User:Tinkaer1991/Tillali Massacre

Coordinates: 11°1′44″N 79°47′44″E / 11.02889°N 79.79556°E / 11.02889; 79.79556
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Tillali Massacre
Part of the Cattle War

Danish soldiers negotiating further territory to Tranquebar, 1750
Date30 June 1756
Location
Tillali, (Near modern-day Thanjavur)
11°1′44″N 79°47′44″E / 11.02889°N 79.79556°E / 11.02889; 79.79556
Result Thanjvurian victory
Territorial
changes
Tillali occupied by Thanjavurian forces
Belligerents
 Danish India Thanjavur
Commanders and leaders
Danish India Peter Hesselberg 
Danish India Hans Jacob Attrup 
Pratap Singh
Perumal Naik
Strength
27 Soldiers of the corps
30 Indian sepoys
Total: 55-57
2000[1]-4000[2] Cavalry
2000 men[2]
Total: 4000-6000
Casualties and losses
55 killed[2] 300
45 Civilians killed

The Tillali Massacre (

Tranquebar and besieged Fort Dansborg
.

Background and prelude

In January 1756 a newly appointed local governor called Perumal Naik was allegedly said to have raided Danish Tranquebar's surrounding districts.[3] In June the same year, a similar incident occurred, where Naik stole a herd of cattles.[4] As commander of the Danish border, Captian Strøbel was ordered to retaliate and marched from the Danish border town of Tillali, to occupy the Thanjavurian town of Anandamangalam with 60 men.[1] The remaining force at Tillali recieved Danish and Indian reinforcements, to protect to border.[1]

Prelude

In reaction to the Danish mobilization of Tranquebar and fortification of Anandamangalam, the nayak of Thanjavur, Pratap Singh, sent roughly 2000 cavalry and 2000 well armed men together with Perumal Naik's army into Danish territory.[1] The combined Thanjavurian army soon reached the Tillali, where the stationed Danes were attacked.[1]

Confrontation

Maps
Trankenbar and the adjacent land, drawn up on the site in 1761 (by engineering captain Leveux)

River systems in the south of GhanaIn command of the Danish outpost in Tillali, were captain Peter Hesselberg, with his Son-in-law, Hans Jacob Attrup, as ensign.[1] In Tillali the first confrontations occurred in the local hostel and pagoda.[1] The Danish forces retreated and took coverage behind a wall, where they got reinforcements from Tillali's local bailiff.[1] Yet the large Thanjavurian army were no match for the small Danish contingent and the Danes were subsequently massacred.[1]

Massacre

Sources describing the incident differ on the death toll. Most agree that both captain, Peter Hesselberg, and ensign, Hans Attrup were killed.[1][5][6]

Additionally, acording to Hans Gregersen in his book Trankebar, two lower officers, 24 European and dozens of Indians were killed.[1] All but one, who hid in the pagoda remained unharmed.[1] A similar claim is made by Danish historian, Kay Larsen, in the brugsforeningsbladet notes that two officers, 24 European and 45 local people from Tillali died.[5] Acording to Holger Christensen's Det danske fremstoed i Indien i 1750-erne 18 men of the corps[a] died.[7] Another claim by Bering Liisberg's Danmarks søfart og søhandel claims that 54 people were either killed or wounded.[6]

Aftermath

After the massacre at Tillali and the Danish retreat from Anandamangalam, all Danish districts outside Tranquebar were occupied and raided.[6] Fort Dansborg was temporarily put in a state of emergency and besieged by the Thanjavurians.[6]

See also

Notelist

  1. sepoys

References

  1. ^
    ISBN 9788711978337. Cite error: The named reference ":2" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page
    ).
  2. ^ a b c Cite error: The named reference Kay Larsen was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ Christensen, Holger. "Det danske fredmstød i Indien i 1750-erne. Baggrund og forløb" (PDF).
  4. ^ Geisler, Jens (2018-08-01). "Kvægkrigen på Coromandelkysten 1756 -". milhist.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 2024-02-13.
  5. ^ a b Larsen, Kay (1935). Danmarks Kolonier (PDF) (in Danish). BRUGSFORENINGS~ BLADET. p. 272.
  6. ^ a b c d Liisberg, Bering (2020). Danmarks søfart og søhandel (in Danish). SAGA Egmont.
  7. Copenhagen University
    . p. 126.