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A contingent of Sikhs had already allied with him, and reports suggested that Ghulam Kadir and the Sikhs engaged in conflict with the imperial guards, emerging victorious. [34] In reaction to this development, Madho Rao Phalke, the Maratha chieftain, was sent to confront them at Shahdara. The ensuing battle resulted in many casualties, with ...
In late March 1657, Aurangzeb's forces were concentrated at the siege of Bidar, Two Maratha leaders, Minaji Bhonsla and Kashi, at the head of 3000 horses raided the Mughal villages of Chamargunda and raided other subdivisions, carrying destruction which Alarmed to the gates of Ahmednagar, meanwhile Shivaji was raiding Junnar in the north, during the night he scaled its walls and sacked the ...
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The Maratha commanders successfully defended Raigad. Aurangzeb sent Khan Jehan to help, but Hambirao Mohite, commander-in-chief of the Maratha army, defeated him in a fierce battle at Patadi. The second division of the Maratha army attacked Shahbuddin Khan at Pachad, inflicting heavy losses on the Mughal army. [citation needed]
Third Anglo-Mysore War Part of the Anglo-Mysore Wars A map of the war theatre Date 1790 – 18 March 1792 Location South India Result British victory Treaty of Seringapatam Territorial changes Kingdom of Mysore lost about one-half of its territory to opponents. Belligerents Mysore Arakkal Kingdom Nawab of Savanur France Great Britain East India Company Maratha Confederacy Travancore Hyderabad ...
The Siddis and the Marathas were locked in an enduring state of conflict, a feud passed down through generations like a blood feud. Despite the Marathas being preoccupied with battling stronger adversaries, they consistently restrained the Siddis, reclaiming any new territories they had acquired and imposing new alliances on them.
The Maratha invasion of the Deccan in 1739, led by Peshwa Bajirao I, was a military campaign of the Maratha Confederacy against the Nizam of Hyderabad. Bajirao's Maratha forces invaded Hyderabad's territories and had a military conflict with Nasir Jung, the son of Nizam-ul Mulk, Asaf Jah. Subsequently, a treaty was signed between the two parties.
The Maratha–Portuguese War of 1683–1684 or Sambhaji's Invasion [3] [4] [5] refers to the Maratha invasion of the Portuguese-controlled portions of Goa and Bombay areas of Konkan. [6] The conflict between the Mahratta Confederacy and the Portuguese in Goa and Bombay , continued on various fronts in between 1683–1684.