Massacre of British Army in Afghanistan in 1842

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Massacre of British Army in Afghanistan in 1842


In the 1800s, the British controlled India, and the Russians, to the north, had their own designs on southern Asia. Between these two imperial powers sat the rugged land of Afghanistan. In time the periodic collisions of empire in that unforgiving landscape would become known as "The Great Game."

One of the earliest eruptions in this epic struggle was the first Anglo-Afghan War, which had its beginning in the late 1830s. To protect its holdings in India, the British had allied themselves with an Afghan ruler, Dost Mohammed.

He had united warring Afghan factions after seizing power in 1818, and seemed to be serving a useful purpose to the British. But in 1837, it became apparent that Dost Mohammed was beginning a flirtation with the Russians.

Britain Invaded Afghanistan in the Late 1830s
The British resolved to invade Afghanistan, and the Army of the Indus, a formidable force of more than 20,000 British and Indian troops, set off from India for Afghanistan in late 1838. After difficult travel through the mountain passes, the British reached Kabul in April 1839. They marched unopposed into the Afghan capital city.

Dost Mohammed was toppled as the Afghan leader, and the British installed Shah Shuja, who had been driven from power decades earlier. The original plan was to withdraw all the British troops, but Shah Shuja's hold on power was shaky, so two brigades of British troops had to remain in Kabul.

Along with the British Army were two major figures assigned to essentially guide the government of Shah Shuja, Sir William McNaghten and Sir Alexander Burnes. The men were two well-known and very experienced political officers. Burnes had lived in Kabul previously, and had written a book about his time there.

The British forces staying in Kabul could have moved into an ancient fortress overlooking the city, but Shah Shuja believed that would make it look like the British were in control. Instead, the British built a new cantonment, or base, that would prove very difficult to defend. Sir Alexander Burnes, feeling quite confident, lived outside the cantonment, in a house in Kabul.

The Afghans Revolted Against the British in Late 1841
The Afghan population deeply resented the British troops. Tensions slowly escalated, and despite warnings from friendly Afghans that an uprising was inevitable, the British were unprepared in November 1841 when an insurrection broke out in Kabul.

A mob encircled the house of Sir Alexander Burnes. The British diplomat tried to offer the crowd money to disburse, to no effect. The lightly defended residence was overrun. Burnes and his brother were both brutally murdered.

The British troops in the city were greatly outnumbered and unable to defend themselves properly, as the cantonment was encircled.

A truce was arranged in late November, and it seems the Afghans simply wanted the British to leave the country. But tensions escalated when the son of Dost Mohammed, Muhammad Akbar Khan, appeared in Kabul, and took a harder line.

The British Were Forced to Flee Afghanistan
Sir William McNaghten, who had been trying to negotiate a way out of the city, was murdered on December 23, 1841, reportedly by Muhammad Akbar Khan himself. The British, their situation hopeless, somehow managed to negotiate a treaty to leave Afghanistan.

On January 6, 1842, the British began their withdrawal from Kabul. Leaving the city were 4,500 British troops and 12,000 civilians who had followed the British Army to Kabul. The plan was to march to Jalalabad, about 90 miles away.

The retreat in the brutally cold weather took an immediate toll, and many died from exposure in the first days. And despite the treaty, the British column came under attack when it reached a mountain pass, the Khurd Kabul. The retreat became a massacre.

Slaughter in the Mountain Passes of Afghanistan
A magazine based in Boston, the North American Review, published a remarkably extensive and timely account titled "The English in Afghanistan" six months later, in July 1842. It contained this vivid description (some antiquated spellings have been left intact):

On the 6th of January, 1842, the Caboul forces commenced their retreat through the dismal pass, destined to be their grave. On the third day they were attacked by the mountaineers from all points, and a fearful slaughter ensued"¦
The troops kept on, and awful scenes ensued. Without food, mangled and cut to pieces, each one caring only for himself, all subordination had fled; and the soldiers of the forty-fourth English regiment are reported to have knocked down their officers with the butts of their muskets.

On the 13th of January, just seven days after the retreat commenced, one man, bloody and torn, mounted on a miserable pony, and pursued by horsemen, was seen riding furiously across the plains to Jellalabad. That was Dr. Brydon, the sole person to tell the tale of the passage of Khourd Caboul.

More than 16,000 people had set out on the retreat from Kabul, and in the end only one man, Dr. William Brydon, a British Army surgeon, had made it alive to Jalalabad.

The garrison there lit signal fires and sounded bugles to guide other British survivors to safety, but after several days they realized that Brydon would be the only one. It was believed the Afghans let him live so he could tell the grisly story.

The Retreat from Kabul Was a Severe Blow to British Pride
The loss of so many troops to mountain tribesmen was, of course, a bitter humiliation for the British. With Kabul lost, a campaign was mounted to evacuate the rest of the British troops from garrisons in Afghanistan, and the British then withdrew from the country entirely.

And while popular legend held that Dr. Brydon was the only survivor from the horrific retreat from Kabul, some British troops and their wives had been taken hostage by Afghans and were later rescued and released. And a few other survivors turned up over the years.

One account, in a history of Afghanistan by former British diplomat Sir Martin Ewans, contends that in the 1920s two elderly women in Kabul were introduced to British diplomats. Astoundingly, they had been on the retreat as babies. Their British parents had apparently been killed, but they had been rescued and brought up by Afghan families.
 

Waffen SS

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Have you ever heard of Sikh troops and their conquest of Pathans? Battle of saragarhi? Only we Indians have been able to dominate them completely.
Battle of Saragarhi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pls read the fine prints also.
What ever, friend, I prefer free minded Afghans fighting to keep their liberty more than Indian servants of British. Of course Afghanistan was frequently dominated by Indians, Afghanistan was once a Hindu and Buddhist country, it started in Mauyran era, continued in Kushan era(a central Asian empire), then Shahi kingdom, after that under Mughals. This time Indians fought for British not for India.

So I dont take pride on those Indians who fought for British, I just ignore.

I believe it was greatest defeat of British army in it's history if not one of them. But greatest defeat of British was Battle of Singapore.

Battle of Singapore - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Some images from 1st Afghan war, I believe you will enjoy them.



Madras Native Infantry



British 17th Foot storming the Kabul Gate



Afghans attacking the retreating British and Indian army



The route taken by the Kabul garrison during its disastrous retreat to India in January 1842



Afghan tribesmen waiting to attack the Kabul Brigade during the agonising retreat to India



Afghan tribesmen armed with jezails



The last stand of British 44th Foot at Gandamak



Dr Brydon arrives at Jellalabad, the last survivor of an
army of 16,500 soldiers and civilians.
 
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W.G.Ewald

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Half of the proud tradition of the British Army must be made up of military disasters.

 
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Sole British soldier escapes Kabul — History.com This Day in History — 1/13/1842


On January 13, 1842, a British army doctor reaches the British sentry post at Jalalabad, Afghanistan, the lone survivor of a 16,000-strong Anglo-Indian expeditionary force that was massacred in its retreat from Kabul. He told of a terrible massacre in the Khyber Pass, in which the Afghans gave the defeated Anglo-Indian force and their camp followers no quarter.

In the 19th century, Britain, with a goal of protecting its Indian colonial holdings from Russia, tried to establish authority in neighboring Afghanistan by attempting to replace Emir Dost Mohammad with a former emir known to be sympathetic to the British. This blatant British interference in Afghanistan's internal affairs triggered the outbreak of the first Anglo-Afghan War in 1839.

Dost Mohammad surrendered to British forces in 1840 after the Anglo-Indian army had captured Kabul. However, after an Afghan revolt in Kabul the British had no choice but to withdraw. The withdrawal began on January 6, 1842, but bad weather delayed the army's progress. The column was attacked by swarms of Afghans led by Mohammad's son, and those who were not killed outright in the attack were later massacred by the Afghan soldiers. A total of 4,500 soldiers and 12,000 camp followers were killed. Only one man, Dr. William Bryden, escaped to recount the details of the military disaster.

In retaliation, another British force invaded Kabul in 1843, burning a portion of the city. In the same year, the war came to an end, and in 1857 Emir Dost Mohammad, who had been restored to power in 1843, signed an alliance with the British. In 1878, the Second Anglo-Afghan War began, which ended two years later with Britain winning control of Afghanistan's foreign affairs.
 

Decklander

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The biggest problem of any army in Afganistan has been the tribal loyalties and lack of trust with afgans. Any afgan will change sides easily just for tribal loyalties. So a person who may be your most trusted in the morning, might become your enemy by evening. We Indians have known this for ages and so we always forged friendship with Tribal heads and tribes rather than individual afgans. Even post 9/11, it was the RAW contacts with tribal heads and Loya Jirga which turned the tables so soon.
 

apple

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Half of the proud tradition of the British Army must be made up of military disasters.
Or conversely, outside of your fetid imagination, the British last lost a European war in... Actually, I'm not really sure when. Joan of Arc, 800(?) years ago?

And in between these "military disasters" they managed to conquer the world and, amongst other achievements, give your country it's culture, society and language. You' re welcome.
 

W.G.Ewald

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Or conversely, outside of your fetid imagination, the British last lost a European war in... Actually, I'm not really sure when. Joan of Arc, 800(?) years ago?

And in between these "military disasters" they managed to conquer the world and, amongst other achievements, give your country it's culture, society and language. You' re welcome.
Fetid imagination? :shocked:

Oh, maybe you thought I was imagining the Black Hole of Calcutta.
 

Bilal

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So the massacre we so read in books is true,the afghans did destroy the great british army.
 

CCTV

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The place so called the graveyard of empires.
British, USSR now US.
 

desicanuk

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The place so called the graveyard of empires.
British, USSR now US.
Russians would have prevailed if Americans had not got involved.American weapons,Saudi money and Pakistani manpower doomed the Russians.
Pro-communist Indian government of the day in yet one more foreign policy blunder blessed the Soviet takeover of Afghanistan as Nehru had done before with PRC's brutal invasion and subsequent subjugation of independent Tibet.
 

drkrn

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Russians would have prevailed if Americans had not got involved.American weapons,Saudi money and Pakistani manpower doomed the Russians.
Pro-communist Indian government of the day in yet one more foreign policy blunder blessed the Soviet takeover of Afghanistan as Nehru had done before with PRC's brutal invasion and subsequent subjugation of independent Tibet.
even without american help its difficult to wage a war in a country like afghanistan way back then.even with least support from outside,afghans scared us which has world's superior tech
the environment there is unforgiving
 

Ash

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An interesting thing about Afghanistan, is that Dost Mahomed was said to be wearing that clock of the Islamic Prohet Mohamed, during his 'jihad' against the English. The wearer of the clock was said to be the' leader of the faithful'. Thats probably how all the tribes united under one leader to fight the English. The clock was brought to Afghanistan in the 1760's by Ahmed Shah Duranni, first Amir of Kabul, from Central Asia. Oddly enough the last time the clock was seen in public was in 1996 when the Mullah Omar, Taliban leader,wore it in a rally to get support to overthrow Kabul. Shortly after, Kabul fell to the Taliban.The clock is said to lie today in the shrine Kharka Shariff, in Kandahar
 

Bilal

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Interesting,but mullah omar still has the cloack?who has current possesion of the said?
 

Ash

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Interesting,but mullah omar still has the cloack?who has current possesion of the said?
. It lies in the shrine i have mentioned. I would think it is guarded by the state
 

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