The Battle of Assaye occurred September 23,1803 near the village of Assaye in south-central India. It was one of the decisive battles of the Second Anglo-Maratha War.
Assaye is located near Jafrabad in Jalna district of Maharashtra.
The Governor General determined to support the Peshwa. He re-installed Baji Rao in Poona on 13 May 1803 and attempted to negotiate with Sindhia but by early August negotiations had failed. The Governor General moved against the two principal Maratha forces: a combined army of Sindhia and the Raja of Berar.
Lord Wellesley formed two armies, the northern under General Gerard Lake, and the southern under Major-General Arthur Wellesley, his younger brother (who would later become better known as the 1st Duke of Wellington). Collaborating with General Wellesley was the East India Company's Hyderabad Contingent, some 9,400 strong, under the command of Colonel Stevenson. In addition to General Wellesley's own army were some 5,000-allied Mysore and Maratha light horse.
Nearby, Wellesley found a place to ford the river near the village of Assaye. He then attempted to attacked a flank of the princes' army. This maneuver failed because his party was spotted as he crossed the river; the Indian army turned their front so they were again facing the British. But a valorous charge led by two Scottish battalions, HM 74th Highlanders (which lost all its officers) and 78th Highlanders, shattered the combined forces and the armies of the princes fled. The casualties of the princes' forces numbered about 6,000 men, while the British lost approximately 1,500. Despite sustaining such heavy casualties in their frontal attack, the British/Indian combined force won a considerable victory but having sustained such casualties, and having fought the battle after a 24-mile march, Wellesley's exhausted army was unable to pursue his defeated enemy.
This was 34 year old Wellesley's first major success, and one that he always held in the highest estimation, even when compared to his later triumphant career. According to anecdotal evidence, in his retirement years Wellington considered this his finest battle, surpassing even his victory at the Battle of Waterloo.
1803 | Battles of the United Kingdom | British rule in India
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"Battle of Assaye".
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