Battle of Delhi (1737)

The First Battle of Delhi took place on 28 March 1737 between the Maratha Empire and the Mughal Empire.[3] It was part of the Later Mughal-Maratha Wars (1728-1763).

First Battle of Delhi
Part of Later Mughal-Maratha Wars (1728-1763)
Date28 March 1737
Location
Result Maratha victory
Belligerents
Maratha Empire Mughal Empire
Commanders and leaders

Baji Rao I

Malhar Rao Holkar

Ranoji Shinde

Tukoji Pawar

Jiwaji Pawar

Yashwant Rao Pawar

Manaji Paygude

Vithoji Bule
Mir Hasan Khan Koka[1]
Chin Qilich Khan
Amir Khan Bahadur
Moin-ul-Mulk
Strength
70,000 soldiers 100,000 soldiers[2]

Background

On 12 November 1736, the Maratha general Bajirao advanced on Old Delhi to attack the Mughal capital. Mughal emperor Muhammad Shah sent Saadat Ali Khan I with a 150,000-strong army to stop the Maratha advance on Delhi. But Bajirao's subordinate chiefs Malhar Rao Holkar and Pilaji Jadhav crossed the river Yamuna and looted Ganga-Yamuna Doab. Saadat Khan then retired to Mathura, thinking the Marathas had retreated towards Pune. But Bajirao's army advanced to Delhi and encamped near Talkatora.

Battle

Muhammad Shah sent Mir Hasan Khan Koka with an army to intercept Bajirao. The Mughals were devastated by the fierce Maratha attack, and lost half of their army, which compelled them to ask for all regional rulers to help against the army of the Marathas. After the battle, when the news of Saadat Ali Khan's approaching large Mughal army reached Bajirao, he retreated to Pune.

Aftermath

The battle signified the further expansion of the Maratha Empire towards the north. Muhammad Shah called upon the Nizam's and Nawab's armies to destroy the Maratha Army.

The Nizam of Hyderabad and the Nawab of Bhopal left Hyderabad to protect the Mughal Empire from the invasion of the Marathas, but they were defeated decisively in the Battle of Bhopal (24 December 1737).[4][3] The Marathas extracted large tributaries from the Mughals, and signed a treaty which ceded Malwa to the Marathas.[3]

The Maratha plunder of Delhi weakened the Mughal Empire, which got further weakened after successive invasions of Nadir Shah in 1739 and Ahmad Shah Abdali in the 1750s. The continuous attacks led the Marathas to wage another Battle of Delhi in 1757 against the Rohillas who were pushed out, which largely effaced the remaining central authority of the Mughal Empire.[5]

See also

References

  1. Advanced Study in the History of Modern India 1707-1813
  2. Dighe, V.G. Peshwa Bajirao I and Maratha expansion. p. 138.
  3. An Advanced History of Modern India
  4. History Modern India
  5. Robinson, Howard; James Thomson Shotwell (1922). "Mogul Empire and the Marathas". The Development of the British Empire. Houghton Mifflin. p. 106-132.
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