Battle of Ghaghara
During
Battle
Results
of Battle of Ghaghra
Sultan Mahmud Lodi
Sultan Mahmud Lodi, who aspired to the throne of Delhi
and who had been declared the rightful heir to the Delhi Sultanate by the
Western Afghan Confederates and aided by the Rajput Confederates, was put to
flight after the defeat at the Battle of Khanwa in 1527. He took refuge in
Gujarat. After trying to get in touch with his kinsmen in the east he managed
to join them. He at the head of the Eastern Afghan Confederates took Bihar.
On the death of Sultan Muhammad
Shah Lohani the Pathan king of Bihar of the new dynasty, an event which
occurred some time after Babur's expedition to Chanderi, he was succeeded by
his son Sultan Jalal ud-Din Lohani a minor, that the chief management of affairs
at least in Bihar then devolved on that prince's mother Dudu and on Farid Khan
better known as Sher Shah Suri who had already risen into distinction; that the
country was distracted by the rival claims of the Lohani nobles related to the
young King, of Baban and Bayezid whose influence was very extensive, of Sher
Shah Suri and of other chiefs, and that these factions added to the effects of
the discomfiture which the Pathans received in the preceding campaigns from the
armies of Babur at length induced the young prince to take refuge in the
territories of the Sultan of Bengal.
In this state of things the
Afghans of Jaunpur and indeed of India in general, in order to avert the total
ruin of their affairs and to unite all interests as far as was practicable
resolved to call in Sultan Mahmud Lodi who had already with the support of Rana
Sanga made an effort to mount the throne of Delhi. When defeated in that
attempt he had retired to Gujarat whence he afterwards proceeded to Pana in
Bundelkhand where he remained waiting for some favorable change of affairs and
now accepted the invitation to ascend the throne of Bihar and Jaunpur. He was
speedily joined by his countrymen from every quarter and seems to have taken
possession of nearly the whole of Bihar without opposition. What excites most
surprise is the secrecy and success with which intrigues and movements so
extensive appear to have been conducted a fact to be explained perhaps by the
deep interest which every Pathan felt in the national success and the fidelity
which tribesmen show to their chiefs and to each other.
The very day after receiving this
news Babur returned to Agra where he intimated to his council his resolution
immediately to assume the command of the eastern army and accordingly taking
with him such troops as were at hand he set out on February 2, 1529 and
crossing the Doab reached the right bank of the Ganges at Dakdaki on February
27, 1529. Here he was met by his son Humayun, General Askari and several
generals who came from the other side. He arranged with them that while his
army marched down the right bank of the river theirs should march down the left
and should always encamp over against his.
The information which he here
received was but little satisfactory. He found that the Pathans who were
straining every nerve to recover their military and political ascendancy had
gathered round Sultan Mahmud Lodi to the number of a 100,000 men that the
Sultan had detached Baban and Sheikh Bayezid with a large force to Sirwar while
he himself with Fateh Khan Shirwani the minister of Sultan Jalal ud-Din Lodi
and of Sultan Ibrahim Lodi in succession by whom Mahmud had been joined and who
had now deserted Babur as he had done his first master kept along the Bihar
bank of the Ganges and was marching on Chunar that Sher Shah Suri, whom Babur
had distinguished by marks of his favor having given him several perganas and
entrusted him with a command, had joined the insurgents, had crossed the Ganges
and occupied Benares from which the officers of Sultan Jalal ud-Din Sherki a
descendant of the older dynasty of the country who held the city under Babur's
authority had fled on his approach.
There were therefore at this time
three competitors for the Eastern or Sherki kingdom
1. Sultan
Jalal ud-Din Sherki the representative of the older kings who ruled the country
before it was conquered by Sultan Sikander Lodi. He had lately submitted to
Babur and sought his protection. His claims had become rather obsolete but
seemed to have been revived at this period, and acknowledged by Babur,
evidently to serve an immediate purpose.
2. Sultan
Jalal ud-Din Khan Lohani whose father and grandfather had headed the revolt
against Sultan Ibrahim Lodi. He was supported by many Afghan nobles in Bihar
but had lately been forced to seek refuge with the Sultan of Bengal his ally.
3. Sultan
Mahmud Lodi the brother of the late Sultan Ibrahim Lodi and the representative
of the Lodi dynasty of Delhi whom the great body of the Pathans had now united
to support in his claims not on Bihar merely but on Delhi itself.
Babur informed of the real state
of affairs continued his march down the banks of the Ganges. In passing Karra
he was magnificently entertained by Sultan Jalal ud-Din Sherki the prince whose
pretensions he favored and on whom he bestowed the nominal command of a
division of his army. When he had made a march or two below that city the
effects of his activity became visible. He learned that Sultan Mahmud Lodi who
had recently advanced to Chunar and even made an assault upon it had no sooner
received certain information of the Emperor's approach than filled with
consternation he raised the siege and retreated in confusion and that Sher Shah
Suri had in like manner abandoned Benares and recrossed the river with such
precipitation that two of his boats were lost in the passage.
The imperial army having reached
Allahabad where the Ganges and Yamuna rivers unite, their streams began on
March 10, 1529 to cross the latter river to Priag whence Babur proceeded by
Chunar, Benares and Ghazipur hastening to attack Sultan Mahmud who had now
taken a position behind the Son River. At Ghazipur, Mahmud Khan Lohani an
Afghan of influence came and submitted to him and while yet near the same place
Sultan Jalal ud-Din Khan Lohani the expelled prince and still one of the
competitors for the throne of Bihar, Sher Shah Suri the future sovereign of
Delhi and other Afghans of influence sent to tender their submission. This
amounted to a breaking up of the Lohani dynasty of Bihar leaving only Sultan
Mahmud Lodi and his adherents to be combated.
Babur now proceeded to cross the
Kermnas and encamped beyond Chousa and Baksara or Buxar. Marching thence he
found that Sultan Mahmud whose army had been daily suffering from defection and
who had been lying not far off attended by only 2000 men had retired with
precipitation on the approach of an advanced party of the imperial army had
been pursued and several of his men slain. He also now took refuge with the
army of Bengal which had crossed the Ganges probably in the intention of co
operating with him. Babur proceeded to the district of Ari in Bihar lying
between the Ganges and the Son River at their confluence where he invested
Muhammad Zaman Mirza with the government of Bihar and fixed the revenue to be
paid out of that province. The Emperor had now arrived opposite to where the
Ghaghara River joins the Ganges from the north east and where apparently the
kingdom of Bengal commenced on the left bank of that river. Here he learned
that Sultan Mahmud Lodi was in the Bengal camp at the junction of the two
rivers with a body of Afghans and that when he and his followers wished to
remove their families and baggage they were not permitted by the Bengalis
probably wishing to retain them as hostages Sultan Jalal ud-Din Khan Lohani his
rival who had lately sent his submission to Babur was in like manner hindered
from departing in consequence of which he had come to blows with the Bengalis
had effected a passage over the Ganges into Bihar with his followers and was on
his march to join the imperial army. The Emperor therefore who considered that
the position of the army of Bengal and the conduct of its leaders had violated
their neutrality prepared to call them to account. Nusrat Shah, the Sultan of
Bengal had recovered some of his lost territories from the Pathans after the
collapse of the Delhi Sultanate.
During
Battle
Babur found the army of Kherid, as the Bengal army was
called, lying between what is at present the territory of Saran. It was
encamped near the junction of the Ganges and the Ghaghara River so as to be
able to defend both the course of the Ghaghara River and the left bank of the
Ganges after the union of the two rivers. He discovered too that the Bengali
generals had collected about a 100-150 vessels on their side of the stream by
means of which they were able at once to hinder the passage of an enemy and to
facilitate their own. Such an army he could not safely leave behind especially
as the troops of Baban and Bayezid had also taken refuge upon and in strength
occupied the upper course of the Ghaghra River. He was indeed at peace with
Bengal but the shelter afforded to his flying enemy the position of the Kherid
army and the equivocal conduct of its leaders made it indispensable that he
should have a categorical declaration as to the disposition and intention of
the Bengali government. He therefore dispatched an envoy to Nusrat Shah the
Sultan of Bengal.
Participants of
Battle
Babur was now joined by Sultan
Junaid Birlas from Jaunpur with about 20,000 men. The tardy arrival of these
troops subjected their commander to a temporary disgrace. Not having received a
satisfactory answer to his demands, the Emperor resolved to compel the army
beyond the Ghaghra River to quit its strong position. He made the necessary
arrangements for the intended attack. He formed his army into six divisions
Four of these consisting of Askari's army which was already on the left bank of
the Ganges and of Sultan Junaid's which had recently joined on the same side
were ordered to be prepared to cross the Ghaghra River either in boats at Haldi
or by fording still farther up that river. Askari was the youngest son of
Babur. The other two divisions were still on the right bank of the Ganges. One
of these under the Emperor's personal direction was to effect the passage of
that river and then to cover the operations of the Turkish Ustad Ali Quli his
chief engineer and commander of the Artillery who was directed to plant a
battery on the banks of the Siru or Ghaghra River above its union with the
Ganges directly opposite to the Bengali camp which it would be able to
cannonade and afterwards to cover the passage of the Emperor's division when it
crossed the Ghaghra River to attack the enemy. Mustafa Rumi another Turkish
engineer who had a party of musketeers and artillery supported by Muhammad
Zaman Mirza and the sixth division was to open a cannonade on the flank of the
enemy's camp from the Bihar bank of the Ganges below the junction of the
rivers. The main body of the army which was that under Askari after passing the
Ghaghra River at Haldi was ordered to march down upon the enemy so as to draw
them from their camp and induce them to march up that river and by this
diversion to keep them occupied until the two divisions of Babur and Muhammad
Zaman under cover of the fire of the artillery and matchlock men could be
transported across.
Motion of the
Armies
The whole army was accordingly
put in motion Askari's four divisions marched for Haldi. The batteries both on
the Ghaghara River and Ganges were constructed and commenced their fire. The
Bengali army behaved with great bravery and pushed parties across to attack the
Emperor's troops both above and below the junction of the rivers. At length
after various movements Babur received notice that Askari had effected a
passage over the Ghaghra River at the Haldi Ghat and was now ready for action
and that he had been strengthened by the defection of Shah Muhammad Maaruf an
Afghan nobleman of the highest rank and consequence who had deserted the
confederacy with his followers and now joined his camp. The general attack was
therefore fixed for next morning but in the meantime there was some fighting
between the vessels in the river.
On the morning of May 6, 1529 as
soon as Askari's army was known to be in motion the Bengali troops moved up to
meet him whereupon Babur ordered both his division and that of Muhammad Zaman
to cross over without delay. This was affected bravely though not without sharp
resistance. The troops got across some in boats, some by swimming, some
floating on reeds. They were met with equal gallantry on landing but kept
together formed and made repeated vigorous charges. As Askari advanced
downwards the enemy finding themselves surrounded and driven in on three sides
finally quit the field in confusion.
Results
of Battle of Ghaghra
This victory was decisive in its consequences. Numbers of
the Afghans who till now had been refractory having lost all hope of re
establishing an Afghan government in the East submitted and Sultan Jalal ud-Din
Khan Lohani the late King of Bihar whose escape from the Bengali camp has been
mentioned arrived with many of his principal Amirs and acknowledged Babur.
Other chiefs imitating their example petitioned to be received into the Emperor's
service. 7000-8000 Lohani Afghans had already joined him and were now rewarded
and employed. The feuds between the Lohani and Lodi factions in the Eastern
provinces were fatal to the Pathan national interest. As for the Sultan of
Bengal Nusrat Shah, he hastily accepted peace proposals, previously
communicated to him via the envoy Babur had sent before the battle.
This would be Baburs' last major
engagement. He continued to consolidate his power and establish administrative
infrastructure in his new Empire distributing jagirs to loyal nobles and
allies. He died at the age of 47 on December 26, 1530 of an unknown illness and
was succeeded by his eldest son, Humayun.
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