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Maratha–Mysore wars

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Maratha-Mysore War
File:Battle of Adoni, Tuzuk-i-Asafia.png
Siege of Adoni (1786)
Date22 August 1768–April 1787
Location
Result See Aftermath
Territorial
changes
Mysore returns all captured territory to the Peshwa
Belligerents

Maratha Empire Maratha Empire

Supported by:

File:Flag of the State of Hyderabad (18th century-1900).svg Hyderabad
File:Flag of Mysore Hyder Ali & TipuSultan.png Mysore
Commanders and leaders
Maratha Empire Madhavrao I
Maratha Empire Raghunath Rao
Maratha Empire Hari Pant
Maratha Empire Murari Rao
Maratha Empire Vyankatrao Bhave
Maratha Empire Padurang Rao (POW)
Maratha Empire Konher Rao 
File:Flag of the State of Hyderabad (18th century-1900).svg Asaf Jah II
File:Flag of the State of Hyderabad (18th century-1900).svg Arastu Jah
File:Flag of Mysore Hyder Ali & TipuSultan.png Hyder Ali
File:Flag of Mysore Hyder Ali & TipuSultan.png Tipu Sultan
File:Flag of Mysore Hyder Ali & TipuSultan.png Muhammad Ali
File:Flag of Mysore Hyder Ali & TipuSultan.png Burhanudhin
Strength
Maratha Empire 60,000[1]
File:Flag of the State of Hyderabad (18th century-1900).svg 25,000[2]
File:Flag of Mysore Hyder Ali & TipuSultan.png 35,000[3]
Casualties and losses
Unknown Unknown

The Maratha–Mysore War was an 18th century conflict in India fought between the Maratha Empire and the Kingdom of Mysore. Though initial hostilities between the sides started in the 1760s, the last battle began in February 1785 and ended in 1787.[4]

Situation in the 18th century

The 18th century saw a steady decline of the once-dominant power on the whole subcontinent – the Mughal Empire. Apart from the disastrous invasion by the Afsharid ruler of Iran, Nader Shah in 1739, the Mughals were successfully contested by the Marathas. Meanwhile, the British East India Company was asserting its influence in India and was engaged in a series of wars with Mysore which eventually resulted in the region falling under Company rule near the end of the 18th century.[5]

Mysore wars with the British

File:Tippu's cannon.jpg
A cannon used by Mysore under Tipu Sultan

Mysore was initially a small kingdom at the beginning of the 1700s. However, able rulers such as Hyder Ali and Tipu Sultan transformed the kingdom and westernized the army and it soon turned into a military threat both to the British and the Marathas.[6] Upon Hyder Ali's death in 1782, Mysore covered 80,000 sq. miles and had a population of approximately 6 million people.[7]

Starting from 1767, the Kingdom of Mysore overall had four major military confrontations with the British (1767–69; 1780–84; 1790–92; and 1799).[8]

Around 1761, the commander in chief of the state of Mysore, Hyder Ali proclaimed himself absolute ruler of the Kingdom and started military campaigns to expand the territory of the state. In 1766, the British East India Company joined forces with the local ruler of Hyderabad against Hyder Ali, but by 1769, the British were left alone in a war with the Mysore Kingdom. In 1769 Hyder Ali made his way to Madras (the location of the Company's government) and demanded a peace treaty.[8]

Maratha–Mysore wars

File:The Head of the advanced guard of the Mahratta Army coming to join Earl Cornwallis, near Seringapatam, May 28th 1791.jpg
The Maratha Army in 1791

After the Second Anglo-Mysore War, the son and successor of Hyder Ali the new ruler of Mysore Tipu Sultan, sought to keep offensive moves by the Marathas at bay. The Maratha had established a military alliance with the ruler of Hyderabad with a common purpose of recovering territories both sides had lost to Mysore during previous conflicts. Much of the desired territory was subject to marches, counter-marches, and sieges of fortified points. The Marathas also attempted to draw the British East India Company into the pending conflict, but a neutrality policy implemented by the new governor-general, Lord Charles Cornwallis made its participation difficult. While the Maratha would later aid the British in the Fourth Anglo-Mysore War, the final conflict between Mysore and the Maratha by themselves happened in January 1787 in the Siege of Bahadur Benda, where Mysore successfully captured Bahadur Fort from the Marathas.

Major conflicts

Outcome and aftermath

File:Anglo-Mysore War 1 and 2.png
Map of Southern India in 1784

The Maratha-Mysore War ended after the final conflict during Mysore's successful siege of Bahadur Benda in January 1787, and the Marathas settled for peace with the kingdom of Mysore, to which Tipu Sultan obliged with the signing of the treaty of Gajendragad in April 1787. Tipu who was desperate to focus on defending Mysore from the British agreed to pay an annual tribute of 12 lakhs per year to the Marathas, to end hostilities with them, which would allow him to focus on his rivalry with the British.[10][11] In addition to this Tipu agreed to return all territories captured by Hyder Ali from the Marathas.[12][13][14]

Tipu Sultan would release Kalopant and return Adoni, Kittur, and Nargund to their previous rulers. Badami would be ceded to the Marathas. In return, Tipu would get all the places he had captured in the war, including Gajendragarh and Dharwar. Tipu would also be addressed by the Marathas by an honorary title of "Nabob Tipu Sultan, Fateh Ali Khan".[15][16]

The Marathas however ultimately betrayed Tipu, during the Fourth Anglo-Mysore War the Marathas presented their support to the British East India Company and the British went on to take over Mysore in 1799.[17] However, sometimes after Tipu's death the Marathas themselves would get involved in conflicts with the British who defeated the Marathas by 1819 in the Anglo-Maratha War leading to the annexation of their territories by the British and end of the Maratha Confederacy in India.[18]

Bibliography

References

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  5. ^ Chopra et al. (2003), pp. 79–80; Kamath (2001), pp. 233–234
  6. ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
  7. ^ Roy Kaushik, "War, Culture and Society in Early Modern South Asia, 1740-1849"; 2011; Routledge; p. 74
  8. ^ a b Encyclopedia Britannica, https://www.britannica.com/event/Mysore-Wars
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  13. ^ Anglo-Maratha relations, 1785-96
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