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Battle of Jalalabad (1842)

Coordinates: 34°25′49″N 70°27′10″E / 34.43028°N 70.45278°E / 34.43028; 70.45278
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34°25′49″N 70°27′10″E / 34.43028°N 70.45278°E / 34.43028; 70.45278

Battle of Jellalabad
Part of the First Anglo-Afghan War

The British troops (right) attack the Afghan line (illustration from a British book)
Date12 November 1841 – 7 April 1842
Location
Result British victory
Belligerents
United Kingdom British Empire
East India Company
Emirate of Kabul
Afghan tribes
Commanders and leaders
United Kingdom Robert Sale
United Kingdom William Dennie 
Akbar Khan
Strength
Unknown, but outnumbered[1] Unknown, but outnumbered the British[2]

The Battle of Jalalabad in 1842 was an Afghan siege of the isolated British outpost at Jalalabad, about 90 miles (140 km) east of Kabul during the First Anglo-Afghan War. The siege was lifted after five months when a British counterattack routed the Afghans, driving them back to Kabul.

Battle

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The outpost was no more than a wide place in the road with a fort, held by about 2,000 troops under General Sir Robert Sale. After the massacre of the British force during their retreat from Kabul in January 1842, Jalalabad was surrounded by Afghan forces, which launched a series of attacks on the force. The British managed to beat off the assaults, and even captured 300 sheep from the besieging force when rations ran short. Eventually, after five months under siege, Sale mounted an attack against the Afghan forces on 7 April. The British captured the main Afghan camp along with all the baggage, stores, guns, and horses. Driven in a rout the Afghans fled to Kabul.

The following day George Pollock's Army of Retribution arrived, to be played into Jellalabad by the band of the 13th with the Scottish song "Oh but you've been a lang time acoming."

Aftermath

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The defence of Jalalabad made heroes of the 13th Foot (later known as the Somerset Light Infantry). It is reported that as the regiment marched back through India to return to Britain, every garrison fired a ten gun salute in its honour. Queen Victoria directed that the regiment be made Light Infantry, carry the additional title of "Prince Albert's Own" and wear a badge depicting the walls of the town with the word "Jellalabad".[citation needed] The army barracks in Taunton, the county town of Somerset, was named Jellalabad Barracks after the battle and that area of the town is still known as 'Jellalabad'.

W. L. Walton a landscape artist, working in London, who exhibited between 1834 and 1855, made the lithographic plates for General Sale's Defence of Jalalabad (c. 1845).[3]

Order of battle

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Jellallabad fortifications

The British order of battle was;

British Army

Bengal Presidency Army

Sirdar Mahomed Ukbar Khan, in Jellalabad, as sketched by James Atkinson

Notes

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References

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  1. ^ Dalrymple, W. (2013). The Return of a King: The Battle for Afghanistan. Borzoi book. Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1-4088-1830-5. Retrieved 15 June 2020. ...even though the garrison was by then outnumbered at least three to one by Akbar's huge army of Ghilzai and Shinwari tribal levies.
  2. ^ Dalrymple 2013: "...Even though the garrison was by then outnumbered at least three to one by Akbar's huge army of Ghilzai and Shinwari tribal levies.
  3. ^ "W. L. Walton and General Sale's Defence of Jalalbad (c. 1845)". Leicester Galleries. Archived from the original on 2 February 2017. Retrieved 21 January 2017.