Siege of The Sherpur Cantonment

Coordinates: 34°31′58″N 69°09′57″E / 34.53278°N 69.16583°E / 34.53278; 69.16583

The Siege of the Sherpur Cantonment
Part of Second Anglo-Afghan War

Assault on the Sherpur cantonment.
Date 15 - 23 December 1879
Location Kabul, Afghanistan
Result British Victory
Belligerents
British Empire Afghanistan
Commanders and leaders
Sir Frederick Roberts Mohammed Jan
Strength
7,000 Anglo-Indian troops 50,000 tribal warriors
Casualties and losses
33 dead and wounded 3,000 dead
Second Anglo–Afghan War
  • Ali Masjid
  • Peiwar Kotal
  • Kabul
  • Charasiab
  • Sherpur
  • Ahmed Khel
  • Second Charasiab
  • Maiwand
  • Kandahar

The Siege of the Sherpur Cantonment was a battle fought in December 1879, during the Second Anglo-Afghan War.

On 3 September 1879 Sir Pierre Cavagnari, the British Resident in Kabul, and his escort were massacred by mutinous Afghan troops, initiating the second phase of the Second Anglo-Afghan War.

A force was assembled and named the Kabul Field Force, under the command of major-general Frederick Roberts. After defeating Afghan forces at Chariasab on 6 October, Roberts marched into Kabul on 13 October.

At the end of November, an army under the command of Mohammed Jan Khan Wardak, who had denounced Yaqub Khan as a British puppet and instead declared Musa Jan the new amir, gathered in the area north of Kabul. On 11 December a small detachment (c.170 men) of the 9th Queen's Royal Lancers and the 14th Bengal Lancers encountered a 10,000+ Afghan army advancing on Kabul. As it was of the utmost importance that Mohammed Jan's advance was delayed the woefully outnumbered Lancers charged the Afghans. Heavy casualties were suffered and the Afghans continued their advance. On December 15, the Afghan army began to besiege the British forces entrenched in the Sherpur Cantonment.

As news of a relief column under the command of Brigadier General Charles Gough reached Mohammed Jan, he ordered his troops to storm the cantonment on 23 December. By midday, the assault had been repulsed, and the Afghan army dispersed. No quarter was given to Afghans found in the area with weapons.

The Sherpur Cantonment is maintained up to the present as a British military cemetery.

Famous quotes containing the words siege of and/or siege:

    One likes people much better when they’re battered down by a prodigious siege of misfortune than when they triumph.
    Virginia Woolf (1882–1941)

    One likes people much better when they’re battered down by a prodigious siege of misfortune than when they triumph.
    Virginia Woolf (1882–1941)