speared as he led the charge to re-capture the Maratha gun line.[63]
The number of Maratha casualties is more difficult to ascertain. Despatches from British officers give a figure of 1,200 dead and many more wounded but some modern historians have estimated a total of 6,000 dead and wounded.
The sound of the guns at Assaye was heard by
Wellesley later told Stevenson that "I should not like to see again such a loss as I sustained on the 23rd September, even if attended by such a gain",
In fiction
- ISBN 0-00-225630-4) depicts the campaign and the battle in detail. Both men's memories of Assaye are mentioned several more times throughout the seriesas Sharpe and Wellington's careers progress. The television adaptation differs and depicts Sharpe saving Wellesley's life from French soldiers in Spain during the later Peninsular War.
References
- ^ a b c d Millar p. 82.
- ISBN 978-1-317-32127-9.
- ^ a b c d Holmes p. 81.
- ^ a b Millar p. 83.
- ^ Millar p. 28.
- ^ a b Holmes p. 68.
- ^ Millar p. 13.
- ^ a b Holmes p. 69.
- ^ Severn p. 171.
- ^ Corrigan p. 72.
- ^ Holmes p. 70.
- ^ Severn p. 170.
- ^ Millar p. 34.
- ^ Severn p. 176.
- ^ Severn p. 177.
- ^ Gurwood p. 69.
- ^ a b c Holmes p. 73.
- ^ a b Corrigan p. 73.
- ^ a b Millar p. 27.
- ^ Millar p. 37.
- ^ Cooper p. 92.
- ^ Cooper pp. 87–88.
- ^ a b Cooper p. 94.
- ^ Millar p. 48.
- ^ a b c Holmes p. 71.
- ^ a b Cooper p.102
- ^ Millar p. 22.
- ^ a b Corrigan p. 74.
- ^ Cooper p. 99.
- ^ a b c Cooper p. 100.
- ^ Black p. 260.
- ^ Cooper p. 101.
- ^ Corrigan p. 76.
- ^ Sandes Military Engineer in India Vol I, pp. 207–208.
- ^ Cooper p. 105.
- ^ Millar p. 57.
- ^ a b Roy p. 128.
- ^ a b Cooper p. 108.
- ^ The picquets of the day were composed of a half company from each of the Wellesley's seven infantry battalions, and were commanded by the officer of the day (Biddulph p. 138).
- ^ Biddulph p. 141.
- ^ Millar p. 61.
- ^ a b Cooper p. 110.
- ^ Millar p. 62.
- ^ Sandes The Indian Sappers and Miners, p. 41.
- ^ a b c Cooper p. 111.
- ^ a b Millar p. 65.
- ^ a b Millar p. 69.
- ^ Cooper p. 112.
- ^ a b Holmes p. 79.
- ^ Thorn p. 276.
- ^ Cooper p. 114.
- ^ Millar p. 73.
- ^ a b c Cooper p. 115.
- ^ a b Cooper p. 117.
- ^ Holmes p. 80.
- ^ Cooper pp. 114–115.
- ^ a b Millar p. 81.
- ^ a b Corrigan p. 77.
- ^ a b Biddulph p. 144.
- ^ Bennell p. 290.
- ^ Weller p. 190.
- ^ Biddulph p. 145.
- ^ a b c Corrigan p. 78.
- ^ Biddulph p. 146.
- ^ Holmes p. 82.
- ^ Gurwood p. 170.
- ^ a b Bradshaw pp. 121–132.
- ^ Wellesley p. 20.
- ^ Gurwood p. 335.
- ^ Singh p. 107.
- ^ "SCOTS History". Ministry of Defence. 2009. Retrieved 18 January 2009.
- ^ Singh p. 297.
Bibliography
- Bennell, Anthony S. (1998), The Maratha War Papers of Arthur Wellesley, ISBN 0-7509-2069-6
- Biddulph, John (1899), The Nineteenth and their times, London: Murray
- ISBN 1-85728-772-X
- Bradshaw, John (1894), Sir Thomas Munro and the British Settlement of the Madras Presidency, ISBN 81-206-1871-8
- Cooper, Randolph G. S. (2003), The Anglo-Maratha Campaigns and the Contest for India, Cambridge: ISBN 0-521-82444-3
- ISBN 1-85285-515-0
- ISBN 0-548-60472-X
- ISBN 0-00-713750-8
- Millar, Simon (2006), Assaye 1803: Wellington's First and 'Bloodiest' Victory, Oxford: ISBN 1-84603-001-3
- Roy, Kaushik (2004), India's Historic Battles: From Alexander the Great to Kargil, ISBN 81-7824-109-9
- Sandes, Lt Col E.W.C. (1933), The Military Engineer in India, Vol I, Chatham, Great Britain: Institution of the Royal Engineers
- Sandes, Lt Col E.W.C. (1948), The Indian Sappers and Miners, Chatham, Great Britain: Institution of the Royal Engineers
- Severn, John Kenneth (2007), Architects of Empire: The Duke of Wellington and His Brothers, Oklahoma City: ISBN 978-0-8061-3810-7
- Singh, Sarbans (1993), Battle Honours of the Indian Army 1757–1971, New Delhi: Vision Books, ISBN 81-7094-115-6
- Thorn, William (1818), Memoir of the War in India, London: Thomas Egerton
- ISBN 0-582-12784-X
- Wellesley, Gerald, ed. (1956), The Conversations of the First Duke of Wellington with George William Chad, Cambridge: Saint Nicolas Press