RGSSALibraryCatalogue

RGSSALibraryCatalogue
RGSSA Library Catalogue

Friday, 18 October 2013

Afghanistan & the British Raj (2): The First Afghan War

AFGHANISTAN &THE BRITISH RAJ AT RGSSA:

THE FIRST "AFGHAN WAR"


Continuing the theme of Afghanistan. (See the May 2013 posting for the first entry.) The Afghanistan exhibition curated by the Royal Geographical Society of South Australia is about to travel to Whyalla. It offers a unique opportunity to view some of the RGSSA's oldest books with links to Central Asia and the Islamic civilisations, plus interesting artefacts, 19th-century works of travel and exploration, and a selection of books, articles and photographs relating to the Afghan cameleers who helped to open up Australia's Outback.

The blog is focussing on the books which give firsthand accounts of Afghanistan as it was gradually and very painfully revealed to the West during the 19th century.

The First Afghan War, 1839-1842
The First Afghan War, as the British called it (First Anglo-Afghan War, sometimes called "Auckland's Folly"), was fought against Afghanistan by the forces of British India, the Army of the East India Company, from 1839 to 1842. It effectively ended with the one of the greatest disasters in British military history: humiliatingly, not a pitched battle, but the ill-conceived and appallingly badly managed retreat from Kabul. 4,500 British-led Indian soldiers and 12,000 camp followers died.(1)

Prelude to War: "Bokhara" Burnes
By the 1830s Russian expansionism led the British to fear a possible Russian invasion of India by way of Afghanistan. The British government therefore decided to send an envoy to Kabul to form an alliance with Afghanistan's Amir Dost Mohammad Khan against Russia. "Whoever they chose to lead such an expedition would have to be a man of exceptional qualities; the endeavour, and its dangers, would be the equivalent of a pioneering trek to the South Pole, or the first flight to the Moon. The man they chose would need to be able to withstand mountain passes and deserts, the threat of bandits, of being held hostage or sold into slavery. More than this, he needed to be an expert in languages, to possess an intimate knowledge of native culture, to have a gift of affability, of making friends in difficult circumstances, and above all to be observant: a sponge for current and reliable information, that might be brought back and presented to the government in Delhi as it pondered its policy. Fortunately for them, the hour presented the man: the one to undertake this task would be Lieutenant Alexander Burnes."(2)

"Bokhara" Burnes in the costume of the country
It was this Scottish soldier's first great expedition that earned him the nickname "Bokhara Burnes":

Burnes, Alexander, Sir, 1805-1841.
Travels into Bokhara : being the account of a journey from India to Cabool, Tartary and Persia ; also, Narrative of a voyage on the Indus, from the sea to Lahore, with presents from the King of Great Britain, performed under the orders of the supreme government of India, in the years 1831, 1832, and 1833.
London : J. Murray, 1834. 3 v.

Burnes had joined the Army of the East India Company as a lad, and once in India showed extraordinary abilities, earning rapid promotion. He also, remarkably for a British officer, learned Hindustani and Persian. He had been serving in "Kutch" or "Cutch" (Kachchh), in western British India when in 1831 he was appointed to lead a British party to Lahore, in the north-eastern Punjab in what is now Pakistan, the ostensible reason for the trip being to take a gift of horses from King William IV to Maharajah Ranjit Singh.(1) Lahore was not under British rule: it was then the capital of the powerful Sikh Empire, and Ranjit Singh was an important and influential ruler. Lahore lies on the Ravi river, which flows west and then south-west in the Punjab, joining the Chenab River, a tributary of the Sutlej, and thence of the mighty Indus.
    The Indus "had not been navigated by Westerners since the days of Alexander the Great; knowledge of it was scanty, and as with Afghanistan, the government in Delhi was conscious it needed to know more about the territories beyond its borders."(2) It would be a river journey of over 1,000 miles. Burnes carried out the mission "in an exemplary fashion, collecting scientific and cartographic data on the one hand, whilst also using his diplomatic talent to maintain good relations with the tribal chieftains and nobles in the regions through which he passed—all suspicious of the motives of the explorer."(2) His book gives a unique account of the opulence of court life under Maharajah Ranjit Singh.
    During this trip he met the deposed Afghan ruler Shah Shuja (or Shuja Shah) Durrani at the British station of Ludhiana. Significantly, Burnes didn't think much of him; he wrote: "I do not believe that the Shah possesses sufficient energy to seat himself on the throne of Cabool; and that if he did regain it, he has not the tact to discharge the duties of so difficult a situation"(2). Truer words were never written. The British authorities' misguided reinstatement of Shah Shuja was to lead to their crushing defeat in the First Afghan War.

Mission to Afghanistan
The expedition to Bokhara (Bukhara) was a great success and led to Burnes's next appointment, the mission to Afghanistan. His posthumously published account is:

Burnes, Alexander, Sir, 1805-1841.
Cabool : being a personal narrative of a journey to, and residence in that city, in the years 1836, 7, and 8.
London : J. Murray, 1842.

After the success of his venture up the Indus, the organisation of this second mission was left up to Burnes. Both his own experiences and the example of earlier European travellers to Afghanistan decided him to travel light, with no display of either military power or wealth to incite an attack. He took only three companions.(2) On his way through the Punjab he again called in at Lahore, where he encountered a Frenchman, a "M. Court" who had come over from Persia by way of Afghanistan. His advice about the safest way to travel in the area prompted Burnes to dress in the local Afghan clothes and get rid of his European tents, beds, chairs and so forth. As a result, he made it through safely. It was not to be the marauding tribesmen who would be responsible for his death in the country, but the stupidity of his military superiors.
    Burnes's wonderfully detailed account of his journey, encompassing Jalalabad, Kabul, Bamiyan, Kunduz, Mazar-i Sharif and much more gives an astoundingly unprejudiced and appreciative picture of all he observed: the way of life, the natural features, the architecture, the wild flowers in bloom on the hills and the formal gardens of the towns, and all the local variations in religious observances and beliefs. He actually discussed theology with the locals, in spite of M. Court's warning that it was a risky topic. "Most important of all, he was able to understand the contemporary politics of the country, by meeting and conversing with many of the chiefs and leading men. ... With his characteristic charm, he was able to form close relations with many members of the ruling Barakzye family in Peshawar and Kabul".(2)

The Amir Dost Mohammad Khan
Of these the most important was the Amir Dost Mohammad Khan (1793-1863), who had become Amir of Afghanistan in 1826 after the decline of the Durrani dynasty and the exile of Shah Shuja Durrani to the Punjab. Burnes discovered that he was a highly intelligent man with an active mind, and their wide-ranging discussions led him to the conclusion that "Dost Mohammed was the only person with the acumen and vigour to re-unify the Empire of Afghanistan."(2) The Amir was willing to become an ally of the British and Burnes realised that with only a little help he would be the man to help prevent Russian encroachments into northern India.

The Amir Dost Mohammad Khan in later life
   Tragically, as it would turn out, Lord Auckland, the Governor-General of British India, ignored Burnes's advice—largely, it seems, because Dost Mohammad wanted British help to regain Peshawar, on the north-West Frontier, which the Sikh Empire under Ranjit Singh had seized in 1834.(3) Thus "Auckland's Folly".

British Reinstate Shah Shuja as Amir, & Advance into Afghanistan

The reinstated Shah Shuja holds court
Taking the advice of Sir William Hay Macnaghten instead, Auckland decided to reinstate the deposed Shah Shuja Durrani as Amir. Troops of the Army of the East India Company marched into Afghanistan in March 1839, reaching Kandahar on 26 April. Shah Shuja was proclaimed as ruler, and the deposed Dost Mohammed took refuge in the mountainous Hindu Kush.(3)

Eye-Witness Accounts of the First Afghan War
What was it really like in Afghanistan for the British during the First Afghan War? We have several books which tell us. Two are by husband and wife. Sir Robert Sale, one of the British commanders, produced a volume of lithographs:

Sir Robert Sale

Sale, Robert Henry, Sir, 1782-1845.
The defence of Jellalabad / by Sir R.H. Sale ; drawn on stone by W.L. Walton.
London : Published for the proprietor by J. Hogarth ..., [1846?]

Sale's wife, Florentia, Lady Sale, wrote more fully of her Afghanistan experiences:

Sale, Florentia Wynch, Lady, 1790-1853
A journal of the disasters in Affghanistan, 1841-22.
London, J. Murray, 1843.

When the First Afghan War began, Colonel Sale was assigned to the command of the 1st Bengal brigade. He reached Kandahar in April 1839, and in May occupied the Heart plain. Heading for Kabul, the British stormed the city of Ghazni, "Sale in person leading the storming column and distinguishing himself in single combat."(4) They then reached Kabul easily. Sale was awarded the KCB and promoted to major-general. "He was left, as second-in-command, with the army of occupation, and ... conducted several small campaigns ending with the action of Parwan which led directly to the surrender of Dost Mahommed Khan."(4)
    The British forces were now in cantonments, and everything seemed so peaceful that many of their families came to join them in Kabul, including Lady Sale and her daughter, also married to a serving officer. Lady Sale's journal gives a vivid picture of the carefree, elegant—and in some cases sybaritic—life of the British in Kabul.

Burnes in Kabul
Alexander Burnes at this time had become the political agent in Kabul. It's an interesting sidelight on his character—and perhaps helps to clarify the readiness with which he took to the charming and decorative Afghan costume—that the life he led there, far from that we might expect of a stern Scottish soldier, was little short of hedonistic!

"View of Cabool, from the East", plate facing p.234, from Burnes's Cabool;
from an original sketch of Kabul "by Capt. H. Wade, of H.M. 13th Regiment"

Afghan Uprising
The Afghans had never truly accepted either the presence of the British or their puppet ruler, Shah Shuja, and after a while hostilities flared. The Afghan tribes flocked to support Dost Mohammad's son, Akbar Khan. Burnes had at one stage left Afghanistan but he was back again: all his advice was ignored and the British authorities insisted on supporting Shah Shuja instead of Dost Mohammad Khan.
    By the time Sale's brigade was ordered to head to Jalalabad to clear the vital line of communications to Peshawar on the North-West Frontier (near the end of the Khyber Pass, close to the Indian-Afghan border), the situation was very dangerous indeed—not least for the British forces in cantonments outside Kabul, in a position which would be nigh impossible to defend.


Murder of Burnes
Violence flared in Kabul and Afghan rebels, led by Akbar Khan, murdered Burnes. Hedonist he might have been, but the calmness with which he continued at his post, and the ferocity with which he fought after the killing of his political assistant, Major William Broadfoot, killing six assailants before meeting his own fate, won him a heroic reputation.

Chicanery and Cover-Up
It seems incredible that all Burnes's excellent advice on tactics was ignored by the British authorities, just as his original advice against supporting Shah Shuja had been. In fact, those to whom he reported behaved shockingly badly and did not pass on all his advice: there was chicanery during his period in Kabul and then a cover-up: "It came to light in 1861 that some of Burnes'[s] dispatches from Kabul in 1839 had been altered so as to convey opinions opposite to his, but Lord Palmerston refused after such a lapse of time to grant the inquiry demanded in the House of Commons."(1)

Sale Takes Jalalabad
On his way to "Jellalabad", that is, Jalalabad, Robert Sale received the news of Burnes's death. He was ordered to return to Kabul as fast as possible, but using his better judgement, decided not to: "suppressing his personal desire to return to protect his wife and family, he gave orders to push on."(4) They reached Jalalabad, a city in eastern Afghanistan at the junction of the Kabul River and Kunar River, to find a rebel force installed and the way back to India blocked.
    After severe fighting Sale took Jalalabad on 12 November 1841. Its defensive walls were half-ruined: he immediately set about making it fit to withstand a siege. His volume of lithographs includes his detailed drawings of the improvements he made to the defences. (I haven't digitised any because a small reproduction won't give you any idea of how impressively detailed they are and how careful a tactician he must have been.) On 7 April 1842 the beleaguered garrison "relieved itself by a brilliant and completely successful attack on Akbar Khan's lines."(4) General Pollock eventually arrived with a relieving army, but Jalalabad no longer needed them, thanks to Sale.
    A detailed history of this episode is given in:

Gleig, G. R. (George Robert), 1796-1888.
Sale's brigade in Afghanistan : with an account of the seisure and defence of Jellalabad.
London ; John Murray, 1861

    If the rest of the British forces could get as far as Jalalabad, their way back to the Frontier and thence the safety of India would be relatively clear.

Disastrous Retreat of British from Kabul
In the meantime the British forces in Kabul had fled, with amongst them Florentia, Lady Sale, with her daughter and son-in-law. Lady Sale was known in her lifetime as "the Grenadier in Petticoats"(5): she travelled the world with her husband on all his postings, but it was perhaps not these travels, as varied as any soldier's of the time, which earned her the nickname, but her determination and grit—as her portrait taken in later life attests!

The "Grenadier in Petticoats"
Her journal offers a stringent description of the complete muddle and panic amongst the British in Kabul when the rebellion broke out. She "gives us a full and vivid picture of events", reporting on "the anxiety and ineptitude of Shah Shuja; [and] the procrastination and confusion of command, as men are readied to take action and told to stand down, marched out of the gates, and told to return. She does not soften her words in the portrayal of characters, or dissemble to preserve the good name of anyone".(2)

Panic Leads to Massacre
What followed this panic was the disastrous British retreat from Kabul in the icy Afghan winter of 1841/1842. At the beginning of 1842 an agreement was reached with the rebels for the safe exodus of the British garrison and its dependants from Afghanistan.(6) They were about 16,500 souls, only about 4,500 being military personnel and over 12,000 camp followers. Most of the troops were Indian units, plus one British battalion, the 44th Regiment of Foot. It was ferociously cold: the worst time imaginable to try to get a large contingent, encumbered as they must have been by the cook-waggons and all the camp followers' baggage, through the mountains of Afghanistan.
    They were ambushed in the snowbound passes by Akbar Khan's supporters, with huge slaughter in what was more or less a running battle, culminating in a massacre at the Gandamak Pass. Fewer than forty men survived the retreat from Kabul. A handful of British were taken prisoner. Only one Briton reached the relative safety of the garrison at Jalalabad, a Dr. William Brydon.(6) It was one of the bitterest episodes in British military history.

British Hostages in Afghanistan
Portrait of an Afghan, said to be Akbar Khan, by Vincent Eyre
Lady Sale's party—she, her daughter (Mrs Sturt), and other members of British officers' families—were lucky to be taken prisoner at the beginning of 1842 rather than slaughtered along the way. They were eventually rescued, later in 1842, and got back to India.
    Another account of the British hostages' captivity in Afghanistan is given in:

Eyre, Vincent, Sir, 1811-1881
The military operations at Cabul, which ended in the retreat and destruction of the British Army, January 1842 : with a journal of imprisonment in Affghanistan.
London : J. Murray, 1843

Vincent Eyre (later Sir Vincent) was one of the many young Englishmen who joined the East India Company's army: in his case, the Bengal Establishment. After 10 years' service he was appointed "Commissary of Ordnance" to the Kabul field force, in 1839. Like the Sales, his family went out to Afghanistan expecting the comfortable life of a peaceful posting. Eyre and his family were also captured during the Afghan uprising led by Akbar Khan in January 1842. Ironically, it was their months in captivity which saved their lives. Besides writing a diary of his experiences, Eyre, who was a considerable artist, also sketched the personalities—officers, women, and even enemies—whom he met. They are charming works, with a great delicacy of touch.

Two of Eyre's sketches of the Kabul prisoners
The manuscript of the diary is said to have been smuggled out to a friend in British India. It was published in England as Military Operations at Cabul in 1843 and immediately ran into several editions. The colour lithographs of his portraits were sold as a set under the title: Portraits of the Cabul Prisoners. The lucky Eyres, like Lady Sale, were later rescued. Eyre went on to a distinguished military career.

End of the War
British morale was greatly shaken when reports of the disastrous retreat from Kabul began to filter through. In September 1842 the British forces retook Kabul and freed the prisoners. Reprisals included great destruction and terrible, vicious slaughter of civilians. The British then withdrew from Afghanistan through the Khyber Pass. Dost Mohammad was released and was able to re-establish his authority in Kabul.(6)

What Would Happen Next?
With British influence west of the Khyber Pass waning the way was left open for Russian influence: an opportunity of which the Russian Bear did not fail to take advantage. We see, in the 30 years following the First Afghan War, steady Russian encroachment on Afghanistan. By 1873 "Russian control ... extended as far as the northern bank of the Amu Darya."(6)


Above: Sketch map of the route of the mighty Amu Darya, the largest river of Central Asia (known in the 19th century as the Oxus River), from its origin in the lofty Pamirs to the Aral Sea. It forms the northern border of modern Afghanistan. By 1873 most of the countries of modern Central Asia (shown in pink) were under direct or indirect Russian control.

References:
(1) "Alexander Burnes", Wikipedia
(2) Bijan Omrani. "Will we make it to Jalalabad?"
            http://www.bijanomrani.com/?p=jalala
(3) "Dost Mohammad Khan", Wikipedia
(4) "Robert Sale", Wikipedia
(5) "Florentia Sale", Wikipedia
(6) "First Anglo-Afghan War", Wikipedia
 
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This post was researched and created by Kathy Boyes 

Saturday, 7 September 2013

Vale Kevin Griffin

VALE KEVIN GRIFFIN

    We recently had the sad news that the RGSSA’s former librarian, Kevin Griffin, has died. He had been very ill for months and had had to give up his library work. The Royal Geographical Society of South Australia has been without a librarian since then and it has really brought home to us what a great deal of work Kevin did, even though he was only part-time.
    Kevin was a very modest person, so I won’t indulge in fulsome praise or post a photo of him. I shall just say, on a personal level, that it was a pleasure working with him. His work for the RGSSA will speak for him. He was instrumental in the decision to set up a computerised catalogue for the Society for the very first time and mount it on the Internet, a move which is giving scholars world-wide access to the RGSSA’s unique collection of works of exploration and travel. In-house, he produced a series of fascinating exhibitions, drawing on his wide knowledge of the collection. His expert work as a bibliographer is best seen in his catalogue for the big exhibition Terra Cognita: Four Hundred Years of European Exploration, Travel and Discovery, which was mounted in 2008 for the 100th anniversary of the opening of the York Gate Library collection in South Australia.

"Terra Cognita" title page (picture on navy mat)
The electronic version of this illustrated publication is available at :

Below we see an extract which shows Kevin’s ability to write concise and telling annotations:



Thank you for your tireless and dedicated work for the RGSSA Library, Kevin.
We miss you.




Wednesday, 1 May 2013

Afghanistan & the British Raj (1)

AFGHANISTAN &THE BRITISH RAJ AT RGSSA

Currently on view at the Royal Geographical Society of South Australia is an exhibition on Afghanistan. It will run from May to October 2013. A booklet, Afghanistan, A Cultural Exposure and Australia's Immigrant Links from 1859, has been issued to accompany it. Those with the chance to visit will see some of the RGSSA's oldest books with links to Central Asia and the Islamic civilisations, and also some interesting artefacts, as well as works of travel and exploration.
    Over the next few months the blog will feature some of the books and their writers. The collection is very rich in 19th-century British works of travel and exploration, and our Afghanistan books are by some of the most extraordinary people ever to fly the flag for the British Raj. I'd like to plunge right in and tell you about Sir Robert Sale and his amazing wife, Florentia, about "Bokhara" Burnes, and his tragically unnecessary death, or about John Wood, the young sailor who reached the source of the Amu Darya (the "River Oxus") in the high Pamirs... But I think a bit of background, not to mention a map, might be in order first!
    The sketch map below shows the borders and major cities of modern Afghanistan and situates that country with respect to the neighbouring states of Central Asia.
 

Here we see some of the places that figure largely in the accounts by early travellers held in the RGSSA's collection. Kabul, Kandahar, Ghazni and Jalalabad are all places with significant rôles in the Anglo-Afghan wars of the 19th century. Intrepid explorers wrote of the great rivers, the Indus and the Amu Darya.
   These places are still important centres in modern Afghanistan - though the early European travellers wouldn't recognise the spelling of many of the names! But the borders have changed a lot. Back in the 18th century the Afghan Empire was at its height, reaching from modern Iran to encompass vast stretches of what is now northern and south-western Pakistan, and stretching far to the north. A hundred years later its size and effective power was much reduced but nevertheless the contemporary maps show us a much larger country than today's:

"Persia & Cabool", from:
Johnson, J. H., F.R.G.S.
The comprehensive school atlas of ancient and modern geography : constructed from the latest and best authorities : with a consulting index of upwards of 22,000 names of places. London : Charles Bean, 1856
Afghanistan is the large mass of blue to the right. This 1856 map is rather hard to read even full-size, but the grey bit at the bottom is the sea, the Indian Ocean to the west of modern-day Pakistan. The thin black line to the left, reaching from the sea up into the blue section, is the mighty Indus River. Mountain ranges are shown by grey shading. The detail below indicates the positions of, top to bottom: CABOOL [Kabul], Ghizni [Ghazni], Candahar [Kandahar].


Centuries of Armed Struggle
The whole history of Afghanistan is one of the sweep of struggling opposed forces, backward and forwards, west to east, east to west, north to south and back south to north, across the country. The current invaders from Europe, America and Australia are just the latest in a long line of interested outside parties who for one reason or another have decided to march in. But the conflicts go deeper than that - bone-deep. The various factions, tribes, dynasties and language groups of the area which today we know as Afghanistan have always been engaged in armed struggles. It’s a way of life. Outside invaders? They're used to those, too, back at least as far as Alexander the Great. The Persian Empire had a go. They're long gone. The Russians have a long history of eying off the area: they had a go quite recently - remember that? No sign of them now. Today's Western powers are as likely to succeed in "winning" anything as the British were with their Afghan Wars of the 19th century. And as for changing the nature of the country—!
   The picture at the top of this blog post shows two typical Afghan men of about 1908-9. Significantly, they are not described as warriors. The one on the left is "A Douranee Villager and his Arms" while the one on the right is "An Afghaun of Damaun". Both armed to the teeth - yes; it was the norm, and still is. If we think of Afghanistan now as at about the stage of development as England was during the Wars of the Roses it may help us to understand the country a little better.

The two plates are both from a volume which documents Afghanistan, its people and its rulers in the early years of the 19th century:

Elphinstone, Mountstuart, 1779-1859
An account of the kingdom of Caubul, and its dependencies in Persia, Tartary and India : comprising a view of the Afghaun nation and a history of the Dooraunee monarchy. London : Printed  for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1815.

    In addition to its historical importance, for those interested in the costumes and customs of the Afghans at this period the work is an invaluable source of material.

L: "A Taujik in the Summer dress of Caubul."; R: "Douraunee Shepherds."
Mountstuart Elphinstone was a British administrator, statesman and historian who became the Governor of Bombay. He was a remarkable and hard-working man who seems not to have shared many of the prejudices which characterized the British Raj. Certainly in the Bombay Presidency he fostered the development of Indian education. He wrote a considerable amount on India as well as his important work on Afghanistan. His History of India (1841) is still considered an authoritative work.
    As he came from an upper-class Scottish family, one of his uncles being a director of the East India Company, which at the time governed British India, young Elphinstone had no difficulty in gaining a post in its Civil Service. Having been transferred to the Diplomatic Service, in 1801 he was attached to Sir Arthur Wellesley's mission to the Marathas. Negotiations broke down and war broke out. Although he was a civilian Elphinstone took up the duties of aide-de-camp to Wellesley, showing such courage and knowledge of tactics that Wellesley (later the Duke of Wellington) awarded him the accolade, saying he ought to have been a soldier!

The Kabul Posting: First European Treaty with Afghanistan
Having returned to civilian life, in 1808 Elphinstone was appointed as the first British envoy to the Court of Kabul, Afghanistan. The aim of the venture was to secure a friendly alliance with the Afghan Amir, with an agreement to oppose the passage of foreign troops through the Afghan Empire. This was intended by the British, who were in the middle of the Napoleonic Wars, to prevent any French incursions into India. The treaty Elphinstone successfully negotiated was the first Afghan pact with a European power.
    However, only a few weeks after signing the agreement, the Amir, Shuja Shah, was deposed by his predecessor, Mahmud. The article on Elphinstone in Wikipedia in fact sees his book, not the treaty, as the "most valuable permanent result of the embassy".

Elphinstone's map of Afghanistan: "Caubul On a reduced Scale, Shewing its relative situation to the Neighbouring Countries"
Return to India & Later Life
In 1811 Elphinstone was appointed as British resident at Poona (modern Pune), a post which was seen politically as a difficult one. War broke out in 1817, the Marathas declaring war on the British. In a crisis during the Battle of Khadki Elphinstone took over military command and secured a victory.
    Promotions followed: he was the Commissioner of the Deccan in 1818, and Lieutenant-Governor of Bombay, one of the largest "presidencies" (administrative territories) of British India, from 1819 to 1827. His achievements include both the founding of the system of state education in India and the return of many lands appropriated by the British to the Raja of Satara.
    Elphinstone retired to England in 1829. He was twice offered the extremely prestigious post of Governor-General of India, but it is a measure of the man that he refused, in order to concentrate on finishing his book, The History of India.

Background to Conflict: The Dorrani Dynasty
The Afghanistan revealed to Mountstuart Elphinstone was an area which had gone through centuries of tribal feuding. with borders, if they could even be called such, constantly changing. Some understanding of its history during the 18th century is important to placing the subsequent conflicts with the British in their correct context. Traditionally the Afghans were used to hostilities, used to repelling invaders, and fiercely defensive of their territories, large or small.

We say "Afghans" but in truth there has always been more than one linguistic group and more than one variation of Islam practised in the area which we think of today as "Afghanistan." These differences were partly the root of the endless troubles there. But as well, the tradition of large families, often, for the wealthier classes, with more than one wife, meant that there was often rivalry between brothers, uncles or nephews over leadership rights, and groups would align themselves with one or other prominent man of a ruling family. Politics, in short! Not so very different, when we think about it, from our "civilised' capital cities today. The main difference was that in Afghanistan the divisions were often according to bloodlines rather than simply factional and opportunistic.

The 18th century was a great century for Afghanistan, seeing the rise of the Dorrani dynasty and the spread of the Afghan Empire. By the end of the century, however, the Empire was in disarray, parts of it had fallen into other hands, notably, in the east, those of the Sikh regime, and it was little wonder that Russia had begun to eye it with interest from the north and Britain from the east.

The Dorrani Empire of Ahmad Shah, Pearl of the Pearls
The history of Afghanistan in the 18th and early 19th centuries is in effect that of Elphinstone's "Dooraunee monarchy": the Dorrani Empire or Afghan Empire of the Dorrani or Durrani family. (Earlier English spellings of the name vary: it may occur in the literature as Dooraunee, Douranee, Dourraunnee, etc. Other spellings which attempt to transliterate the Pashto name are Dorrani, Durani, Durrani.) It was a Pashtun dynasty, whose empire covered modern Afghanistan, northeastern Iran, the Kashmir region, Pakistan, and northwestern India. It was established in 1747 by Ahmad Shah Durrani, who ruled until 1772. The empire is considered the foundation of modern Afghanistan: Ahmad Shah is known as the Father of Afghanistan. The name "Dorrani" or "Durrani" adopted by Ahmad Shah means "pearl of the pearls".

"King Ahmad Shah Durrani Abdali", Miniature, Moghul school, c.1757 (Wikipedia)
East of the Empire: The Subcontinent
In the 18th century the balance of power in the Indian subcontinent was very different from what it was to become during the 19th century. British power, in the hands of the East India Company, was centred on the three Presidencies of British India: Madras, Bengal, and Bombay. Thus, although the Dorranis were doubtless seen in the 18th and early 19th centuries as a potential threat to British interests in north India, it was not the British with whom Ahmad Shah had to contend.
    He invaded the territory of the crumbled Mughal Empire in the north of the Indian subcontinent several times, gaining control over the Punjab and Kashmir, and in 1757 sacking Delhi. He allowed the Mughals to retain nominal control there on condition they acknowledged his suzerainty over the Punjab, Sindh, and Kashmir. However, the Mughals were not by any means the only Indian power in the subcontinent and he soon had to face the Maratha Confederacy, a powerful Hindu faction based in Poona (modern Pune), and in control of vast territories. In 1761 the Third Battle of Panipat was a decisive victory for the Afghan forces, who had rallied a large army to the Muslim cause. But they took heavy losses, and there were many subsequent challenges to Ahmad Shah's authority in northern India, notably the rise of a big Sikh faction.

End of Empire
In his later years Ahmad Shah also had to contend with rebellions in the north. His empire never regained the heights it had attained in 1761, when it had been second only to the Ottoman Empire. At the time of his death in 1772 the extent of his power had thus been curtailed and he had retired to his home in the mountains east of Kandahar. Nevertheless, he "succeeded to a remarkable degree in balancing tribal alliances and hostilities, and in directing tribal energies away from rebellion." (Wikipedia)

Deatil from Elphinstone's map of Afghanistan,
showing Kandahar (Red) and Kabul (Pink)
Disarray After the Death of the Amir
Afghanistan itself had been in considerable disarray since Ahmad Shah's death, with his successors proving incapable of governing. Ahmad Shah was succeeded by his son, Timur Shah, not a popular choice with the Dorrani chieftains, as he had already failed to retain power in northern India on his father's behalf. Civil war broke out and the empire began to crumble. On Timur's death in 1793 his fifth son, Zaman Shah, succeeded him. However, some of Zaman's many brothers were rivals for the position. Ironically, it was Zaman Shah who, in an effort to control the Punjab, made the mistake of appointing the young Ranjit Singh as governor there. Civil war in Afghanistan resulted in the overthrow of Zaman Shah in 1801. More violence followed. Mahmud Shah had two years in power before he was ousted by another of Timur Shah's sons, Shuja Shah, or Shah Shuja, who ruled from 1803-1809 (but was to return to power in the 1830s with British support, resulting in one of the greatest tragedies of British military history.)

A New Power on the North-West Frontier: Ranjit Singh
By the time Mountstuart Elphinstone visited Afghanistan in 1808-9 and met Shuja Shah Dorrani, northern India and the North-West Frontier had seen the rise of the Sikhs under Ranjit Singh (1780-1839). He had occupied Lahore in 1799, then being declared Maharajah of the Punjab. The British were resisting his attempts to expand eastward: he signed the Treaty of Amritsar with them in 1909.

Chief sources for background material:
"Dorrani family", Library of Congress Authorities
"Durrani Empire", Wikipedia
"Mountstuart Elphinstone", Wikipedia
"Ranjit Singh", Microsoft Encarta 2006
"Shah Shujah Durrani", Wikipedia

Later blogs will look at what followed Mountstuart Elphinstone's visit to Afghanistan and the deposition of Shuja Shah, including the first-hand depictions of the First and Second Afghan Wars in the Royal Geographical Society of South Australia's collection.

 
Detail, "A Hindkee in the Winter Dress of Peshawer"

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This post was researched and created by Kathy Boyes