[Home]History of Ahmad Shah

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Revision 3 . . (edit) September 17, 2001 11:07 am by MichaelTinkler [links]
Revision 2 . . August 22, 2001 4:43 pm by (logged).99.203.xxx [Initial text from 1911 encyclopedia -- please update as needed]
Revision 1 . . August 22, 2001 7:56 am by (logged).99.203.xxx [Initial text from 1911 encyclopedia -- please update as needed]
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff, author diff)

Changed: 2c2
Afghanistan, was the son of Sammaun-Khan, hereditary chief of
Afghanistan, was the son of Sammaun-Khan, hereditary chief of

Changed: 13c13,15
Durani. Two things may be said to have contributed greatly
Durani.

Two things may be said to have contributed greatly

Changed: 17c19,58
military service
military service; and he kept his army constantly engaged
in brilliant schemes of foreign conquest. Being possessed
of the Koh-i-noor diamond, and being fortunate enough to
intercept a consignment of treasure on its way to the shah
of Persia, he had all the advantages which great wealth can
give. He first crossed the Indus in 1748, when he took
Lahore?; and in 1751, after a feeble resistance on the part
of the Muslim viceroy, he became master of the entire
Punjab. In 1750 he took Nishapur, and in 1752 subdued
Kashmir. His great expedition to Delhi? was undertaken in
1756 in order to avenge himself on the [Mogul empire]? for the
recapture of Lahore. Ahmad entered Delhi with his army in
triumph, and for more than a month the city was given over to
pillage. The shah himself added to his wives a princess of
the imperial family, and bestowed another upon his son Timur
Shah, whom he made governor of the Punjab and Sirhind. As his
viceroy in Delhi he left a Rohilla chief in whom he had all
confidence, but scarcely had he crossed the Indus when the
Muslim wazir drove the chief from the city, killed the
Great Mogul and set another prince of the family, a tool of his
own, upon the throne. The Mahratta chiefs availed themselves
of these circumstances to endeavour to possess themselves of the
whole country, and Ahmad was compelled more than once to cross
the Indus in order to protect his territory from them and the
Sikhs?, who were constantly attacking his garrisons. In 1758
the Mahrattas obtained possession of the Punjab, but on the
6th of January 1761 they were totally routed by Ahmad in the
great battle of Panipat. In a later expedition he inflicted
a severe defeat upon the Sikhs, but had to hasten westward
immediately afterwards in order to quell an insurrection in
Afghanistan. Meanwhile the Sikhs again rose, and Ahmad
was now forced to abandon all hope of retaining the command
of the Punjab. After lengthened suffering from a terrible
disease, said to have been cancer in the face, he died in
1773, leaving to his son Timur the kingdom he had founded.





Initial text from 1911 encyclopedia -- Please update as needed

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