Mir Jumla's invasion of Assam
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Mughal invasion of Assam | |||||||||
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Part of Ahom–Mughal conflicts | |||||||||
According to spoken accounts, approximately 10 Moidams were damaged by Mir Jumla II's army.[1] | |||||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||||
Ahom kingdom | |||||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||||
Mir Jumlah | Sutamla |
Mir Jumla II invaded the Ahom kingdom in January 1662 and left it in January–February 1663. He was able to occupy Garhgaon, the Ahom capital, before the beginning of the rainy season, but he and his army were confined mostly to Garhgaon and Madhupur during that period. The Ahom king Sutamla had to take flight and hide in Namrup during Mir Jumla's occupation of the capital. The defection of Baduli Phukan, a high ranking Ahom commander, precipitated the Treaty of Ghilajharighat in January 1663, with the Ahom king accepting tributary status. Mir Jumla died on his way back before he could reach Dhaka, his capital.
Background
[edit]After Shah Jahan fell sick in 1658, the vassal ruler of Koch Bihar, Pran Narayan, threw off the Mughal yoke and began offensives in the east to recover territories in the erstwhile Koch Hajo. Narayan attacked the Faujdar of Kamrup and Hajo, who retreated to Guwahati. This confusion enabled the Ahoms to march against both the Mughals at Guwahati as well as Pran Narayan, and the Ahom kingdom took control of the region right up to the Sankosh river. During the Mughal succession war, Auranzeb's general Mir Jumla II pursued Shuja, a rival claimant of the Mughal throne, who escaped to the Arakan. Mir Jumla was made the governor of Bengal and he sent Rashid Khan to recover the erstwhile Mughal territory in Kamrup. The Ahoms fortified Jogighopa at Manas river in preparation against the Mughals. Mir Jumla, in the meantime, took possession of Koch Bihar (Pran Narayan having fled to Bhutan) and began his march against the Ahoms on January 4, 1662. The Ahom fortifications at Manas were easily overrun.
Koch Behar was occupied in about one month and a half and making administrative arrangements there, Mir Jumla came to join the advance party towards Kamrup.[4] The king of Assam was prudent enough to evacuate Kamrup, but Mir Jumla decided to conquer Assam also. Mir Jumla took 12,000 cavalry, 30,000 infantry, and a fleet of 323 ships and boats up river towards Assam—the naval contingent comprised Portuguese, English, and Dutch sailors.[5]
Mir Jumla's march toward Garhgaon
[edit]Mir Jumla divided his army into two and advanced east, one division along the north bank and the other along south bank of the Brahmaputra River.[6] By February 4, 1662, Mir Jumla took possession of Guwahati. The Ahoms took stand at Samdhara (under the Borgohain) and Simalugarh (under Bhitarual Gohain) in the north and south banks respectively. Mir Jumla now transferred his entire army south and reached Simalugarh at the end of the month and overran it with some effort. The attack so disheartened the Samdhara fort that it was abandoned in haste and the Borgohain adopted a scorched earth retreat. After a night-long naval battle at Kaliabor, the Ahoms again fell back. Mir Jumla then reached Salagrah, which too was abandoned.
Occupation of Garhgaon
[edit]Sutamla had no option but to take flight, leaving some riches in Garhgaon that fell into Mir Jumla's possession. Mir Jumla entered the capital on March 17, 1662.[7] from this campaign, Mir Jumla has manage to capture 100 elephants, 300000 coins, 8000 shields, 1000 ships, and 173 massive rice stores.[8]
Notes
[edit]- ^ "Assam's Charaideo Moidams are sacred. Now Unesco bid moves it to India's political centre".
- ^ (Shakespeare 1914:41)
- ^ Muzaffar H. Syed 1905, p. 166
- ^ Narayan Sarkar 1951, p. 277
- ^ Abdul Karim (1992). History of Bengal: The reigns of Shah Jahan and Aurangzib. Institute of Bangladesh Studies, University of Rajshahi. p. 446; 449. Retrieved 8 March 2024.
- ^ (Gait 1906:128)
- ^ (Shakespeare 1914:41)
- ^ Muzaffar H. Syed 1905, p. 166
References
[edit]- Gait, Edward A (1906), A History of Assam, Calcutta, ISBN 9780404168193
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Shakespeare, Leslie Waterfield (1914), History of Upper Assam, Upper Burmah and northeastern frontier, Calcutta, ISBN 9780342896868
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Narayan Sarkar, Jagadish (1951). The Life of Mir Jumla, the General of Aurangzab. Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-03-16. Retrieved 8 March 2024.
- Muzaffar H. Syed (1905). History of Indian Nation : Medieval India (ebook). K. K. Publications. ISBN 8178441322. Retrieved 8 March 2024.