Capture of Peshawar (1758)
The Capture of Peshawar took place in the spring of 1758Deccan, Tukoji Rao Holkar was given the charge of Peshawar with 10,000 Maratha troops.[7]
Aftermath
Peshawar was captured on 8 May 1758 by the Maratha Empire from the Durrani Empire. The Marathas were victorious in the campaign in the province and Peshawar was captured. After being defeated by the army of Marathas, the Durranis with Jahan Khan and Timur Shah Durrani left the fort and fled to Afghanistan.[8][5]
See also
References
- ISBN 9781598843378.
The Marathas, assisted by Sikhs, defeated the Afghans and captured Attock, Peshwar and Multan in the spring of 1758.
- ISBN 9781598847604.
However, Timur Shah was driven out of Peshawar in 1758 following his defeat by the Maratha Empire.
- ^ Hari Ram Gupta (1961). Marathas and Panipat. Chandigarh: Panjab University. p. 97.
Other contemporary Persian records mention that "Tukoji and other cavalry officers sent by Rao Malharji Holkar and Rao Jankoji Sindhia arrived at Peshawar."
- ^ ISBN 9781932705546. "The province of Multan and northwest frontier were also overrun by Marathas and the forts of Peshawar and Attock were garrisoned by their troops"
- ^ ISBN 9780803213449.
The Marathas attacked soon after and, with some help from the Sikhs, managed to capture Attock, Peshawar, and Multan between April and May 1758.
- ISBN 9781615301225.
- ISBN 9781932705546.
Subsequently , Tukoji Holkar , with 10,000 Maratha soldiers , was posted at Peshawar and Narsoji Pandit took charge of the fort of Attock with a contingent of 4,000 troops.
- ^ War, Culture and Society in Early Modern South Asia, 1740-1849
Further reading
- Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World: A Historical Encyclopedia, p. 43, at Google Books
- Duff, James Grant. A history of the Mahrattas, Volume 2
- War, Culture and Society in Early Modern South Asia, 1740–1849, p. 103, at Google Books