Anglo-Afghan Wars (1839-1919)
Anglo-Afghan Wars (1839-1919)
Anglo-Afghan Wars (1839-1919)
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The Anglo-Afghan wars were a direct result of the Great game between
Great Britain and Russia which began in 1830.
Table of Contents
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A brief history of Afghanistan
First Anglo-Afghan War (1838-43)
Second Anglo-Afghan War (1878-80)
Battle of Saragarhi (1897)
Third Anglo-Afghan War (1919)
Impact of Anglo-Afghan Wars
By 522 BCE Darius, the Great extended the boundaries of the Persian
Empire into most of the region that is now Afghanistan.
The Ghaznavid and Ghurid dynasties ruled the region from 997 to the
Mongol invasions in 1221. Later Timur incorporated the areas into the
Timurid empire with the city of Herat as the capital.
Babur also used Kabul as military headquarters from 1504, from where
he launched into the Indian subcontinent.
After centuries of invasions the nation finally began to take shape during
the 18th century under the leadership of Ahmad Shah Durrani.
By 1736 Persian ruler Nader Shah gained control of most of the region
that is present-day Afghanistan. He was assassinated in 1747.
After his death, Ahmad Shah Durrani was chosen to be the ruler of
Afghanistan. Durrani extended Afghanistan’s borders into India during
the 1760s.
The Afghans were in constant conflict with the Sikh kingdom which had
conquered Peshawar. The unstable condition in the Afghan and Sindh
regions along with the increasing power of the Sikh kingdom made the
British fear attacks from the northwest frontier.
The British East India Company sent envoys to Kabul for an alliance
against Russia. Kabul demanded the restoration of Peshawar captured
by the Sikh kingdom. The British were unsure of their power to deal with
the Sikhs and hence refused Kabul’s demand.
After fleeing to Balkh and then Bukhara, where he was captured, Dost
Mohammad managed to escape from jail and returned to Afghanistan to
join his partisans in fighting the British.
1840: Dost Muhammad had the upper hand in a fight at Parwan in 1840,
but the next day he submitted to the British in Kabul. He and the majority
of his family were sent back to India.
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1842: The uprisings continued and the British found to hard to contain
the Afghans, hence they decided to retreat. The whole English camp
marched out of Kabul but was swarmed by bands of Afghans, and the
retreat ended in a bloodbath. Shoja was also killed in Kabul as he was
unpopular among the Afghans.
The British were earlier aiming to attack Punjab as well but were
countered by Maharaja Ranjit Singh. But his death in 1839 caused the
Sikh kingdom to fall apart. Thus, the end of the First Anglo-Afghan war
gave way to a series of Anglo-Sikh wars (1845-49).
Dost Mohammed stayed loyal to the treaty and refused to help the rebels
during the ‘Revolt of 1857’.
1856: After the Crimean War, Russia turned its attention towards Central
Asia yet again.
Sometime after Lytton’s arrival in India, he informed Sher Ali Khan, Dost
Mohammad’s third son and the heir apparent that he was dispatching a
“mission” to Kabul. Lytton’s request to enter Afghanistan was denied by
the emir.
Lytton did not begin attacking the kingdom until 1878, when Afghan
forces turned back Lytton’s envoy, Sir Neville Chamberlain, at the frontier
while General Stolyetov of Russia was allowed entry into Kabul.
1878: The British attacked Afghanistan. Sher Ali fled his capital and
country and died in exile early in 1879. The British occupied Kabul.
Sher Ali’s son, Yakub Khan signed the ‘Treaty of Gandamak’ for peace
in 1879 and he was recognized as the amir.
1879: The Afghan rebels rose against foreign interference and the
British envoy, Sir Louis Cavagnari, and his escort were murdered in
Kabul.
1880: Lor Ripon replaces Lytton as the governor-general and went back
to the policy of non-interference.
British got full control of Afghanistan’s foreign affairs and the Amir
became a dependent ruler.
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1893: The Durand line was drawn as the boundaries of modern
Afghanistan by the British and the Russians. The line is named after the
British civil servant Sir Henry Mortimer Durand who marked the line.
Durand Line cut through Pashtun villages and has been the cause
of continuing conflict between Afghanistan and Pakistan.
The Battle of Saragarhi is considered one of the finest last stands in the
military history of the world.
The final amended treaty was signed in 1921 before which the Afghans
concluded a treaty of friendship with the new Bolshevik regime in the
Soviet Union.