Battle of Kathmandu

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Battle of Kathmandu is located in Nepal
Gorkha
Gorkha
Kathmandu
Kathmandu
Sindhuli
Sindhuli
Location in present-day Nepal
Jaya Prakash Malla (reigned 1736-1768), last king of Kathmandu
Kathmandu Durbar Square, where the main battle took place, as it looked in 1852.

The Battle of Kathmandu occurred during the Gorkhali conquest of Nepal.[1] It was fought in Kathmandu in 1768, and resulted in the defeat of its king Jaya Prakash Malla by Prithvi Narayan Shah, king of the adjoining Gorkha Kingdom.

Shah's victory marked the establishment of the Shah dynasty in Nepal and the end of the rule of the indigenous Newars.[2] The peaceful Newars, more inclined towards culture and trade, lost to the warlike Gorkhalis who had made expansion and plunder their state policy.[3]

The blockade

Kathmandu (alternative names: Yen Desa येँ देस, Kantipur) was one of the three capital cities in the Kathmandu Valley, the other two being Lalitpur and Bhaktapur. The kingdom of Kathmandu extended to a distance of 12–13 days journey north to the Tibetan border. The Trishuli River marked the boundary between Kathmandu and Gorkha in the west.[4]

The Gorkhalis desired the Kathmandu Valley due to its rich culture, trade, industry and agriculture.[5] In 1736, the Gorkhali king Nara Bhupal Shah launched an attack on Nuwakot, a border town and fort in the northwest of the valley, and was roundly defeated.[6]

His son Prithvi Narayan Shah became king in 1742 and resumed the campaign.[7][8] Convinced he would not be able to take Kathmandu with strength, Shah sought to subdue the valley by choking its commerce and supply lines. His forces occupied strategic passes in the surrounding hills, and strangled the vital trade routes linking Tibet and India.

In 1744, he took Nuwakot, which gave him a foothold in Nepal and allowed him to stop its trade with Tibet as it lay on the trans-Himalayan trade route.[9] In 1762 and 1763, the Gorkhalis overran Makwanpur and Dhulikhel respectively, surrounding the Kathmandu Valley from the west, south and east.[10]

In a bid to cause a famine, he mounted a blockade preventing any grain from passing into the valley. Blockade runners were hung from the trees on the roads.[11] As a result, starvation faced the 18,000 households in Kathmandu, 24,000 in Lalitpur, 12,000 in Bhaktapur and 6,000 in Thimi.

British expedition

The prolonged siege forced the Malla king to appeal to the British East India Company for help against the invading Gorkhalis. News of coming English assistance raised the spirits of the Newars.[12][13]

In August 1767, Captain George Kinloch led a British force towards Kathmandu to rescue its beleaguered inhabitants.[14] He reached within 75 km of Kathmandu and captured the forts at Sindhuli and Hariharpur, but was forced to retreat by a 2 pronged attack from Sardar Bansu Gurung.[15][16]

The invasion

With the siege of Kathmandu continuing, the Gorkhalis took Kirtipur in the Battle of Kirtipur in 1767. The fall of the hilltop town located to the west of Kathmandu, which was marked by bloody fighting and savagery, was a setback for the valley's defense.

Shah then turned his attention to Kathmandu. He sent his agents to infiltrate the city and create dissension among the Newars by conducting a propaganda campaign. After many months, they succeeded in driving a wedge between the king and the nobles of Kathmandu.

In September 1768, the Gorkhalis entered the city. They attacked from three points on its perimeter -- Bhimsensthan, Naradevi and Tundikhel. At Bhimsensthan, Newar women stood at the windows of their houses and poured buckets of water laced with chili powder on the Gorkhali soldiers below. The men engaged the attackers in the street. After a brief battle, Jaya Prakash Malla realized that he had been betrayed by the nobles, and that Kathmandu was lost. He then fled to Lalitpur with his trusted troops.[17]

In the following months, the Gorkhalis also conquered Lalitpur. The three kings of Nepal then gathered in Bhaktapur for a final stand against the aggressors.[18] Shah conquered Bhaktapur in 1769, thus completing his conquest of Nepal. He established the Shah dynasty which remained until 2008 when Nepal became a republic.[19]

See also

References

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  6. Northey, William Brook and Morris, Charles John (1928). The Gurkhas: Nepal-Their Manners, Customs and Country. Asian Educational Services. ISBN 9788120615779. Pages 30-31.
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