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Military campaigns of Hari Singh Nalwa information


Military campaigns of Hari Singh Nalwa
Part of Sikh Expansion

Oil painting of Hari Singh Nalwa displayed in the Lahore Museum.
Date1807–30 April 1837
Location
India, Pakistan
Result Establishment of Sikh regime over most of Punjab region, lower Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Kashmir.
Territorial
changes
Sikh Empire's annexation of territories
Belligerents
Sikh Empire
Supported By:
Durrani Empire
Sadozai Loyalists
Durrani Empire (Until 1823)
Mujaheddin
Emirate of Kabul
Peshawar Sardars
Local Afghan Tribesmen
Commanders and leaders
Hari Singh Nalwa 
Maharaja Ranjit Singh
Shah Shuja Durrani
Dewan Mokham Chand
Jodh Singh Ramgarhia
Sultan Mahmud Khan
Diwan Ram Dayal  [1]
Amar Singh Majithia 
Muhammad Durrani[2]
Misr Diwan Chand
Kharak Singh
Sham Singh Attariwala
Hukam Singh Chimni
Nihal Singh Attariwala (WIA)
Atar Singh Dhari 
Bhayya Ram Singh
Mahan Singh Mirpuri
Akali Phula Singh 
Desa Singh Majitha
Fateh Singh Ahluwalia
Yar Muhammad Khan 
Jean-Baptiste Ventura
Jean-Francois Allard
Goolab Singh 
Kurram Singh 
Nidaan Singh Panjhatia (WIA)
Budh Singh Sandhanwalia
Sher Singh
Ilahi Bakhsh
Akali Hanuman Singh (WIA)
Tej Singh
Misr Sukh Raj
Gulab Singh
Dhian Singh
Lehna Singh Majithia
Paolo Avitabile
Josiah Harlan
Faqir Azizuddin
Claude Auguste Court
Khushal Singh
Jawala Singh
Mahan Singh Mirpuri
Mangal Singh Ramgarhia
Jawahar Singh 
Nawab Muzaffar Khan 
Qutub-ud Din
Wazir Fateh Khan
Dost Mohammad Khan
Azim Khan
Aghar Khan
Ruhullah Khan
Jabbar Khan
Agarullah Khan Jarral
Bostan Khan
Mohammad Khan Tarain
Azim Khan Barakzai
Muhammad Ashfar Khan
Sakhi Arsallah Khan
Syed Akbar Shah
Rahmat Khan
Shaikh Muhammad Shoaib 
Sayyid Ahmad Barelvi 
Sayyid Ahmad Ali Shah 
Mir Painda Khan
Mir Faiz Ali Khan 
Shah Ismail Dehlvi 
Mirza Hayat Dehlvi 
Sultan Mohammad Khan
Sultan Khan
Dela Khan 
Wazir Akbar Khan
Mohammad Afzal Khan
Shams-al-Din Khan
Mirza Sami Khan

The Military campaigns of Hari Singh Nalwa were a series of conquests and battles in which the Sikh Empire commander Hari Singh Nalwa fought from 1807 to 1837. His first battle was fought against the Durrani Empire. With his help, the Sikh Empire managed to expand over a large land area, spanning from Jamrud to Tibet. He was killed in the battle of Jamrud at Khyber Pass in 1837.

  1. ^ Tandan, S. L. (1902). "Selected Men of Hindustan. Part 1".
  2. ^ Jalal, Ayesha (30 June 2009). Partisans of Allah: Jihad in South Asia. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674039070.

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