Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Community portal; Recent changes; Upload file; Search. ... Makwanpur (Nepal) Battle of Makwanpur was fought on 28 February 1816 in Makwanpurgadhi, Nepal ...
Battle of Makwanpur was fought on 21 August 1762 in Makwanpurgadhi, Nepal between the Gorkha Kingdom and the Kingdom of Makwanpur. [1] The battle lasted for about eight hours and resulted in Gorkhali victory. [2] 60 Gorkhali and 400 Makwanpur soldiers were killed in battle. [2]
The Battle of Makwanpur (1762), the Battle of Makwanpur (1763), and the Battle of Makwanpur (1816) were fought in this fort. [ 1 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] In 2015, the Government of Nepal issued stamps featuring the Makwanpur Gadhi.
Nepal–Sino war starts 1757 1871: British India captures Butwal. But Gurkha army takes control the next month. This causes Nepal–Anglo war. Kumaun and Gadwal comes in control of British India. (1814) 1815 1872: Sugauli Treaty is signed 1860 1917: Janga Bahdhur becomes successful to return part of Terai to Nepal from British India
Makwanpurgadhi or Makwanpur Gadhi (literally Makwanpur Fort) is a village development committee in the Makawanpurgadhi Rural Municipality of Makwanpur District in the Bagmati Province of southern Nepal. At the time of the 2011 Nepal census it had a population of 14996 people living in 2588 individual households. [1]
Battle of Makwanpur may refer to: Battle of Makwanpur (1762), a battle between the Gorkha Kingdom and the Kingdom of Makwanpur; Battle of Makwanpur (1763), a battle between the Gorkha Kingdom and the Nawab of Bengal; Battle of Makwanpur (1816), a battle between the Kingdom of Nepal and the East India Company
Battle of Makwanpur was fought on 20 January 1763 in Makwanpurgadhi, Gorkha Kingdom between the Gorkhas and the Nawab of Bengal. [1] The Muslims fled Makwanpur, resulted in Gorkhali victory, and the first victory of Gorkhas against overseas soldiers.
The Gorkha War (1814–1816), or the Anglo–Nepalese War, was fought between the Kingdom of Nepal and the British East India Company as a result of border disputes and ambitious expansionism of both the belligerent parties. The war ended with the signing of the Treaty of Sugauli in 1816, which ceded around a third of Nepal's territory to the ...