Mughal-Safavid War-1649 AD
Date 1649-1653
5000 7000
Mughal-Safavid War
Date 1649-1653
Location
Afganisthan
Result
Safavids recaptured Kandhar
Territorial
Kandhar is captured by Mughals
Belligerents
Safavid
Empire Mughal Empire
Commandants and Leaders
Abbas
II of Persia Shah Jahan
Mehra
Khan Aurangzeb
Autar
Khan Dera Shikoh
Murab Baksh
Strengths
65,000
80,000
12,000
Zumburak 18,000 Sowars
110 canons
Causalities and Loses
5000 7000
Detail of war
The Mughal–Safavid
War of 1649–1653 was fought between the Mughal and Safavidempires in
the territory of modern Afghanistan. The war began after a Persian army,
while the Mughals were at war with the Janid Uzbeks, captured the fortress city of Kandahar and other strategic cities that
controlled the region. The Mughals attempted unsuccessfully to regain the city.
The Safavids had
territorial claims over Kandahar since the reign of Shah
Tahmasp. The overthrow of Humayun
, the Mughal Emperor, is known to have gained the
support of Shah Tahmasp in return for his permission to allow the Safavids to
capture Kandahar. Subsequently, conflicts emerged in the region during the
reign of the another Mughal emperor, Jahangir,
because most of the populace opposed Safavid rule and often served in the Mughal Army.
The reign of Shah
Jahan over the Mughal empire was marked in the northwest by a
continuous struggle against the powerful Persians for what is now Afghanistan.
In 1639, the armies of Shah
Safi of Persia captured Bamyan and it appeared that they would attack Kandahar next.
Shah Jahan, assisted by Kamran
Khan and Malik Maghdood, had marched on Kandahar and negotiated the surrender
from the Persian commander, Ali
Mardan Khan, in 1638. He expected the Persians to
attempt to regain the city soon and so he ordered that the wall be repaired
rapidly while a large Mughal army based in Kabul protected the area. When no Persian attack came, in 1646
the Emperor sent his son, Murad
Baksh, to invade Uzbek-controlled Badakhshan. In the following year,Aurangzeb, another son, routed an Uzbek force outside of Balkh and captured the city.
Though victorious in the field, the Mughals were unable to secure the
conquered territories and Shah Jahan was forced to recall his armies from
Badakhshan.
Encouraged
by the Mughal reversal in Badakhshan, in
the summer of 1648 Shah Abbas II marched from Isfahan with and army of 40,000 and after
capturing Bost he laid siege to Kandahar and easily
captured it after a brief siege on 22 February 1649. The Mughals attempted to
retake the city in 1651 but the arrival of winter forced them to suspend the siege.
Shah Jahan sent Aurangzeb with 50,000 soldiers to
recapture it, but although he defeated the Safavids outside the city he was
unable to take it. His artillery train proved unable for the task. Aurangzeb
attempted to take the fortress city again in 1652. Abdul Aziz, Khan of Bukhara, had
entered into an alliance with Shah Abbas and in May 1652, he dispatched 10,000
troops to Kabul in May to harass the Mughal supply lines. Though not strong enough to lift the
siege, the Uzbeks endangered a Mughal convoy of 2,000 who were escorting one
and a half million silver coins to the besieger's army at Kandahar.After two
months of fighting Persian resistance and the growing activities of the
Uzbeks, Aurangzeb was forced to abandon the campaign.
In 1653 Shah Jahan sent his favorite son, Dara Shikoh, with a large army and two
of the heaviest artillery pieces of the empire but after a five-month siege the
Mughals couldn't manage to starve the city, and the attempt to breach their
walls by cannon fire also failed. The
Mughals finally gave up all attempts to recover Kandahar.
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