History of The Afghans (1858) by J.P. Ferrier
History of The Afghans (1858) by J.P. Ferrier
History of The Afghans (1858) by J.P. Ferrier
T H E A F G H A N S .
BY J. P. FERRIER,
mEXK8LT01 TEX OE-UB8 ~'ATBIQUE. ARD LATE ADJUTAXT-@ERPBU
OI TAE PEEEXAN NuY.
t raml a frma tk Brigiaal PBnpabli8@ gbluluript
BY CAPTAIN WILLIAM J EW.
LONDON:
JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET.
1858.
BY THE SAME AUTHOR,
CARAVAN JOURNEYS AND WANDERINQS IN PERSIA,
AFGHANISTAN, TU-AN, AND BELOOCHISTAN, AND
THROUGH PARTS OF CENTRAL ASIA 'prwiody unvisited, THE
HAZARAH.COUNTRY, GOIJB, HELXUND, SEIIJTAN, &. TMsktedhm
the original Frrmch Manuscript, by Captdn J ~ ~ s E . 8 d Edition,
with Origind Map, 8vo. Zls.
Thin Work contdnr important information regarding the opening for British
Manafiaetnres throngh the Indos, into the heart of Central Ma.
Ik Ferrlef m concldcm am tbore of .n tnW@nt obmvr. but t&y amcw tu mom
eapecWyummlngfmn fonlgner.ub3 f mm~whomwe l ne nt I Ue dt oqpr d~ur
onprqlndlc+d al- It h most vslcrme to llnd that meb a uitlo of au IndLn &xnInlon
Iran mtldwl of lta acms(mw,Uut he Is earvlncedit 'rilllutforyrsifltbeoot
attseLed by q Eump.n MUOIL' "-RAU.
TO MY OLD COMBADEB
THE l s ~ BEQIMENT OF C H A S S E ~ D'AJWQUE.
P R E F A C E .
THE Translator, having accomplished his very in-
teresting, though laborious, task of rendering into
English the manuscripts of General Ferrier, is anxious
to avail himself of this opportunity to congratulate that
officer on having added these instructive volumes
to the Eastern literature of this country. They &an
be more thoroughly appreciated here than in France ;
and that they must prove of real value in England is
evident when we consider how great are the interests
involved in the development-commercial, social, and
religious-of that vast continent which Providence
has permitted to fall under our rule.
As an old soldier also, the Translator wishes to mark
his sense of the frank and generous manner in which
General Ferrier has spoken of the arduous services of
the Anglo-Indian army in Afghanistan ; more especially
as at the period at which he gave expression to these
sentiments--1845-the entente between his own nation
and England was by no means so cordial as happily
it is now. The Author's criticisms, when unfavour-
able, are generally well-founded; and though, no
doubt, inaccuracies are to be met with in some por-
tions of the ' History of the Afghans,' it is evident
that they proceed from defective information, and
not from any ignoble desire to write disparagingly
of the British Empire or our gallant soldiers. As
to his comments on the Indian policy of this country,
or the manner in which that policy has been carried
out, the Translator cannot,, agreeing as he does with
a
the greater number of them, feel at all surprised
at their .severity ; indeed, he considers that we ought
to accept these bommenta with gratitude, inasmuch
as they present to bs a more unprejudiced view of the
subject than we have yet seen.
At a very early period French travellers greatly
distinguished themselves in the East, and the names of
Tavernier, Bernier, and Thevenot justify the assertion ;
but the travels of General Ferrier are even of a more
interesting character than those of these pioneers
in Asiatic adventure ; moreover, his sufferings were
great while wending his weary way over the deserta
of Central Asia, in some districts where European foot
had never before left its imprint on the burning sands.
The cruelty and hardships he then endured entitle him
to the commiseration of every feeling mind, and the
industry and perseverance that enabled him to collect
and to preserve the materials for his History and
Travels, under circumstances so adverse, are worthy
of all admiration.
Important also are the opinions of one who is capable
of giving us much eound advice, and critically examin-
ing the conduct of Great Britain, in connection with
the countries which join her Indian frontiers on the
n&h and north-west. Our information regarding
these countries, their inhabitants, and their policy,
has hitherto come almost exclusively from officers or
civilians in the East India Compaby's service ; it ia
profitable to see the mme subjects treated by a
foreigner and from another point of view, for reasons
which must be apparent to many.
General Ferrier has pointed out, in his chapter on
the invasion of India, in ' Caravan Journeys,' the
probability of the Sepoys joining the Russian army,
and the princes and rajahs'throwing off their alle-
PREFACE. vii
giance ; opinions which, no doubt, elicited expressions
of indignation from many of his readers, especially
those who were the servants of the, East'Inhia Com-
pany-but how fearfully hae his estimate of native
fidelity been justified since the publication of- that
volume I
The reader will do well to consult the highly
interesting notes and appendices of Sir H. Rawlinson,
Sir John Login, and Mr. Danby Seymour, in ' Caravan
Journeys,' ,as they elucidate many points in the History
of the Afghans.
The style of the author is rather severe, and there
are several portions of the present work in which there
was an opening for much touching writing and for
appeals to the highest and best feelinga of our nature ;
even a few words only here and there would have
considerably increased the interest of the subject, but
the translator did not consider himself at liberty to
do otherwise than adhere strictly to the text. When
there wae a duplication of thought, or want of arrange-
ment, he has endeavoured to remedy these defecte;
but otherwise the reader is in possession of General
Ferrier's work in its integrity.
iUahn&ey Iq&tonc, March 27,1868.
CONTENTS,
C HAP T E R I.
Origin of the A f g h - Opinion of Monsieur Ruffin, Eugene Bortf, and
others - 0pinion.of Afghan author%-Afghsns mentioned by Tamerlane in
his 1netitut.a - The probability of their Jewish origin - Their conversion to
Islamism - A Hebrew Bible presented to Nadir Shah by th6 Yoosoofzyea -
Afghsne of Indian and Khowsian origin - Warlike and independent under
Sebek-Taghee - Aborigines of Afghanistan - Afghans in India known aa
Patans and Rohillas - Firet mentioned as A$hans in the reign of Aboo Seid
-Cleeaification of Afghan tribea -The author adopta that of Ahlullah
Khan - P e mt i o n of the Afghane under Qhengis Khan - The Abdalees
settle in the Suleiman mountains - Yoosoofzyes established in Cashmeer -
Afghaniatan inhabited almost exclueively by Abdalees and Qhildjzyes - List
of Afghan tribea and their branches - Schiam amongst them on thia subject -
Makooheea and Khaouganeea - A singular reason for taking offence - S u b
division of the tribes and their branches . . . . . . .. Page 1
C HAP T E R 11.
Afghaniatan conquered by Alexander -Reconquered by the aboriginal inha-
bitante - Taken by the Tartars - Death of Mansoor - Sucteaa of Sebek-
Taghee - Character of the Afghans at thia period - C o n d o n of temtory
to the Abdalee tribe - Qhildjzyea opposed to the Tartar dominion - The
first sovereign of Afghanistan - His son Mahmood -Cruelty of the Tartar
princes -Expulsion of Beiram - K h m Malek the last of the Ghaznevide
dynasty - List of the monarch of that race - Afghan princes of Qour -
Mahmocd Qouree -His conqueeta in India - Eldooz - Djellal Eddin -
Afghanistan conquered by Qhengia Khan - Malek Kurt - Chems Eddin
Qonree -Their d t y to the Tartare - Conquered by Tamerlane -
Deecription of the Afghans by that invader-Afghan rule in India-
Mahmood III. - Ibrahii Rhan defeata BelM and seizes Kabul and Kan-
. dahar - Mina Baboor - Aseiated by the Persians -Defeated by the
Uzbeks, but mcceseful in India - Fall of Ibrahim Khan - Death of M i i
Baboor- Succeed$ by his eon Humayoon -Protected by Shah Thamasp
-Anecdote of the latter - Aasista Hamayoon with a Persian army - The
/
Looda defeated - Their attempts to W e Delhi - The prophetese Kiemsl
Bddin - Shah Jehan drives out the Loods - Aurungzebe finally annihilates
them - Kandahar ceded to Persia by Humayoon - Taken and retaken by
the PersiPns and Yogule -Afghan deputation to Shah Abbas - Extract
CONTENTS.
from Su John Malcolm's ' History of Persia ' -Afghans quiet under Shah
Abbes - Tyranny of his grandson Shah Seffee - Kandahar taken by Shah
Abbea IT. in 1642 - S u m of the Qhildjzyea - Their revolt mppraaeed by
the Shah Howi n - Qourguin Khan - Deputation of the Af gi uu to the
Pmi anCourt i n 1708. .. .. .. .. . . .. Page 18
CHAPTER 111.
The Kelauter of Kandahar is sent prisoner to 1s- - His intrignes against
Qourguin Khan -He makes a pilgrimage to Mecca - Obtains a fetw from
the chief mollah of Islam - Retnrna to Ispahan, and h d l y to Kandahar -
Indignation of Qowguii Khan - Eventa coneequent upon this - Opinion of
Abduhh Khan upon them -Death of Qourguin Khan -Mir Weis enters
~ r j a h a r - Statement of Mi ne Mehdee - The Ghildjzyea declam their
independence and exterminate the P e h troop - The tribe of the Abdaleea
= M i themselves in Herat - The Persian generaln attack the Kelauter
and are beaten - Kaea Khomo Khan besieges Kandahar - He is defeated
and killed with 30,000 of his troop - Mohemed Roostem mcreeds him, but
is also beaten - The Afghans acknowledge Mir Weis as their 8ovemign chief
-Death of the Mir in 1716 - His brother Mi u Abdullah wcceeda him -
His nepiations with Persia-Ia put to death by the eldest eon of Mir
Weia, who mcceeda him - Alayar Khan, Governor of Herat - Zeman Khan
appointed by the P& monarch to succeed him - Heyat Sultan - He
marches again& Kandahar - Attacked by Assad mlah and defeated -
Enters Herat - Persian campaign a g a b t the Uebeks - Sefi Kooli Wa n -
Is defeated by the Afghans - Independence of the Afghans eatablished -
Assad Ullah l a p siege to Furrah -1s attacked by Mu Mahmood of Kau-
dahar - A Belooch chief, Mir Mohamed, aei m Herat. .. .. 25
CHAPTER IV.
Intrigues of Perais in Afghaniatan - Preparationn of Mir Mahmood - He
ontwits the Persian Court - Is appointed Qovernor-Gieneral of Kaadahar -
His ambitions pmjecta - 8aieee the fdreeeee on the Helmund - State of
the Persian army - Beeiegea Keaman - It aurrendm to his troop - They
tue b e c r h by the Persian general huft Ali - Mir Mahmood rehab
to IOrndalm - Leuft Ali ia &grad - Revolt against Mir Mahmood at
Kandahar - The Mir march with his army @net the Persians - Pro-
visione the fortreee of Bam - Kerman mn d e r s to him - He is repulsed
before Yecd - Movee on I8pahan - State of Yir Mahmood's troop - A
eingalar d p e for conrage - Pusillanimity of the Persians - Disnnion
amonget tbem - 'Ilm coneequences -Their army ir routed by the Afghans
- Tbe Ethemad Doanlet and the Walee of aeargia -The chief command of
the army is given to the latter-Propwition of Shah Hoosein to Mir
Mh o o d - The siege is pmaed closer - The Persians endeavour to leave
the city - k t d t y prevaile - The r d t - D d f u l snfferings of the
inhabitants - Shah Eoosein pmceah to the Afghan camp - He abdicates
tbe throne - Aahmood's oondnct after his victory. . . . . .. a8
CONTENTS.
CHAPTEB V.
The Prinoe Thamesp - Mahmood sends an army against him - gasbeen cur-
renders to the Afghans - Duplicity and cruelty of the victom - The inha-
bitants take their revenge - Defeat of the Afghans - Mahmood is furious
at this - Reconciliation with Aman Ullah Khan - Mahmood maaeacrea the
Persian nobles - Ssnguinerry acema in Is* - State of the provinces -
Prince Thamaep ia proclaimed Shah - h m b l e a t roop in the Azerbaidjan
-The Turks and Rnmiam seize upon Armenia and Georgia - State of the
A@an army - Desertions from Mu Mahmood's ranks - Shi m besieged -
-my of Mahmood - Mir Echreff appointed to the chief command - The
Afghan army march upon Yezd - Mahmood becomes deranged - Lasaea in
the Afghan ranke - the troop return to Ispahan - Mahmood in a paroxysm
of madness puts to death the sons of Shah Hooeein - Death of Mahmood -
Mir Echreff s u c ~ him - He puts the Serdar UUah Khan to death-
Policy of Russia at this period-Echreff marches against the Turks-
Battle of Kiemereh - Defeat of the Turks - Treaty with the Afghans -
Eventa in Afghanistan -The Ruasians take posseesion of Guilan - Echreff
fortifies the Afghan quarter in Ispahan -Nadir joins the Shah Thamaep
- He takes Pu'ishapoor - Echreff seizes Yezd -Battle between Nadir and
Echreff - Defeat of the afghan^ -Battle of Bagh Mirsne - The Afghans
retire from Iapahan - Conflict at the Bend-emir - Retreat upon Shi m -
Destruction of the Afghan army - Death of Echreff - Reflections. Page 61
CHAPTEB VI.
Nadir takes Herat and Furrah - Marches upon ILandahar in 1737 - Admirable
defence by the Qhildjzyes - Mir Booeein capitulates - Nadir reducee
Afghanistan - His policy in that country -Insurrection of the Afghans
after the death of Nadir Shah - Expuleion of the Persiana - Ahmed Khan
Suddozye elected King - Hadji Djemal Khan - Revolt of the Serdare -
Nssser Khan d n d e r a Kabul and Peahawnr - Ahmed Shah marches
against Lahore-Hayat Ulleh Khan obtains the aesistauce of the Mogul
Emperor - Admirable tactics of Ahmed Shah - Pawage of the Tchenab -
Ahmed Shah taka Lahore - Maka a treaty with the Mogul Emperor -
Revolt at Kandahar - Execution of the conapiratom - Ahmed Shah ad-
vances into Khoraaeen - Siege of Herat -Defence of the citadel by Emu
Khan - Timoor Miiza marches against Meshed - Defeet of the ghoraeeanee
chiefs in that city -Meshed relieved by Shah Rokh- Defeat of Mir Alem
- Ahmed Shah retim from Meshed - Beaieges Nithapoor - In obliged to
retreat - Dieasters of the Afahnn army - Passage of the Heri-rood - The
remainder of the army anive at Herat - b e d Shah reaches Kandaha~ 65
CHAPTER VI I .
Seoond siege of Niehapoor by the Afghans - Clemency of the viator-He
invests Meshed - Battle of Kakhak -Death of Ali Mnrad - Csptnre of
Toon and Tubbus - An ambuscade - Treaty with Shah Rokh - Ahmed
xii CONTENTS.
'
Shah retires to Herat - Campaign against the Uzbeks - Beghee Khan aeka
Balk, Khulm, kc. - A d Khan Ghildjzye - His succesees in Persia -
Defeat of Kerym Khan -&sad Khau is attacked in the mountains - Last
attempt of the Afghans to annex Peraia - Naseer Khan, Belooch, revolts -
l' he combats of Pringuez and Mestook - Siege of Kelat - Favourable terms
made by Nasser Khan - Ahmed Shah proceeds to India - Insurrection of
the Mahrattas - Ahmed Shah Gourkanee deposed - Asamhation of
Alemguir - Ghazi Khan eeizea the throne of the Moguls - Ahmed Shah,
Suddozye, reaches Lahore - Marches on Delhi - Shooja ed Dooulet -
Passage of the Bar - Desertion of Delaver Khan and Zal Beg - Shah Alem
cedes his rights to the English - Revolt in Kandahar - Abdul Khalek
Khan - Abdullah Khan enppmzaes the insurrection - Ahmed Shah marches
on Peahawur - Arrives at Kandahar - Zd Beg is executed - Delaver
Khan flies to Herat - Timoor Mina is made viceroy - Ahmed Shah's
muons for this -Death of Ahmed Shah - Yaghoot Khan -The Serdars
declare for Suleiman Mirza - Chsnrcter of Ahrned Shah . . Page 79
CHAPTER VI I I .
Kabul becornea the capital - Sons of Ahmed Shah - Dervish Ali Khan -
Afghan principles - Walee Khan and his sons put to death - Flight of
Suleiman Mirza - Timoor Mirza enters Kandahar - Reaides at Kabul -
Kuzzilbaeh cavalry organised - Timoor marches against Scinde - Conflicts
between the Kalorae and Talpoores :Timoor Shah takes Bnwalpoor-
Establishes the galoras in Scinde - Fresh disturbances in Scinde - Medad
Khan is beaten at Djioond - Fethi Khan Talpoora eucoeede to power -
Timoor takes the field against the Emir of Bokhara - Bslkh and Akhcheh
h o me independent - Timoor retnrns to Knbul - Events in Khorassan -
Afghan army marches on Meshed - Mamech Khan - Capture of Tchinaran
- Death of Medad Khan -Fresh insurrection in Khorassan -Afghan army
advanoes into that province - Conspiracy to take Timoor Shah's life - The
plot faila - Arseleh Khan is put to death - Value of an oath in an Afghan
sovereign - Death of Tirnoor Shah - Character of that monarch - Sons
of Timoor .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 96
CHAPTER I X.
Afghanistan at the death of Timoor-Intrigues for the succession- Payendeh
B a n supporte Zeman Mirza - Afghan tactics - Zeman is proclaimed Shah
-He marcha against his brother at Kandahar-Flight of Humayoon
M i - Tyranny of Zeman Shah - His sanguinary acts - Gives up Balkh
to Persia - Zeman marches against the Punjab - Humayoon eeizee Kan.
dshar - Zeman takes the city by treachery - Humayoon is made prisoner
- His brother puts out his eyes - Zeman advanoes upon Scinde - Mahmood
Mima endeavours to intercept him - Battle of Gourrek - Zeman advances
on Herat - Takes the city - Mahmood Mina retires to Persia - Advances
on Funah - Battle of Emaret - Mahmood invests Herat - Cunniug of
Zeman Shah - Mahmood quits his c a mp Hi s allies are beaten and dispersed
CONTENTS.
- Zeman Shah amvea at Herat - Mahmood retirw to Bokhara and Khiva
-Revolt of the Si kh - Zeman reducea Lahore - Dieasters of his army -
He reaches Kabul and Kandahar- Fatal tendencies of Shah Zeman -
Discontent of the Afghans - The vizier Vefadar Khan - Conspiracy of the
Serdara - Payendeh Khan and his accomplices executed - Flight of Fethi
Khan - Revolta - Fethi Khan accompanied by Mahmood takw Fnrrah and
Kandahar - The army deserte Zeman - Battle between the brothera -
Zeman is beaten and his eyes put out - Vefadar Khan is executed - Zeman
retiras to Bo*ra - Character of the Shah . . . . .. Page 108
CHAPTER X.
Mahmood ascends the throne - First acts of the Shah - Revolt of the Ghildj-
eyes - Kaiesar Mirza is driven from Herat - Hadji Firooz Eddin made
governor of that city - Kaisear Mirza attacks him, but is obliged to retire -
Kamran, a son of Mahmood, and Kaisesr alternately take poseeesion of Kan-
dahar -Disorders and conflict with the Kuzzilbashes -Peace is regtored at
Kabul -Conspiracy against Shah Mahmood -He is dethroned -His brother
Shooja eucceede him - Mahmood remains a prisoner - Kamran is expelled
from Kandahar by Kaissar Mirza - The latter, defeated by the Herateea,
evacuates the city - The Persians k i e g e Herat - They are beaten and
retire - Shah Shooja marches against the Talpoores - Returns to Kabul -
English embesey to Kabul - Difficulties of the reign of Shah Shooja - The
Serdar Fethi Khan intrigua and flies from Kabul-He is d by
Kaimx Mirza - Dost Mohamed escapes and pillagea Bakooa- Shere dil
ghan assists Shah Mahmood to ewape - The latter and the Mohamedzyea
release Fethi Khan -Mahmood marches on Kabul - Seiiees the city -
Battle of Neemla - Shooja is put to Bight - Endeavours to keep the field
- Retiree to Loodiana . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 129
CHAPTER XI.
Sir A. Bnmes' sketch of Shah Shooja- Fethi Khan is appointed Vizier - Shah
Mahmood devoted to pleasure -Influence of the vieier - Kamnm, the son
of Shah Mahmood- His ferocious disposition- He kills his coumn Kaisrurr
- Fethi Khan reducea the Belooches - Establishes order and aecnrity -
Afghan alliance with the Sikhe - They unite and seize Caahmeer - Fethi
Khan breaks his word to the Sikhs-The latter seize upon Attok- Brilliant
exploit of Dost Mohamed - Panic of the Afghans - Kunjeet Sing pillages
Caehmeer - The pretensions of Persia on Herat -Hoosein Ali Mirza
marches against that city -Fethi Khm marches to the relief of Herat -
The vizier a m & Hadji Firooz Eddin - The prince's harem ia violated and
plundered by Dost Mohamed - Flight of Mir Efzel Khan to Meshed -
Battle of Kiaffir Kaleh - Retreat of both parties - The Afghans obtain the
plunder -Kamran conspires against Fethi Khan - Shah Mahmood com-
man& the vizier's eyes to be put out-Kamran arrives at Herat and
executes the order - The brothera of the vizier, Shere dil Khan and Kohendil
Khan, mpe- Poor dil Khan remains a prisoner . . .. .. 143
CHAPTEB XII.
Shere dil Khan raieea hda hi u - Kamran proceeds there -Poor dil Khan
eacapea - Cruelties of Kamran apon Fethi Khan - Brothm of the Vier -
Dost Mohamed Khan - Cause of hie quarrel with Fethi Khan -He seieee
Kabul - Flight of the Royal Family - Mahmood and Kamran meet a t
Qhnenee - Dost Mohamed puts them to K i t - Murder of Fethi Khan -
The Shah and hie san are pursued and arrive at Herat - Misunderstanding
between the princea - They acknowledge the eueerainty of Pereis - Quarrele
between Mahmood and Kamran-Hadji Firooz and Kalech Khan attack
b r a n - The latter is killed and Hadji h e made prieoner - b r a n
and the Peraiana at v a r h - Ravdt of Fnrrah - Kamran proceeda to that
place - Moustapha Khan and Mohamed Hooeein revolt at Herat - Ca m of
this- Djehanguir Mirm ia proclaimed king, and aRawsrde depceed-
Hadji Firooz w& him -1)eath of Meuhvali Khan - Hadji Rroos
retiree to Meshed-Momtapha Khan closes the gats of Herat against
Kamren-He beaiegee the city, but retires on the approach of Shere dil
Khan - The letter a h retires - Cruelty of Monstapha Khan - Conspiracy
of Syud Mir &dik - b r a n enttna Herat - Miserable end of Momtapha
Khan - Venjpme of Kamran - Reflectim on the Afghans Page 159
CHAPTEB XIII.
Death of Shah Mahmood -Kamran is suspected of murdering his father -
He indulgee in every kind of ex- -Death of Attah Khan- Yar Mo-
hamed Khan in made Vier of Herat-Hostility of the Persians against
this prinaipality - Intrigues of Abbes Mim- Yar Mohamed amvea at
Meshed -He ie put to the torture by the Persian prince - Ia delivered by
the Athar Bashi-Measurea of Yar Mohamed -Revolt of the Syud
Mohamed Sedik - He is betrayed by Kamran and executed - The Shah is
closely watched by Yar Mohamed - His sons are diqpced - Project of
Mohamed Shah on Herat-The Bamkzyes consent to the reatoration of
Shah Shooja-He plays the despot, and is overthrown-Eyoob a u d
him - Mohamed A h Khan marches against the Si kh - Runjeet ling
en& againat the Afghans - The battle of Noochero - The Afghans are
beaten - Death of Aaim Khan- The character of that se&r -His eon
Habib UUah Khan succe& him . . . . . . .. 173
CHAPTER XIV.
Prooeedinga of Habib Ullah Khan -Divisions between the one of Payendeh
Khan - Hpbib Ullah Khan at war with hie uncles - Poor dil Khan inter-
feres in Kabul - Union of Sultan Mohamed and Doat Mohamed Khans -
Shere dil Khan and Poor dil Khan establish pace between theii brothem -
Doet Mobamed again at variance - Hie rivalry with Sultan Mohamed -
That prince at E & m - Sir A. Burnes's opinion of him - Kandahar -
Poor dil Khan and Shere dil Khan -Character of the latter -Sir A.
Burnes's opinion of the Kandahar chiefs - Character of Dost Mohamed -
8i A. Bums's opinion of him . . .. . . . . .. .. 186
CONTENTS.
Shah Shooja takes up arm6 against the Barukzyea - Doat Mohamed Khan
marches b the relief of Bandaha~ - Shah Shooja receives a check - That
sovereign ie completely defeated - He retirea to Kelat - Sultan Mohamed
urivee at Kabul -Machinatiom of that serdar againat Doet Mobamed Khan
- Reeolution of the latter - The Dost, now elected Emir, marches againat
the SMu -Defeats them at Djamrood - Sir A. Bumes at Kabul - The
Englieh are hoetile to Doet Mohamed - Sumner'a account of the Russians
and the English in BBi - Mohamed Shah determines to invade Herat - He
ia supported by the Rnaeians .. . . . . .. . . Page 199
CHAPTER XVI.
Rmt diplomatic discnrcsiona relative to the siege of Herat-Mr. EILis ia
wcceeded by Mr. M'Neil - The Peraiana invade the prindpelity of Herat
-The minister of the Shah plays a double game - Captain Eldred Pottinger
at Hmt - Ruseian of f i m in the Persian camp - Samaoun Khan - Colonel
B b b r g - General Boroffiki - Colonel Semineau - Siege of Qorian -
Recrimination againat the h c h o5car - Russian and Englii agents in the
Pereian camp - Their hostility against Colonel Semineau -Operations at
the siege of Gorian - Fall of the place - Shere Mohamed Khan - Par
Mohamed's reply to his broth= - Duration of the siege . . .. 214
OHAPTEB XVII.
Herst - Appennmoe and podtion of the city - Its fortificatim and environs
- Atiack of the Persians on the suburbs - Colonel Bemineau'e plan of attack
- Absurditiee of the Pereiene - Underhand intrigues and eccentricities of
Hadji Mina Agassee - Mean~ adopted by him to prevent succese - Con-
qiracy in Herat in favour of the Persians - The plot ia discovered-
Moneter cannon- h h e r y and death of Mirza Naghi - Distinguished
conduct of Colonel Semineau - Cowardice of Meuhbalee Khan - Colonel
S e h u decliea to take part in the operatiom - The A!&m eorpriae
Hsdji Khan - Scarcity of proviaiom in the Afghan camp - Privations of
t he enemy in Herat - DBcultiea of their position - Djellal Eddin Yirza
and ChemEddin d wr t to the Perai m - Mr. M'Neil arrives at the Pmian
cpmp - Proceedings of that minister - Diplomatic notea between the
Rnssisns and the English - Mr. MLNeil break^ with the Persian government
-His messengers are arrested - Mr. M'Neil's conduct in the Persian camp
-He leaves for Tauria . . .. . . . . .. . . .. 227
-?
CHAPTER XVIII.
L
Ilbr. M'Neil's letter to the Muchteid of lapehan -Lord Palmemtan no longer
continues his halt meaeuren - The English occupy the islsnd of Karrack -
Captain Vi vi tch at Knndnhnr and Kabul - He returns to the Persian
xvi CONTENTS.
camp with the envoys of them principalities -Treaty between Persia and
Kandahar - Violent declaration of Lord Palmerston to the Persian govern-
ment - General Simonitch arrive6 in the Persian camp- The Persians take
oourage - Hadji Mirza's opposition to Count Simonitch -Colonel Semi-
neau's plan of attack adopted - Siege operations renewed - The assault -
Treschery of the Persian chiefs - General Boroffeki is killed and the Persiane
are repnlsed -Colonel Sdi neau is wounded - He send8 in hie resignation,
which ie not aocepted - Is promoted to the rank of General, and reoeivea a
Persian order -The English ultimatum arrives at the Persian camp-
Conduct of the Herateea dnring the assault . . .. .. Page 243
C H A P T E R XI X.
The Persians abaudon the siege of Herat - The Serdam of Kandahar and
Captain Vivitch-Deeolaticm of Herat-Par Mohamed implorea the
assistance of the neighbouring principalities-Yar Mohamed m b the
Herateee to the Tmma n s -The English prepare to invade Afghanintan -
Misnnderstanding between Doat Mohamed and Runjeet Sing - Intervention
of the English -Their want of good faith towardn Doat Mohamed - Their
prtiality for Runjeet - Negotiations between the English and the Dost -
Battle of Djamrood - Burnes at Kabul - He meeta with Vikovitch, who ie
coldly received by the Emir -The Doet makes frank explanations to the
English - He ie supported by Burnes at Calcutta- Burnee ia triumphant
over Vikovitah - Note of Lord Palmerston to M. de Nesselrode - Reply of
the Rueeien cabinet - The laat attempt of the Doet to secure the alliance of
the English - Efforta to defeat this on the part of Sir W. M'Naghten and
.
Sir Claude Wade - Lord Auckland declares for Shah Shooja - Consterna-
tion of the Dost at thie intelligence - R-CefledLons on the English policy 268
-
C H A P T E R XX.
Iord Anckland sends Sir W. MINaghten to Lahore- Tresty with the Sikha
-Manifesto of the Governor-General from Simla in justification of hie
policy -,Reflectio-m on this document - The poseession of Scinde adjourned
-The Emirs are opposed to the advance of the British army through their
temtory - Mir Rouetern of Khyqoor - Averse to M i n g the fortma of'
Bukkur to the Engliah, but at length accedes to their request- The result,
of this to himaelf and his family -Conduct of the British authorities in
Scinde - Strength of the army when concentrated at Shikapoor -Extract,
from Mr. Sumner's work - Seizure of Kurrachee - English appliances tal
euocesa in the invattion of Afghanistan - Promedings of Shah Shooja 276,
C H A P T E R XXI .
Introductory note to chapter - Character of the Afghans - Their physical do-
velopment - Mental qualities - Indifferent Musrrulmsns - Their tnrbnleni;
nature - Spirit of independence - love of marauding - Their cupidi*
extreme - Inemible to good faith -The law a dead letter in their eyes --
CONTENTS.
xvii
The citizen and the nomade - Hospitality - Prandial habits of Par Mohamed
- The character of their food - Kooroot - Mode of eating - Ignorance of
the Afghans- Their wperstitiona - Education - Coetume -Dirty habits
- Religione feeling -Administration of the lawe - The kz tulionis -
Puniehmenta - Diaeeees - Remedies - Public buildings - Rods - Pri-
vate houaea -The zoology of Afghaniatan - Domentic animals - Nature of
the mil - Productions of it - Aridity of the country -Minerals - Geo-
graphical position - Climate - Difficulties of rapid communication - Pop=--
letion ..
-
.. . . . . . . . . . . .. Page 283
OHAPTER XXII.
Government of the Afghan provineen - Power of the Emks - Influence of the
priests - Turbulence of the aerdare -Ideas of government - Conduct of
public dbks -Stability of power unlikely to la& - Mode of obtaining i t
-Character of the serdam - The prodwing classes - They cannot leave
Eandahar-Clannish feelings-Meroenary qualities of the serdars-
Fidelity of the troops never certain - l' he result of their numerous wars -
The aovareign and the serdare - Superiority of the Mohamedzyes -The
power of the Barukzyen - Probabilities of their retaining i t - English mar-
ria* in Afghanistan - The Afghan army - Manner in which i t is compared
-The contingents easily assembled -Ignorant of military discipline, and
insemible to ita advantages - War a necessity - Cavalry numerous - Mode
of fighting - Riihta of individuals unknown - Construction of their towns
-Tribes of the south -Strength of the Afghan army in each principlity
- Par Mohamed'a troope -Money - Prices of pvi si ons -Wine-
Weighta and measures - The Parsivans - Mechanical arts - European
mannfectnree - Taxation . . . . . . . . . . .. 302
CHAPTER XXIII.
English army laves Shikapoor - March through the Bolan pass - Kohendil
Ki m advancze to meet it-Defection of the Afghan chiefs-Kohendil
retires into Persia - gandehar capitulates- Aes~ult and fall of Ghuznee -
D o ~ t Mohamed endeavonra to negooiate, but without s u ~ - The Emir
leavea Kabul - The English enter the city - Restomtion of Shah Shooja -
Firat dieagreement between him and the British - The latter interfere in the
administration of the kingdom - Results of this - The prieste are hostile to
t he invaders - Avaricious viewa of the English disappointed- Revenues of
Af g Wt a n moderate in amount - Means employed to raise them -Shah
Shooja demande the fulfilment of the treaty- Refusal of the English-
Hatred them augmented - Religious proselytkm - English ton-
nexions with Afghan women - Revolte in the kingdom - The Dost at
Bokhara-Pemt i ons to which he is subject-Combat at Karchy-
Mohamed Shah threatens the Usbek Emir - The Dost is r e 1 4 - His
perilolls poaition near the Oxus - He flies to Cher S e b and Khulm -
Reftvns to the province, of Kabul - Conflicts between the Dost and the
English- Deserted by his countrymen - Burrendere to the English - He
is sent to India .. . . . . .. . . . . . . .. 327
B
xviii CONTENTS.
CHAPTER XXI V.
Shah Shooja demands the evacuation of his country by the English-Their
refusal -Forgery of letters - The invaders i m p e a vizier on Shah Shooja
-Unjustifiable wt s of this functionary - Complaints of the Afghan Chiefs
to Shah Shooja- The King conspires with them against the English-
Abdullsh Khan at the head of the conspirators - Carelessness of the English
- Subsidies to chiefs reduced - Revolt of the Ghildjzyes -General Sale
marches against them - Is obliged to retire into Jelldabad - Feeling of
wuri t y in the English - Insurrection in tho provinces - Revolt at Kabul
-Attack on Sir A. Burnes's house -Assassination of thst officer -The
English are driven from the city - Bad defensive position taken by them -
C o w a t storea pillaged -Death of Abdullah Khan - Zeman Khan
proclaimed King - Continual fighting - Weaknesy of Geneml Elphinstone
-Conduct of the 44th Regiment -Suspension of arms - Akbar Khnn
returns to Kabul - Indecision of the English -Events in the provinces -
Plan of retreat abandoned - Embarnrssment of Sir W. M'Naghten - Sus-
picions of the Afghans - Meeting between the Resident and Akbar Khan -
Assassination of the former -Major Pottinger - Treaty with Akbar Khan
- The English retreat - Akbar Khan unmasked - The English deliver up
hostages to him - English army annihilated - Akbar Khan besieges Jellal-
abad - Transactions between Shah Shooja and Zeman Khan-The King
is assassinated - Character of that Sovereign . . .. Page 341
CHAPTER XXV.
Fethi Djing Mina s u d Shah Shooja-Combat between that prince and
Zeman Khan - The former is besten - Akbar Khan returns to Kabul and
form Fethi Djing to retire to the citadel - The former becomes his Vizier
and recognize him as King - Akbar plundera Fethi Djing -Flight of the
Prince - Akbar remains master of Kabul- The English in spite of the
i nsumt i on maintain themselves at Kandahar - Foresight of Major Rawlin-
son -Occurrences in the neighburhood of that city - Persian account of
them - Akter Khan, Alizye, beaten by the English - Plan of the Afghans
to seize Kandahar - They are defeated - Second expedition of the English
to Kabul - Akbar Khan is repulsed at Butkhak -Opinions of the press ou
this second expedition - What is true and what is false -Mistakes of the
jourualist in military matters -The English evacuate Afghanistan -They
place Shapoor Mina on the throne of Kabul - The Englicih give Dost Mo-
hamd his liberty - Akbar Khan returns to Kabul and seizes the sovereign
power - Restoration of Doat Mohamed at Kabul - Seif der Djing is driven
frbm Kandahar by Kohendil Khan .. . . . . . . .. 364
CHAPTER XXVI .
State of Kabul after the return of Dost Mohamed-Antagonistic feeling
between the Emir and his son Akbar Khnn- Ambitious projects of the
latter - War between the Dost and the Walee of Khulm - Reasons for this
rupture - Akbar Khan mishee to dispossess Kohendil Khan of Kandahar -
CONTENTS. xix
AIso to join the Sikhs against the English - His rupture with the Doet -
Maniage of Akbar with the daughter of Yar Mohamed Khan - Intrigues of
Kohendil Khan to prevent this union- Demonstration of Akbar Khan
against Kandahar - He requests the assistance of the Shah of Persia -
FBvmbl e reply of that sovereign -Akbar obliges his father to withdraw
from the direction of affairs -Death of Akbar Khan - Revolt of Mohamed
Shah Khan - Dost Mohamed forces him to return to his duty -Alliance
between Persia and Kabul - The English are alarmed - Embsrrrrssment of
the Emir - Sultan Mohamed Khan returns to Kabul - Reception by the
Doat- The Emir appoints his son Haidar Khan, vizier- The Dost joins
the Si kh against the English- Antipathy of the Afghans to the Sikhs, and
aicc wemi - Dost Mohamed takes Attock - His cavalry is defeated by the
English - Owes his esc~pe to the fleetnese of his horse .. Page 388
CHAPTER XXVII.
The English conquer the Pnnjab - Dost Mohamed losea Peshawur and Attock
-He retires to Kabul -Policy of Kohendil Khan at Kandahar after his
return from Persia - Retrospective view of -rs at Herat - Par Mohamed
Khan and the English - Major Pottinger and Colonel Stoddart - The latter
leaves for Bokhara -Interview between Major Pottinger and Shere Dil
Khan---Serious consequences rml t i ng from this - Conduct of Yar Mohamed
- Majcr Todd at Herat - Treaty concluded with Shah Kamran - Yar Mo-
hamed all-powerful in the principality -A scene at Yar Mohamed's dinner-
table - Intrigues of that chief - His treatment of Shah Kamran - Misun-
derstanding between Major Todd and the Vizier - Dine Mohamed Khan -
Approbation of Major Todd's conduct by the Directors of the East India
Compny -Official instructions to that officer - Mf a i t h of Par Mohamed
-Difficulties of Major Todd's position - Treachery of 'Par Mohamed -
Snbeidy to Shah Kamran and his Conrt stopped - The vizier makes fresh
demands upon Major Todd - Counter propositions by the latter -He leaves
Herat and is escorted ont of the city .. . . . . . . .. 401
CHAPTER XXVIII.
Reaction a , g t the English at Herat-Inggtitude of the East India Company
to Major Todd - Death of that o h r - Russian expedition against Khiva
- General Peroffski leaves Orenburg-Disasters and retreat of the Russian
army - Aga Khan raises a revolt in Kerman - The Kazi of Herat at Khiva
-Conversation with the Khan-Disgrsca of Pacoobe Mehter- Allah
Kooli Khan accepts the English alliance--Snare laid for the Kazi - Captain
Abbott at Khiva - His mission there - Intrigues of Yamoba Mehter -
Captain Abbott leavea for Russia -The Usbeks take him prisoner-Akhood
Zadeh leaves Khiva in search of him - Meeting of Akhood and the captive
- The Yues Bashi and Hasan Behadoor - Freah complication - Captain
Abbott reaches Russia -Lieutenant Shakcspear amves at Khiva - Obtaina
the libention of the Rusaian slaves and brings them to Aatrakan - Lieut.
CONTENTS.
Shakespear's recep,tion at St. Petemburgh-Captain Abbott not recompensed
-
- Russia creates difficulties for Khiva - The Shah diman& the Persian
slavea - Captain Conolly arrivee at Khiva - He fail^ in the objed of his
mission - Bequiremente of the Khan . .
-P -'
.. Page 419
CHAPTEB XXIX.
Captain Conolly leaves for Kokan -Liberality of that offioer -War between
Bokhara and Kokan-Colonel Stoddart requeata Conolly to come to Bokhara
-The I h n of Kokan is averse to his going -Nasser Ullah sends a firman
to Captain Conolly insuring his safety--Conolly l aves Kokan for the Emir's
camp - Colonel Stoddart -Bad anepioes under which he arrives at Bokhara
-First meeting between Colonel Stoddart and the Emir -Strange pro-
ceedings of that officer when presented to Naaser Ullah-He treats him
with insolence - Stoddart is arrested - Barbarous treatment -The Mir
Cheb - Stoddart ie confined in the Si-tchah -He turm Muesulman -
Russian intervention in his favour- Stoical courage of Stoddart - The Emir
changes his conduct towards him- Vicimitudea to which he is subjected -
The Sultan interferes in hie favour - A h the Russian minister at B o k h
and the Khan of Khiva - Repliea of the Emir to those who intarcede for
him .. . . -. .. .. .. .. . . .. 437
CHAPTEB XXX.
Character of Conolly - Full of hope aa to the rerinlt of hie negociationa -
Naaser Ullah returns to Bokhara- Hk interviews with the English
officers - They are both imprisoned - Allah Dad Khan, the Afehnn
envoy, ret urn to Kabul -'He is brought &k to Bokhara-His in-
famous intrigues- M. de Boutenieff leaves the city - 8khood Zadeb,
the son of the Kazi of Herat, and his brother Moharned Davood - Dangers
to which the latter is exposed - Akhood Zadeh @ mt e d at the hnt i er of
B o k h - He is imprisoned' by the Emir- Obetinate conduct of Stoddart
- The servants of the English officers are r e l d from prison Akhood
Zadeh and AlIah Dad Khan are confined in the Sigh-lchah - They am sub-
sequently relessed -Joseph,' a Greek, is executed - Paper and pene are
found on Stoddart - He receives the baatinado - Execution of that oKice~
and Conolly - A register of that event, and other circumstano88 wmected
with thase oflicere . . . . .. .. .. . . .. 551
CHAPTER XXXI.
hkdmned Shah ,of Persia threatens Khiva- Mr. Thompson, the Britiah
minister, arrives at that uity - He faile in hie negodations - Nasaeli
Fl ow, a Neapolitan, comes to Teheran - Travels to Bokhara, and is
thrown into prison there- The Naib, Abdul 8emnt Khan - Naeseli is
put to death - Abdul Bamnt experimca the ssme fate - Reaeone that led
to his execution - The watchmaker, Orlando Qiovanni - The Emir o h
CONTENTS. xxi
him to be put to death- Chsrarter of N w r Ullah Khan - Measnres
taken in England to ascertain the fate of Stoddart and Conolly - Dr. Wolf ..
-Policy of Yar Mohamed after the English left Herat - The Shah Kam-
ran in arms against the Vizier - Yar Mohamed beaieges him in the citadel
- The Serdar Dine Mohamed Khan-Kamran is imprisoned and plundered
by Par Mohamed - Mohamed Yoossoof - The diamond vest -Negocia-
tione regarding i t - Mohamed Yoossoof Mirza the dupe of Yar Mohamed -
He fliea to Md e d - Revolt to set Kamnu~ at liberty - Yar Mohamed pub
his sovereign to death . . .. . . . . . . .. Page 461
CHAPTER XXXII.
Sans of Shah Kamran - Hadji Firooz Eddin - Hie sad end, and that of his
eon Malek Kamem Mirza - Afghan princes in Persia - Conduct of Ruseia
and England in regard to Herat - Yar Mohamed, now sovereign prince of
Herat, attende to the welfare of the Heratees -Strengthens his power,
and preperea to attack Cbm - Dine Mohamed Khan plundera the caravans
-Yar Mohamed t aka possession of the province of (four - Differences
with Kandahar - Subingatee the Hazarah Zeidwts - Marches against the
Usbek ghanab - He is recalled to the south - Privations d e r e d by his
army - Equilibrium between the states of Central Asia - Mohamed Shah
of Persia mpporta Kohendil Khan in his quarrel with, Par Mohamed - The
latter as&a the Shah of Persia in his war with Khorassan- Death of the
Persian manarch - Alliance of Yar Mohamed with the Shah of Persia 478
G r e a t S a n d y
~Beekaneer
D e s e r t
oJeasuLmeer
.
HISTORY OF THE AFGHANS.
CHAPTER I.
Origin of the Afghans - Opinion of Monsieur Ruffln, Eugene Bod, and others-
Opinion of Afghan authors-Afghans mentioned by Tamerlane in hk Insti.
tutm - The probability of their Jewish origin -Their conversion to Ialaminm
- A Hebrew Bible presented t o Nadir Shah by the Yoosoofzyrs- Afghans of
Indian and Khoraasian origin - Warlike and independent under Sebek-Taghee
-Aborigines of Afghauistan - Afghans in India known as Patans and Rohillas
-Rmt mentioned as Afghans in the reign of Aboo Seid-Classification of
Afghan tribes -The author adopta that of Abdullah Khan - Persecution of the
Afghans under Qhengia Khan-The Abdalees settle in the Suleiman mountains
- Yoosoofzyee established in Caehmeer -Afghanistan inhabited almost exclu-
sively by Abdalees and Ohildjzyes - L i t of Afghan tribes and their branchee -
Sehiamamongat them on this subject -Yakoohees and Khaouganees- Asingular
reason for taking offence - Subdivision of the tribes and their branches.
THE origin of- the Afghans, which is involved in obscurity, has
given rise t o a variety of opinions, and it is not easy to adopt
.
any one in particular. Some pretend that they are descended from
the soldiers of Alexander the Great, whom he leR in these countries
after he had conquered them ; and from some Greek colonists who,
under the kings that succeeded that emperor, subsequently joined
these descendants of his victorious legions. Others affirm that the
Copts of Egypt, the Chaldcans, and even the Armenians, were
their ancestors ; but the majority of Eastern writers consider them
to be the descendants of one of the ten tribes of Israel-and this
is the opinion of the Afghans themselves. Finally, a few authors
assure us that this nation is not of Jewish origin, but that those
who i n d u c e d the Mahometan religion amongst them were con-
verted Jews.
The following is taken from the work of that celebrated orien-
talist, 31. Ru5n : L L The Afghans," he says, "had their origin
from the Albanians of Asia, who, in consequence of their numerous
revolts, were transpoked from one extremity of Persia to the other,
and driven into Khorassan ; they were a very warlike people,
B
2 ORIGIN OF THE AFGHANS. CHAP. I.
known under the name of Aghvan or Arghan, and made them-
selves famous in the history of Persia Their Albanian origin is
evident by the name itself, for agoan is the Greek word HA'AB."
This opiuion, which has been contradicted by several authors,
merits nevertheless some attention, because it is in accordance with
the custon~ which the Persian monarchs are supposed to have fol-
lowed, viz. that of removing from the shores of the Mediterranean
or the Black Sea any population that gave them the least uneasi-
ness or apprehension ; also that of bestowing upon the Greeks, a
considerable number of whom were at all times in the Persian
armies, a certain portion of territory, where they were allowed t o
establish themselves, as a reward for their services. The historians
of Alexander have made us acquainted with one of these colonies,
and we learn from them that, when that monarch advanced into
Bactria in pursuit of Besaus, he destroyed the town of the Brances,
the inhabitants of which, descended fmm Milesian Greeks, he put
to death, as a punishment for a crime committed by their ancestors
-a most cruel and unjust act.
The opinion of M. Ruffin is in opposition to that of another
oriental scholar, M. Eug'ene Bo&, who, in his Letters on the East,
thus explains himself on the subject of these Al bani i s :-
" The Aghovaus," he remarks, '' were an ancient and distinct
people, first brought to our notice by Pompey at the time of his
ex@tion into the Caucasus. The Greeks and Latins, by an inac-
curate transcription of their name, called them Albanians; they
inhabited the high mountains and the valleys bordering on the
Caspian Sea, which now form the provinces of Daghestan aud
Shirvan. The Armenians were never able to subjugate this brave
people, who were governed by feudal laws similar to those which
existed in Europe during the middle ages; they were Christia~is
before they adopted the faith of Mahomet, and it is known that
they preserved their liberty up to the period of the arrival of
Bouzan, general of the Sultan Seljookide Nalek Shah. The lan-
guage of this nation differed entirely from that of the Armenians.
. . . . . In short, we may say that the people mentioned by the
Greck authors under the denomination of Albanians cannot, on
account of their peculiar language, be considered as of Ch a l d m
origin--an opinion which is in direct contradiction to that of their
historian, Moses Galganderasti, who lived a b h t the ninth ceutury
of the Cluistian era, and who, with Moses of Chorenus, affirms
CHAP. I. MENTIONED BY TAMERLANE. 3
that they are descended from Sisag, of the Armenian race. We
hope to clear up this point a h r having collected from the moun-
tainous district in which these pretended sons of the Aghovans
lived, the remains of the language they speak. I t is with less
reason still that some of the learned, led astray by a similarity of
wordq, have confounded the Aghovans with the Afghans, feudal
tribes dispersed over the south of Persia, and who, more than any
other, recall to our minds the ancient Parthians. The language
of the Afghans is analogous to that of the primitive Persian, and,
in the opinion of Sir TVilliam Jones, they are neither of Jewish
nor Chaldaxn extraction. The supposition that they aere identified
with the Agbovans, once formed, has led to the conclusion that
they were the descendants of Jews, because the province of Kir, to
which the Assyrians transported the captive tribes of Israel, ap-
peared to commentators to be the country watered by the Kour,
the C y ~ s of the Greeks."
Some persons have with reason affirmed that Tamerlane, exas-
perated ' at the depredations committed by the people inhabiting
Mazanderan, south of the Caspian, transported the whole of them
into the mountains situated between India and Persia But they
erred in supposing that from this population are descended the
Afghans of our own day, for the posterity of the unfortunate people
who were removed to these mountains by the Tartar conqueror form
at the present time a small tribe of E'imake, known under the appel-
lation of Firooz Kohiq after the city of that nrlme (srtuated about
sixty-three miles from Teheran), where they were defeated and taken
captive by Tamerlane : this tribe now inhabit the country between
Herat and Meimana. Besides, the Tartar warrior and legislator
mentions the Afghans, in his Institutes, as a nation which had for
many yeam inhabited the Suleiman mountains, and was much
given to pillage.
The Afghan authors who admit the Jewish origin of their nation
thus account for the removal of their ancestors to Central Asia :
some declare that Afghan% who gave his name to the Afghans,
was lineally descended from Abraham and Magar by Ishmael ;
others &nu that he was the grandson of Saul ; and all think that
Bakht ul Nasser* must have sent some Jewish prisoners into the
mountains of Gour. These prisoners would soon have considerably
4 CONVERSION TO ISLAMISM. CEAP. I.
increased ; and though far from their mother-country, without doubt
they would have preserved their faith, which was kept alive by
the periodical reception of letters from their countrymen who, more
fortunate than themselves, had returned to the Holy Land. Matters
remaincd in this state until Mahomet announced himself as the
messenger of God. A Jew, by name Khaled, whom he wnverted,
wrote at this time to his brethren in Gour to give notice of this
happy event, and induce them to embrace the new faith; but they,
before adopting Islamism, sent several of their chiefs to the Prophet.
Amongst these was Keys, who pretended to be descended in a
direct line from Saul through forty-seven generations, and Abraham
through sixty-five. Mahomet loaded him and his companions with
favours, and gave him the title of RIalek* Abd-ul-reshid, a rank
to which he was entitled as the descendant of the Jewish king.
These Afghan ambassadors, now Mu d ma n s , accompanied Rfa-
homet in several of his wars, and distinguished themselves by many
remarkable deeds of valour ; neverthelw with the sanction of the
Prophet, and after having received his benediction, they returned
to their own homes, accompanied by a few Arabs, and with their
assistance succeeded, in the space of forty years, in completely con-
verting their countrymen to Islamism.
Some authors affirm that Afghatla was the son of Khaled ; others
say he was contenlporary with Solomon, and assert that he was one
of the principal officers of that monarch.
These different versions, which do not rest upon any sufficient
proof, are very difficult to admit; the Afghans, however, think
that they have evidence of their Jewish origin in the following tra-
dition. When Nadir Shah, marching to the conquest of India,
arrived a t Peshawur, the chiefs of the tribe of the Yoosoofzyes pre-
sented him with a Bible written in IIebrew, and several articles
that had been used in their ancient worship which they had pre-
served; these articles were at once recognised by the Jews who
followed the camp. This fact, supposing it to be one, if affordil~g
evidence sufficiently convincing to some persons, can only be con-
aidered as authority with respect to the Yoosoofzyes ; but it does
not follow, therefore, that other Afghan tribes are branches from
the same stem ; on the contrary, everything leads to the conclusion
that, although they all speak a comnlon language, the Pushtoo,
* Prince.
the tribes are not all of the same origin,-they are distiliguished by
marked characteristics, moral as well as physical. The Afghans
of Kabul consider themselves as Indian Afghans, whereas those
of Herat say they are Khorassani Afghans ; one tribe repudiates
another, and denies its Afghan origin, aud there is not the least
sympathy between them. We may believe that, being enemies
in bygone ages, their union, such as it was, progressed only by
degrees, with a view of delivering themselves from slavery, and
repulsing the common enemy. The names of Patan, Rohilla,
Afghan, which serve at the present time to designate the Afghan
nation, are really those of so many distinct races now confounded
in one. If we could admit, as they do, their Jewish origin, we
must also suppose that they would, on the spot to which they were
transferred, have developed all the characteristics of an enslaved
people, humble and degenerate ; but such is not the case, for we
find the Afghans from the very first, that is to say from the reign
of Sebek-Taghee, courageous, and animated by a love of inde-
pendence-always warlike and energetic, retiring to their moun-
tain fastnesses to escape from tyranny, and leavin,? them whenever
the smallest hope presented itself of seizing lands which they con-
sidered th'ey had any right to-it is only a primitive race who
could have remained so strongly attached to the soil.
No one has thought of the aboriginal people, nevertheless they
must not be lost sight of, for, according to Quintus Curtius and
Arrian, the Arians, Arrachosians, and others, were both numerous
and brave. Tile conquests of Alexander did not lead to their exter-
mination ; and it is very natural to suppose that their race has
descended to the present day through intermarriages, though in small
proportions, with the Greeks who remained amongst them, and after-
.
wards with the Tartar and Persian conquerors who invaded them.
Ilowever, under all circumstances, there is little affinity between
them and these two nations ; it is not thus with the Beloochees, with
whom they have many points of resemblance, moral as well as
physical. I n spite of the foreign domination which has weighed
upon the Afghans for so many generations, we ought to believe
them when they state that their race has never mixed with any
other, for in our day they makc no alliances except amongst
themselves ; and the Afghan who should give his daughter in mar-
riage to a stranger would dishonour himself; this, however, is a
remark which in a strict sense applies only to those tribes that
6 ABDULLAH KHAN'S ACCOUNT. CHAP. I.
inhabit Afghanistan properly so called, for those disseminated
through India connect themselves without distinction with all
Mahomedan nations.
The natives of India have known the Afghans for centuries under
the name of Patans and Rohillas,* a designation which they now
apply to them ; they also call them Pushtoonees, from the language
they still speak ; and it is not till the reign of the Sultan Abou-
seid, of the race of Ghengis Khan, that certain Eastern writers
speak of them under the name of Afghan, which is only the plural
of the Arab word feglun. t This was applied to them because
they were always in a disunited state amongt themselves, and
continually addressing their complaints to the sovereigns on whom
they were dependent; neverthelera the name was but little used
till the reign of Shah Abbe the Great, who, tired with their in-
cessant lamentatiom, ordered them henceforward to bc called by
that designation only.
There are almost as many classifio~tions of the Afghan tribes
as thcre are Eastern authors who have written on the subject ; not
only are they not agreed, but they have called each other very hard
name3 to prove their accuracy. Being incompetent to decide
which is right, we shall adopt the opinion of Abdullah Khan of
Herat as the one most deserving of credit, and we will precede it
by giving his view of thc manner in which the Afghans were
brought to Afghanistan. The following is a translation of his
manuscript :-
" The word Afghan is derived from the Arab, that of aotlghan
from the Persian, and both one and the other are used in Hebrew.
" Malek Thalut (Saul) king of the Jews had two sons, Afghan
and Djalut-the first was the father of the Afghan nation and gave
his name to it. After the reigns of David and Solomon, who suc-
.
ceeded Saul, anarchy divided the Jewish tribes, and this continued
to the period at which Bouktun Nasr $ took Jerusalem, massacred .
70,000 Jews, and after destroying that city led the surviving
inhabitants captives to Babylon. Subsequently to this disaster the
Afghan tribe, struck with terror, fled from Judea and settled in
Arabia : here they remained some considerable time, but 8s pas-
turage and water were scarce, and both man and beast suffered
extreme privation, some of the tribe determined to emigrate to
Roh in hlahtoo signifies mountain, t Noise, tumult.
and Rehilla an inhabitant of mountaim. Nebuchadnezzar.
Hindostan. The branch of the Abdalees continued to reside in
Arabi i and during the caliphat of Aboo Bekr their chiefs allied
themselves to a powerful sheikh, by name Khaled ibn Velid, of the
tribe of Korech. The position and condition of the Abdaleea was
sensibly ameliorated in consequence of the asistance which they
obtained from Khaled, but at the period when the Arab subju-
gated Persia the Abdaleee left Arabia and settled in this new con-
quest, establiihing themselves in the provinces of Far8 and Kerman,
and here they remained until Ghengis Khan invaded those districts.
The tyrannical proceedings of this conqueror weighed with such
terrible effect on the population, that the Abdalees quitted Persia
and, passing by the Mekrane, s i d e , and Mooltan, arrived in
India ; but the results of this new migration were not more for-
tunate, for they were scarcely settled here when their neighbours
made war upon, and forced them to leave the plains and inhabit
the rugged mountains of Suleiman, considered as the cradle of
the tribe, and called by them Kooh-Khasseh: The whole Afghan
nation was b:ought &et her by the arrival of the ~bdal e& in
the Suleiman mountains, and then c6nsisted of twenty-four tribes,
of which, as it has been already observed, Afghan, the son of
Saul, was the father : this prince had three sons, named Tsera-
Bend, Aqoutch, and ~er l eni and each of them was the father of
eight so& who gave their namea to the twenty-four tribes.
" The following is the manner in which they are claased :-
'&om of Tun-Bend.
Abdd . . . . . .
Yoosoof ....
.... Baboor..
w e . . . . . .
Lohoom ....
Beritch ....
Khoognian ..
ChirPn ......
Namea of the Mbes.
. . Abdalees.
.. YoosoofEyea.
.. Baboorees.
.. Wed-.
.. Lohooanees.
.. Beritchees.
. . Khooguianees.
.. Chiraneed.
Sans of Argootch
Ghildj ....
Kauker . . . .
Dj umourian . .
stoiien ....
Pen . . . . . .
Kaas . . . . . .
Tahan . . . .
Naesar . . . .
.Sons of Kezlm. Names of h Mba.
. . . . . . ghattak Khattahree.
&or . . . . . . . . Soorees.
Afreed . . . . . . . . Afreedees.
. . . . . . . . Twr Toorees.
Sons of Kerlen. Names of the Triber
zw4 . . . . . . . . Zazees.
Bab . . . . . . . . Babeea.
. . . . Benguech.. Benguechees.
Lendeh-poor . . . . Lendeh-poorees.
- -
Aden and the surrounding country ea an Af han author h~ dated 1 I do
in at the preacnt time inhabited by an not thin1 we should: a similarity of
Arab tribe, which, M well aa the prin- name and the alliance of the Afghan
cipol Afghan tribe, ia known by the
Abdalees with theArab tribeof Korech
name of Abdalee. Are we to conclude are not sufficient proofa in the &ma-
that they have one and the same origin, the.-Ferrier.
8 TRIBES AND THEIR BRANCHES. CHAP. I.
"The greater number of these tribes were scattered over India; but
there, instead of increasing, they so diminished that scarcely a trace
of any of them is to be found in these days. The only exception
to this remark is the tribe of Yoosoofzyes settled in Cashmeer.
Nadir Shah, desirous of ascertaining their numbers, issued a de-
cree that each family ehould bring a spear to his camp, and when
these were counted they were found to amount to 600,000: a t
the present time therc would not be half that number. This tribe
has for more than thirty years been under the dominion of the
Sikhs. Afghanistan, properly so called, is inhabited almost exclu-
sively by Abdalees and Ghildjzyes, and of these we shall speak
more especially. The first, although inhabiting every part of
Afghanistan, are principally resident in Herat and Kandahar;
the Ghildjzyes are established in the last-mentioned principaht~
and Kabul ; the Kaukerees near the Bolan Pass ; the Baboorees,
Nassarees, Lohooanees, and Babees, in Kandahar and Scinde, where
they are profitably occupied in commercial pursuits ; the Beritchees
are in the neighbourhood of Pislieen ; the Chiranees and the Moh-
munds to the north-east of Kabul ; the Benguechees (Shiahs) between
the last-mentioned town and the country of the Hazarahs,-these
are divided into four branches, viz. the Bede-kheelee, Chaloozanee,
Qajee, and Bertedjee ; finally, the Chiranees are to be found every-
where, though in small numbcrs : the remaining tribes are in India,
or have become extinct.
" Having only to consider Afghanistan Proper, I will now give
more detailed information respecting the Abdalees and the
Ghildjzyes, which form the bulk of the population of this country ;
and as the offshoots in which they are subdivided are tolerably
numerous, it will be useful to give here a tabular statement, which
I have endeavoured to render as accurate as possible.
"The powerfil tribe of the Abdalees is known a t the present
time under the name of Dooranee, which was given to them by
Ahmed Shah Suddozye on the occasion of his ascending the throne
in 1747. When Nadir Shah ordered a census to be made of the
Abdalee tribe, there were 195,000 families, and from these he
raised 12,000 excellent cavalry ; but the Abdalees have decreased
in number since Nadir's time.
" Abdal, the son of Tsera-Bend, the founder of this tribe, had only
one son, named Teryn, who had two sons, Zirek and Pindjpa:
from the first originated three tribes, and from the second five.
CHAP. I. TRIBES Ah 9 THEIR BRANCHES. D
"The tribes that descended from Zirek are,-
" 1st. Koofelzye, more generally known under the name of
Popolzye, divided into five branches, namely,--lst, the IIuscenzalee ;
2nd, Badoozye ; 3rd, Kdenderzye ; 4th, Ayoobzye ; 5tl1, Sudtloqe.
The legitimate sovereigns who have reigned over the Afghans
during the 17th and 18th centuries were of the branch of the
Suddozyes. The tribe of the Koofelzyes numbered 20,000
families.
"2nd. Barukyze. This was in very ancient times one of the
most distingttished offshoots of the Abddees; it is divided into six
branches-lst, the Mohamedzye ; 2nd, Kharzye ; 3rd, Sefretzye ;
4th Inguizye ; 5th, Gurjizye ; 6th, Etchekzye. The actual
sorereigns of Kandahar and Kabul are of the branch of Mo-
hedzye. The Barukzyes numbered 40,000 families.
" 3rd. Alikiouzye, which is divided into three branches-lst, the
Djaloozye, to which belonged the chiefs of the Alikiouzye tribe ;
2nd, Melazye ; 3rd, Serkanee. Yar Mohamed Khan, of Herat, is
of this tribe and the Djaloozye branch. Tile Alikiouzyes number
20,000 families.
" The tribes descended from Pindjpa are-
" 1st. Isakzye, numbering 10,000 families and divided into four
branches, viz., lst, Ahmedzye ; 2nd, Avazye ; 3rd, Aferdinzye ;
4th, Biroozye.
" 2nd. Alizye, numbering 10,000 families and divided into three
branch-lst, Hassanzalee, to which the chiefs of the Alizye tribe
belong ; 2nd, Alekzye ; 3rd, Guerazye.
3rd. Noorzye, numbering 30,000 families and divided into three
branches-lst, Tchalakzye ; 2nd, Bahaderzye ; 3rd, Derzakee.
" 4th. Khaouganee, numbering 6000 families and divided into
two branches-lst, Khaouganee Kelan ; 2nd, Khaouganee Kitchik.
'& 5th. Makoohee, numbering 10,000 families and divided into
three bmches-lst, Bedelzye ; 2nd, Firoozye ; 8rd, Sebzalee.
" The tribe of the Ghildjzyes, from which sprung Mir Weis, Mir
Mahmood his son, and Mir Echreff his nephew, had Ghildj, the
son of Agoutch, for its founder. Ghildj had two sons, Ibrahim
and Thooran, from whom sprung the six tribes that follow, viz.,
lst, Suleiman-Kheilee ; 2114 Outekee ; 3rd, Tookhee-from this
came the branch of the Lds, which gave India its sovereigns ;
4t h Khaleelee; 5th, Toorkee ; 6th, Euderee. The three first
descended from Ibrahim, and the three last from Thooran.
10 TRIBES AND THEIR BRASCHES.
CHAP. I.
A TABLE of t he TRIBE of the ABDALEES.
Abdal and
his son Teryn
founders of
t he Tribe.
Zimk ..
Pidjpa ..
Popoleye . .
Barukzye ..
Alikiouzye . .
Alizye ,. ..
Noonye ..
Khmuganee
Makoohee ..
I
Suddoeye.
Hussenmlee.
ijadoozye.
Kalendereye.
Ayoobzye.
I
Mohamedaye.
Khareye.
Sefretzye.
Inguizye.
Gurjizye.
Etchekzye.
Djalweye.
Melneyn.
Serkanea.
Ahmedeye.
Avnzye.
Merdineye.
Biroozye.
Haesandee.
Alekzye.
Guemzye.
Tchalakeye.
hhaderzye.
Khaouganee Kelan.
Khaouganea Ki t c h i
I
Bedeke.
Firoozye.
Sebzalee.
TRIBE of the GEILDJZYE.
Ibrahim.. ..
T h o o m ..
Tookhee.
Khaleelee.
Toorkee.
Endem. "
I I
The primitive tribe of the Afghans was called tageh, a word
which corresponds with that of nation : the first divisions of this
primitive tribe are called fergueh, tribe ; the subdivisions of this,
tirehs or branches. Thus the families which are descended from
the first generation-Taera-Bend, Argoutch, and Kerlen-as the
Abdalees, the Ghildjzyes, the Kaukerees, form the Taveh, nation ;
those which descend from theae last, such as the Popobeq k u k -
zyes, Ibrahirn, Thooran, &., are called Fergueh, tribes; and the sub-
divisions of these (see the above tablej are called the Tireh, branches.
The Abdalees and Ghildjzyes, by reason of their numerical
superiority over the others, and also from the power they have
CHAP. I. MAKOOHEES AND KHAOUGANEES. 11
exercised, and continue to exercise, in Afghanistan at the present
day, have arrogated to themselves a certain kind of supremacy
over the other tribes, and consider themselves of an origin more
noble than theirs : they even refuse to acknowledge their right to
the title of ASghan. It is more especially the Abdalee tribe that
has put forth, and in the most positive manner, this pretension.
Not only do they refuse the title of Afghans-and this even to the
Ghildjzyes-but also there is a scl~ism on the subject amongst
themselves, and the Zireks affirm that they are of a more noble
extraction than the Pindjpas. This scornful amumption has often
given rise to sanguinary co~lflicts between them, and is based upon
the fact that the mother of Abdal was a legitimate wife, whereas
the mother of Ghildj was a concubine, which is, they say, proved by
the name which was given him, for Ghildj in Pushtoo signifies
bastard.
On the other hand, the tribes of Makoohee and Khmuganee,
though of Afghan origin, were not at the outset of the Abdalee
tribe, but, by reason of the perfect friendship which always existed
between them, the Abdalees adopted them and clasaed them
among& the Pindjpas, and they have ever since been con~idered
as belonging to that family. After the death of Nadir Shah an
occurrence took place which will give some idea of the importance
the Afghans attach to their belonging to the most noble tribe.
Ahmed Shah had scarcely founded the dynasty of the Suddozyes
when it was nearly overthrown by an intrigue fomented against
him by the Serdar Noor Nohamed Khan. Obliged to employ
severe measures to repress the evil-disposed, he ordered that ten
persons of each tribe taken from amongst the most guilty should be
put to death. I t was the first time he had shed the blood of his
subjects, and the experiment was not without danger, for the
Afghans talked of avenging themselves and retaliating upon the
Shah and his family; but the sovereign authority triumphed, and
hi m that moment it was admitted by the tribes that the king had
the right of shedding blood without any one having the power to
question it. The Nakoohees and Khaouganees had not been
included in these acts of severity, on the ground that, not being
Abdalees by descent, their fault was of less magnitude, and therefore
it was ~ i b l e to pardon them ; but these tribea, affronted at the
exception, withdrew from the Shah's camp. An explanation
naturally followed, and Ahmed Shah, to satisfy them, ordered ten
12 SUBDIVISIOX OF TRIBES. Cu r . I.
Makoohees and ten Khaouganees to be put to death, upon which
they immediately returned to their duty, for they considered them-
selves vilified by the exception that had been made in their favour.
lndepe~idently of the tribes and branches that we have classified,
those bf the Abdalees and the Ghildjzyes are again subdivided into
so great a number of t i rel ~, or families, and there is so much con-
fusion in these subdivisions, that it would be impossible for an
Afghan, even the best informed upon the suiject, to give a perfect
list of them. There would be no exaggeration in stating their
numbers at more than three hundred. These have been formed
from time to time when the surplus population of a tribe has been
obliged to separate from it and seek a fresh district, or when a n
influential relative of the chief had some misunderstanding with
him and withdrew from his authority, with those who were attached
to his own person. At other tirries some successful conqueror broke
up a tribe, to render it less pwerful ; each subdivision then took the
name of the new chief whose fortunes it followed, but they always
looked upon themselves as members of the original tribe, though
often separated by considerable distances from each other. These
separations are also to be attributed to the fear entertained by t he
sovereigns of the numerical force of some of the tribes. Shah
Abbaa the Great was the last who adopted this measure on a large
scale ; and to secure the permanent tranquillity and stability of t he
populations to which he had assigned a new territory, he carried a
number of hostages with him to Ispahan.
The Abdaleeq besides having the name of Dooranees, which
they received from Ahmed Shah, are still called Suleimanees, from
the mountains whence they came ; the district they then inhabited
bears the appellation of Tobeh-Maharoof.
CHAP. 11.
CONQUESTS OF THE COUNTRY.
CHAP TER 11.
Afghanistan conquered by Alexander - Reconquered by the aboriginal inhabitants
-Taken by the Tartars - Death of Mansoor - Suocesa of Sebek-Taghee -
C2iamcter of the Afghan8 at this period -Concession of territory t o the
Abdalee tribe - Ohildjzyes opposed to the Tartar dominion -The firat sove-
reign of Afghanistan- His son Mahmood - Cruelty of the Tartar princes -
Fhpulaion of Beiram - Khosroo Malek the last of the Ohaznevide dynasty -List
of the monarchs of that race - Afghan princee of Oour - Mahmood Gouree -
His conquests in India - Eldooz - Djellal Eddin -Afghanistan conquered
by Ohengia Khan - Malek Kurt - Chema Eddin &wee - Their suzerainty to
the Tartars - Conquered by Tamerlane - Description of the Afghans by that
invader - Afghm rule in India-Mahmood 111. - Ibrahim Khan defeats Bellal
and seizes Kabul and Kandahar - Mirza Baboor - Assisted by the Persians -
Defeated by the Uzbeka, but successfi~l in India- Fall of Ibrahim Khnn-
Death of Mirza Baboor - Succeeded by his son Humayoon - Protected by
Shah Thamanp- Anecdote of the latter-Assists Humayoon with a Persian
army - The Looda defeated - Their attempts to retake Delhi - The propheteas
Kiemal Eddin-Shah Jehan drives out the Looh - Aurungzebe finally anni-
hilatea them - Kandahar ceded to Persia by Humayoon - Taken and retaken
by the P e r s i a ~ and Moguls - Afghan deputation to Shah Abbaa - Extract from
Sir John Malcolm's ' History of Persia'--; Afghans quiet under Shah Abbas -
Ty mn y of hie grandeon Shah Seffee - Kandahar taken by Shah Abbaa 11. in
1642 -Success of the Qhildjzyes- Their revolt suppreseed by the Shah
Hoosein-Qourguin Khan -Deputation of the Afghens to the Persian Court
in 1706.
AMONGST the conquests of Alexander the Great was that of Af-
ghanistan, and at the death of this invader his lieutenant, Seleucus,
succeeded to the sovereignty of the greater portion of his dominions
in Asia. I t is presumed that his son and grandson followed him ;
but history does not inform us how or why, under the reign of the
last-mentioned monarch, Afghanistan was taken from the Seleukides
by the aboriginal chiefs, and soon formed, with Bactria, an inde-
pendent state, which existed with some degree of splendour during
one hundred and fifty years. After the lapse of that period the
Tartars made themeelves masters of the country, and appear to
have held possession of it up to the tenth century. This blank
remains in profound obscurity, and it' is only from about the year
A.D. 997 that we have any information which can elucidate the
history of the Afghans.
At that time Mansaor reigned in Tartary, and when he died
an officer of rank, named Sebek-Taghee, threw off the allegiance
14 SEBEK-TAGHEE. CUP. 11.
he owed to his successor, established his dominion over all the
southern part of Afghanistan, and made Ghumee his capital.
The Afghan tribes at this period were for the most part a nomade
and barbarous people, living by plunder and rapine, and under
a host of chiefs very careful of their independence, who were
almost always at enmity with each other, and ready to sell their
services to the highest bidder. Thence it often happened that a
part of the nation was to be found in one camp, while another was
opposed to it in that of the enemies, and, like true Condottieri, they
fought against one another without the least scruple. The disunion
existing amongst the Afghan tribes in the present day may be
traced back to the most remote timea, and it is not surprising that
with this sentiment they have so long delayed to organize them-
selves aa a nation. Their migratory habita also contributed to
this result, and they were for a long time a wild race dispersed
over Persia, India, and the mountains of Afghanistan, but every-
where and at all periods turbulent and difficult to govern, adapting
themselves very little to the habits of those of a different origin
within whose territory they established themselvea The consequence
was, that on very many occasions quarrels arose in which many of
the tribes were decimated without pity, while the remainder were
obliged to seek refuge in the mountains where they are to be met
with in the present day. The tribe of the Abdnlees, the most
powerful now existing, did not fix itself in the Suleiman range
till it had received authority to do so from Sebek-Taghee, who was
desirous of reconipensing them by this concession of territory
for the support they had afforded him in his Indian campaigns.
The Ghildjzyes, on the contrary, were always strongly opposed to
the Tartar dominion over their country, which was so much the
more dangerous for them, because their tribe was at that time
exceedingly numerous. They carried their malpractices to such
an extent, that Ma h md , son of Sebek-Taghee, who succeeded
him on the throne of Ghuznee, was obliged almost entirely t o
exterminate them. But succeeding centuries have enabled the
Ghildjzyes to recover from this disaster, and the tribe is now,
next to that of the Abdalees, the most nunlerous and the most
powerful in Afghanistan.
Sebek-Taghee may be considered as the first sovereign who ruled
over Afghanigtan properly so called ; but the Afghans, in conse-
I I
quence of his Tartar origin, looked upon him and his descendants
I
b
1
CHU. IT. CRUELTY OF TARTARS. 15
as tyrants and usurpers, and thought little of his good deeds
and the benefits he conferred upon them. Mahmood, after the
death of his father, carried his a m into Persia aud India, and
with the spoils of war obtained in these countries enriched
Afghanistan, and made Ghuznee, his capital, one of the most
beautiful cities in Asia. His death took place in 1028. His de-
scendants, little worthy of succeeding him, soon lost the territory
which he had added to the kingdom founded by Sebek-Taghee;
their dominion was soon reduced to the Afghan provinces, in which
their authority was not always respected; and if they preserved
these during two centuries, they owed this circumstance much more
to the difficulties in which their neighboun were involved than to
any fear they entertained of the Tartar dynasty.
Beiram, one of these princes, seized upon an Afghan chief, of
the name of Sooree, who about the year 1151 commanded in the
province of Gour, and put him to a cruel death to punish him for
the resolution with which he had opposed him. The barbarity
of the Tartar prince on this occasion exceeded anything that can
be imagined ; he made him suffer a thowand tortures, and insulted
him by every species of outrage.
Allah-Eddin, brother of this unfortunate Afghan and his successor
in the sovereignty of Gour, determined to revenge himself by force
of arms, and completely suoceeded He seized the town of Ghuznee,
abandoned it during seven days to the fury and excesses of an
army burning with vengeance and poesesved with an inherent pas-
sion for plunder, and who carried the spirit of a savage temperament
so far as to mix the blood of the vanquished with the mortar des-
tined to repair the walls of the city.
Beiram, thus vanquished, retired beyond the Indus, and con-
tinued to reign in the Punjab, abandoning the western provinces of
his kingdom to his victorious adversary.
War was declared on several other occasions between these two
princes, when Beiram was less unfortunate, and his son Khoeroo Shah
inherited the reduced territory he had preserved ; but the dynasty
of the Ghaznevides was brought to a close during the lifetime of
his grandson Khosroo Malek. Attacked in 1160 by Mahmood
Gouree, cousin and successor of Allah Eddin, Khosroo Malek
was overthrown, and his kingdom annexed to that of Afghanistan.
The following is a list of the Ghaznevide princes who reigned over
the last-mentioned country :-
16 AFGHAN PRINCES OF GOUR. CHAP. 11.
D HeJim
.. .... Scbek-Taghee 976 365
I e mJ l . . . . . . 997 .... 387
.... .... Mehmood 997 387
.... .... Mohamed 10.30 421
.... . . . . . . Maseood 1031 422
.... Madood . . . . . . 1041 433
h o d . . . . . . 1049 .... 441
A.D. Hdil'&
.... . . . . . . . . . . Ali 1049 441
.... .. Abd-ul-Reaohid 1052 443
.... . . . . Ferakh-d 1053 444
Ibrahim . . . . . . 1059 .... 450
. . . . . . .... Maseood 1098 492
.. .... Araelnne Shah 1104 508
Beiram Shah .... 1108 .... 512
The Afghan princes of Gour, from being simple chieh of a small
principality, were thus raised to the sovereign power in Afghanistan,
to which they soon added divers principalities of India. Gour is a
little province, well situated for defence, and in the heart of the
most rugged mountains of the Paropamisus, but possesing none
of those means of aggression which could enable the Afghans to
hope for victory against one so powerful as that of Ghuznee. I t
may be supposed that Allah Eddin found a ready support in the
other tribes of his nation, who submitted with regret to the dominion
of the Tartars. The humiliation which the Afghans experienced in
being treated as a conquered people, added to their feelings of
nationality, must have excited heroic sentiments in their breasts, and
made them triumph over the foreign race that oppressed them.
RIahmood Gouree carried his arms into the interior of India
and seized Benaree, in which city he committed a thousand
atrocities. This prince left no heirs, and died in 1205. IIi s
empire, in accordance with his desire, was divided between
his favourites and his freedmen. Afghanistan proper fell to
Eldooz, but he was soon despoiled of it by a prince of Kharism,
whose successor, Djellal Eddin, was in like manner obliged to
retire before the victorious armies of Ghengis Khan. Ferishteh
informs us that the descendants of this conqueror were in possession
of Afghanistan up to the year 1251-the period at which an
Afghan or Patan King, which is synonymous, seized upon Ghuznee
and Kabul, and annexed them to the Indian empire.
Less than a century later a new dynasty, which western authors
mention under the name of Malek Kurt,* established itself in the
province of Gour and extended its dominion over Kandahar and
Herat from A.D. 1336 (Hejira 736) to A.D. 1883 (Hejira 785).
The first sovereign of this dynasty, Chems-Eddin Gouree,
The word Kurt in a corruption of dynasty was of the Afghan race.-
the word Cow, which, united Kith that Fern&.
of Malek, eignifies Prince of Qour. This
CHAP. 11. AFGHAN RULE IX INDIA. 17
nevertheless, acknowledged the suzerainty of the Tartar monarchs ;
this was the case also with his sons and successors, Rookn-Eddin
and Fakhr-Eddin, but the third, Ghyaz-Eddin, threw off the vassal-
age which had been laid upon him by the descendants of Ghengis
Khan. Chems-Eddin, Malek Hafez, Moez Eddin Hoosein, and
Malek Bagher, who succeeded him, preserved their independence ;
nevertheless the latter claimed the support of the Tartars to main-
tain him in the position he had usurped ; but his reign was of
brief duration, for his brother RIoez-Eddin overthrew him, and left
the reins of power to his son Ghyaz-Eddin, the ninth and last sove-
reign of this dynasty. This prince was made prisoaer by the
Emir Tamerlane, who seized hi territory as well as that of Ghuznee
and Kabul.
Tamerlane speaks of the Afghans in his Institutes as a barbarous
people, devoted to pillage, and by no means so far advanced in
civilization as the Tartars; but he limita the country they then
mupied to t he Suleiman mountains, from which we are leR to
conclude that he understood by the name Afghan or Aoughan
only the tribe of the Abdalees, who, since the days of Sebek-Taghee,
were in possession of the country mentioned in the Institutes. This
hms t ance is therefore ,confirmatory of the opinion we have
already set forth on the uncertainty of the origin of the Afghans.
From the conquest of Afghanistan by Tamerlane up to the com-
mencement of the siiteenth century the information respecting them
is exceedingly vague, and yet this epoch ought to have been one of
the most honourable in the annals of Afghan history ; but a portion
of the facts which relate to it occurred in India, and beyond the ter-
ritory the history of which we are endeavouring to sketch : we shall
therefore pass on very rapidly, and only have recourse to the manu-
script from which we have already given some passages.
The ASghan rule in India commenced a t the death of Mahmood
Gouree, which took place in 1205; thus, as we have already
stated above, the dominions of this Mahmood were, for want
of a d i i heir, divided between hi favourites and freedmen.
The Indian provinces fell to Koutoob, one of his generals of tho
Atghan tribe of Lood. This tribe, seeing its chief the sovereign
of a vast empire, with Delhi for its capital, left Afghanistan
a d settled themselves in India, where, protected and favoured
by the monarch, they increased rapidly. Accustomed from their
infancy to a life spent in camps, and of rude and simple habits,
C
18 AFGHAN RULE IN INDIA. CHAP. IT.
they with little difaculty obtained an m d a n c y over the nativea
of India, and the fear with which they inspired them resulted in
their accepting with resignation the yoke of the Afghan dynasty.
This dynasty still held poesession of that country in 1398, when
Tamerlane conquered it. Mahmood 111. was then on the throne,
and the invader allowed him to retain the supreme power as a
recompense for the assistance which he gave him during those
bloody massacres that obtained for him the title of the destroyer
of humanity.
Mahmood 111. died in 1450, a period at which an Afghan lord,
also of the tribe of hod, named Bellal, overthrew the reigning
family. This new sovereign made Agra his capital. During his
reign the empire was a prey to continual agitation ; the revolts
amongst the Loods were incessant, and Bellal was at length driven
out and succeeded by lbrahim Khan, another Afghan chief of the
same tribe, who subdued each of his competitora in turn ; he in-
vaded successively Kandahar and Kabul, meeting with scarcely
any resistance, favoured as he was by the Afghan tribes. Suc-
cesses ea easily obtained increased his ambition, and he resolved to
march upon the Tartar kingdom of Ferghana, already attacked in
-
the rear by Chahee Beg, king of Bokhara, with whom he concluded
a treaty offensive and defensive, stipulating that the conquered
countriea should be divided between then]. Mirza Baboor, of the
tribe of Gurkani, and Mth in descent from Tamerlane,' was at
thii time sovereign of Ferghana, who, already despoiled of some
of the best parts of his territory by Chahee Beg, and menaced on
the south by Ibrahim Khan, despaired of being able to resist this
combination of his enemiea, fled from his kingdom, and placed
himself under the protection of the King of Persia ?'his took
place in the year 1498 (Hejira 904). Shah Ismael Seffavye re-
ceived him in tlie most gracious manner, and soon after gave him
a force of 20,000 horsemen, commanded by Mir Nadjm, with
which to recover his kingdom. Mirza Baboor also took the field,
and commenced operations against the Uzbeks ; but he had
scarcely laid siege to Bokhara H hen the inhabitants, reinforced by
the troops which Ibrahim Khan had sent to hi support, attacked
the Persians during the night, routed them, and killed their leader,
Mir Nadjm. This occurred in 1505 (Hejira 911).
He was the son of Omar Sheikh, waa the son of MiranshAh, who wm
who WM the son of Aboo hi d, who the son of Tamerhe.-Fcrier.
CHAP. II. MIRZA BABOOR. 19
AAer this disaster Nirza Baboor retreated by the way of Balkh,
the road to which city remained open: he was fortunate enough
to be able to take Kabul, and within a brief space he had
made numerous partisans in that country, which he entirely sub-
dued. In 1508 (Hejira 913) he seized upon Kandahar, and
not long after the Punjab. The natives of India, seeing his suc-
cess, wmte to him in 1511 (Hejira 916), and besought his assistance
in throwing off the tyranny of Ibrahim Khan, promising to act
with vigour the moment he should appear at the head of his
m y . This request consorted with the projects of vengeance that
Mirza Raboor cherished against Ibrahim Khan, and he accepted
it with readiness. He marched, therefore, against that monarch
in 1535, defeated him, and took possession of the whole of the
Indian territories of which Ibrahim had usurped the sovereignty.
After this brief description of the transient power which the
Afghans possessed in this part of India, the manuscript of Ab-
dullah Khan of Herat proceeds thus. The natives of India had
little reaaon to congratulate themselves in having requested another
monarch to come and govern them, for Mima Baboor oppressed
and plundered, and made them almost regret Ibrahim Khan the
Load.
At the death of Mirza Baboor, sovereign of India and Afghan-
istan, which took place in 1530 (Hejira 937), his eldest son suc-
. ceeded to all his dominions, but his brother Kamran, and his
vizier Shere Khan, an Afghan of the tribe of Lood, revolted
against him, and, assisted by those devoted to their interests,
obliged him to fly ; the Persians, on the other hand, had some
time before attacked Kandahar and taken it from the Moguls.
Notwithstanding this act of hostility, Humayoon did as his father
had done-he retired to the court of Persia and sought the pro-
tection of the Shah Thamasp. This monarch, having been in-
formed that the fugitive prince was approaching his territory, sent
an order to the governor of Herat to receive him with every mark
of respect, and to e~cort him to Kasbeen, the capital, in a manner
worthy of his rank and with a splendour truly regal. After their
meeting the two monarchs felt a lively interest in each other. The
Shah Thamasp not only acceded to the wishes of his royal guest,
but did everything in his power to anticipate them, as the follow-
ing anecdote will show :-
Humayoon, walking one day in the streets of Kasbeen, came to a
c 2
20 HUMAYOON. CHAP. II.
canal, the clear and limpid waters of which ran with a rapid c oum
between banks covered with flowers and verdure ; the spot p l e d
him greatly, and turning to one of his officers he said, " If I had
the means of doing so, I would here build a magnificent mosque."
A Persian nohleman who heard these words repeated them to the
Shah Thamasp, who swore that the wish of Humayoon should not
remain ungratified, and his architect, having been called into his
presence, was ordered to construct a magnificent mosque, and
within the space of six months, upon the site indicated by the
exiled prince. He also forbade any of hi servants from men-
tioning the circumstance, and gave strict injunctions that Humayoon
should never be permitted to walk near the spot until the edifice
was completed. In six months the beautiful mosque was finished,
and the name of the Shah's guest inscribed over the portal in the
f q d e as having been the founder. Humayoon, to whom no
intimation on the subject had been given, was conducted to it.
His astonishment on seeing it was great indeed, and his gratitude
to the Shah Thamasp for this delicate mark of his friendship not
less. Subsequently the Shah gave him further proofs of his attach-
ment; indeed he was prodigal of them.
Humayoon, nevertheless, became at length sensible that the state
of his &rs in India would never improve if he continued to pass
his time amidst the festivities of the court at Kasbeen ; he therefore
begged the Shah to give him some troops with which he might
hope td regain his crown and punish the usurpers of his throne.
The King of Persia received this new request as he had done every
other, and placed 12,000 cavalry, commanded by Beyram Khan,
a t his disposal. This officer had resided many years in India, was
well acquainted with the habits and feelings of the people of that
country, and the Shah charged him to re-establish Humayoon in
all his righte. The march of this army upon Delhi was soon
known, and the Loods at once made every preparation for defence,
but in vain. Humayoon had scarcely arrived at Kabul when his
Indian subjects revolted against Shere Khan, and after having
killed a large proportion of his Afghans obliged him to fly from the
country. On hearing this Humayoon travelled night and day to
reach his dominions, leaving Beyrdm Khan and his Persians, with
a crowd of Tartars and Parsivans that soon joined him, to follow.
This numerous and well-trained army was broken into divisions on
its anival in India, and Humayoon sent them in various directions
CHAP. II. A LOOD PROPHETESS. 21
wi t h orders to massacre the Afghan Loode wherever they were
met with and not l*ve one alive. These instructions were
rigorously executed, and those who were fortunate enough to escape
were reduced to a pitiable condition ; but when they recovered
from the terror into which they had been thrown, they showed
themselves in arms at various points and again threatened the
Emperor of the Moguls. Nevertheless they did not attempt any-
thing in the lifetime of Humayoon, but after his death, which
took place in 1555, and in the reign of his son Mohamed
Akim Mirza, surnamed Djellal Eddin Akbar, Roouchen Bayazid,
one of the chieEs of the Loodq who passed amongst them as
inspired, in short almost a prophet, united the scattered warriors of
the tribe, placed himself at their head, and declared his preten-
sions to the throne of Delhi. For several years he kept up a
desultory warfare against the IIfogule, but without obtaining any
positive result, for death surprised him in the midst of it. His son,
Omar Sheikh Kiemal Eddin, continued the strife, and owed the
mccess which he obtained, as his father had done, to the mper at i on
of the Prince Noor Eddin ~ e h a n ~ h i r ; second son of Humayoon, who
had also raised the standard of revolt against Akbar. The Looda
continued to carry on this party warfare for a considerable time, but
without being able to grasp a second time the Indian sceptre, for the
Noguls were too powerful.
ARer t he death of Omar Sheikh Kiemal Eddin, a young maiden
of the tribe of Lood, named Kiemal Iihatoon, endeavoured to create
a schism i n the Mahornedan religion as profeased by the Afghans,
the Moguls, and a few Indian tribes ; her preaching and that of
her disciples was the cause of great commotions in the empire : the
1 4 % who were always at the head of every disturbance, suffered
new misfortunes, and fresh massacres considerably reduced their
numbers. These troubles were rife up to the commencement of the
mign of Shah Abedin Mohamed Shah, surnltmed Shah Jehan, who
again persecuted the Afghan Loods, and in 1632 (Hejira 1042)
drove them out of India, but the revolts, which had been excited by
this religious schism, were not thoroughly put down until the close
of the reign of Aurungzebe, who succeeded him. From this period
the Lood tribe ceased to have any influence in India ; they made
no further attempts to obtain power ; and we shall in future become
further acquainted with their history in that of Afghanistan Proper.
Mirza Baboor, the founder of the dynasty of the Moguls, was
22 EMBASSY TO SHAH ABBAS. CHAP. 11.
enabled to hold possession of Kabul, which he lefi to his su-ra ;
but he lost Xmdahar, and this as well as the principalities of Herat
and Gour fell into the hands of the Persians. Subsequently, how-
ever, he retook Kandahar, against which he sent his son Kamran
lfirza, but soon after it was again in the power of the Shah Thamasp.
Seffavye Humayoon, the successor to Baboor, seized upon it ouce
more, but, to mark his gratitude for the services which he had
received from the Shah of Persia, he ceded it to him by treaty in
1545 ; it continilcd in the possession of Persia during the lifetime
of Humayoon, a.fter which his son Ak h r retook i t I t fell, how-
ever, in 1609 (Hejira 1018), into the hands of the great Shah Abbas
Seffavye, but only to revert to the Emperor Jehangir, who carried
Kandahar by assault. This was the last time but one that the Moguls
were enabled to take this fortre- the advantageous position of which
on the frontiers of the two states made them dispute its possession
with so much tenacity against the Persians. The contest for it was
again renewed in 1620 by Shah Abbas, and the efforts which
Aurungzebe made to retake it at a later period completely failed.
The officers appointed by the Persian monarch to govern Kandahar
so oppressed the Afghans that they sent two of their principal
Serdars to the Shah to obtain a relaxation of the rigorous measures
to which they were subjected, and requested that the governor
might henceforth be chosen from the chiefs of the Afghan tribes,
promising that their fidelity should be' proof against every tcmpta-
tion. The following are the terms in which Sir John Nalcolm,
in his excellent work on Persia, speaks of this embassy ; the informa-
tion is taken from the Persian manuscript of Mirza Syud Nohamed
of Ispahan :-
" I n the time of the SatTavean kings of Pemia the Affghans were
often oppressed ; and on one occasion they were so discontented with
their Persian governor, that they sent a secret deputation to
Ispahan to solicit his removal and the appointment of one of their
own tribe. Their request was granted; and two of the tribe of
Abdallee were raised to the office of &ish Saffeed, or Kutkhodah of
the tribes, and their authority was confirmed by a royal patent
The name of one of these two persons was Seedoo, of the family of
Barneeyehi, from whom Ahmed Shah, the founder of the present
royal family of Cabul, is lineally descended. The name of t he
other was Ahmed, of the family of Bareekzehi, from whom the
present Affghan chiefs, Serafray Khan and Futteh Khan, are
CEAP. II. AFGHANS UNDER SHAH ABBAS. 23
descended. The Affghans were delighted with this arrangement,
and granted their entire and respectful obedience to the chief
appointed by the Persian Government Time has confirmed this
respect; and the superiority of the chiefs so selected has become an
inheritance to their family. The race of Seedoo obtained sovereignty,
while that of Ahmed has only gained high station and command.
The Seedoozehis (or descendants of Seedoo) are held in such venera-
tion, that, if one of them was to attempt the murder of an ameer, or
lord of another tribe, it would be considered wrong to obtain
safety by assaulting the Seedoozehis. If an Affghan acted other-
wise he would be deemed an outcast in his own claas or tribe.
There is, however, an exception to this rule in favour of the
descendants of Ahmed, and the Ahmedzehis may without sacrilege
slay a Seedoozehi ; but a great number of the Affghans deny this
privilege, even to the Ahmedzehis. Seedoo and Ahmed (this
author adds) were raised to rank by Shah Abbas the Great, and
derived their fortunes from that fountain of dignity and splendour."
This respect for the Suddozyes amongst the Afghans has dis-
appeared in our days; and since they have been dispossessed of
the throne, not only those who belonged to this branch, but also
all the members of the tribe of Popolzye, from which it wae
derived, are persecuted and often plundered by the Mohamedzyes
actually in power.
So long as Shah Abbas lived the Afghans settled in Herat and
Kandahar remained perfectly tranquil under his dominion ; but a
Persian governor, appointed by his grandson and successor Shah
Seffee, having maltreated them, they revolted. Thii sovereign
managed to keep the Heratees in check, but his governor in Kan-
dahar, a traitor to his duty, passed over to the camp of the Mogul
Emperor with the Persian troops under his orders, and gave up
the fortress to the Shah in 1634.
Kandahar was taken from the Moguls by the Persians in 1642,
during the reign of Shah Abban the Second. The conquerom of
z.
Delhi subsequently made every effort, but in vain, to recapture
the city, and were obliged to remain eatisfied with the possession
of Kabul, which had belonged to them from the time of Baber.'
The Persians retained Herat and Kandahar in spite of the adverse
feeling of the Afghans, who were always more anxious to be under
the dominion of the Great Mogul, which they considered lesa bur-
densome than that of the Persians.
24 DEPUTATION TO PERSIAN COURT. CUP. 11.
The Afghans of the tribe of Ghildjzyes, dispersed over the pro-
vince of Kandahar, were, however, the most restlets and the most
constant enemies of Persia, so that, towards the close of the seven-
teenth century, they had pretty nearly rendered themselves masters
of the principality.
In 1698, a little before liis accession to the throne, the Shah,
Sultan Hoosein, felt that it was absolutely necessary that they
should be put down, and with a vie* to effect this object he selected
as their governor the JValee of Georgia, Gourguin Khan, sur-
named Shah Nawaz Khan, a clever and energetic man, and sent
with him a well-appointed and numerous army, and instructions to
take severe measures with the Afghans.
Shah Nawaz Khan arrived at Kandahar in 1702, and treated
the Afghans without pity, as a conquered but rebellious people ;
nothing could escape hi inflexible and harsh proceedings-neither
rank, age, nor sex was any protection ; his troops, surfeited with
miirders and pillage, reduced the women and girls to a state of
slavery, and made them the unhappy victims of their base violence.
The Afghans, bewildered and alarmed at this state of things, sent
a deputation to Ispahan, in 1706, to entreat the King to put a
stop to the calamities which weighed upon them ; but this embasfiy
did not succeed as a similar one had done in the reign of Shah
Abbas, for their delegates were received with haughty and harsh
indifference ; and the individuals who composed the deputation re-
turned to their countrymen to share with them the despair they
also fel .
Disappointed in their hopes, the Afghans could not dream of
emancipating themselves by force of arms from the heavy yoke
of Gourguin Khan, for his vigilance was equal to his severity ;
flight being impossible and complaint useless, and seeing no other
mode by which they could put a stop to the cruelties that were
practised upon them, they awaited in silence, and bowed down with
grief, the moment when they should be able to take ven,oeance
upon their oppressors for so many outrages ; and this was not far
distant, for an act on the part of Gourguin Khan soon presented
them with an opportunity.
ARREST OF MIR WEIS.
CHAPTER 111.
The Kebntur of Kmdahar is sent prisoner to Ispahan - His intrigues against
Courguin Khan - He d e a n pilgrimage to Mecca - Obtains a fh from the
chief mollah of Islam - Returns to Ispahen, and finally to Knndahar - InQ-
nation of Oourguin Khan- Events consequent upon this - Opinion of Abdullah
Khan upon them -Death of Oourguin Khan - Mir Weis enters Kendahar -
Statement of Mirza Mehdee - The Ghildjzyea declare their independence, and
exterminate the Persian troops - The tribe of the dbdalees establish them-
selves in Herat - The Pernian generala attack the Kelauter and are beaten -
Kaee Khosroo Khan beaieges Kendahar - He is defeated and killed with 30,000
of hie troopa - Mohamed Roostem suoceeds him, but is also beaten -The
.
Afghans acknowledge Mir Weis aa their sovereign chief - Death of the Mir in
1715 - Hie brother M ~ I Abdullah succeeds him -His negotiationa with Persia
- Is put t o death by the eldest son of Mir Web, who succeeds him - Alaysr
Khan, Governor of Herat - Zeman Khan appointed by the Persien monarch to
succeed him - Heyat Sultan - He marches againet Kandahnr - Attacked by
Assad Ullah and defeated - Enters Herat - Persian campaign against the
Uzbeka - Sefi Kooli Khan - Is defeated by the Afghans - Independence of the
Afghnns h b l i s h e d - Assad Ullah lays siege to F u d - Is attacked by Mir
lddmood of Kandahar-A Belooch chief, Mir Mohamed, seizes Herat.
AMONGST the Afghan nobles who had signed the petition to the
Shah against Nawaz Khan was Mir Weis, the Kelauter ' of Kan-
dahar, and chief of a branch of the tribe of Ghildjzyea This
Serdar had, by his amiable manners, liberality, persuasive powers,
and great intelligence, made himself much beloved by his countrymen.
Gourguin Khan feared him, and knew that he was the principal
instigator of the hatred which the Afghans bore him ; he therefore
ordered the Kelauter to be arrested, under the pretext that he was
conspiring against the government, and sent him, with several
other rich M d t Afghans, to Ispahan, there to explain his conduct
to the Shah.
Mir Weis did not on this occasion belie his reputation for ability.
On his arrival at the court of the Seffavyes, he at once perceived the
corruption which reigned on all sides ; and scattering a little gold
about him, he endeavoured to turn his captivity to account. I n a
The dutiea of Rclmi&r in Persia are his other functions to snperintend the
not exactly defined. In different towns administration of the pohce, but with
they are more or leas important: but very extensive powers.-Rvrkr.
in the caw of Mir Web, at Kmdahar, t Literally d i t e bani, but in this
the ofeca must have been Governor in instance mihe&.-Furrier.
chief.
And he had probably amongst
26 PILGRIMAGE OF MIR WEIS. CU. 111.
solemn audience granted him by the King he succeeded in obtain-
ing from the sovereign an acknowledgment that he was innocent
of the accusations which had been brought against him ; and such
was his tact, and the ductile character of his mind, that in the
course of a few days he became one of the principal favourites of
Shah Sultan Hootwin, and the friend of all the great nobles of his
court.
Assured of having for the future an influence over the degraded
courtiers of the Persian King, the views of Mir \Ireis took a wider
range than they had hitherto done, for he concluded that a country
thus delivmd up to men so worthless and corrupt might become
an easy conquest if attacked by some brave men well led. Strong
in the power of his own genius, he deeply reflected upon the mode
in which he might carry out so gigantic an enterprise as an inva-
sion of Persia ; and, to give himself the best chance of success, he
determined to work upon his countrymen by that most powerful of
agents, fanaticism. Instead of evincing a desire to return to hi
country, he solicited and obtained the Shah's permission to under-
take a pilgrimage to Mecca, and also his consent tbat the rich sej&
who had accompanied him should return to Kandahar ; but before
they left Ispahan he instructed them secretly to prepare the Afghans
for revolt. A few days after their departure Mir Weis was on his
way to the Holy City, where, having enlisted the sympathies of
the chief mollahs of Islam, who, like the Afghans, were Soonees,
he found no difficulty in obtaining from them a fetvo, in which
they declared that his countrymen were bound by every means in
their power to throw off the thraldom of the Shiah heretics.
Mir Weis returned to Ispahan as soon as he had performed his
pilgrimage, and occupied himself in canying out the intrigue
which, with no little ingenuity, he had set on foot before his de-
parture.
Like all Persian nobles in high situations, Gourguin Khan had
enemies at court anxious for his downfall, as much from jealousy
as in the hope of mcceeding to the government of Kandahar, or
replacing him by one of their own creatures. Amongst these
enemies was the vizier of Shah Sultan Hoosein, who could not
forgive Gourguin Khan and his nephew, the Sipahee Salar Kaee
Khosroo Khan, the estimation in which they were held by the
Shah, and the influence which they had always employed against
him. Mir Weis, with considerable penetration, saw that this
CHAP. HI. HIS RETURN TO KANDAHAR. 27
personage intended to compaas the ruin of both uncle and nephew
by prejudicing the mind of the Shah against them whenever an
o c d o n should present itself; he made, therefore, secret advances
to the V i e r with the hope of inducing him to associate himself in
his design. The Vizier, well convinced of the h d feeling which
the Afghan chief entertained against Shah Nawaz Khan, and .
believing him to be entirely devoted to the interests of the Shah,
entered into his views, and become one of Mir Weis's warmest
protectow In order the more rapidly to bring about the fall
of Gourguin, the Vizier made every effort to support the Af-
ghan chief against him, and solicited the Shah's permission for
Mir Weis to return to Kandahar. Thii feeble prince had been
pcrsded that Gourguin Khan and hi nephew, secxetly s u p
ported by the Tzar of Russia, wished to raise the standard of
revolt in Georgia, and declare themselves independent. Thie
was d c i e n t to induce the Shah to give Mir Weis permission to
return to his native city, with orders to resume the important fun*
tiom of Kelauter, satisfied that his fidelity and vigdance would
enable him to penetrate the real sentiments of Gourguin, and at
the same time serve as a counterpoise to his power, which had con-
siderably increased, and given rise to some apprehensions. Mu
Weis, well assured that every one would be in his favour, returned
to Kan- by Kerman and the Seistan, observing attentively on
his journey the state of things in each locality. On his arrival he
saw that the power and tyranny of Gourguin Khan had attained
their utmost limits, and thought that his adversary might refuse to
recoguise the b a n which conferred on him the functions of Ke-
lauter. But the Governor, though indignant at his return, con-
formed to the orders of his sovereign, and reinstated the Mir in his
post. Nevertheles, to humiliate him in the eyes of the people,
and to prove that he himself was absolute in his own govern-
ment, he ordered him to send one of his daughters, a girl of great
personal beauty, to his harem without delay-his intention being
not to make her his wife, but his concubine.' The Afghans, in-
formed of the affront which had been put upon their chief, and eager
The manuscript of Abdullah Khan Mir, with whoee talents and influence
is here atvarhco with that of Mires he was well acquainted, and that he
Ali Mohamed, whose account of the wished by means of this marriage to
transaction I have followed. Abdullah put an end to the differences that
Khpn Abs that ~nrgui n Khan was exiatad between himself and that chief.
really deairoum of an allinnce with the -Far*.
28 MURDER OF GOURGUIN KHAN. CHAP. 111.
to avenge it, rushed immediately to arms ; but Mir Weis, secretly
assembling the principal chiefs, arrested their ardour, and they
decided upon temporising in order that they might take measures
which should better ensure the success of their plans. " The time
which must prove our courage," said he to them, " is arrived, but
the prudence of the serpent that watches overcomes the strength of
the lion who permits himself to slumber; we must conceal our
swords in a bed of roses, and those who have sufficient faith in me
to place their destiny in my hands may be convinced that the most
profound secresy is the first condition of success."
After thii conference Mir IVeis affected to submit to the go-
vernor's wishes; but instead of sending him his own daughter, he
substituted one of his slaves, also a very beautiful gi r l who, dressed
in the richest attire, was conducted in great state to the harem of
the Shah Nawaz Khan. Not less animated than Mir Weis against
the oppressors of her country, his slave accepted, and with delight,
the part she was called upon to perform. Gur gui n Khan, not in
the least suspecting the plot, believed the Afghan was really de-
sirous of forgetting the past and being on friendly t e r n with him
for the future ; he therefore trusted him implicitly.
Mir Weis profited by the favour which he now enjoyed with the
governor to bring about his fall with greater certainty ; at the same
time he secured the co-operation of the officers of the palace, and
excited the turbulent Abdalee and Kaukeree tribes to commence a
revolt, which soon spread its ramifications over all the southern part
of the province of Kandahar. This rising occasioned Gourguin so
much anxiety, that he decided on sending his best Gcorgian t r oop
to put it down, and retained only twelve or fiReen hundred men near
him to defend the citadel.
Mir Weis took advantage of the absence of these t r oop to put
the projects he had so long meditated into execution, and sent
Shah Nawaz an invitation to a feast which he had prepared a t one
of his country houses, situated about half an hour's ride from the
city. This he accepted, and without suspicion, and such was the
security felt by Gourguin after he had arrived there, that he quaffed
immoderate quantities of wine during the repast, and with his
suite, who had indulged to an equal extent in their libations, even-
tually fell asleep. Everything, in short, worked well for Mir
Weis ; the conspirators slaughtered all the inebriated sleepers, after
which the Kelauter dressed himself in the robes of Gourguin,
CHAP. m. DESTRUCTION OF OEORQIAN TROOPS. 29
and ordered the Afghans in his own eervice to put on those of
the Georgians who had accompanied their Walee. Thue dis-
guised, they returned to Kandahar in the middle of the night, put
to death the Persian troops on guard at the gate, and entered the
city without being recognised. The insurgents, at first but few in
number, were soon reinforced by the Afghans from the environs,
who had previously been prepared for the movement, and the Per-
iian garrison was so coulpletely exterminated, that not one soldier
was leR alive. Mirza Mehdee, a Pemian, and author of the ' Life
of Nadir Shah,' gives a different account of the death of Nawaz
Khan. He states that the governor had quitted Kandahar to
chastise some rebels of the Kaukeree tribe, when Mir Weis arrived,
who fell upon the Georgian JValee at Dehchir, defeated and took
him prisoner, and subsequently put him to death by the hands of
Murad Khan, a low Afghan. This statement seems, however, to
be inaccurate.
The natives of different countries residing at Kandahar were
at that time at variance with each other, and, after this tragedy was
over, Mir Weis assembled them together with a view to their recon-
ciliation. In his usual persuasive style of eloquence he showed
them the advantages they might obtain from the liberty which had
thus been given them, and invited them to form that bond of union
which alone could emancipate them, and for ever, from the Persian
yoke. He then drew forth the jktvo he had obtained from the chief
mollahs at Necca, which had an irresistible effect upon the feelings
of this fanatical people, whose warlike instincts, having been 'pwer-
fully excited, required only to be cleverly directed. They were
not long in deciding what come to take, and swore that they would
obey the Mir, inviolably attach themselves to his fortunes, and
respect his person.
Three days after this unlooked-for event, the Georgians who had
been despatched against the rebels in the south, and succeeded in
their mission, arrived under the walls of Kandahar. Here they
were suddenly attacked by five thousand Afghan horse, com-
manded by Nir Weis; and though they fought with a heroism
worthy of a better cause, they were unable to stand the unexpected
shock or make good their retreat : only eighteen escaped and re-
turned with the disastrous intelligence to Persia Such is the
~ccount given by Mirza Ali Nohamed, from whom Abdullah Khan
again differs. The latter states " that Gourguin Khan himself
SO ABDALEES ESTABLISHED M HEKAT. CHAP. ITI.
marched at the head of hi troop against the Abdalees and Kau-
kerees, who had taken up a position about twenty leaguea from
Kandaher, and, refusing to pay the taxes, massacred without pity
every Persian they came in contact with. Gourguin Khan was
acarcaly ten miles from the city, when Mir Weis, having quickly
asembled the principal chiefs and all the fighting men of the Ab-
dalee, Ghildjzye, and Kaukeree tribes then in Kandahar, followed
rapidly in the rear of Gourguin Khan. I t was the habit of the
governor and hi Georgians to get drunk regularly every day after
suneet, and no precautions were ever taken to guard a camp in
which every one was plunged in debauch. Mir Weis knew this,
and fell upon them during the night : it was a massacre rather than
a combat, h- the Shah Nawaz and his troops were put to death
almost without resistance. After this coupde-main Mir Weis re-
turned immediately with his men to Kandahar, to which he laid
siege, and after a few days obtained an easy victory over the
remaining half-starved Persians that defended the place. These
he put to death, as well as those individuals who were not of Afghan
origin, or who held an appointment under the late governor. Dis-
cord ensued when the plunder was to be divided, and swords were
drawn; but the Abdalees and Kaukerees were beaten by the
Ghildjzyes, and finally obliged to submit, nor could they have
remained in Kandahar without their permission. The Abdaleea up
to this time had always inhabited the country to the south of the
Urghendab and the Helmund without having ever obtained the
consent of the Mogul or Persian kings to pass t h m rivers ; but
now, by virtue of a freah agreement with the Ghildjzyes, they were
enabled to do so, and many of them settled amongst the mountains
of the Siah-bend, ituated between Kandahar and the principality of
Gour. The emigration of the Abdalees into the principality of
Herat dates from t h i period, and there in the course of a very few
years they greatly increased in numbers and became very rich.
Nevertheless the Afghans agree in stating that a branch of the
Nooreyes had been established in the plains of Obeh and Chehrak
for more than one hundred years before the bulk of that tribe came
to reside in the principahty."
Mir Weis, having driven out the oppreesors of his country, turned
his attention to the manner in which he might best mnaolidate his
work : he restored union between the different tribes, established a
kind of discipline amongst them, and released them from the heavy
CEAP. In. SIEGE OF KANDAHAR. '31
impoats which had till then weighed heavily upon their exertions.
Finally, in 1713, the principal familiea acknowledged him as the
Sovereign Prince of Kandahar.
The Court of Persia, instead of putting down thk rebellion
with vigour, adopted a system which expoaed all its weaknesa I t
commenced by negotiating; but Mir Mreis, having detained the
ambaeradors who were aent to advise him to return to his duty, the
Shah at length determined to march an army upon Kandahar.
With this view the chietk who commanded in Khoraaurn were ordered
to unite their forcea and a t t . the rebela This they did, and,
though Doutnumbering the Afghan troop in the proportion of
eight to one, they were, in consequence of the want of co-operation
between the Persian chiefs, completely beaten by Mir Web in three
d v e battles. These events took place in 1713.
The Shah, on receiving information of this catarjtrophe, saw
at once the imminence of the danger. The revolt might gain
ground in other provinces of his empire, in which alarming indications
had manifested themselves ; however, two yeare elapeed before he
ordered his army of 30,000 men to take the field. I t was com-
poeed of Persians, Arabs, and Abdalee Afghans, at enmity with the
Ghildjzyes, and commanded by Sipahee Salar Kaee Khoenn, Khan,
\Wee of Georgia, and nephew of the unfortunate Gourguin Khan.
I n this campaign Mir IVeis was not successful. He lost all the
territory he had taken from the chiefs of Khoraman, was completely
defeated by Kaee Khosroo between the Helmund and the Urghendab,
and, retiring from thence, was obliged to seek refuge within the walls
of Kandahar, to which city his adversary soon laid siege. This the
Sipahee Salar puehed forward with great activity and perseverance,
and ravaged all the environs of the city, which, ere many days had
became a complete desert.
As a reprisal for the acts which
the Abdalees and Kaukereea had committed, he put to death all
the Afghans who fell into his power, and did not even epare the
women and children.
The besieged were soon reduced to the greatest extremity, and,
alarmed at the terrible consequences that might befall them if the
city waa taken by mu l t , they insiated that Mir Weis should offer
terms of aceommodation to the Peraian general. But Kaee Khosroo
Khan, thinking himself sure of success, and eager to avenge the
death of his uncle by that of his murderere, demanded the uncon-
ditional surrender of the place. The garrison eaw by this reply that
32 DEATH OF MIR WEIS. CHAP. TIT.
they had nothing to hope for, and, gaining courage from despair,
continued the defence with renewed energy, the abilities of their
chief rising with the difficulties which he had to contend with.
Mir Weis, having succeeded in bailing the vigilance of the be-
siegers and escaped from Icandahar, assembled several thousand
Afghan cavalry, ravaged the localities Khosroo had spared for the
purpoee of supplying his own camp, and bar& the Persians day
and night. The result was obvious. The Sipahee Salar was obliged
to raise the siege to obtain provisions, of which he stood greatly in
need ; but constantly molested on his march, he found it impossible
to secure a moment's repose for his troops, who, decimated and
discouraged, began to disband. This new danger induced him to
offer battle to the Afghans, who accepted it on the 26th of Rarnazan
1714 (Hejira 1126), and they so completely annihilated the Persian
army, that only one hundred out of thirty thousand men escaped
with their lives. Khosroo Khan, borne down with despair, threw
himself at the head of a few brave companions into the thickest of
the fight, and there sought an honourable death, which defeat had
made more welcome to him than life. This narrative is also from
the text of Mirza Ali Blohamed. Abdullah Khan assures us that
Khosroo did not attack the Afghans, but that they surprised and
defeated him in a night attack.
Mohamed Roostem, another Persian general of some repute,
was subsequently sent with a third army to subdue Mir \Yeis.,
but he was not more fortunate than his predecessor. Defeated
by the Afghans in several encounters, he owed his own safety
only to a rapid retreat, which left the Mir absulute master of the
whole province of Kandabar. After this fresh success all the
Afghan tribes gave in their adhesion to him, and acknowledged Mir
Weis for their sovereign chief, as the inhabitants of the capital had
done after the death of Gourguin Khan. Unfortunately, how-
ever, this adroit and courageous man could not continue the great
work which he had up to this time so cleverly conducted, for he
died towards the close of 1715, in the eighth year of his rule over
the Afghans, and in the succeeding one to that in which he obtained
his last victory over the Persians. I t was also the very moment
at which the measures he had taken with a view of insuring the
independence of his country and ameliorating the condition of the
people afforded every hope that they would be realised; but.
though checked for a time, these hopes were not extinguished, for
those measures received a fresh impulse under the government of
his eon Mahmood.
Mir M7eis left two sonq Mir IIahmood and AIir Hoosein. The
former, who was the elder, had scarcely attained his eighteenth year
at the time of his father's death, and in consequence of this the
Afghan chiefs declared that he was not competent to succeed him.
Their uncle, Mir Abdullah, was therefore placed at the head of
mra, but the expectations which had been raised by the bold and
eharacterietic conduct of his brother were not realised by him :
hiis first act was to open a conference with the Persian govern-
ment, whose suzerainty he agreed to admit, and also to pay a
tribute, if the Shah would give him the government of Kanda-
bar, make it hereditary in his family, and withdraw the Persian
gamwns h m the principality.
Two years were consumed in these disgraceful negotiations,
and, though the projects of Nir Abdullah were but imperfectly
known to the Afghans, they were mistrustful of his intentions, and
opposed him as best they could ; but when these projeds came to
be revealed to them by the Persians, who in so doing hoped to sow
the seeds of dissension amongst them, they were in the highest
degree indignant.
The eldest son of Nii Weiq who was already distinguished by
many of the qualities the Afghans had admired in his father, arld
who, though so young, had displayed daring acts of courage bor-
dering on rashness when engaged with the Persians, took advan-
fa,- of the discontent which the interested conduct of his uncle
had given rise to in the minds of his countrymen, and seized the
sovereign power of which he thought he had been unjustly deprived.
The unpopularity of Mir Abdullah made his success easy; he
attacked his house with ollly fifty men, killed him with his own
hand, and made the Afghan chiefs then at Kandahar elect hirn
governor in the room of his murdered relative. The people them-
elves demanded his election, which, however, was not agreeable to
a few ambitious Serdars; but when they saw the young chief had
obtained the general support of the nation, they adhered to the new
order of things.
Abdullah Khan, the Heratee, gives a different account of the
motives which led to this murder of the Mir. Abdullah, observes
hat historian, was less active, less impetuous, but not less intelli-
gent and prudent than hi brother Mir lJTeis. After the death of
D
34 ALAYAR KHAN. CHAP. 1n.
the latter aeveral Ghildjzye chi ei talked openly of their intention
to dictate to those in power ; the seeds of much discord had also beea
sown amongst the tribes, and Mir Abdullah was perfectly aware that
he could not expect to retain the sovereign authority in any degree
of tranquillity unless he could prevent new hostilities on the part
of Persia The negotiations therefore which he had entered into
with the SbAh had only that object in view, and there is no doubt that
whenever he had foulld himself able to do so he would have thrown
off a vassalage the liiht fetters of which he now consented to wear.
The fiery Afghans could not understand the wisdom of this system,
and the constant opposition of his nephew Mahmood finished by
lowering his influence with the Serdars, several of whom hoped
and were desirous of occupying his position themselveg The
Mir's death was as unjust as it was to be regretted, and the more
to be deplored, as his successor displayed warlike qualities only,
which led to the decimation of the tribes, and weakened them to
such a degree that, under the reign of Nadir Shah, they again fell
under the Persian yoke. The power also after Mahmood's time
passed into the hands of the Abdalee tribe-to the injury of the
Ghildjzyes, who had been the first to proclaim and establii the
independence of the Afghan nation.
At about the period when Mir IVeis died, the poyulatioo of
Herat tried also to withdraw from their allegiance to the Sef-
faveana The Khorassianq of whom it was for the most part
composed, had obtained from Nadir Shah the privilege of being
governed by their own chiefs. Alayar Khan, who was governor
of the province at the time of Roostem Khan's defeat, though not
declaring himself independent as Mir Weis had done, acknow-
ledged only from that time a nominal submission to the Persian
court; but whether the Persian garrison of Herat, though v e .
small, still inspired him with awe, or whether he hoped by cunning
and temporising finally to become completely independent, he
continued to keep up appearances, and observe a respectful bear-
ing towards the Shah Hoosein ; and as anarchy reigned in several
Persian provinces, he thought the monarch might possibly look
upon these faint proofs of his obedience as submiasion
Alayar Khan, as well as Mir Weiq with whom he had secretly
allied himself in a common determination to resist the Shah, died
before he could put into execution the plans which he had con-
ceived. The court of Persia appointed Zeman Khan, Koortchee
CRAP. m. ZEMAFi KHAS-EKEYAT SULTAN. 36
Bashee, his sucemr . This officer, who commanded the troop8
quartered in the provi~lce of Herat, was instructed to reinforce hia
division by enlisting all the volunteers in the locality and march
against Mir Abdullah. If this chief had been as prudent aa his
predecessor, he might have hoped, if not to obtain a positive
complete success against the rebels in the south, at least some
advantages which would, without doubt, have prevented Mir Mah-
mood from undertaking the expedition which he made some time
after in Persia ; but Zeman was a dull and dissipated man, and
had not the tact to fomelit the elements of diecord which existed
amongst the Afghans. The Abdalee tribe, almost the whole of
which was settled in his government, were the hereditary enemiee
of the Ghildjzyes, and might have been led against them with
success ; but he had affronted thrm, and was obliged to take the
field with a weak corps-d'armke composed almost entirely of Per-
sians. Neither the importance of the undertaking he had to cany
out, nor the burden of the responsibility which rested upon him,
operated as any restraint upon his conduct, and his exceaees were
much that they effected his ruin even before he was in presence of
the enemy.
A short time before this a branch of the Suddozye tribe had
establiihed itself in the neighbourhood of Sukkur, and their chief,
Heyat Sultan, anxious to obtain certain favours from Zeman
Khan, committed a most fearful outrage against his own son. In-
credible as it may appear, he sent As a d IJllah, a young and beau-
tiful lad, to this wretch in human shape for an infamous purpose.
The crime accomplished, the unfortunate youth took the first
opportunity of making his escepe from the Persian camp, and, re-
turning to his tribe, which shared with hinl the feelings of fury that
animated their young chief, they determined upon taking a deep
revenge. Assad's first step was to seize his vile and unnatural
parent and imprison him in a fortress, after which, accompanied
by a few thousand horsemen, he stiuted in pursuit of Zeman Khan,
d such was the rapidity of his movements, that he surprieed the
Persian commander at midnight in the district of Zemindavar,
before he had received the slightest intimation of his being in
arms, attacked with great bravery and impetuosity the wearg and
aleeping troops, and put them nearly all to the sword. The villain
who had so deeply injured him was the first that fell, and by the hand
of Asaad ; after which the vidorious youth marched on Herat,
D 2
36 PERSIAN CANPAIGN AaAINST UZBEES. CHAP. In.
and, having obtained an entrance to the city, exterminated the few
Persians he found there. After this he again took the field, and
made himself, almost without opposition, master of the whole pro-
vince, which, on the 26th of Ramazan, 1716, he constituted an in-
dependent principality.
As to the Persian troops which had succeeded in effecting their
escape from the massacre at Zemindavar, finding themselves with-
out a commander, they disbanded, and returned to Ispahan. All
that the government could do to induce them to return to Afghan-
istan under a new general was ineffectual ; they refused to march ;
and the Shah Sultan Hoosein was under the necewity of relin-
quishing his project for bringing that country again under hi
dominion. Assad Ullah Khan raised himself to power about a
year before the period at which 3Iir Ma h md became by the
murder of his uncle Prince of Kandahar.
Persia, already so much weakened by the loss of two of her
finest provinces and three armies, ravaged by the Uzbeks, menaced
by Turkey and Russia, and governed by a degraded and super-
stitious court who ruled the feeble Sultan Hoosein, had no little
difficulty in making a stand against so many disasters Neverthe-
less, the Persian monarch made a last effort, and in 1719 raised
an army of 35,000 men, well provided with artillery, which he
placed under the orders of Sefi Kooli Khan, a general of re-
puted talent, to whom he allotted the task of driving back in
the first instance the Uzbeks, and then of reducing Herat and
Kandahar.
The Khan obtained an easy victory over the undisciplined
hordes of Uzbeks, who, badly armed and badly led, having pillage
only in prospect, and not the permanent occupation of Khorassan,
took to flight at the first shock of the Persian army. Puffed up
with pride at a success thus easily obtained, Sefi Kooli Khan
pompously announced hi intention to exterminate the rebel Af-
ghans, to whom he sent an imperious order to come to his camp and
implore his mercy. On the receipt of this message, Assad Ullah
Khan moved forward to meet him at the head of 12,000 Afghans
and Hazarahs, and, in spite of the disproportion of the two m i -
attacked him directly. The Afghans were armed only with bad
swords and worse matchlocks, but they did not hesitate to face the
fire of the formidable Persian artillery, and maintained during a
whole day a most obstinate combat, in which 3000 of their best
CHAP. III. ASSAD ULLAH KHA4N. 37
troops lost their lives. The victory was still undecided at sunset,
when by some accident never accounted for a dreadful explosion
took place amongst the Persian artillery. This caused an instan-
taneous panic in their army, and they took to flight, leaving on the
field of battle all their baggage and the greater part of their guns.
Sefi Kooli Khan and several lnembers of his family, together
with a large number of chiefs as well as 10,000 Persian soldiers,
were slain in this battle fought near the village of Kariz.
This victory decided the fortunes of the Afghans. Independence
was henceforward theirs, and the power, but half-established,
of Assad Ullah Khan was consolidated, not only in Herat, but
also through the greatest part of Khorassan, of which he took
possession, with the exception of Meshed, its capital, and that re-
sisted all his attacks. Seeing that his efforts to reduce it were
ineffectual, he was satisfied with keeping a watch upon it, and
marched to the south of his territories, in order to extend them in
that direction. He seized, in the first instance, upon Subzawar,
and afterwards moved on Fumah, to which place he laid siege,
when he was attacked by Mir Mahmood of Kandahar, who thought
these proceedings might be detrimental to his own interest, more
particularly as Asaad Ullah exhibited the courage and capacity of
a good general, and belonged to the tribe of the Abdalees, the
rival of his own. But Assad Ullah Khan was unfortunately killed
at the commencement of the battle, a ball having stnick him in
the middle of the forehead; his troops, discouraged, retired to
Herat, where anarchy reigned during several months, until a
Belooch chief of the Seistan, one Mir Nohamed, seized the power
and established order in the city.
ISTHIGUES OF PERSIA.
CHAI' TER IV.
Intrigurn of Persia in Afghanistan - P~.eparations of Mir Mnhmood - He outnits
the P e r a h court - Is appointed Governor4eneral of Kandabar - His embi-
tious projects-Seizes the fortrases on the Hel ~nund - State of the Persian
army - Besieges Kerman- I t surrenders to his troop-They are beaten by
t he Persian general Leuft Ali Khan - Mir Mahmood retreats t o Kandahar-
Leuft Ali ie disgraced - Hsvolt againd Mir Mahmood at Kandohar-The Mir
marches with his army against the Persinna- Provisions the fort- of Bam -
Kermnn surrenders to him - He is repulsed before Yezd - Moves on Ispahan
-State of Mir Mahmood's troops - A aingular recipe for cournge - Pusilla-
nimity of the Persians - Disunion amonpt them - The consequences - Their
army is routed by the Afghans-The Ethemad Dooulet and the Walee of
Georgia - The chief command of the army is given to the latter - Proposition
of Shah Hoosein to Mir Mahmood - The siege in premed cloaer - The Pemiana
endeavour to leave the city - Great scarcity prevails - The result - Ih.ssdful
suffe'eringa of t he inhabitanb -Shah Hoosein proceeds to t he Afghan camp -
He abdicates the throne - Mahmood's conduct after hie victory.
THE Persian Governn~ent, while sending armies to subdue h d a h a r ,
also employed the arts of negotiation, and tried to deceive suc-
ccsively Mir Weis, his brother, and his son, with intrigues and
promises of which Eastern nations are so prodigal. But these
chiefs did not fall into the snare prepared for them: nevertheless
Mir Mahhood, who put his uncle to death because he had received
certain propositions from the Shah, found eomewhat later that this
plan was a good one, and adopted it himself; less, howwer,
because he was afraid of the Shah of Persia, than becaw he re-
quired a few years of repose to prepare himself for the invasion
which he had projected against that kingdom. As the victory over
Assad Ullah Khan might awaken the fears of the Persians, and
induce them to march one of their everlasting armies upon him, he
hastened, immediately he had relieved Furrah, to inform Shah
Hooeein that he had attacked the Abdalees only to prevent them
from taking the town from him, and that it was now entirely a t the
disposition of the Shah. The letter which Mir Mahmood sent to
the Shah was placed in his hands Ly the same minister who had
been the accomplice of Mir Weis, and on this occasion he did not
give the lie to hi own base antecedents. Instead of enlightening
his master on the manifest ambition of the Afghan prince, he did
all that lay in his power to convince him that the Ghildjzyes were
CEAP. IV. PROJECTS OF MIR MAHMOOD. 39
excellent vassals, who had rendered him a very great eervice, and
furhmore that they had only exterminated Gourghin Khan, his
nephew, and the Georgians, on account of the excesses they had
commitbed, and to deliver themselves from a moet odious tyranny.
By such representations he sought not only to revenge himself on
tbe Georgians, whose chiefs were his most dangerous antagoniata,
but also to endeavour to calm the resentment the Shah had always
felt against him, in consequence of the effort9 he had made to in-
duce him to give Mir Weis permission to return to Kandahar.
The p r feeble-minded sovereign, deceived once more, beatowed
upon Mir Mahmood the surname of Hoosein Kooli Khan (the slave
of Hooeein), and sent him a firman appointix~g him Governor-
General of Kandahar, and making that high office hereditary in his
family. Mir Mahmood accepted these honours with apparent
gratitude and respect, and this good understanding between the
Mir and the Court of Ispahan enabled him to augment in all
&ty the force which he intended to employ in carrying out hie
ambitious ~r oj eds. To clear away, however, all difficulties, he a h
wrote to the Shah and represented that the Abdalees recently
establi$red in Herat had been in revolt for the last two years
and paid no taxes, and he solicited the Shah's permiesion to
subdue them. Sultan Hoosein was foolish enough to consent to
thia expedition, which Mir Mahmood at once under t ~~k, but, in-
&ad ,of h c t i n g his steps to the north, he sent there a amall
flying detachment, while he himself marched with the mass of his
m y along the banks of the Helmund and seized all the fortreesea
on that river, for they commanded the principal roads of the Seistan
leading i n t ~ Persia. I t is true he took possesion in the name of
the Shah, but his secret purpose was to f o e himself, and to
collect provisions, in order that he might command an easy passage
to tbe southern provinces, and at a future time with little di5culty
invade the Persian territory. I t will be remembered that his father
had travelled through them on his return from Kandahar, and
the invaluable information which he then collected was now to be
utilized by his son, whose preparations for this invasion were pro-
longed up to 1720. But even then his army numbered only
12,000 men ; however, they were all picked men, inured to war and
~ardahips of every kind, and prepared for any eventuality that might
arise. Persia, on the contrary, was at this time in a most deplor-
able d t i o n ; everything was in dieorder; and the only emula-
40 NIR MAHMOOD TAKES KERMAN. CUP. IV.
tion that could be said to exist at that court was who should ex-
hibit the greatest weakness and degradation. The right of holding
the appointments of the public service, instead of being a privilege
belonging to high birth or a recompense for meritorious services,
bas sold to the highest bidder ; the troop, without discipline, re-
ceived neither instruction nor pay, and, frequently disbanding them-
selves, pillaged the villages and the caravans. The towns were
infested with thieves, who openly followed their villanous profession
with the utmost assurance, knowing they could do so with impunity.
In short, everything announced the complete decadence of this p t
monarchy, which, attacked on all its frontiers, by the Afghans, the
Tartars, the Russians, and the Arabs, seemed likely to become an
easy conquest to the first who should attempt to invade it.
I t was the young Mahmood, breathing vengeance for the miseries
which hi country had suffered under the Persian rule, who was the
first that engaged in this difficult enterprise. I n 1720, under the
pretext of attacking Clledad Khan, a Iklooch chief, who with his
nomades was ravaging the province of Kerman, Mahmood placed
himself at the head of his small army, and traversed amidst unheard
of difficulties the arid and desert countries of the south of Persia On
this march hi soldiers were soon decimated by privations and fatigue,
and of the 12,000 men who set out with him only 7000 arrived
under the walls of Kerman, to which he laid siege with a courage
and determination utterly disproportioned to the means of aggression
at his command. Simultaneously with theae operations he again
endeavoured to put the Shah Hoosein on the wrong scent a d lull
the vigilance of his government, to which he wrote stating that he
had besieged Kerman merely to force the Governor to furnish hb
troops with provisions, and thus repay him the expense of moving
his army in the interest and for the benefit of the Shah of Pemia
Mahmood was pined by a great number of Persian malcon-
tents, who soon filled up the casualties in hi army. The town,
hard pressed, held out only for a few days, and then surrendered' at
discretion ; nevertheless the victor thought it necessary to punish
the inhabitants for the feeble resistance, they had offered, and not
only them but those of the whole district. During four months his
soldiers, gorged with plunder, committed every imaginable ex-
at the expiration of which time they were attacked and put to
flight by the Persian General Leuft Ali Khan, who marched to the
aesistance of the invaded province with a very superior force. The
CIIAP. IY. REVOLT AT KAXDAHAR. 4 1
defeat of Mir Mahmood wm so complete that he was obliged
to make a rapid retreat to Kandahar, taking with him only a
miserable remnant of that army which had followed him with so
much enthusiasm to the conquest of Persia 1 Not one man woulQ
perhaps have survived if the evil genius which presided over the
destinies of that empire had not arrested the progress of her victo-
rious commander. Leuft Ali Khan, the only good general the Shah
then had, was, by way of recompense for the brilliant success which
he had just obtained, deprived of his command and thrown into
prison A wurt intrigue, originating in the Vizier, brought about
this unjustifiable result, for the letter of Mir Mahmood had been per-
fidiously misinterpreted by him to the Shah Sultan Hoosein. But if
Mir Mahmood had not been defeated, more important interests would
have obliged him to abandon the province he had just conquered,
for he received intelligence that his rear waa seriously menaced.
Beiiam Sultan Gkzee, governor of Furrah, and Malck Djaffer
=.an Sibnee, having formed an alliance, succeeded in cxciting a
portion of the province of Kandahar to revolt against his authority.
Supported by a few thousand men, they had even seized upon the
city in the name of Shah Hoosein, but were driven from it by Mir
Hoosein, brother of Mir Mahmood. The latter therefore hastened
his return, and his presence soon restored order. His resolu-
tion had not been shaken for one instant, for he had reflected, and
wkly, on all that had passed, and had seen his own faults.
These had arisen rather from ignorance than want of courage-
they appeared to him therefore easy of correction : and the bravery
and intelligence which he had shown in his fatal expedition of 1720
Becured for him the obedience and admiration of his soldiers, which
enabled him with little trouble to raise another and a larger army,
one not less enthusiastic than the first. The Afghans of every
tribe, even those living in the provinces of Herat and Kabul as well
as the Hazarshs, hastened with alacrity to the standard of a chief
who promised to enrich them with the spoils of their ancient o p
pmmm. The Bdoochee settled to the south of the Helmund also
furnished him with a contingent of several thousand men, and he
determined to take an ample revenge for the disasters inflicted
upon him by Leuft Ali Khan.
A h having installed his brother Mir Hoosein aa Regent of
bda ha r during hie abeence, he again entered Pereia, in January,
1722, at the head of an army of 28,000 men, carrying with him
42 SECOND CAPTURE OF KEFWAN. CHAP. 1F.
immense stores of provisions in order to guard against the priva-
tions his troops had suffered on his first expedition from the
scarcity of food and forage.
Mir Mahmood opened this campaign by rapidly m i n g the
kistan, and without encountering any obstacle he reached the
fortress of Barn, where he remained for a few days. This for-
tress he repaired and strengthened with great care, and made it
an immense de@t of provisions and munitions of war. The gar-
rison was ordered to collect within its walls all the corn which
the inhabitants of the moundi ng country could supply above what
they required for their own use, and also to keep numerous beasbs
of burden ready to take the road whenever instructions were given
to that effect. The command of this important place was confided
by Mir Mahmood to his relative Noor Ullah Khan, a brave and
energetic man, on whose fidelity he could rely ; and having thus
completed hi preparations, he again advanced and arrived before
Kerman, intending to besiege it once more, but the inhabitants
opened the gates almost without offering any mistance : the garrison,
however, in the citadel, composed of picked men, refused to sw-
render. The commander wrote to the Afghan chief that, if his
object was to amass great riches and become Shah of Persia, he
would lose his time and uselessly exhaust his resources in under-
taking the siege of a place that was provisioned for ten years, and
the defenders of which were determined to bury themselves beneath
its ashes rather than capitulate ; but he added that if the Mir chose
to march on Ispahan he might accomplish his purpose, and he
offered to give him 18,000 tomauns towards the expenses of the
campaign, if he would raise the siege. Mahmood accepted these
conditions, far less because, according to the custom of his country,
it saved the honour of his arms, than because he had no heavy
artillery to batter the place-the only guns at his disposal, those
called in Pmia ~ i m b e k , being wholly inefficient for thie purpm.
Of these he had an hundred carrying a ball of from one to two
pounds, each ei mhr ek being carried by a camel with the artillery-
man who served it.
Directly Mahmood had received the sum agreed upon he moved
upon Ispahan by Yezd, the direct road, and made an attempt to
take the latter town by aseault as he passed ; but several attach hav-
ing, in spite of the brilliant courage of his soldiers, been vigorous1 J
mpulsed, he abandoned this siege also. I t was likely to prove
CHAP. IV. MAHMOOD ADVANCES ON ISPAHAN. 43
a lingering affair and occasion him the loas of much precious time,
m be continued hi march upon Ispahan witbout troubling himaelf
about his rear, for the country was too denuded of the enemy's
troop to give him any anxiety on that subject. As to his line of
operations, that lay wherever provisions could be obtained, and he
carried with him a pretty large supply, which was renewed from
time to time in the villages on his road. In this manner he arrived
at Guluabad, a village situated ten miles from Ispahan, without
having met one Persian who attempted to oppose his paeeage.
Here he entrenched hi army, which had been somewhat reduced
since its departure from Kandahar by privation and fatigue, as
well as in the combats before Kerman and Yezd ; but these losea
he had repaired by a few thousand Gheber recruits, who were not
lea dwirous than the Afghans to revenge themselves on their
common oppressors the Persians. Mahmood had still 23,000 com-
batants under his command when he arrived at Guluabad, but, in
spite of their cowage and t.he advantage they derived from the re-
putation of their arms, they could have been eaeily exterminated
if the Persia118 bad possessed the least sentiment of national
feeling, and been animated by the remembrance of the ancient
grandeur of their country ; but this debased people learnt from
their weak monarch only how to lament their misfortunes, instead
of warding them off by fighting manfully to prevent them, and it
was not till the last moment, when money and arms were distri-
bated amongst them, that they decided upon defending the capital
of the empire.
Mir Ma h m d s troops arrived at Guluabad in wretched condi-
tion : the rags they wore scarcely covered them ; they were destitute
of warlike stores; with rare exception, their sabres were the only
arm of which they could make any use, and their Sight artillery
was unfit for siege purposes. Ispahan, on the contrary, beaides ita
population, which was at this time estimated at more than 600,000
souls, had a garrison of 60,000 soldiers; the city walls were
*ong, and the besieged in potmmion of a formidable artillery.
Unfortunately, however, the spirit of the army was cowardly and
~peratitious, and it was in those days more advantageous for a
minister to deceive and betray the monarch, or flatter hie pre-
dilection for theological discussions, than to do his duty. One '
of his favourite generals, Fath Ali Khan Kadjar, assured Shah
Hoosein he had heard from an old woman of Asterabad, who
44 DlSUNION OF THE PERSIANS. h a p . 1V.
wes said to be inspired, that two legs of a he goat, boiled with
325 peapods in water over which a young virgin had repeated
1200 times '' Lh illah, illah l'a,". made a broth which would render
invisible the men who drank it : the superstitious monarch therefore
ordered that his troops should be daily supplied with goat-soup
thus prepared. A thousand absurdities equally efficacious were
decreed for a like purpose ; and there were only one or two high-
minded men who, stimulated by the calamitous state of daira,
endeavoured to raise the drooping spirits of the garrison ; but owing
to the weakness of the monarch, they and the few followers
who adhered to them soon fell victims to his imbecile conduct.
Traitors alone were listened to and intrusted with the command of
the troops ; there was no mutual understanding between them, and
they daily accumulated acts of cowardice, treason, and folly, one
upon the other.
The Ethemad Dooulet, first minister of the Shah, and the IValee
of Arabia, who was General in Chief, were always of opposite
opinions. The first asserted that, as they had hitherto done nothing,
but had allowed the Afghans to arrive under the walls of Ispahan,
it would be better to remain on the defensive, and let them wear
themselves out in useless efforts ; but the Walee made light of
the opinion of that eminent personage, and went out nearly every
day skirmishing mund the enemy's camp, in a manner, moreover,
that appeared to be much more in the interests of Mir Mahmood
than in those of his sovereign. His subordinate officers committed
similar faults ; sorties were made without judgment or discipline,
and the Persian troops gave ground at the first onset, while the
rivalry existing amongst the commanders produced daily collisions
in their army, that frequently ended in bloodshed.
A council of war having been summoned by the King, who
presided in person, it was at length decided that a general attack
should be made upon the Afghans. Mahmood had only twenty
thousand fighting men to withstand the Persians, but, accustomed
to conquer, the power of this force was increased three-fold by
their own courage : they heeded not the numbers of the enemy, and
blindly obeyed a prince who possessed all their sympathies, and
who had the command entirely in his own hands; while the
Persians, being formed into several divisions, all independent one of
* Clod is God, and there i8 no God but him.
CUP. IV. DEFEATED BY THE AFGHANS. 4 5
.the other, and receiving different orders, were essentially deficient
in combination and resolution, the chief elements of military success.
At daybmk on the 8th of April, 1721, the Persians left the city
in great confusion to attack the Afghan camp.. The Ethemad
Dooulet and the Walee of Arabia had not been able to come to an
understanding as to the order of battle, and were no better agreed
in opinion as t o the attack ; thus each of them commenced with the
corps-d'm& under his command, and in accordance with his own
individual ideas, without dreaming of the mutual support they
ought to afford to each other when required.
At first the Ethemad Dooulet remained inactive, and, advantage-
ously posted on the defensive, waited for the Afghans to advance, and
this plan was approved by the majority of the other generals. But the
Walee, a man of little reflection and of an ardent temper, looked upon
this inaction as disgracefill, and, without listening to the advice of his
colleagues, exclaimed, " \Ve are not here to deliberate, but to fight."
IVith these words he galloped forward to his men, who poured
down upon the left &k, which gave way at the fimt onset. It now
required a slight effort only to turn the Afghans and put them to a
complete rout ; but the Arabs, far more anxious for plunder than for
glory, rushed into the camp of Mir Mahmood and began the work of
pillage. The Ethemad Dooulet, observing the Walee thus engaged,
fell upon the Afghan right, which was moving up to attack the Arabs ;
but Aman Ullah Khan, the most talented of Mir Mahmood's lieute-
nanb, who commanded this wing, perceiving his intention, faced
about, and for some time retired before the Persians ; then suddenly
halting, he opened his squadrons and unmasked his one hundred
zimbooreks, which instantly sent forth a hail of balls into their ranks.
The enemy, instead of rushing at once upon the guns, which could
not have been reloaded in time for another discharge, suddenly
halted, and finally decamped. Aman Ullah, skizing the propitious
moment without hesitation, fell upon the figitivea with his cavalry,
and made a terrific carnage ; their artillery, consisting of twenty-
four pieces of large calibre, which they had placed in their rear,
were also captured, and turned against the royal army. From
that moment the rout of the Persians was complete, and the soldiers,
instead of entering Ispahan, regained each his own province, and
there waited the issue of events. The Afghans obtained an im-
mense booty in this battle, in which 25,000 Persians remained upon
the tield: amongst them was Roostem Khan Gooulaye Agaasee,
46 PROPOSITIONS OF THE SHAH TO MAHMOOD. CHAP. IT.
chief of the slaves, and Ahmed Khan, General in Chief of the
Artillery, two of the moat important officer% in the army.
This event spread the greatest consternation in Is*, and the
Shah held mother council of war, at which the Ethemad Dooulet
proposed that the King should leave the capital without delay, and
retire to Kasbeen, from whence he could make an appeal to hie
faithful subjects, raise a powerful army, and, returning, reacue
Ispahan from the Afghan invaders. The Walee of Arabii whose
troops had behaved so ill in the last battle, and had been the
cause of the defeat, again held a different opinion, which obtained
with the feeble monarch, who, influenced by traitors and cowards,
blindly consented to his own ruin. He gave the Walee the supreme
command of his army ; but in thus concentrating the power into one
hand he did not succeed in imparting greater unity to the sub-
sequent operations. The successive reverses which overwhelmed
the Persians, instead of opening the eyes of the Shah to the inca-
pacity of his general, served only to increase his absurd caprices,
which always ended in partial defeats, and eventually so decimated
and discouraged his army, that the troop were afraid to expose
themaelves.beyond the walls of the city.
While the Shah Howi n confided the destinies of his empire to
a man so little worthy of tllis trust, Mir Mahmood, though a con-
queror, was a prey to the most cruel anxiety, for the number of
his troops diminished without his having the power to recruit
them; a turn of fortune in favour of the Persians might place
him in a mast critical position ; and at one moment such was
his indecision that he ceased to give any orders to his gene-
rals. Finding that Ispahan did not surrender aRer the victory
he had gained, he was on the point of retiring to Kerman to
reorganize his army; but having been informed of the alarm
which reigned in the city, and that provisions were running
short, his hopes again revived, and another motive arose to dia
suade him from fulfilling hi intention of retreating. In- of
preserving that firmness of demeanour, which will frequently sus-
tain a droopmg cause, instead of energetically battling with his
enemy, the Shah Sultan Hoosein was seen to drag the imperial
purple through the mire, and, following the example of his g c ~
vernor of Kerman, beseech his enemy to accept immense sum
of money to evacuate the Persian territory. I t was evident that
his propition originated in fear and discouragement; and
CHAP. IV. SIEGE OF. ISPAHAN. 47
Mix Mahmood was convinced that he should soon be master of
the city if he persevered in the investment of the place. He
hourly saw the Persian generals committing the grossest faults,
and neglecting to take the mast simple measures for their pre-
servation. He knew that imprudent and ignorant eounsellore gave
the Shah advice which muat infallibly lead to his destruction ; and
all these circumstances determined him to abandon his project of
retreat and press the Persians with additional vigour.
The errors, or rather the treachery, of the Persian nobles,
enabled Mabmood to surround the city by a line of circumvallation,
which it would h v e been impassible to defend with his small army
if the Walee had made the least effort to dislodge him ; but he sent
a succession of feeble detachments against the Afghans, which,
badly directed, failed in every attack. Ferahabad and Djulfa,
abandoned by the Walee, were now taken by assault, and, regard-
less of the heroic resistance of their inhabitants, the general in
chief made not the least demonstration in their favour ; it was
supposed that the fanaticism of this barbarian was gratified by the
ruin oi qul f a, for it was inhabited by Armenian Christians. In
short, the Walee and his troops always moved in the direction
where the enemy was not ; and if he did meet the Afghans, he wss
eure to retreat under some frivolous pretext or other; he boasted
in loud terms, when in presence of the Shah, but always remained
in a state of inaction when he ought to have shown energy and
determination.
Feeling that he was victorious on all pints, Mahmood drew
closer the line of circumvallation in which he held the Persians,
who made not the least attempt to check hi operations : debased
by the tyranny and superstitious bigotry of the court, they became
utterly helpless ; while the Afghans, elated by their success, and
poseessing all the klaa of a people who had recovered their liberty,
fought with the greatest enthusiasm. They carefully guarded the
roads, intercepted the convoys of provisions that endeavoured to
enter the capital, and laid waste the environs with fire and sword,
preserving only what was necessary for themselves; until this
country, hitherto so fertile, became an arid desert on which nothing
d d be seen but the bleached skeletons of men and horses, and
the charred ruins of forsaken villages.
At the cammencement of the war the rural population, harased
and plundered, flocked to the capital, where they were of no use in
the defence, and their presence only increased the scarcity, which
soon became extreme, and many thousands of the famished citizens
of Ispahan let themselves down from the ramparts and fled from
the city, hoping to reach some other province where food was in
abundance. But the Afghans, who closely watched their move-
ments, slaughtered them without remorse, and but a very few
succeeded in effecting their escape; nevertheless the bare possi-
bility of doing so induced crowds of them daily to make t he
hazardous attempt, Heaps of human bodies were seen here and
there wanting the common rights of sepulture, while many more
floated on the surface of the Zendehrood, the tainted waters of
which were no longer fit for the ordinary purposes of life ; and at
length even these did not reach the capital, for the Afghans cut off
the canals which supplied the city ; the tanks were insufficient t o
meet the general consumption, and thirst was superadded to the
pangs of hunger. Provisions of all kincls were soon exhausted ; the
few camels and other beasts of burden which remained were Eold
at so high a price that the great men about t.he court could alone
purchase any animal food ; and the people were reduced to such
extremities that they were compelled to give chase to the mast
unclean animal4 which by their religion they were forbidden not
only to eat, but even to touch. At night the inhabitants of one
quarter made incursions into other parts of the city to search for
provisions supposed to be concealed, and frequent scenes of vio-
lence and bloodshed were the result; for here the father was often
found amed against his son, and brother against brother; al l
affection was banished amongst the members of t.he same family ;
they looked upon each other as deadly enemies, and fought
for the wretched scraps of food they had perchance procured,
At length meat of every kind disappeared, and the trees wem
stripped of their leaves and bark to satisfy the cravings of th-
miserable being$, who, searching the very dunghills and com-
mon sewers, lived upon any soft substance, whatever it might
happen to be, which they found there. Old pieces of leather
were soaked, boiled, and eaten with avidity; the plaster h m
the walls, mixed with sawdust, also offered them another spe-
cies of food which was sometimes the object of angry dispute
even to the death. The population of Ispahan, so healthy, light-
hearted, and rich a few months before, now presented the spectacle
of a mob of attenuated creatures, wan and of a sinister aspect,
CHAP. IV. ABDICATIOS OF SHAH HOOSEIS. 49
scarcely able to drag themselves along the streets and public
places, that were covered with the corpses of their countrymen,
and which, horrible to relate, were sometimes eaten to alleviate
the temble pangs of hunger. Many put an end to their own
existence to avoid these sufferings. Amidst all this appalling
misery the people evinced to the last their devotion to their King,
who txaured them of the speedy arrival of his son Thamasp. This
prince had succeeded in eluding the vigilance of the Afghans,
and gone tu the north of the empire, where he expected to raise
an army and march to the relief of Ispahan; but five months
having elapsed without any tidings of him reaching the capital, its
inhabitants despaired of his return, and besought the Shah to bring
their calamities to a close. This prince, more weak than ill-inten-
tioned, afflicted with the fearful condition of his subjects, determined
to put an end to it ; besides, it was utterly impossible that he could
prolong the defence. All his armies had been destroyed, the
few soldiers t hat remained in Persia were in distant provinces, and
many of them in the interest of ambitious chiefs, who, profiting
by the miserable state of their country, united with each other to
meate an independent power.
Eight months had elapsed from the commencement of the siege,
when, on t he 14th of Sefer, 1135 of the Hejira, and 23rd October,
1722, the Shah Sultan Hoosein left the city, escorted by the great
o5cers of his court, and arrived at the camp of Mir Mahmood,
in whose favour he publicly abdicated the throne, and with all
solemnity delivered to him the sword and crown of the Seffa-
veana, the attributes of his power as monarch of the Persian
empire. The same day the invader took military possession of the
arsenals and other public establishments, but it was not till five
days after that he made his triumphant entry into Ispahan. His
first act was to assign a place of residence to the fallen Shah, and
a su5cient pension to meet his requirements ; his second, to order
a general massacre of the troops remaining within the city, not so
much with a view of taking revenge upon them for the resistance
they had made, as to strike terror into those who, under the command
of the Prince Thamasp, might be tempted to renew the contest.
This massacre continued during three days, after which Mir Mah-
mood ordered it should cease, and occupied himself in restoring
tranquillity and security in the capital. Having very little confi-
dence in the administrative powers of the Afghans, who, up to this
E
50 CONDUCT OF MIR MAHMOOD. CHAP. IV.
period, had never taken part in public affairs, and not daring to
place any faith in the Persians so recently subjected to his rule, the
Mir appointed two officers at the head of each department of the
administration-an Afghan and a Persian ; the former to watch
the latter, and at the same time acquire from him all that it was
useful for hi to know.
The measures taken by Mir Mahmood to protect the vanquished
from insult, the severe discipline he observed in his army, and the
even-handed justice he dealt out to every one, soon acquired for
him the esteem of the Persians. The Persian chiefs, who, traitors
to their king, had furnished him with information during the siege,
he treated with the greatest severity ; he, nevertheless, made an
exception in favour of the \ITalee of Arabia, whose life he spared
in conformity with a vow that he had made so to do if he should
come victorious out of the contest; and in order not to give any
opportunity for a false interpretation tu the motives which dictated
this, he loaded wit11 favours those who had remained faithful to the
fortunes of the Shah Iloosein.
Up to the day on which Mir Mahmood attained a position so
elevated, his conduct was that of a man animated by magnanimous
sentiments ; but, from the time he felt securely wated on the
throne of the Seffiveans, he adopted a line of conduct which tar-
nished the glory of his previous career ; the innate ferocity of the
Afghan, suppressed for a time, soon reassumed its empire over his
mind ; he became suspicious and even cruel towards those who had
served him with the greatest fidelity. But, in spite of his tynmny,
he endeavoured to tranquillie Persia by his judicious administra-
tion, and to extend his dominion over those provinces which had
not recopised his authority. He would, perhaps, have succeeded,
but for the change which had taken place in his character, and
which became every day more and more cruel.
SURRENDER OF KASBEEN.
C HAP T E R V.
The Prince Tharnasp - Mahmood wnds an army againat him - Keabeen sur-
rendem to t he Afghana - Duplicity and c ~ e l t y of the victon, - The inhabitants
take their rev'enge - Defeat of the Afghans - Mahmood is furious at this -
Beconcilintion with Aman Ullah Khan - Mahmood massaorea the Peraian
nobles - Sanguinary scenes in Ispahau - State of the provincee - Prince
Thampep ie proclaimed Shah - Assembles troops in the Aeerbaidjan - The
Tarkn aod Russians seiza upon Armenia and Georgia-State of the Afghan
army - Desertions from Mir Mahmood's ranka - Shiraa besieged - Tyranny of
Mahmood - Mir Echreff appointed to the chief command - The Afghan m y
.
much upon Yezd - Mahmood becomes deranged - Lowee in the Afghan ranks
-The t~wp return to I s p h m - MdRnood in a paroxysm of madness puts to
death the sons of Shah Hocmein - Death of Mahmood - Mir Echreff succeedn
him - He puts the Serdar Ul l ~h Khan to death - Policy of Ruaaia at thin
period - Echreff march- against the Tu r h - Battle nf Kiemereb - Defeat of
the Tu r b - Treaty with the Aighana - Eventa in Afghanistan - The Russianr
take pwesaion of Guilan - Echreff fortifiee the Afghan quarter in Ispahan -
Nadir joins t h e Shah Thamasp - He takes Ninhapoor - Echreff seizae Yezd -
.
Battle between Nadir and Echreff-Defeat of the Afghans-Battle of Bagh
W i e - The Afghans retire from Ispahan - Conflict at the Bend-emir-
Betmat upon Shirae -Destruction of the Afghan m y - Death of Echreff -
Beflections.
Am~a the abdication of his father in 1722, the Prince Thamaiip
Mirza wumed the title of Shah at Kasbeen ; but when Mir Mah-
mood denpatched an army against him, the prince fled at its
approach, and retired into the Azerbaidjan. The inhabitants of
&been, seeing themselves thus abandoned, immediately made
their submission to the Afghans, to whom they gave a most
diendly reception. The invaders reciprocated thia feeling, and
appeared desirous of being on the best terms with them ; but, afier
they had been some time in the town, renewed the scenes of car-
nage which took place at Ispahan, and during three days gave the
reins to their passion for murder and pillage. The Kasbeenians,
Wi that submission had not disarmed the vengeance of their
conquerors, assembled in arms after the first moment of sur-
prise, massacred in their turn nearly half the Afghans, and drove
the remainder from the city. The survivors at once dispersed ;
eome of them regaining ~spahan, while others followed the-Serdar
Aman Ullah Khan, &d Mir Echreff, the cousin of Mahmood.
These two Afghan chiefs had, more than any others, contributed to
E 2
52 hIAHM00n'S ATROCITIES. C a p . 8-
the victories and elevation of the son of Mir Weis ; but Nahmood,
jealous of their popularity, instead of recompensing them for their
services, basely accused them of treachery and threatened them
with death, from which they escaped to Kandahar.
niir Mahmood was highly incensed at the defeat his troops sus-
tained at Kasbeen, and- not less so at the defection of the two
serdars; he was also apprehensive that the Persian nobIes whom
he had retained at his court might attempt to overthrow him or
take his life, and thought, therefore, that, having merely a small
body of t r a ps to make a stand against a general revolt, terror
alone could retain the Persians in obedience. lye11 convinced of
this, he determined upon adopting the most barbarous measures, and,
having succeeded in reconciling himself with Aman Ullah Khan,
turned that circumstance to acmunt by making it the opportu-
nity for holding a great festival. To this he invited all the Persian
dignitaries of rank and other persons of note in Ispahan, who,
anxious to please their new sovereign, and entertaining no suspicion
of his villanous design, accepted his invitation, and arrived at the
palace to the number of one hundred and fourteen, but, instead of
the banquet which they had expected, they found Afghan troops
posted in the royal gardens, who, in conformity with the orders they
had received, put them all to death. This horrible butchery accom-
plished, the soldiers spread themselves over the city, and slaughtered,
to the number of several thousands, the near relatives of the victims,
as well as a great number of syuds and ulemas of' the capital. It
was only when this bloody tragedy had been played out that
Mahmood's fury was temporarily appeased. Two days after, five
hundred youths, of the first families in the kingdom, and who
within the walls of their colleges had escaped this massacre, were
taken from thence into the country, and hunted down like deer, the
Afghans piercing them through with their jereeds as they fled
terror-stricken across the plain. Not long after, three thousand
Persians, who had taken service in the tyrant's army, experienced
a similar fate; they were suddenly attacked at a banquet which
he gave them, and, being unarmed, were exterminated to a mau.
Finally, he put to death every Persian who had held any em-
ployment or received any favours from thc Shah's government.
These horrible proceedings, which lasted dqi ng a month, plunged
all the first families of the country into the depths of despair, and
denuded Ispallan of half its population ; the carnage subsequently
CHAP. V. STATE OF THE AFGHAN ARMY. 53
extended itself to the provinces, and murder, pillage, and desola-
0
tion reigned on all sides.
At length the cruelties of 3Iir Mahmood became a species of
madness, but the Persians, utterly debased, did not attempt to
deliver themselves from his frightful tyranny. I n the midst of
these sanguinary scenes they lay prostrate a t the feet of him who
had but yesterday deprived them of a father, a brother, a son, or a
friend, and, while waiting till they received the Eame fate at his
hands, were vile and degraded enough to submit to be used as the
instruments of his ferocious nature. But the torrents of blood thus
shed brought no sense of security to Mir 3Ialimood, and his posi-
tion was certainly well calculated to inspire him with uneasiness.
Tharnasp JIirza had recently been acknowledged Shah by the
population of Azerbaidjan, and a party which began to be powerful
in that province had pronounced in his favour, and threatened to
march, at no distant date, upon Ispahan. On the other hand, the
Turks and the Russians, taking advantage of the distracted state
of Persia, had seized upon Armenia, Georgia, Guilan, Kurdistan,
and a part of Irak, and made 'further dispositions for advancing
towards the south. The army of Mahmood numbered only at this
time a few thousand Afghans ; it is true, their name alone was in
itself sufficient to make the conquered tremble ; but the ranks
of these hardy and ferocious soldiers were daily thinned, and every-
thing indicated that they would not be able to resist the storm
which was gathering against them in the north.
All these considerations, and the retirement of Mir Echreff, a
chief beloved by the troops, led to much desertion amongst the
Afghans ; the most devoted servants and the nearest relatives of RIir
Mahmood fled from the effecta of his tyranny, and he soon found
himself isolated in the midst of his court. In this extremity he
recruited his army with Kurds, who, as well as the Afghans, were
Soonees, thinking that he could rely more upon them than upon
the Persians, who were of the hostile sect of Shiahs. He thus raised
a new army, with which, in 1724, he took possession of several
districts in Irak and Fars, though Shiraz, the capital of the latter
province, did not surrender until it had stood a siege of eight
months and suffered all the horrors of famine.
But the Afghan nation were not dazzled by these successes.
Nahmood never regained their confidence, and such was the irn-
pression his actions had produced that the reinforcements he had
54 MADNESS AND DEATH OF MAHMOOD. CHAP. V.
.
haughtily demanded from Kandahar arrived but tardily, and
amounted only to the tenth part of what he anticipated, for no one
would serve a prince who had delivered them &om the Persian yoke
only to impose a more cruel and despotic tyranny of his om. The
Serdar Mir Echreff was at the head of these troops, and they
insisted t h t he should be c o n b e d in his command as the abso-
lute condition of their services. Mir Mahmood the more readily
complied with this request, because, having been abandoned by
his principal officere, the cooperation of his cousin had become an
absolute necessity for him, not only to direct the military opera-
tions, which, by reason of his bad state of health, he was unable to
,
conduct, but also to retain in Persia, through his influence, many
Afghans who would otherwise have left the country. On the
arrival of this reinforcement Mir Mahmood marched upon Yezd,
which he attempted to seize, but he was not fortunate in this
enterprise. He issued orders to his troops which it was impos-
sible to execute, and derangement of his intellectual faculties
was clearly manifested upon this occasion ; his eccentricities were
very nearly causing a revolt in hi army, which, indignant at
the losses it had sustained without obtaining any corresponding
success, obliged him to raise the siege and return to Ispahan.
This check soured and excited him, and his irascible nature
was still more aggravated by the unreasonable demands of his
officers, who were supported by the troops. Alarmed also at the
progress of Thamasp Mirza, the Russians, and the Turks, and a
prey to remorse, his mind was filled with visions of his victims
ready to torment him, so that he abandoned hiiself to super-
stitious devotion in the most exaggerated form; he shut him-
self up in a subterraneouj cell, observing the strictest fast, and
when, at the end of two months, he left this retreat, he was in such
a state that he could scarcely be recognised. Livid, emaciated,
and his features contracted, he seemed to dread the light of day,
and reappeared more fearful and more cruel than ever ; haunted by
the darkest suspicions, gloomy and taciturn, he shuddered at the a p
proach of his best friends, dreading to find in every one an assassin.
During one of the paroxysms of his disease he was informed
that the sons of the Shah Sultan Hoosein had made an attempt to
escape, when, trembling with rage at this intelligence, he ordered
them all to be brought into his presence, and, drawing his poiguard,
put thirty-one of them to death with his own hand. Their unfor-
CHAP. V. ACCESSION OF MIR ECHHEFF. 55
tunate father, hearing their cries, broke through the guards, and,
rushing to the scene of carnage, endeavoured to protect them at
the risk of his own life ; a blow from Vahmood's dagger wounded
him in the arm, and the sight of his blood alone d l e d the Mir
to himself, and induced him to spare two of the princes, still very
young, the only ones that escaped from this fearful massacre. His
insania was at length complete : to this were added an attack of
paralysis, a pamful disease of the intestines, and want of sleep, and
in this condition he sometimes tore pieces of flesh from his body,
and devoured them. His mother, as some say, in despair at his
sufferings--or Rlir Echreff, as others affirm, to obtain the power to
which he was called by the general wish of the Afghans--ordered
him to be smothered under the cushions of his own divan ; his re-
mains were thrown to the jackals. But whoever gave the order for
the death of IIahm~~d, it is certain that this prince was still alive
when the Afghans acknowledged Jlir Echreff a s their sovereign.
The antecedents of this young soldier and his brilliant qualities,
in no way inferior to those of his predecessor during the first years
of hii reign, raised great hopes of him in the minds of his subjects.
Accordingly, he applied himself earnestly to the task of mitigating
the misery inflicted by his relative, and expressed publicly the
horror he felt at the merciless deeds which had rendered the very
name of Afghan odious ; he paid the greatest honours to the re-
mains of the sons of the Shah Sultan Hoosein by magnificent
funeral rites, at the close of which he declared to the assembled
Afghan and Persian nobles that he devoted the memory of Mah-
mood to the execration of future ages. In short, he did everything
in his power to attach the Persians to his interests, and beatowed
favours upon them, even to the detriment of the Afghans. The
latter were not long in perceiving that they had chosen a master
who was quite determined to take every advantage of the power
they had j u t placed in his hands, for his first act was to put the
Serda.r Aman Ullah Khan to death. This brave but ambitious
general of Mir Nahmood, as well as several other chiefs, had done
everything to prevent his election, and he was also suspected of
holding a secret correspondence with Shah Thamasp. No real
crime could be imputed to them, but Mir Echreff thought their deaths
necessary to his security. He confiscated to his own profit the
wealth which they had acc~imulated during the conquest of Persia,
and this enabled him to meet the immediate necessities consequent
6G THE RUSSIANS AND TURKS. CHAP. V.
upon his succession and the embarrassments that met him on all
sides.
Echreff entertained no delusions on the difficulty of his position.
I t was evident that he must put an end to the divisions amongst his
own people, and obtain the confidence of the Persians ; he had also
to repel the invasion of the Russians, who had seized upon the
Guilan ; that of the Turks, already masters of Georgia, the h e r -
baidjan, Kurdistan, and part of Irak ; and finally to subdue the
party of Thamasp Mirza, which had been organised in the south of
the Azerbaidjan and the Mazandcran. This prince was the only
one of the three surviving sons of the Shah IIoosein, who was then
in possession of his liberty : by the abdication of his father he con-
sidered himself King of Persia, and had, as Shah, treated with the
Russian and Turkish governments. To the fint he had promised
the cession of the provinces bordering on the Caspian ; and to the
second, the countries they hCd already seized, on condition that they
assisted him in regaining the throne of his fathers. Agreeably to
the terms of this treaty, which accorded so well with the views of
territorial aggrandizement projected by the remarkable sovereign
who then reigned in Russia, the army of Peter the Great disem-
barked in the Guilan, and there established itself; and as every-
thing denoted that the Russian generals did not intend to leave the
positions they had taken up, Echreff turned his fint efforts against
the Turks. I n his endeavours to establish peace he a t first tried
what he could effect by negotiation, offering to make great sacrifices
to obtain that result. But the Sultan, Ahrned Khan, seeing the
state of anarchy that reigned in Persia, determined to retain the
provinces already mentioned ; the negotiations, therefore, were
broken off, and he ordered Ahmed Pasha, the lJTalee of Bagdad,
and Hoosein Pasha, the \Valee of Mosul, with the troops under their
command, to converge first 011 Kermanshah, and afterwards to
concentrate them on Hamadan. These two towns were already
occupied by detachments of the Turkish army under the orders of
Abdul Rahman Pasha The Walee of Bagdad, who had the com-
mand in chief, was instructed to send a flag of truce to Mi r
Echreff directly his army had assembled at Hamadan, and impera-
tively demand that the Shah Hoosein and his sons, at this time
imprisoned in the fort of Teberruk, at Ispahan, should be set at
liberty. He was also to insist upon the immediate evacuation of
the Per s i a territory by the Afghans, as well as the restitution of
CEAP. V. ECHREFF DEFEATS !I'HE TURKS. 67
all the treasure they had laid their hands on during their occupation.
The rejection of any one of these conditions was to be followed by
a declaration of war.* And in this manner the matter terminated,
for the Turkish envoy was unable to come to any understanding
with Mir Echreff. Ahmed Pasha took the field with an army of
60,000 men and 70 pieces of artillery, and marched direct upon
Lspahan. Echreff met him about four day%' march from the capital,
h& army not b e i i half as numerous as that of the Turke, and-very
ill provided with artillery. A battle was fought at Kiemereh, a
town situated between Ispahan and Boroodjird, and the victory was
for a long time undecided, but at length the Turks were routed,
leaving 12,000 men upon the field, and 50 pieces of cannon ; the
baggage also fell into-the hands of the ~ f ~ h a n s . Echreff showed
h i e l f as great after the victory as he had been reasonable and
moderate during the negotiations, and, retaining only the arms,
returned all the booty his soldiers had made to the Turks. To
Ahmed Pasha he write that he could not consider as legitimate
spoils of war the plunder he had taken from misguided Mussulmans ;
that hi greatest desire was to live in peace with his brethren ; that
he trusted the Sultan would not again disturb him in the possession
of a throne which he had taken from heretics, and to whichhe had an
incontestable right by every law, human and divine. This generous
conduct, and the cession to the Turks of the districts of Tauriq
Zinguian, Sultanieh, Tefrich, Ferahane, Kezaz, Kur di sh, Loo-
rista11, and Koozistan, as well as admitting the religious supremacy
of the Sultan, which Mir Echreff engaged to acknowledge in future,
induced the Turks to make peace. This he ardently desired, for he had
to contend with immeasurable difficulties ; and in these negotiations
with the Turks, as well as his conduct in the field, Echreff displayed
the talents of a consummate diplomatist and a first-rate general.
He obtained from Turkey the formal recognition of hi right to the
throne of Persia : and the year following, the Sultan ~ h me d Khan
sent Reshid Pasha to congratulate the Afghan chief on his accea-
Bion to the throne. Echreff ahrwards sent Mohamed Khan, a
Abdullah Khan, the historian of in the only earrtern authority which
Herat, remarkn in his manuscript, that records the death of the Shah Sultan
&hreffwas M, thoroughly indignant at Hooaein as having taken place at thia
the insolence of thin m q e , that im- epoch, I thought it right to mention
medistely aftar the I-eceipt of it he the circumntance in a note, adopting
ordered the Shah Hooaein and hin sons myself the opinion more generally ac-
to be beheaded in the presence of the credited.-Femim.
Turkish envoy; but as Abdullah Khan
68 EVEN'I'S IN AFGHANISTAN. Chap. V.
Beloochee, to acknowledge the compliment, and he was received at
Gnstantinople with great honours.
In consequence of the treaty thus concluded between Echreff and
the Sultan, the Prince Thamasp was left to his own resources ; and
when the Turks entered the Azerbaidjan he evacuated that pro-
vince, followed by a few devoted adherents. Subsequently to this
he again took @on of Kasbeen and Teheran, and in these
cities he resided alternately ; but no sooner had Echreff got rid of
the Turks than he marched against and completely defeated the
Prince, forcing him to retire into the Mazanderan. Nevertheless
the troop of Thamasp refused to surrender Kasbeen and Teheran
to the victor, who, called to Ispahan by the urgency of his affairs,
leR an army to prosecute the sieges under the command of the
Serdar Seidel Khan Nassaree, who soon reduced these citiea
While Echreff was courageously fighting in Persia to establish
his power, he lost his hold upon Kandahar, which remained defini-
tively in the hands of l l i r Hoosein, a brother of Mir Mahmood,
whom he had endeavoured to overthrow by an intrigue. In the
Seistan, the governor Rlalek Mahmood, a descendant of the ancient
Persian sovereigns, had taken the title of king, and subsequently
seized upon the greater part of Khorassan. Herat had acknow-
ledged his authority for many years past, so that the Afghans were
driven out in this direction. These changes were the cause of
further complications amongst the chiefs, between whom there was
already anything but a good understanding.
I t was, therefore, evident to Echreff that there was no hope of
hi being aseiated by his own nation, and that for the future he
could reckon only upon those who had, up to this time, followed
his fortunea. He now saw, without much regret, the W i
masters of the Guilan ; and when he was convinced that the posses-
sion of that province would satisfy their ambition, and that they had
no intention of disturbing him in Irak, he determined to act with
the utmost energy in the East, where his affairs were much em-
barrassed ; but before leaving Ispahan he ordered the quarter in
which the Afghans resided to be enclosed with high and thick walls,
within which they would be secure against all the vicissitudes of
war. Shah Thamaap, on the other hand, made every effort to
recover the throne of the Seffavyes, and had the good fortune to
secure the services of one of those extraordinary men that Nature
produces only at long intervals. Nadir, subeequently Nadir Shah,
Cur. V. ECHREFF MARCHES AGAINST NADIR. 60
a powerfirl robber-chieftain, offered his services to the eon of the
Shah Sultan Hooeein, who accepted them with eagerness The
military reputation of Nadir, to which was now added the autho-
rity derived from his position as commander-in-chief of the troops
of the legitimate king, attracted numerous partisans to hie camp,
and he soon saw himself at the head of a large and welldisciplined
army inspired by his own peculiar and energetic impulses.
During the years 1726 and 1727 Nadir employed himeelf in
reconquering that part of Khorassan which Malek Mahmood, the
Prince of Seistan, had seized, and also in taking Herat ; after which
he marched towards Mazanderan, that he might, in concert with
his sovereign, adopt some plan for driving the Afghans from the
kingdom. The capture of the city of Nishapoor, and the slaughter
of 3000 Afghans, was the prelude to this enterprise. After this
he dislodged successively all the Afghan garrinons in Khommn,
and drove them from post to post, until they had entirely evacuated
this province, which soon acknowledged, and to the fullest extent,
the authority of the Shah Thamasp
While Nadir was t h ~ occupied, Mir Echreff seized upon Yezd,
which had resisted the arms of Mir Mahmood: but the conquest
was dearly bought, for he there lost hi tried and veteran soldiers, the
elite of his army. This was indeed a great misfortune, and,
aggravated by the fact that, Mir Hoosein having declared himself
independent in Kandahar, he was unable to fill up the casualties
in his m y with Akhans, who were no longer anxious to take
service under him. Ki Echreff was, therefore, constrained to
recruit his m y with Persians, and march without further delay
againet Nadir, whose victorious battalions were daily augmented
by Inen eager t o deliver their country, and take a deep ~ v q e for
the odious tyranny under which they had groaned for six years.
hjir Echreff had never been in such a critical position, and the
measurea of g re caution which he took to protect his rear plainly
showed the disquietude he felt; his soldiers participated in this
feeling, they had lost all confidence in themselvee, and it was under
such apprehensions that they moved forward to meet the enemy.
Shah Thamasp, impatient to recover his capital, was desirous that
Nadir should march in all haste on Ispahan; but the prudent
@- respectfully but firmly declined to comply with his withes,
Convinced that such a movement would be inopportune. Nadir felt
confident that, if he kept hi t roop fresh, it would be easy for him
SO BATTLE BETWEEN X'ADIR AND ECHREFF. CEA~. V.
to beat the Afghans, if they attacked him after a long forced march,
exhausted by privations and fatigue. I n acting thus he also had
the advantage of choosing the ground on which he intended t o give
battle without removing from Bfazanderan. The population of this
province was entirely devoted to Shah Thamasp, and he could there-
fore, in caee of a reverse, effect his retreat in all security across the
mountains, which offered at every step admirable positions for
defence.
The army of Echreff numbered 30,000 men, scarcely the half of
which, at the utmost, were Afghans, and on coming up with the forces
of the enemy he found them entrenched in a well-chosen position on
some small hills selected by Nadir. The Afghans, never havku
seen the Persians hold their ground, were anxious to attack at once ;
but Echreff, who had a higher opinion of his adversaries, repressed,
perhaps inopportunely, this impulse, which might have given him
the victory, and remained several days in a state of inaction. It
was only when it became impossible for him to obtain supplies that
he decided upon giving his adversary battle, and on the 23rd of
Reby'-i-ul akher, 6th of November, 172 8, he took up a poition in
front of his army Echelloned from hloomineabad to Boordj-meyq
or Meimandoos. The latter place is situated about seven miles east
of the town of Damghan, having the village of Naimabad on the
west, and at the same distance from the village of Deh Bfollah. The
attack commenced along the whole line ; but the Persians received
it with great steadiness, and, perfectly cool, waited till the enemy
had advanced within half musket-shot before they poured i n their
fire. The Afghans fought with the courage and savage energy that
was natural to them and the confidence of men accustomed to
conquer; but they were unable to make any impression upon their
adversaries. Echreff, surprised at a resistance to which his troops
were not accustomed, attempted to destroy Nadir's order of battle
by turning his left flank ; but the Persian commander, perceiving
his intention, formed his infantry into squar q and routed in detail
with his cavalry EchrefPs detachments, after which, leading the
mass of his forces against the Afghan reserves, he put them to flight.'
Abdullah Khan &tea there were that this sovereign held them in great
ten French oficers, for the moat part consideration, gave them the absolute
belonging to the artillery, serving in nutliority over his troops, md that he
the Persian m y , and that hie father, owed the greater portion of hie succeen
who was placed by Nadir under their to the faithful support which they gave
special ordem, had frequently told him him.-Ferrier.
CHAP. V. DEFEAT OF AFGHANS. 61
.
The Nir's troops performed, indeed, prodigies of valour ; but they
were unable to rally, and left 12,000 of their comrades on the field
of battle. The Persians, who lost only 3000 men, followed the
retreating enemy and came up with them at the defile of Khar,
called aLw by the Persians Tingui-serdaree.. Here the Afghans
rallied and renewed the fight ; but they were again defeated, and
abandoned all their baggage to the victors-Nadir himself was
wounded in this second engagement. The distance from the
defile of Khar to Teheran is forty-five miles, and the remnants
of the Afghan army reached that city in one day; they subee-
quently pressed on to Ipsahan with all speed, spreading alarm,
desolation, and death on their route. On their arrival there they
hastened, with their families and their treasure, into the fortreis
which Echreff had constructed in the centre of the city ; but after
having conMed its defence to a garrison of picked men, the Afghan
commander again took the field with his remaining troops, con-
sisting of Afghans, Tartars, Kurds, and Ghebers, in all 20,000
men, marched to the north of Ispahan, and at a spot twenty-four
miles from thence took up a position on a table-land in advance,
and to the north-east of the village of Rfoortchekhor. There he
waited for the Persians, over whom he still hoped to prove his
~uperiority in arms. The Afghans were posted between the village
and a trench which they had thrown up in front of their camp in
the form of a demi-lune, their right resting on a watercourse and
their left on a caravanserai difficult to take. Seeing them in so
good a position, Nadir did not think it advisable to attack imme-
diately : he wished to refresh his troops, and for this purpose pitched
his camp about two miles west of the high road and round the
village of Bagh-mirane. The reconnaissancee which he ordered to
be made on the Afghan camp having satisfied him that it could not
be carried in front, he determined to turn the position, and taking
adrantage of a dark night, which occurred three days after his
arrival, he found himselfat the near approach of day in the rear of
the Afghans, separated from them only by the village. Fortune,
which favoured him at all points, again declared for him, for
a violent wind arose and drove clouds of dust in the faces of
This apot is cited by several travellers, and with reason, aa being the Caapian
F'yles.-~rrria.
62 . DESTRUCTION OF AFGHAN ARMY. CHAP. V.
the Afghans, and, favoured by this circumstance, Nadir fell upon
them with the same intrepidity and vigour which he had already
displayed. The enemy, in despair, maintained an obstinate re-
sistance ; but they had to do with men flushed with recent victories,
which gave them the solidity of old soldiers. If the Afghans fought
to preserve their conquest and their lives, the Persians were ani-
mated by the remembrance of the injuries they had suffered, and
were burning to avenge. The village was at length carried, and
aherwards the entrenchments, in defending which 4000 Afghans
found a soldier's death. The survivors retreated in disorder to
Ispahan, where each of them collected in the course of the night
his most valuable effects, and at daybreak, accompanied by their
wives and children, mounted on mules and camels, fled southward.
Mir Echreff, furious at his reverses, put the Shah Sultan Hoosein
and his two sons to death, and in a gloomy and savage mood was
the last Afghan that left the walls of Ispahan. He carried with
him all his treasures and jewels, and, with 12,000 horsemen still
under his command, directed his course on Shiraz, from which city
he hoped again to reassume the offensive agminst the Persians ; but
Nadir did not allow Echreff time to reorganise his army, and after
a few days' repose he was once more on foot, intending, if p h b l e ,
to force him to evacuate the province of Fars. The Afghans ad-
vanced to meet the enemy as far as Peulee Khan, a bridge over the
Bendemir, ten miles south of Persepolis, and disputed with tenacity
and fury the pasmge of that river; but they were again defeated
and retired to Shiraz in the greatest confusion. Nadir doggedly
pursued them step by step, invested the city, and informed the
beleaguered host that, if Echreff was not delivered up to him
within fortyeight hours, he would put every soldier to death,
and with torture. The Afghans agreed to his conditions, on ascer-
taining which the Mir prepared for flight, and, accompanied by two
hundred brave men who remained faithful to hi fallen fortunes, cut
his way sword in hand through the investing army, taking in hot
haste the road to Afghanistan-a portion of his m y fell under the
swords of the Persians, who gave their adversaries no quarter, and
the remainder dispersed. As to Echreff, he was so rapidly pursued
that he was obliged to abandon his baggage and treasure to avoid
being made prisoner : hi followers, seeing that they could no longer
be of the least' service, left him. When he reached the S e i i ,
CHAP. V. DEATH OF ECHREFF - REFLECTIONS. 63
he had only two servants with him, and they, as well as the Mir,
fell by the hand of Abdullah Khan, a Belooch chief, who Bent his
head and two large brilliants which were found on him to the
Shah Tha r na s ~. ~
Thus terminated the dominion of the Afghans in Persia
If any
individual was capable of maintaining it for a longer period, it was
certainly Hi r Echreff, who to extraordinary courage united great
talenta of every kind ; but the elements on which his power rested
were too unstable for it to be possible that he could eventually
come forth victorious from the conflict which arose between himself
and the robber chieftain. This extraordinary invasion of Persia
ended in the extermination of all those who had taken part in it-
a just retribution for the crimes and atrocities with which they had
sullied their cause. During the seven years that the Afghans held
Persia, that empire lost more than a third of its population ; the
soil remained without cultivation, the canals and watercourses for
irrigation were dried up, and the greater portion of the public
buildings completely destroyed. The invaders had to contend
against a people enervated, effeminate, and devoid of every senti-
ment of honour and national feeling; they triumphed, there-
fore, by an obstinate determination to succeed, and, in spite of their
inferiority in numbers, they did so. Such examples are, it is true,
rare in history ; but the Afghans were better qualified to fight than to
govern. To appropriate, wherever they went, and without any reason
or pretext whatsoever, money or money's worth, was their practice ;
revolts and disturbances naturally ensued, and necessitated the
employment of a large army. They were in the end weak-
ened by twenty combats, and found it impossible to recruit in
Afghanistan, except in the small and scarcely organised state of Kan-
dahar, which ceased to provide them with further reinforcements ;
they were, therefore, obliged to admit foreign soldiers within their
ranks, whose fidelity was at least doubtful, and who rarely acted
with vigour ; but they maintained themselves seven years in Persia,
much more by the terror which their first victories and their cruelty
inspired, than by the material means at their disposal. If Echreff
vanquished the Turks, it was becanse he had the support of the
Sereral Eastern authors contradiat thin mount, and rssert that Echreff
died of dbmae.- Perrier.
64 REFLECTIONS. CHAP. V.
Persians, who detested them much more than they did the Afghans,
and served voluntarily against them ; but directly Nadir appeared,
this unreal and unstable dominion was dissolved and overthrown in
four successive battles. Shunned and dreaded everywhere for their
turbulence and barbarity, they were repulsed on all sides, and found,
.with great difficulty, an asylum or even a shelter in those desert
wastes ; the greater number of them were tracked like wild beasts,
and killed like them, or perished from misery and hunger, and it
- is doubtful whether more than a few hundred Afghans ever returned
to their own country.
CHAP. TI. XADIR TAKES IIERAT AST) FI'RRATI.
h'adir taka Hernt and Furrah - Marches upon Kandahar in 1 i 3 i -Admirable
defenoe by the Qhildjzyes -Mir Hoosein cnpitulates- Nadir reduces Afghanistan
- Hi s policy in t hat country -Insurrection of the Afghane after the death of
Sadir Shah - Expulsion of the Persians- Ahmed Khan Suddozye elected
King - Hrdji Djemal Khan - Revolt of the Serdarn - Naeaer Khan surrenders
Kabul and Peahnwur- Ahmed Shah marches againat Lahore - Hayat Ullirh
Khan obtains t he neaietance of the Mogul Emperor- Admirnble tactics of
Ahmed Shah - I'as~age of the Tchexlab - Ahmed Shah takes Lahore - Makun
a treaty with t he Mogul Emperor - Revolt at Knndahar - Execution of the
conspirators - Ahmed Shnh advancea into Khoraeaan - Siege of Herat -
Defence of t he citadel by Emir Khan - Timoor >firm marches agninet Menhed
-Defeat of t he Khorminn chief^ in that city -Meshed relieved by Shah
Rokh - Defeat of Mir Alem - Ahmed Shah retires from Meshed - Beaieges
Xiehnpoor - Is obliged to retreat - Disasters of the Afghan m y - Pmeage of
the Heri-rood -The remainder of t he army arrive at Hercrt- Ahmed Shah
reaches h d a h a r .
IT not having been our intention to write a history of Persia, we
shall not follow Nadir Shah in hi wars with the Turks and other
nationalities under the Persian rule, but proceed at once to speak
of his campaigns in Afghanistan.
Afkr the victory at Shiraz Nadir reconquered in succession all
the Persian provinces which had become detached from the empire.
In the year 1730 he seized upon Herat, that city having revolted
from his authority ; hc also took Funah, a strong axid very im-
portant fortress, situated about one hundred and forty miles south
.
of the first-mentioned place ; but he did not extend his conquests on
that side, arid it was only aRer having obtained several fresh vic-
tories over the Turks, and imprissned Thamasp, that he placed the
crown of the Seffavyes on his brow. I n 1737 he marched on Kan-
dahar at the head of 100,000 men without meeting any resistance on
his road, for the inhabitants submitted to his authority or fled at
his approach. Nevertheless the population of the city, which had
been considerably augmented by the influx of persons whom his
victorious march had driven into it, prepared to resist the Persian
invader.
Mir EIoosein Khan, who was still in command there, reminded
the Ghildjzyes of the struggle they had made for their indepen-
dence, their victories over the Persians, and their conquest of that
(;I; SIK(3E OF KAXDAHAII. CHAP. VI.
coiir~try ; and, being eloquent as well as brave, he easily succeeded
in exciting them to make a spirited defence. The position of h-
dahar was at this time very strong, the city being situated a t the
foot of a rocky mountain which flanked it on the north and eaqt :
innumerable stone towers, connected by curtains, surrounded it, and
followed the sinuosities of the mountain, the summit of which was
occupied by a fort, believed to be impregnable, and commanding
the citadel, placed half way between it and the city. Nadir Shah,
against whom no resistance had as yet been offered, was obliged to
halt before these obstacles, to which art had crlso added all that
could render the defence effectual. Despairing of being able to
take the city by assault, he establidicd a strict blockade, hoping to
reduce the garrison by famine ; but it was in vain that he enclosed
Kandahar within a double wall, between which his soldiers were
sheltered from attacks both from within axid without; a year and
a half elapsed without his having obtained the least advantage
against the city-however, he was more successful towards the
country, for his detacliments brought the whole of the environs
under submission. JYlien, therefore, he was master of the province,
he resolved to carry tlie place, and ordered a general assault. The
preparations for this had been most formidable, the bravery and devo-
tion of the troops admirable, but, aRer a furious and desperate
conflict of two days' duration, Kandahar was not only not taken,
but not one of the advanced works was carried, though several
attacks against them had been made. A feeling of discourage-
ment begari to pervade tlie Persian army, when a newly-raised corps,
of the tribe of tlie Bakhtyarees, which had already distinguished
itself on several occasions by its firm and courageous bearing, ob-
tained an advantage which raised the hopes of the rest of the troops,
and induced them to redouble their efforta Though received with
a storm of bullets, this gallant band had succeeded, by climbing the
almost perpendicular rocks and clinging to their projections, in
reaching a little plateau, from whence they were enabled to carry
several towers on the north side of the mountain. Into these t h q
managed, simply with ropes and their own strong arms, to raise
some pieces of artillery, which opening their fire upon all the
other towers, a breach was made, and in six hours tlie Bakhty-
arees were in possession of them; the town and citadel were
therefore obliged to surrender at discretion. Mir H m i n Khan
retreated into the fort on the summit of the mountain, where
CHAP. VI. XADIR'S POLICY Ih' AFC;IIASISTAS. O i
he successfully resisted eve4 attack, and might still have made a
protracted defence had it not been for the generosity of Nadir, who
pmmised to spare his life, and give him high rank in his own army.
This noble offer led to a capitulation, and Mir Hoosein afterwards
became sincerely attached to the Persian invader, and one of his
favourite generala
Ol~ce master of Kandahar, the Persian monarch took measures
to consolidate hi power, and, with a view of preventing the in-
habitants from again offering a similar resistance, which their
bravery, their meam of defence, and the strength of the place
might tempt them to do, he dismantled the fortifications, and trans-
ferred the population to a new town which he built during the
blockade at about a gunshot from the old city. But the new one
was scarcely inhabited fifieen years, for immediately Ahmed Shah
Suddozye came to the throne he built a third city, about one mile
and a half further east, when the city of Nadir was deserted.
To the conquests of Herat and Kandahar Nadir was not long
in pining that of Kabul, and thus became master of the whole of
Qhanistan. By great political ability, and more especially by
the generous manner in which he treated the people and their
chiefs, he completely secured their good will, and raised a contin-
gent of 16,000 horse in that country. They were recruited
amongst those who could claim descent from the Abdalees and
the Ghildjzyes, twelve thousand being taken from the former
tribe, and four from the latter : the chiefs of these tribes, to the
number of ten, namely, eight Abdalees and two Ghildjzyes, had
the command of these t rdps, the command in chief being given
to Noor Mohamed Khan Alizye, one of them. This body of men
accompanied Nadir Shah in all hi expeditions, and ~ i c i p a t e d
powerfully in the successes and glory of that conqueror. They
rendered him more especially a signal service, and certainly mved
his army from complete destruction, when, on his return from India,
he was engaged with the enemy in the mountains beyond Peshawur,
and h a r d on all sides by the Khyberrees. The Persian con-
queror was in a most critical position on that occasion, and extri-
cated himself only by paying a large sum of money by way of toll
to the mountaineers who closed the defiles against him. I n short,
thig contingent of the Abdalees and Ghildjzyes showed so much
devotion to Nadir, and rendered him such important services, that
he at length re fed them to his own troops, which led to great
F .!
I
CH ISSUIIRECTIOS OF THE ,4FGEUS5. CHAP. IT.
jealousies on the part of the Persians and when Nadir was ass
sinated in 1747, they gave vcrit to their resentment, and attacked
this favoured corps with fury. Being ve ~y inferior in numbew
the Afghans were obliged to consult their own safety by a prompt
retreat, and returned to their country under their own ammander
Noor Ilohamed Khan, but thcy immediately took measures t o deli-
ver themselves from thc Persian yoke, by no means a difficult task,
for, after h'adir's death, anarchy reigned in every part of the empire.
The serdars who had served in the Persian army were, as we
have already remarked, ten in nunibcr. Ahmcd Khan Suddoq-e,
descended in a direct line fro111 Sudoo, who had been ambasador
to 8h;lh Abbns the Great, was the most noble a n l o n e them;
and IInclji Djemal Khan Afohamedzye, lineally descendtd from
Moliamed, a comp~nion of Sudoo in t l ~at embassy, was the most
influential. Expericncc had clearly demonstrated to all thtw
chiefs that the divisio~ls anlongst themsr4ves, much more than the
power of tllcir cnemics, liad, up to that pcriod, brought them under
the subjection of the various invaders of their muntry ; and they
swore therefore to remain btrietly united, and adjourned for one
month the rolnplction of the code of laws which thcy had dctc.r-
mined to give to their nation.
After the return of the Afghan contingent to Kandahar, they
remained SOIIIC daj s in the enjoyment of those social and family ties
to which tliry liad been for so long a time strangers, and their tur-
bulent spirit3 took solne repose ; but whether from a disco~itented
feeling towards their chief, or intrigues which led them to rebel
against him, they witl~drcr the chief cornniand from Noor hiohamcd
Khan, giving as a reason that his origin was not sufficiently noble.
After the fall of this perzonage the principal serdars of the Abdalee
and Gliil(1jzye t r i l ~ s asernbled in the tomb of Sheik Seurk,
situated in the village of Nadir-abad, now Kichk-nookhood, t hi r e-
five miles from I i a~~dahar , to dreidc upon the best method of
organising a regular governnient in zlfglianistan. At this meet-
ing it was agreed that a fusion of their nation with the Persians
wns henceforward irnposible-that thry ought to elect a chief
taken from amongbt tlicnisclves, who should be obeyed in all thm
and =isted in giving that unity of purpose to all military opera-
tions, and the civil administration, without uliicli there was no
chance for them to preserve their independence. This proposition
was not agreed to without delay, and more cspccially without g ml t
difficulty ; each tribe was anxious to advance the claims of its own
candidate for the throne, and the $ood understanding between the
chie& who represented the tribes was far from being impreswd with
sentiments of a conciliatory or unswlfish character. Ahmed Khan
Suddozye, whose family lived at IIerat, where he enjoyed great
consideration, was present at eight of these tumultuous asjemblies,
and had listened attentively to all that had been said without offer-
ing one word on the important questions which had becn discussed.
The dervish who had the care of the tomb of Sheik Seurk, and
whose opinion was a l ~ a y s rcccived with respect, had remarked the
rwrved manner of Ahmed Khan, and the holy man, wearied with
the interminable discussions and repetitions which had taken place
during several days at these meetings, adviscd their breaking up
the conference a t once. " IYhy all this verbose talk ? " said hc to
the serdars ; " God has created Ah~ned Khan a much greater man
than any of you ; he is of the most noble of all the Afghan families.
Maintain, therefore, God's work, for his wrath will weigh hcabily
upon you if you destroy it." After having pronounced thcse ~ o r d s
in a most energetic manner, he took a handful of barley from an
adjoining field, and, having formed it into a wreath, placed it on
the head of Ahmed Khan, adding, " aud may this serve as your
diadem." IXadji Djemal Khan, the most powerful of the serdars
present at this meeting, and who appeared to have the greatest
number of votes, immediately withdrew his pretensions in favour of
Ahmed Khan, and supported his election with all the weight of
hiis persuasive eloquence--conduct that obtained for him the general
w t of the Afghans. The serdars, seeing that he who would
tcrtainly have been chosen their sovereign wos ~o disinterested,
followed the example thus given them ; but they separated well
mnvince(1 that Ahmed Khan, who had been the most silent of them
all, had alm been the most clrver in not allowing his claim to be
advanced till the last moment, when the diversity of opinions had
wearied the meeting, and, above all, in having these qualifications
brought forward by a third person, which made him appear modest
and disinterested, when they wc.11 knew he was neither the one nor
the other.
Ahmcd Khan, who t wk the titlc of Shah, was crowned in the
mosque at Kandahar towards thc close of the year 1747, when
there were great rejoicings, which were prolonged during several
weeks. The ceremony of his coronation was of the most simple
70 AliMED MAIiCIIES OX KABUL. CHAP. VI.
kind : the Mollah of the highest rank poured a measure of wheat
on the head of the new monarch, announcing to the assembled
Afghans that he was the chosen of God and the nation. This
emblematical investiture of the regal power is followed at the
present day amongst the Afghan tribes each time that they elect a
chief; t.he signification which is attached to this ceremonial is,
that abundance and prosperity will result from the ads of him
whom they make the depository of power.
The Afghans were still in the midst of their coronation festivals
when there arrived at Kandahar Eaghee Khan Chirazee, chief of
the customs to Nadir Shah in Scindc and the Punjab, ha* in
his custody two kooroors, 1,360,0001., in money, diamonds, and
shawls. This Ah md Shah scizcd and immediately distributed
amongst the officers and men of his army and the employ& of the
government ; and this great liberality on his part did more for his
future career than all his private virtues and his iloble origin.
Several tribes who had not as yet positively recopised hi election,
but the chiefs of which were on this occasion the recipients of his
generosity, now attached themselves to his person, and he profited
by this feeling of unanimity to consolidate his power, and during
the first years of his reign to raise a large army, with which he
subsequently marched on Kabul with a view to its capture. Tnis
was not so easy as an offensive operation, for Nadir Shah had
wttled twelve thousand Persian families in the Bala Hisjar, the
citadel of that capital ; but Ahmed Shah having, throug11 hi p d -
zans, elitered into a secret understanding with them, they made
common cause with the Afghans on their arrival, under a promise
that their chiefs should participate in the official appointments and
advantages in the gift of the sovereign, and be treated in d l things
on a footing of equality.*
I n spite of this defection, N m r Khan, the governor of Kabul,
obstinately refused to recognise the authority of Ahmed Shah, and
did everything in his power to recruit the garrison amongst the
The Persiam inhabiting Kabul are
them from the others, gave them a
k~iown b the name of Kuzzilbaehes, kind of red cnp; henae their name of
bemuse tgey form prt of one or mom ' I Red head," Re ml baah. the^
of the seven Turkiah tribes that em- seven tribe^ were Oustadjaloo, Chamloo,
braced the party of the Shah Ismail, Niknloo, Babwloo, Zoolkadder, Wjbl.
the founder of the tribe of the kkffn- and Afchnr.- firrim.
vyea. Tkie sovereign, to diitiryuish
CI ~AR VI. IIAYAT GLLAH KHAX. 7 L
IIaearahs and Usbeks, but all in vain ; and despairing at length of
being able to make head against the Afghans, he fled, after a feeble
conflict, to Peshawur. Ahmed Shah then took possesion of Kabul
without meeting with the slightest opposition ; appointed as governor
of the province a clever man devoted to his person and interests ;
and left the city in pursuit of Nasscr Khan, who, abandoned by the
greater part of his followers and wi n g clearly that a longer
mistance could only end fatally for himself, surrrndcred Peshawur
to the Afghans and submitted to their king.
Ahrned Shah was aware that war was a necessity to the people
over whom he reiyned ; their turbulent nature, and the rivalry which
existed between the various tribes, would certainly have led to grave
disordem against the prosperity of the state and been dangerous to
his rising power, if tliey had remained inactive. h i d e s , the king-
dom of the Afghans was to be constituted, the limits and boundary
of which had not up to this time been defined by any one. Ahmed
Shah resolved t o extend these limits wherever an Afghan tribe was
to be found, and, in order to carry 1Js views into effect, he remained
no longer at Peshawur than was necessary to subdue and organize
the tribes which inhabited the mountainous districts of that province ;
and when he was convinced that there was nothing more to appre-
hend from their opposition, he crossed the Indus and marched
against Lahore.
Hayat Ullah Khan, son of Zekeria Khan, honoured by Nadir
Shah with t he surname of Shah Nawaz Khan, who had succeedeci
his father in the government of this city, hearing the intentions of
Ahrned Shah, assembled an army and took up a position at a little
distance north of Lahore. He a h wrote a letter to the Great
Nogul at Delhi, Ahmed Shah Gourkanee,. informing him of the
advance of Ahmed Shah Suddozye; the capture he had recently
made of Kabul and Peshawur ; of his ~rojects on Lahore, and those
which he he might have on India ; and for these reasons
claimed his assistance. The Mogul Emperor conceded all that he
desired, and placed himself at the head of thc troops destined to
co-operate with Hayat IJllah. Immediately the Lahore chieftain felt
certain of this he did not wait for their arrival, for, thinking that
Ahmed Shah Suddozye, when he saw him so well supported, would
Gouknnee is the name of the tribe to which Taxnerlime belonged, also
Y ' i Bnboor and his descendants.-E'enisr.
72 AHJIED JIBRCHES AGAISST LAHORE. CHAP. TI.
not dare to tempt fortune against him, he made a bold demonstra-
tion in the hope of arresting his march, and moved his camp to the
left bank of the Tchenab. The Afghans, however, neither halted
nor delayed their onward movemcnt as he had expwkd, and soon
arrived in his front; but as the rivcr was considerably swollen,
the two armies were obligcd to wait till it liad fallen before they
could attack. Thc impatience of the ilfghan mo~z~rch in particular
was great, for he was anxious to engage his adversary before the
lloguls, of wliosc expected arrival he was aware, had joined, but
the want of pontoolis obligcd him to remain passive during several
days. Directly his cavalry could attempt tlie pass~~ge of the river
with any security lie put tlie wliolc of that anri in motion at mid-
night and in profound silence, and crahscd at a spot a few parasap
above the enemy's cncampnicnt. Ahmed Shah had conceived the
idea of marching straight to L~hore, carrying the place by a coup
dc-main, and baffling the vigilance of his opponent by leaving hi
infantry behind him on the riglit bank and in sigi~t of the enem!.
His anticipations were well founded, for the army of Sliah Naraz
Khan, thinking they had still before them the whole of the Afghan
forces, slept in fancied security. On the following day, however, the
Governor of the Punjab learnt that Ah md Shah was marching on
the capital with his cavalry. Leaving therefore his infantry face to
face with that of his opponent, he hastened in pursuit of their horse
with his own, and came up with them on the following day half-way
between the Tclienab and the city ; but having reconnoitred and
found the enemy much superior in numbers, lie did not dare to
attack, and filed along his flank, protected by a chain of hills, south
of which he expected to fall in with Gourkanee, who was marching
to his assistance.
The Afghan King saw clearly the movement of his adversary
and divined his object, and, a fresh project having suddenly sug-
gested itself to his mind, hc penilitted Sliah Nawaz to rnake this retro-
grade movemeilt without ofliering any opposition to it ; but when he
supposed him to be at a good distance Ahmed returned by the road
by which he had advanced, and fell upon the Sikh infantry on tbe
left of the Tchenab, routed them completely, captured their artillery
and a considerable booty. He then passed his own infantry over
to the right bank of the river, and moved rapidly on Lahore, which
he seized without di5culty.
Shah Nawaz Khan, whamcd of a flight which must be explainirl
Ciiau. VI. REVOLT AT KANDAHAR. 73
to his ally by some reason or another, attempted to justify it by
e d t i n g to the highest degree the numbers, courage, and clever-
nes of the Afghans ; this imprudent speech brought discouragement
into the Mogul ranks, and their inclinations, which up to that period
had been unanimous in favour of fighting, were transformed into an
d e n t desire for peace.
ARer having fortified Lahore and confided it to the m e of a
picked garrison, Ahmed Shah Suddozye marched to meet Ahmed
Shah Go u r k e e , but he had scarcely traversed half the distance
which separated him from the Mogul Emperor, when he was met
by his envoy, who was tlie bearer of pacific proposals from his
master. After long hesitation Ahmcd Shah Suddozye decided for
pmce, for the chances of the war in which he was engaged were
g a t ; his power was as yet in the bud ; he was also not without
u~icasiness as t o his rear, and even regarding the state of his own
country; he thought therefore that it would be imprudent on his
part to risk his fortune on the uncertain issues of a battle, and
therefore agreed that all the provinces in the Punjab which had
been under the rule of Nadir Shah should remain in the hands
of the Afghans, and should form the dower of a Mogul prin-
cess, who was somc little time afterwards married to the prince
Timoor Mirza II., son of Ahmed Shah Suddozye. All the
countries situated beyond the Sut1t.j on the left bank of the
Indus remained in the hands of the Moguls, and the rivers
before mentioned were to form the line of demarcation between
the two empires. A treaty based upon this convention was
signed by the two parties in 1750 ; and the Suddozye prince,
after having nominatcd governors in his new conquests, returned
to Kandahar, where several Afghan serdars, jcalous of the power
of their wvereign and of the glory which he had recently acquired,
secretly endeavoured to excite the masses against him. No sooner,
therefore, had he arrived in his capital than they resolved t o
w i n a t e him, but the king, informed of this conspiracy a few
momenta only before the time at which they had fixed to carry it out,
frustrated it entirely by his firmness and presence of mind. The leader
in this plot was the same Noor Mohained Khan, Alizye, who was
removed from the command of the army when the Afghans returned
horn Persia, and upon whom Ahmed Shah had conferred the title
of Jlir or Prince of the Afghans ; his accomplices were Meuheubet
Khan, Kedoo Khan, and several other Afghans of less note, who
74 SLEGE OF HERAT. CUP. TI. I
with him perished by the hands of the executioner, a s well as ten
men from each of the tribes most deeply compromised. These
executioi~s were the first which had taken place by order of Ahmed
Sllah, and many of the chiefs, being apprehensive that he might on
some other occasion adopt the same severe measures against them-
wlves, disputed his right to inflict the punishment of death. AAer
the executions were over they agitated the question whether or not
the l et talionia should be applitd to the Shah and his family ; they
also wished to limit his power, or rather to subject it to their
approbation ; but Ahmed Shah suppressed with energy this feeling
on the part of the chicfs, and his determination and justice Boon
produced tranquillity in the countries subject to his dominion.
Reassured by this favourable result, he meditated the conquest
of Khorassan, a project which he had conceived immediately he
ascended the throne. At that period Shah Rokh, grandson of
Nadir Shah, reigned in this province, where he had with difficulty
established himself after great opposition on the part of the chiefs.
His principal autagonist was Moomeen Khan, governor of Tchina-
ran, who had even succcedcd in taking po~jession of Mesbed,
and induced the army to proclaim him Shah of Persia; but after
having exercised the sovereign pcwer for a few days only, he gave
umbrage to the troops, who mutinied and put him to death. Thi
event enabled Shah Rokh to rcassume his rights; his satisfado%
however, was not without alloy, for several other chiefs who had
the same object in view as Moomeen Khan spread anarchy and
confusion in all parts of Iihorawan. Ahrned Shah thought, there-
fore, that this was a most propitious opportunity for his purpose ;
and in 1750 he marched into that province with an army of 70,000
men. Herat was then governed by the Arab Serdar Emir Khan,
an old commander-in-chief of artillery under Nadir Shah, who held
the city in the name of Shah Rokh Mirm ; this chief, feeling that
he WRB not strong enough to meet the Afghans in the field, placed
the citadel in a good state of defence, and with a garrison of picked
men retired within its walls. To tlie townspeople who were ready
to defend the city he ordered that money, provisions, and
should be distributed, and dcspatclied a messenger to Shah Rokh
Mirza requesting his prompt assistance.
The inhabitants of Herat now sustained a siege for fourteen
months in the most heroic manner, trusting always that this &Gst-
ance, twenty times demanded, and as often promised by the prince,
CHAP. TI. SHAH ROKH-MIR ALEM. 75
would at length reach them ; finding themselves, however, deceived
in their hopes, and being reduced to the greatest distress, they sur-
rendered at discretion and opened the gates.
Emir Khan, who, fmm the citadel, witnessed the fall of the city,
determined to make one last effort in its defence, and descended
into the suburbs with his little band ; but being assailed in front
by the Afghans and in the rear by some Heratees who were of
their party, hi soldiers were soon exterminated, and the Emir
hacked to pieces on the spot. Fifty men whom he left in the
citadel were the only troop that surrendered to the Afghans, and
their lives were spared.
Shah Rokh Mirza had been prevented from going to the relief
of Emir Khan by circumstances which he could not control for he
wa s hardly able to maintain his own ground in Meahed, the ps-
session of which was disputed by a score of competitors. The
general-in-chief, Yoosoof Khan, had at the outset beaten them all,
but this chief, as brave as he was faithful, fell in a combat which
took place between his troops and those of two princes of Khorassan.
One of them, by name Mir Alem, belonged to an Arab tribe of
the % i n ; the other, Djaffer Khan, was chief of the Kurdish
colonies of Boodjnoord. These Khans, after the death of the
brave Yoosoof Khan, seized Meshed and imprisoned Shah Rokh ;
but when the moment arrived for dividing the authority and the
plunder they could not agree, and, assisted by their respective parti-
sans, came to blows. In this conflict Mir Alem proved the victor, and
remained sole master of the city. After having obtained this ad-
vantage he made every preparation to resist Ahmed Shah Suddozye,
repaired the fortifications, provisioned the place, and after having
confided its defence to the inhabitants, whom he believed he could
trust, he leA Meshed, determined if possible to pounce upon Herat.
In this attempt he was disappointed, for, on arriving at Toorbutr
SheikJam, he was himself surprised by the prince Timoor Mirza,
who, 6 t h the advanced guard of the Afghan army, was marching
on Meshed. Recovering from the first feeling of astonishment at
this untoward incident, Mir Alem attacked his adversary with the
greatest intrepidity and made him give ground; but a charge of
8000 Belooch cavalry commanded by Nasser Khan, chief of Kelat
in Beloochistan, carried disorder into the Emir's ranks, and his army
was cut to pieces. Mir Alem immediately gave up all idea of
. keeping Meshed, and retired in the direction of Ghain to hie tribe.
i 6 SIEGE OF MESHED. CHAP. ~ 1 .
Nasser Ullah Khan, the son of Shah Rokh, who was in the field
with a small party of horse when he heard this good news, entered
Meshed, delivered his father, and placed him a t tlie head of affairs.
Anxious to terminate the object of his expedition, Ahmed Sliah
now appointed Dervish Ali I<han, IIazarah, to the government of
Herat, and, rejoining his advanccd-guard with the rest of his troops,
a few days afterwards arrived under the walls of Meshed, which he
invested on all sides, and vigorously besieged. Hk attacks were,
however, repulsed with energy, and he *.suffered during several
months considerable losses that were not compensated by any cor-
responding success In spite of the vigilance and the discipline
which Ahmed Shah maintained, a night rarely passed without his
being surprised by Nadir hlirza or Nasser Ullah Khan, who, a t
the head of a few select horsemen, came down upon the Afghan camp
when they were least expected, and did not retire until they had
placed a good number of their adversaries hors de corrrhat. Asiatic
armies have no conception how to protect themselves from night
attacks by placing main guards, pickcts, or videttes; so that Ahmed
Shah's forces were always surprised by thcse onsets, which, being
cleverly conducted, annoycd t hcn~ much. Alamech Khan Zafe-
ranloo, governor of Tchinaran, who had attached himself to the
fortunes of the grandson of Nadir, gave him also very useful
support; he supplier1 the town with provisions, his cavalry made
daily attacks upon the rear of the Afghans 01. pillaged and laid
wtlste the environs of the city and their camp. Although the besieg-
ing army amounted to an effective force of 60,000 men, they were
never able to overpower, or even seriously to check, this handful of
cavalry, who dealt such heavy blows and numbered not more than
a thousand men. Matters remained in this state during four
months, after ~ h i c h Ahmed Shah, who had not expected to meet
with so obstinate a resistance, finished by listening to the proposi-
tions that were made with a view to an amicable arrangement, and
consented to raise the siege of Meshed on condition that his Eon
Sindjar Mirza, who had remaincd a prisoner with the Persians
after the death of Nadir Shah, should be restored to him. SeveraI
of Ahmed Shah's relations, whom Emir Khan had carried away from
Herat where his family resided, were also to be given up, and on
the receipt of a large sum of money the Afghan king a p e d to
retire from before the place.
These conditions having been duly fulfilled, Ahmed Shah, with- .
CHAP. FJ. DISASTERS OF THE AFGHAN ARNY. 77
out troubling himself about his rear, proceeded at once to lay siege
to the fortified city of Nisha~oor, situated in a plain exceedingly
fertile, where hi army could easily find subsistence. This town
was then governed by two persons of equal authority-one,
Abbas Kooli Khan, of the tribe of Beyat, which numbered 10,000
families, residing around Nishapoor, and on which he relied for
support; the othcr, Hadji Scif Eddin, a native of the city ; and
both determined to offer a stout resistance. Ahmed Shah was
satisfied by simply investing the place, deferring the siege to a later
period, when, according to a promise made him by the latter, .he
hoped to be able to obtain possession of the city. For himself,
mid this personage in his lcttcr to the Afghan monarch, he laid
down his arms the very day of Ahmed Shah's arrival ; but he
added that i t would require some time before he could overcome
the obstinacy of Abbas Kooli Khan, who had decided upon fight-
ing. In thus acting the cunning IIadji was only desirous of gaining
time, md the Afghan sovereign was his dupe, for he negotiated
and kmporised so long, that the winter set in before he had
opened his trenches; the snow fell heavily, the army were soon
in want of provisioi~s, and cold and hunger cruelly decimated the
troops. At length the severity of the season was such that the
beasts of burden perished, and the Afghans were compelled to
abandon their tents, baggage, ammunition, and artillery. After
having destroyed the former and spiked the guns, they threw them
into the hariz, or subterranean aqueducts, communicating with the
Burface by shah, and then retreated, leaving a long line of corpws
and baggage-animals on their track. Another division of their
i u ~ ~ y , which had been detached against Ali Murad Khan, the.
chief of Tubbus, was also nearly exterminated ; those who escaped
the sword succumbed in their flight to the severity of the weather ;
and such was the intensity of the cold that at the halt made at
Kiaffer Kaleh 18,000 of dlimed's soldiers died in one night, and
on the following day very nearly the same number perished in
attempting the passage of the Heri-rood, near the town of Kussan.
The river was frozen, but it gave way under the crowd of fugitives,
who were swallowed up in the icy waters ; those who had retreated
bg other roads were scarcely more fortunate. The Serdar Djummeh
Khan, who held a command in this expedition, left a short sketch
of it, and one of the incidents that he relates is worthy of mention,
as it appears to us unique in history. He assures us that, in ordcr
78 TIIE AFGHANS REACH HERAT. CIIAP. TI.
to preserve himself from the excessive cold, and therefore from
death, which was the certain consequence, only one way suggested
itself, which he adopted; this was, to disembowel some of his
camels, in the inside of which, enveloped in a blanket, he each rught
took up his quarters, and in this way he passed from one to an-
other as they got cold, killing Beventeen between sunset and d~.
The disasters of this retreat continued until the wretched remnants
of the Afghan force reached Herat, at which time all that remained
of Ahmed Shah's brilliant array of troop were a few miserable
beings more resembling skeletons than mldiers. A few days after
his amival in the city, Ahmed Shah perceived that the governor,
Dervish Ali Khan, profiting by his distressed pi t i on, was in-
triguing to seize his person and raise himself to power upon hiis
master's ruin; but Ahmed, anticipating his intention, ordered him
to be arrested and thrown into prison, appointing his son Timoor
Mirza governor in his stead ; he then leR for Kandahar, with a view
of recruiting his m y .
SECOND SIEGE OF NISHAPOOR.
CHAPTER VII.
Second siege of Nishapoor by the Afghnne - Clemency of the victor - He inverts
Meshed- Battle of Kakhnk- Death of Ali M u d - Capture of Toon and
Tubbua - An ambuscade - Treaty with Shnh Rokh - Ahmed Shah retiree to
He&- Campaign agai nat the Uebeks-Beghee Khau seizes Balk, Khulm, &o.-
dssad Khan Ohildjzye - Hia succeseea in Persia - Defeat of Kerym Rh.n -
bssad Khan ie attacked in the mountaim-Last attempt of the Afghan8 to
annex Pemia - Naseer Khan, Belooch, revolte -The combate of Pr i npez and
Uertook - Siege of Kelat - Favoureble terma made by Nasser Khan - Ahmed
Shah proceeds to India - Insurrection of the Mahrattna - Ahmed Shah Gour-
Lanee de@ - Aasaseination of Alemguir - Ohazi Khan seizaa the throne of
the Moguls - Ahmed Shah, Suddozye, reachea Lahore - Marcbee on Delhi -
Shooja ed Dooulet - P~a%age of the Bar - Desertion of Delaver Khan and Zal
Beg -Shah Alem cedes his rights to the Engliah -Revolt in Kandnhu-
AMul Khalek Khan - Abdullrrh Khnn suppresses the insurrection - Ahmed
Shah marches on Peshawur- Amvea at Kandahar- Zal Beg is executed -
Delaver Khan flies to Herat - Timoor M h is made viceroy -Ahmed Shah'a
maom for thia -Death of Ahmed Shah - Yaghoot Khan - The Serb
declare for Suleiman Mi ma- Character of Ahmed Sbah.
IN the following year, namely, in 1751, having completely
repaired hi disasters, Ahmed made a second inroad upon Kho-
ramn. Every cavalry soldier carried with him two battements* of
iroh for casting shot, which were placed in store directly he arrived
with his army under the walls of Nishapoor. TL3 siege of this
city was now pressed with great energy ; the Afghan monarch
cast a gun upon the spot, which threw a projectile weighing
472 lba English, and one month wan employed in casting, boring,
and placing this monster gun on its carriage. When fired it
produced a most terrible effect, the walls and houses being pierced
through and through, but it burst the very first time it was
US. The citizens of Nishapoor, ignorant of that fact, were
en terrified by the destruction which this single bullet occasioned,
that they despatched several of their chiefs to Ahmed Shah t,o
inform him that they surrendered at discretion. Abbaa Kooli
Khan, who held the citadel, refused however to acknowledge this
surrender, and attacked the Afghans at the moment they were on
the point of entering the city ; but he was repulsed in an instant,
and reduced to the alternative of soliciting in person the clemency
A baltGment of Herat in equal to 6 lbs. Eng1irh.-F-m.
SO BATTLE OF KAKHAK. CHAP. vn.
of the conqueror. Alimed Shah detained him as a prisoner in his
camp, and he subsequently accompanied him to Kabul : the Afghan
conqueror, having perceived in this chief very considerable talents,
and a frankness of disposition in which he thought he could confide,
gave him his sister in marriage; he also bestowed one of his
daughteru on Abbas Kooli's son, a h r which he sent him back to
Nishpoor, as governor of that city. Having thus satisfactorily
established his power there, Ahmed Shah, thinking he had cause of
complaint against Shah Ilokh hlirza and his sons, who had bem
hostile to him in his second campaign in Khorassan, again laid
siege to Meshed. Contemporaneously with this movemel~t he
detached a corps of cavalry under the orders of the Ser dm Jehan
Khan and Nasser Khan of Kelat, to subdue the districts of Toon
and Tubbus, and take revenge for the defeat which the Afgham
had sustained during the precedirig year at the hands of Ali
Murad Khan. These Serdan commericed operations by deras-
tating the country, after which they marched against the governor
of Tubbus, whom they met at Kakhak, a small village situated
near Gourmabad, and ttiere fought one of the most ohtinate and
bloody battlcs that is to be found in the annals of Persian histoq;
such was the tenacity and fury of the combatants, that, when
ammunition failed on both sides, they dismounted from their
horses, and, drawing their sabres, did not cease to strike till the
death of Ali Murad, who arrived at the close of the conflict;
this determined the issue of the battle, and the remainder of hi3
men, for the most part of Arab tribes, took to flight Much of the
credit of this victory was more especially due to the bravery of
Nasser Khan and his Beloochees, who behaved like heroes.
ARer this the Afghans took possession of Toon and Tubbus,
and committed every kind of excess upon the inhabitants of thw
towns : fire and sword did their work, and to these were added viola-
tion, murder, pillage, and devastation ; in which having indulged
sufficiently, they a p i n joined the royal camp, carrying with them
a considerable booty. While the serdars of Ahrned Shah were
obtaining these successes, that sovereign pressed on the siege of
Meshed with vigour, but he had, up to this period, been scarcel?
more fortunate than in' the preceding year. The inhabitants
animated by religious fanaticism, defended thcmwlvcs with intre-
pidity, and the Afghans suffered heavy losses in their encounw
with the enemy ; their resources also diminished daily, and pmvi-
CII.~P. VII. AHJIED'S TREATY WITH SIlrIH 110611. 81
sions became very scarce, which obliged Ahmed to detach 2000
of his c.rv 1 y in the direction of Subzawar and Shah Rood Bostam,
to procure supplies. In this enterprise they perfectly succeeded,
and were returning to camp with 2500 beasts of burden laden with
plunder, which had greatly enclimbered and delayed them, when
on reaching the halt of Abbasabad the foragers fell into an ambus-
cade, in which were p t e d 1500 Kadjar horse from the environs
of &erabad; who fell upon and completely routed them. A great
number of Afghans were killed or made prisoners in this affair;
the plunder fell into the hands of the Kadjars, and the survivors,
numbering-ecarcely a thousand, regained the Afghan camp
Ahmed Shah, seeing that his efforts to take Meshed would prove
ineffectual, and fearing that the winter, n llich was now approach-
ing, might cause a repetition of the disasters of the preceding one,
accepted the terms offered him by Shah 1Hokh Mirza. Thcse were,
that Ahmed should leave him in quiet possessio~i of Khorassan and
support him against the ambitious chiefi of the province, on con-
dition that Shah Rokh should acknowledge his suzerainty, that
money should be coined in his name, firmans and other official
documents bear his seal, and the districts of Toorbut Sheikh
Jam, Bakharz, Toorbut-haidarieh, and Khaff, be made over to
him. A treaty, drawn up on this basis, was signed by the two
contracting parties, aRer which Ahmed Shah, thinking that the
power which he had thus consolidated was a sufficient guarantee
against the ambitious projects of Assad Khan, an Afghan chief,
of whom we shall have occasion to speak hereafter, returned
to Herat, where he occupied himself in carrying out numerous
reforms in the army and administration. I t was from hence
that he sent Beghee Khan, one of his viziers, with an army to
~ M u e the countries beyond the Oxuq inhabited by Uzbekg
b r a h s , and a few Afghan families, who had not yet acknow-
ledged hi dominion. After having engaged in wveral combats,
but not very serious o: es, Beghee Khan seized upon Meimana,
AndekhooYc, Akhcheh, Shibbergan, Serpeul, Balkh, Khulm,
Badakshan, and Bamian: he organized the various districts he
had conquered; and having appointed governors, with whom he
leR troops to keep the inhabitants in awe, he returned to Kandahar,
where Ab e d Shah had previously arrived, and this sovereign,
to recompense Beghee Khan for the services he had rendered
him, added to his title of vizier that of Sedre-azem.
(1
I t has been mentioned that in isolating Khorasean from Persia,
and placing the former under the authority of Shah Bokh Miza,
his vassal, Ahmed Shah acted with a view of protecting himself
against the projects of Assad Khan, an Afghan Serdar, of the tribe
of the Ghildjzya After the death of Nadii this Serdar had been
fortunate enough to maintain his authority in the Azerbaidjan, of
which province he was governor. He was a man of great firmness,
brave, and more enlightened than are ordinarily the individuals of
his nation ; and his justice, his equitable views, and the p r t d i t y
which he manifested in favour of the sect of Shiahs, drew around
him a great number of partisans. Seeing his power and popularity
thus increased, he declared openly his pretensions to the possession
of Irak, Khorassan, and even proposed to push on to Afghanistan,
and dethrone Ahmed Shah, whom he considered as an usurper, for
in his opirion the throne belonged by right to a chief of the tribe
of Ghildjzyes; but he was arrested in his march eastward, and
recalled to Irak, by serious events that occurred in 1753. Kerym
Khan, of the tribe of the Zends, after having made his authority
acknowledged in Fars and t.he other southern provinces of Persia,
took advantage of the hatred which their populations felt for
everything that bore the name of Afghan, to raise a large army,
and with this he marched against Assad Khan, with the view of
forcing him beyond the Persian border. This chief, who had
already advanced as far as Damghan, retraced his steps, met his
antagonist at Kasbeen, attacked him immediately, and with such
effect, that Kerym Khan was completely beaten, and so hotly
pursued, that he was obliged to abandon Ispahan and Shiraz,
without being able to offer even the slightest resistance. He
subsequently retired to the mountains in the south of Persia, to
ehelter himself from further pursuit; and discouraged by the
reverse he had just experienced, was on the point of seeking refuge
in India to enjoy the repose he so ardently desired, when he was
dissuaded from taking this step by Roostem Sultan, the chief of the
district of Khecht. This chieftain informed Kerym Khan that
Assad Khan had committed the imprudence of entangling himself
in the defiles which led to his place of retreat ; that this ill-judged
movement would infallibly lead to his destruction, because the
country people, who were on the side of the Zend chieP a d
Of the army of A d Khan one-third were Afghans, and the other two Owr-
gims, Kurds, and Turks of Aeerbaidjan. -Ferrier.
Caw. TII. ATTACK ON ASSAD BHAS. 83
detested the Afghans, were quai nt ed with all the advantages
and diiculties of the ground, and, profiting by such knowledge,
would make the narrow gorges and defiles through which the latter
w m marching a last resting-place for his enemies.
Convinced by this reasoning, Kerym Khan decided upon renew-
ing hostilities, and placed his troops under the orders of Roostern
Sultan, giving him full power to act as he thought fit ; accord-
ingly this chieftain halted for Assad Khan at the defile of Kooma,
which extends ahout a mile and a half along the summit of a high
mountain, and through this the Afghans could only advance in single
file. The Persians placed themselves behind the fragments of
mcks which lay scattered along the pass, and waited till the enemy
occupied it h m one extremity to the other before they attacked,
when, with a perfect unity of action and inconceivable energy,
they fell upon the whole line. Every shot from the long match-
locks of these expert marksmen carried death into the Afghan
ranks, ahiie their bullets fell harmlessly against the rocks, behind
which their adversaries had ensconced themselves. All those who
could escape from this hornet's nest endeavoured to make good
tbei retreat and regain the plain, but here they found b h
opponents, who had turned the positioii and attacked them with
fury. I t was in vain that Assad Khan tried to rally his troops
and renew the fight ; his efforts were unavailing, and he was obliged
once more to retire. A few days after, while continuing this re-
trograde movement, he was overtaken by Mohamed Hoosein Khan,
Kadjar, another aspirant to the Persian throne, when the remainder
of his army was destroyed, and Assad Khan only escaped with his
life by seeking refuge in Bagdad. Not meeting here with the s u p
port he expected, he passed on to Georgia, where the Prince Hera-
clius gave him no better rewption; and worn out and dispirited
by his many disappointments and personal sufferings, and being
without a hope of success, he finished by making his submission
to Kerym Khan, who gave him high rank at his court and
treated him with every consideration. Assad Khan remained to
the end faithfully attached to Kerym Khan, and this was the last
attempt made by the Afghans to seize the throne of Persia.
Ahmed Shah experienced some disquietude in seeing Assad Khan
thus submit to the Persian monarch, but Kerym Khan, having
plenty to do in maintaining the tranquillity of his own kingdom,
never again made the slightest hostile attempt to annex Afghan-
a :!
84 RETOLT OF NASSER KHAN. CHAP. TII.
istan to Persia: it was however believed at Kandshar that he was
no stranger to the revolt of Nasser Khan, chief of Kelat and
Beloochistan, of which we shall have occasion to speak.
Subsequently to his return from Khorassan Ahmed Shah had
been under the necessity of proceeding three times to India, as
well to establish his authority in the Punjab, where great agita-
tion, fomented by the Mahrattas, was almost permanent, as to
curb the turbulent spirit of that people, who were not less un-
manageable than the Afghans. Nasser Khan had taken part in
all these expeditions, and distinguished himself in each of them :
he had recognised the suzerainty of Ahmed Shah from the time he
ascended the throne, and had a!ways been well treated and gener-
ously recompensed by that sovereign ; but nevertheless the Belooch
chief revolted against him and proclaimed his own independence in
1758. Ahmed Shah exhausted every means of conciliation
towards Nasser Khan, whom he esteemed, without being able to
bring him back to his allegiance, and at length sent a division
of his army against him, but the chief, who had been for some
t ~me prepared for this crisis, was not intimidated, and directly
he was informed of the arrival of Ahmed's troops he marched to
meet them. A battle was fought near the village of Pringuez,
situated about seventy miles from Kelat, in which the Afghans
were completely beaten, and obliged to retire to a distance of thirty
miles from thence. The Serdar in command immediately despatched
a messenger to the king to demand rcinforcements, and Ahmed, fear-
ful lest such a cheek, though of little consequence in itself, shouli
acquire importance from the exaggerated manner in which the
circumstar~ces might be detailed to the tribes recently subdued,
put himself at the head of this second division, and hastened t o
the support of his discomfited troops. Nasser Khan, assailed by him
near the a m p of Nrxstook, situated three miles and a half frorn
Pringuez, was defeated, and obliged to retire in all haste to Keiat :
this t o m he had previously placed in a good state of defence, and
within its walls he now took refuge. Ahmed Shah followed him
close and illvested the place ; the position of the citadel on . m
eminence was exceedingly strong, and this circumstance, and the
want of unanimity that existed amongst the Afghan scrdars, were
the causes that led to a protracted siege, and eventually to no
advantageous result. I t was in vain that assaults were made on
five different occa~io~lti ; they all failed, because the various chiefs
Ca.4~. V1I. THE MAHliAT'I'AS. 65
would not, and did not, support each other ; and at length the Shah,
perceiving he could gain nothing by prolonging the conflict, con-
sented to a treaty which replaced Nasssr Khan under his suze-
rainty, and obliged him to furnish a contingent of troops on every
occasion that the Afghan monarch made war beyond the boundaries
of his kingdom. I n this case the chief of Kelat was to receive a
sum of money and munitions of war every time he took the field.
Nasser Khan also stipulated that he should not be compelled to
furnish such contingent for the sake of supporting this or that
Suddozye chief, or their successors of that or any other tribe, or
be obliged to take part in the internal quarrels that might arise
amongst the Afghans themselves. This was the only condition
bearing the charactor of vassalage imposed upon tlie Belooch chief,
who was now exempted from the tribute which he had previously
paid to Xhmed Shah ; and in order to make the treaty more binding
the king married a cousin of Nasser Khan's, after which he returned
to Kandahar, and he was shortly obliged to leave for India to
put down the troubles which had again broken out owing to the
intrigues of the Nahrattas. This people incited the population to
revolt, aud seized the country, which was the appanage of the Mogul
Princess, the wife of Timoor Mirza.
"The Nahrattas," remarks Sir John JIalcolm, " became fomid-
able in the reign of Shah Jehan, and during thirty years that
Arungzebe passed in the southern provinces of his ernpire his chief
occupation was to subdue the Jfahrattas ; but this he found impos-
sible, for they never awaited his attack. The country was laid
waste and his troops continually hanssed by men who, from the
lightness of their frames, were no burden to their horses, and who,
fro111 habits of hardihood and abstemiousness, required little either
for shelter or support. I t seemed in vain to war with a foe who
was intangible, and whose glory lay in the rapidity of his retreat ;
for the Mahratta soldier, though brave, boasts more of his power to
elude than to attack his enemy. When the empire of India fell to
pieces at the dtxth of Arungzebe, and RIahomedan princes and
nobles were all ranged against each other, the Jlahrattas, by con-
tinuing united, made a rapid and surprising progress. Besides the
great posessions which they actually occupied, they had compelled
not only the paramount sovereign of India, but almost every ruler
of a province, to pay them a considerable part of their annual col-
8G AHbfED RHAE REACHES LAHORE. CHAP. TII.
lections,* that their habitations and fields might remain in safety.
At the period when Nadir threatened invasion, the city of Delhi
itself was subject to this disgracejkl tribute." t
The disgraceful tribute of which Sir John Malcolm here speaka
was agreed to by the Indian princes at the period when Ahmed
Shah marched against the confederation of the Mahrattas, and the
latter used all the influence they possessed in the variou~ yrinci-
palities of India to force those princes to send their contingent of
troop to take part in the war in which they were about to engap
against the Afghans.
Ahmed Shah Gourkanee, the sovereign of Delhi, had been de-
posed in 1753 by his vizier Ghazee Khan, and that functionary
placed his nephew Al empi r on the throne in his stead. This
prince, utterly destitute of ability, was assassinated by Ghazee in
.
1760, when the usurper seized upon the sovereign power himjelf;
and Ahmed Shah, Suddozye, heard of this event a few days before
he arrived at Nooltan, as well as of the junction of the Mogul troop
with those of the Rlahrath.
The various populations of India had heen in an unsettled state
ever since Nadir Shah seized upon Delhi; but at the death of
Shah Mahmood, emperor of the Moguls, anarchy was rampant
The princes of India, tributaries of the Mahrattas, ardently desired
to deliver themselves from the yoke imposed upon them by tbis
confederation of plunderers, and Ahmed Shah, Suddozye, sent secret
emissaries to their courts in order to work upon and strengthen this
feeling. With a view of giving them time to do this he advanced but
slowly, and occupied himself in organising the territory which he
had recently conquered in Scinde and Nooltan. He tben entered
the Punjab, which the Mahrattas evacuated at his approach without
fighting, so that he arrived at Lahore unopposed, and there he
encamped. The Indian princes obeyed the injunctions of the Mah-
rattas, and, in spite of the intrigues of Ahmed Shah, sent their
several contingents, which, when united, formed an army of 200,000
men, of which 70,000 were cavalry, supported by twenty pieces of
artillery of large calibre and 200 zimbooreks.
~heil did not take the field until the whole of this formidable
* Thin was levied under the vwious t Sier Muaakbereeu.
names of Choute, Deamokee, kc.
CHAP. Tll. BATTLE OF PANIPUT. 67
army was assembled in the environs of Delhi. He then advanced
to meet it, and came up with the enemy on the banks of the river
Bar; but in consequence of the depth of that stream and the want
of pontoons, he was obliged to wait a few days until the water had
subsided. This was all the more disadvantageow to him, inasmuch
as he could only obtain provisions for his troops on the side occupied
by the enemy ; and as the Nahrattaa were vigilant in watching the
fords which they fortified, the Afghans soon felt the e e c t s of
a scarcity in their camp; some of them murmured loudly, and
others prepared to desert, when a fortunate occurrence, the result
of the clever policy of their sovereign, took place, which, producing
abundance a t once, revived their hopes. Shooja-ed-Dooulet, the
Prince of Lucknow, had submitted to the Mahrattas only because he
could not avoid it, and, suddenly leavlng them, proceeded to the
Afghan camp, followed by several other Indian rajahs and 25,000
men, which made the effective force of Ahmed Shall's army 85,000
men--45,000 being cavalry and the remainder infantry-with seven-
teen piece% of cannon and eighty zimbooreks There were about
10,000 non-combatants in the Afghan army, whereas in that of
tbe Mahratta confederacy one-third might be set down as belonging
to that class, such, for instance, as servants, sutlers, drivers in charge
of oxen, ponies, camels, &c., and thus not more than from 100,000
to 110,000 troops could be brought into position.
Shooja-ed-Dooulet, having provisioned the Afghan army, and
overcome the hesitation of the Serdars, who considered the passage of
the river as a thing impossible, i t was resolved to give battle. On
the 7th of January, 17 61, therefore, Ahmed Shah, Suddozye, ordered
the Serdar Samut Khan, Yoosoofzye, to cross the river with 5000 ca-
valry and attack the Moguls-which order he promptly obeyed ; but
the greater portion of his horsemen were carried away by the rapidity
of the current, and the fire of the enemy's artillery made such havoc
amongst them, that the survivors remained in a state of indecision.
Ahmed Shsh, perceiving this corps required support, sent two others
to its assistance ; but the Serdars Delaver Khan, Isakzye, and Zal
Beg, Popolzye, who commanded them, and who were at variance
with Samut Khan, did not heartily execute the order they had re-
ceived, and allowed Samut's troops to be cut up. The king saw the
state of affairs at a glance, and, alive to the lead thing that might
~ m p m i s e him as tr, the issue of the contlict, mounted his horse
88 DEFECTION OF SERDARS. .CHAP. VII.
and plunged into the river, followed only by 16s guards. The Serdars
the divisions which had remained immovable were
now obliged to advance, for the troops were ashamed to see their
sovereign braving death while they remained p i v e spectators
of the combat. The Mahrattas redoubled the fire of their artillery
to repulse this attack, and this was so terrible that the surface of the
river was covered by the c o r p s of Incn and the carcases of home,
its waters became crimsoned with their life-blood. But the
rifghads gained at length, though with heavy 10% the opposite
shore, and with hearts burning for revenge fell upon the enemy,
whom they finally put to the rout ; 20,000 of them remained on the
field of battle, also their artillery and baggage, and the victors
obtained a rich booty. This memorable and bloody battle was
fought on the plains of Paniput, a few parasangs north of Delhi.
Shoojaed-1)ooulet had up to this time formed but an incor-
rect estimate of the bravery of the Afghans; but after having
been an eye-witness of it, and remembering that they were not
very conspicuous for their notions of gratitude, and might perhaps
be wanting in that which they owed to him, he regretted that he
had assisted them-nevertheless he remained faithful to his new
ally ; as to Delaver Khan and Zal Beg, who had not obeyed the
order of Ahmed Shah to march to the assistance of Samut Khan,
and feared his anger, left the camp by stealth, taking with them
their men, even before the issue of the day was known. The king,
without making himself very uneasy at this defection, continued
rapidly to advance, and seized upon the Mahratta country, &r which
he passed into the Mogul territory, when the usurper Ghazee
Khan, seeing his kingdom invaded, determined to obtain, if possible,
the mediation of Shooja-ed-Dwulet, and thus make hi peace with
Ahmed Shah. The Prince of Lucknow was not averse to under-
taking this negotiation ; but on condition that Ghazee Khan, as in
duty bound, should surrender the crown to the legitimate sovereign,
and further pay an enormous contribution to the expenses of the war.
These severe tern having been accepted, Ahmed was desirous of
lacing Shah Alem, the son of Alemguir, on the throne, and,
upon his refusal to be reinstated in his rights, his son Jehan-booght,
as yet only a child, was raised to the musnud.
Mattem at Delhi having been thus settled, Ahrned Shah pro-
ceeded in the direction of the Punjab to maintain order there, a~ld
CHAP. T11. REVOLT IN KASDAHAH. 89
was preparing to march to the southern provinces of India when he
learnt that tile Mahrattas had moved upon Deihi. He returned,
therefore, in haste to the support of his new ally, whom he had the
good fortune to save from the danger that menaced him, for the
Mahrattas retired at his approach. Whether Shooja-ed-hulet
Lad really intrigued with them to bring about the fall of Jehan-
booght, or whether the serdars, jealous of his influence with the
Shah, deceived Ahmed in order to effect his ruin, the result was
that the Afghan monarch, who ought to have shut his eyes, at leaat
for the moment, to the accusations brought against the Prince of
Lucknow, demanded from him a large sum of money ; but Shooja,
indignant at the ques t , determined not to comply with it, and,
clandestinely leaving the camp with his troops, retired to his own
country. This desertion, added to that of Delaver Khan and Zal
Beg, with their 10,000 horse, seriously reduced the strength of the
Afghan m y , so that Ahmed Shah was no longer in a position to
prolong the campaign, but, satisfied with the immense treasures he
had collected during the war, he returned towards his own teni-
tory, to which he was, as it happened, recalled by an event of some
importance.
Some ambitious, and consequently discontented serdars, had, &r
their flight 6um the royal camp, joined Delaver Khan and Zal
Beg, who, supporting the revolt of a nephew of Ahmed Shah's, by
name Abdul Khalek Khan, proclaimed him king at the fortress of
Ghshlt, and subsequently moved in triumph towards Kandahar.
Previously to this Hadji Djemal Khan, of the branch of the Zer-
gueranees, had likewise ~roclaimed himself king at Kandahar a h r
the departure of Ahmed Shah for India, and had even coined
money in his own name ; but having heard of Ahmed's victories, he
thought it would be more prudent to renounce the royal position he
had assumed and stand on one side. Abdul Khalek, lees judi-
cious, made incredible efforts to secure his object. When Ahmed
Shah became thoroughly aware of what was passing in his capital,
he considered the circumstances of so little importance, that he did
not think it newsmy to return there in person, but sent the Isakzye
Serdar, and Abdullah Khan, surnamed Shah Pecend Khan, with
a strong division of cavalry, to put down the rebellious proceedings
of hi nephew and the serdars who had joined him, recommending
the Khan, above all things, to use the utmoat despatch and endea-
90 EXECUTION OF ZAL BEG. CHAP. TIT.
vour to arrive at Kandahar before they could reach it from Girishk ;
he was not, however, in spite of his exertions, able to do so until after
the revolt had taken root there, and Suleiman MI-rza, the eldest son of
Ahmed Shah, who governed in the absence of his father, had been
expelled from the capital. The greater number of the revolted ser-
d m had only supported the usurper because they believed the report
which had been circulated by Delaver Khan and Zal Beg that
Ahmed had lost the battle of Paniput, and met with great reverses
and disasters in India ; but they deeply regretted their folly in this
unlucky bilsiness when they were made acquainted with his success
and saw Abdullah Khan and his cavalry make their appearance.
Thinking, therefore, that the only way to obtain the Shah's pardon
was to make a prompt submission, they, with few exceptions, went
to the camp of the latter, to whom they delivered up the city, and
also Abdul Khalek himself. When he leR Delhi, Ahmed Shah
had gone to the Punjab, and thence to Peshawur, to re-establish
his authority, which had been somewhat questioned; and it was
during this journey that he received a letter from Abdullah Khan,
announcing the manner in which he had terminated his mission-
the king, in his reply, desired him to strangle his nephew secretly,
a command which he immediately put into execution.
The disorder at Peshawur was great when Ahmed arrived
there, as well in the town as in the neigl~bourl~ood ; and aeveral
months elapsed before tranquillity was restored, and matters resumed
their ordinary course. At this period snow covered the ground to
the depth of three feet, and the Sl~ah was obliged to wait for the
spring until he wuld return to his capital ; he wrote, therefore, to
his son Suleiman Mirza, desiring him to take every possible means
in his power to capture the serdars Delaver Khan and Zal Beg, who
had so treacherously deserted him, and to put them to death The
prince wrote therefore to the latter, feigning a friendship and pro-
mising perfect oblivion of the past-and this in the name of his
father-if he would pay him a visit at Kandahar. Zal Beg ac-
cepted the invitation, and, with perjury truly Eastern, Suleiman
Mirza put him to death directly he entered the town. Delaver
Khan was lese inclined to confide in the prince's word than his
unfortunate friend, and instead of proceeding to Kandahar, as
he had previously promised to do, he fled to Herat, and placed
himself under the protection of the prince Timoor Mirza, second
CHAP. Fil. TIMOOR MIRZA VICEROY. 91
son of Ahmed Shah, and governor of that city. From a spirit
of opposition to his brother Suleiman, with whom he was on bad
terms, Timoor received the %tive in a somewhat eager manner,
and showered honours and benefits upon him, which were increased,
even to prodigal~ty, each time that the reiterated orders arrived
at Herat to put him to death.
Ahmed Shah left Peshawur at the commencement of spring,.
and remained the whole summer at Kabul, arriving at Kandahar
about the middle of autumn, at which period he experienced an
attack, and with more intensity than ever, of that terrible malady
which had forced him long before to substitute an artificial nose of
silver for his own, which had sloilghed away. This malady, called
by Abdullah Khan Djuzam (which in Persian signifies leprous,
and a small ulcer) arrived towards the close of this year at such
a fearful height, that the Shah determined to proclaim his second
son, Timoor Mina, his viceroy and successor to the throne of
Afghani The serdars, astonished at this decision, which
appeared to them unjust, inasmuch as it was to the prejudice of
hie eldest son Suleiman Mirza, assembled, and, having come to a
mlution, presented a respectful request to the Shah Ahmed in
favour of that prince. I n this document they allowed a feeling
of something like discontent to appear, that they had not been con-
dted in a matter of so grave a nature. The Shah replied, that in
acting thus he had not consulted hie own particular bias, and that
m making hi selection he had been guided entirely for the public
good. " Timoor," said he, " it is true, is younger than Suleiman,
but he ia infinitely more capable of governing you than his brother."
The aerdara wished for a proof; the Shah simply replied that
Suleiman had never been able to conciliate the esteem and affection
of the tribes ; that he wm violent without clemency ; that he had
never been able to foresee or put down a revolt ; and, in short, that
he hastily put to death the Serdar Zal Beg. " But," said the
aerdam, " it was by your order." " Did I not also order Timoor
to put Delaver Khan to death? " replied Ahmed ; " and what did .
he do? Political reasons might induce me to order two culprita to
be put to death, but other eecret reams, which were known to the
' The mannscript of Abdullah is entirely without datea, the author is therefore
unable to give my .-I'kmb.
92 DEATH OF AHMED SHAH. CHAP. 1-11.
prince Suleiman, ought to have led him to disobey me, as his brother
did." The serdars appeared satisfied with these replies, which
seemed to embody, as it were, liis opinions for the future guidance
of the princes of the blood.
l a e n Ah md Shah had induced the serdars to acknowledge
his son Timoor Mirza as his successor, he retired to a palace he
had built at Tobeh-Maharoof, situated in the midst of the Suleiman
mountains, the cradle of hi tribe. From hence he watched orer
the government; but after four or five years had elapsed, his
disease having rendered him incapable of any further continuous
labour, he entirely abandoned public atiairs to the governors of
the various provinces of his empire, and expired shortly after,
aamely, in 1773. Yaghmt Khan, the chief of his eunuchs, and
a person in whom he had great confidenrc, kept his death a
profound secret, and wrote imnicdiately to Timmr Mirza, who
was still governor of 1-&rat to come with all speed to Iisndahar
and take possession of the throne. At the same time that he
transmitted this inforn~ation he set out himself, taking the royal
corpse with him ; this was placed in a litter, and the curtains
carefully drawn H-as completely concealed from every one. The
adroit eunuch approached the litter from time to time, as if to
receive some order from his sovereign, or give him some r e hh-
ment, remarking to those of his w r t who wished to make any
request or an inquiry about his health, that, being extremely unwell,
the Shah had ordered that no one should be allowed to disturb
him. Yaghoot Khan also took with him the Shah's jewels and
treasure, which were carried by mules, and always precdtd
the royal litter, so that he might be able to have hi eye con-
ptantly upon them. No one discovered the deception during the
greater part of the journey ; and it was only about a day's march
from Kandahar, when the prince Suleiman Mirza came out to
receive his father, that it waa necessary to make the Shah's death
public. The ee:da.rs, who were present on this occasion, were
nearly all attached to the party of this prince, from whom they
h d received brilliant promises, and they immediately retunled with
him to the city, and proclaimed him Shah of the Afghans.
Ahmed Shah, Suddozye, reigned twenty-five yean and a f e ~
months : he was free from most of the crimes commonly found in
individuals of Eastern nations ; such as drunkenness, whether from
CIIAP. m. HIS CHARACTER. 03
wine or opium, duplicity, avarice, cruelty, and one which need not
be mentioned ; he was always a most firm supporter of religion.
On his accession to the throne he changed the name of his tribe,
which was Abdalee, to that of Dooranee, which signifies a person of
noble and ancient birth ; and he took the title of Doorveranee, i. e.
he around whom converges the noble and ancient tribe.
In order to increase the numbers of the Afghan nation Ahmed
connected with i t all the tribes of doubtful origin, Eimak or Belooch,
speaking the Pushtoo language, who were settled in the various
provinces, particularly in the district of Furrah and on the banks
of the Helmund. There was a clause in his will forbidding his
8u-rs to cut off the nose or ears of any one, no matter whom ;
and this was based upon his own sufferings, for the leprous disease
having destroyed his nose, and Nadir Shah, to punish him for an
act of insubordination, having cut off one of his ears, he had deeply
felt the deprivation of these organs. I-Ie also desired the Doorn-
nees to ally themselves one with another, and not to give their
girls in marriage to strangers; that for the future the succession
should go entirely to the son and to the exclusion of the daughters,
who up to t hat time had participated in the property left by their
fither; that at the death of an Afghan his nearest relative, the
father and son excepted, should marry his widow ; and if there was
no relative, t he widow should reside in the house of her deceased
husband, and live on the proceeds of his property till her death ;
that when a marricd woman died without having a child, her
father, brother, or other relative could not demand her dower from
the husband; he also abolished divorce, and withdrew from the
master hi right to kill his slave. 1-Ie abrogated the custom of
bending the body and kissi~~g the earth before the sovereign, whom
hc commanded henceforth to be saluted by carrying the hand
straight to the forehead ; he granted permission to sit in the pre-
sence of the monarch only to the syuds and priests, to whom he
conceded the privilege of dining every Thursday evening with
the sovereign, in order that he might be able to converse with
them on the sciences and religion. The laws he made during
hi reign he caused to be rigorously executed, and commanded
that his descendants and successors should do the same after
him. He accumulated great riches, but they consisted of the
plunder which he had taken from his enemies ; the revenues of
04 CHARACTER OF AHMED SHAH. Ca n . VIL
Afghanistan, properly so termed, never found their way into his
private coffers : he gave his troops their pay in,person. The name
of Ahmed Shah became glorious throughout Asia after the battle of
Paniput, which was one of the causes that led to the rapid decay
of the Mogul empire. The petty chiefs of Rhorasean, who all
acknowledged his suzerainty, and offered but a timid opposition,
he would have brought into complete subordination, had i t not
been for the six campaigns which he made in the Punjab, India,
and Beloochistan, which absorbed dl his time. He saw that
repose demoralized his troops, and he kept them always in a
state of discipliie. I t was by this system that he was enabled to
maintain himself securely upon the throne, as much as to the great
clemency that he constantly manifested, and which induced him so
continually to pardon the rebellious chiefs who could not bring them-
selves to bow under the yoke of obedience, and between ahom he
was obliged to be the peacemaker. His reign was remarkable for
the good which he spread around him, and his generosity and simple
and modest demeanour in the midst of courtly pomp made him
loved by all-who approached his person ; he was of easy access, and
administered justice upon the most equitable principles, without a
harsh word even to those who deserved it ; he was conciliating, per-
suasive, and no one ever complained of the jud,pents that he gare.
He greatly extended the limits of his empire, which, at the moment
of his decease, were as follows: the frontier to the north was defined
by the Oxus and the mountains of Kiafferistan ; to the south, by the
sea of Oman ; to the east, by the mountains of Thibet, the Sutlej,
and the Indus; and to the west, by Khorassan, Persia, and
Kerman.
But Ahmed Shah is much more deserving of eulogy for the talent
with which he subjected the various Afghan tribes to hi laws,
than for having given such a vast extension to his kingdom, or for
the victories he won. The princes who prior to him governed
the Afghans exercised but a nominal authority over the nomade
tribes, for they listened only to the orders of their own chiefk
Ahmed Shah conciliated the majority of these, and reduced to
obedience the few who were hostile to him. The nine Serdam
who had served with him in the army of Nadir formed a Council
which he always consulted in questions of state : he adopted
no measure of importance without their approbation, and never
CHAP. VII. CHARACTER OF AHMED SEL4H. 95
failed in any promise that he made them. His government in
short resembled much more a federative republic of which he was
the head, than an absolute monarchy. After a victory he always
gave up a large part of the spoils of the enemy to his soldiers ; he
never adopted an arrogant tone of superiority with their chiefs
which could hurt the feelings of those with whom he had once
been on equal terms, and who ,had elevated him to the sovereign
power.
FORMATION OF AFGHAR CHARACTER.
CHAP. VTTI.
CHAPTER VI I I .
Kabul becomes t he capital - Sons of Ahmed Shah - Dervish Ali Khan - Afghan
principles - Walee Khan and hia sons put to death - Flight of Suleiman Mi na
- Timoor Mirza eptera k d a h a r - h i d e s at Kabul - Kuezilbash cavalry
organbed - Timoor marches againrt Scinde - Conficta between the Kaloras
and Talpooras - Timoor Shah takes Ehwdpoor - Establishes the Kal om in
Scinde - Freah disturbances in Scinde - Medad Khan ia beaten at Djioond -
Fethi Khan Talpoora succeeda to power - Timoor takes the field again%t t he
Emir of Bokhara - BRlkh and Akhchsh become independent - Timoor returna
t o Kabul - Events in Khorassan -Afghan army marchea on Meshed- Mamech
Khan - Capture of Tchinaran - Death of Medad Khan - Freah insurrection
in Khorassan - Afghan m y advances into that province - Conspiracy to take
Timoor Shah's life - The plot fails - Aml eh Khan is put to death - Vslua
of an oath in an Afghan sovereign -Death of Timoor Shah - Character of t hat
monarch - Sons of Timoor.
THE Afghans never really enjoyed their independence till the
reign of Ahmed Shah, and the national disposition was probably
modified at this epoch. The liberty of speech and action in which
they were permitted to indulge contributed without doubt power-
fully to develop that independent manner and rustic pride which
still characterize them in our own day-a conquered nation for
generations, they became all at once conquerors. This sudden tran-
sition took place it is ,true under Mir Mahmood, but was only
thoroughly developed under Ahmed Shah, Suddozye ; it inspired
them with confidence in themselves and roused a superiority which
had up to that period been dormant ; in a word, the national mind
had been formed.
The city of Ka~i dahar was considered the capital of Afghanistan
during the reign of Ahmed Shah, but he only resided there during
the autumn and winter; he went to Kabul in the spring and
summer, alternately changing his place of abode from one city
to the other, that he might constantly enjoy an ageeable and
temperate climate. 1-Iis son Timoor Shah altered this state of
things; for he withdrew the title of capital from Kandahar and
transferred it to Kabul, which was subsequently tlle royal resi-
dence during the whole period that thc dynasty of the Suddozyes
occupied the throne of Afghanistan
C ~ ~ ~ . VIII. AFGFIAN PRINCIPLES. 97
Ahmed Shah left eight sons, namely, Suleiman Mirza, Timoor
Mirza, C'hahab Mirza, Sindjar Mirza, Yezdan bakhch Mirza,
Sikander Mirza, Darab Riirza, and Perviz Mi rza The Prince
Timoor, \TTa1ee of Herat, named by his father as his successor, did
not hear of his death till he received the letter written to him by
the eunuch Yaghoot Khan, bnt he learnt before he left IIerat
that his brother Suleiman Rlirza had been proclaimed king a t
Kandahar by a few Serdars, at the head of whom was the Shah
IValee Khan, first minister of the deceased Shah. The delay
which took place before Timoor proceeded to his capital arose
from the uneasiness occaeioned him by Dervish Ali Khan,
Hazarah, a subtle chief, and a dangerous traitor, who had re-
cently escaped from the dungeons of Herat, in which Ahmed Shah
had imprisoned him after his return from Meshed A party
hostile to Timoor had rallied round this Khan; nevertheless the
prince, under a proniise of pardon, was clever enough to induce
him to come within the precirlctv of his palace ; where, according
to Afghan usage, which consi~ts generally in a perfect disregard
of the value of the most solemn oaths, he put him instantly to
death, and gave .the command of the Ilazarahs to the Serdar
Mohamed Shah Khan, a member of the =me tribe. After this he
appointed his own son, Mahmood Rlirza, Governor of IIerat ; but
as he was desirous that he should accompany hi.11 to Kandahar, he
named Islam Khan, Popolzye, his vizier, as the locum tenem of
his son in that office, after which he assembled his troops and
marched against Suleiman Rlirza. On his arrival at Furrah he
was joined by a great number of partizans who had already
abandoned the cause of his brother, but amongst all those who
deserted Suleiman the most important accession to his cause was
the Shah IValee Khan, who had great influence over the Afghans.
This personage brought his two sons and two of the principal
Dooranee Se r dm to the camp of Timoor, which was then at
Siah-ab ; but the prince, fearing to be hampered in the government
by this old servant of his father, and desirous also of striking
terror into the traitors by a severe example, ordered their heads
to be struck off directly they appeared before him. The party
of Suleiman Mirza, terrified by these executions, was at once
dissolved, and the usurper finding himself thus deserted fled to
India, accompanied by four followers who alone remained faithhl
to him.
R
9.9 PROMOTIONS BY TIMOOR. C~AP. VIIT.
Timoor, surrounded by all the great and powerful families in the
kingdom, and accompanied by a numerous army, now made his
public entry into Kandahar with much pomp and circumstance,
and R7as a t once acknowledged king by the assembled Serdars ; but
he made only a short stay in this city, the population of which
had become odious to him from having taken his brother's part:
as a punishment he deprived it of its title of capital, which aa
we have already said he transferred to Kabul, to which place
he at once proceeded with his army, leaving his son Mahmood
provisional Governor of Kandahar. The reign of Timoor con-
tinued for twenty years, arid during this period he almost always
passed the winter at Peshawur, and the remaining seasons of the
year at Kabul. On ascending the throne he augmented the pay
of the Afghan chiefs, and gave the tribes a great extension of
territory; several of the serdars received appointments of great
tnwt and high command and titles much esteemed at the court of
-
an Asiatic sovereign.
The Serdar Pa3endeh Khan, son of that IIadji Djernal who had
renounced his pretensions to the throne in favour of Ahmed Shah,
Suddozye, was confirmed in the command of tlie powerful tribe of
the Barukzyes, and honoured with the title of Sera-fraz Khan.
Delsver Khan, the Serdar who deserted at the battle of Paniput,
received the title of Medad Khan, and the grade of Serdaree
Serdarane, " General of Generals." Kazee Feiz Ullah, Pich-nawaz
of the king, received the title of Kelane Kelauter, " Greatest of
the Great." Timoor Shah had such an implicit confidence in this
Serdar that he never did anything without consulting him. Abdul
Latif Khan, one of the descendants of Sheik Ahmed Zindeh Pir,
was appointed lieutenant of the kingdom and receiver-general of the
taxes. Noor Jlohamed Khan, Baberee, was made president of the
court of accounts ; and lastly, Iltifat Khan, chief of the eunuchs,
was appointed chief treasurer and custodian of the crown jewels.
All these personages had the rank of ministers, and Timoor ordered
as a general rule that the principles of justice, equity, and a mild
course of conduct should be observed towards every one ; but he rc-
commended them to employ the chiefs of tribes as little as possible
aa public functionaries, for up to this period they had generally
held the appointments, and almost always abused their authority.
The Shah's guards were selected from the tribe of Isakzye, and t o
this the Serdarec Serdarane belonged. A division of 12,000
CHAP. VDI. ?.rwOOR MARCHES AGSIXST SCINDE. 99
Ruzzilbash horsemen was also organized under the command of
the Serdar Mohamed Khan Beyat, the pay of their officers was
augmented, and Timoor chose from amongst these the companions
of his debauched habits, for he had a great predilection for wine
and other pleasures He paid with great punctuality every half-
year the salaries of the officers of his court, and the army every
Year.
Timoor Shah was only twice at the head of his troop to meet
his enemi'es ; all the other wars in which he was en,pged were con-
ducted by the Serdaree Serdarane, Medad Khan, Iaakzye. The
first occasion on which Timoor took the field was in 1779 in the
campaign against Scinde, which had revolted. The governor of
this province, a vassal of the Afghan sovereigns, and admitting
their suzerainty, had endeavoured to throw it off at the time the
Mahrattas rose in his father's reign, and Ahmed Shah had subdued
him even before the battle of Paniput, making him pay a very
large sum of money as arrea of tribute, and as an indemnity for
the expenses of the war; a r ter which Ahmed forgave him, and
maintained him in his qove~mmer~t. This chief belonged to the
tribe of the Kalora, and had the title of Emir of Scinde. Mir Fethi
Khan, chief of the Talpoora tribe, a rival of his, attacked him in
June, 1779, massacred a p a t number of his people, and diepos-
eessed him of his government. The Kalora chieftain fled to
Kandahar, from whence he addressed a petition to Timoor Shah,
who at once took the field with his army to reinstate him in his
rights. The king began by seizing Bawalpoor, in which place he
found immense riches, and upon these he laid his hands. The in-
surgents &r this success did not hold their ground anywhere, and
their chiefs fled from the province, which the Shah placed under
the control of the, Kalora Emir, and then returned to Kabul ; but
he had ~ r c e l y left Scinde when the chief of the Talpooras
again entered that territory and once more drove out the Kaloraa
The embarrassments under which Timoor laboured at that time
prevented him from promptly represeing this fresh outbreak : and it
was only in 1786 that the Serdaree Serdarane Medad Khan could
march there with a small corps d'armde, with which, on its entering
Scinde, the contingent of the Khan of Kelat was to form a junction ;
this chief, however, was bound to the Talpooras by family ties, and
on various pretences did not bring the reinforcement which by
treaty he was obliged to furnish. In spite of this contretemps
H 2
100 WAR WITH THE EMIR OF BOKHARA. CIIAP. VnI.
Medad Khan marched upon the insurgents with his small force,
but, being attacked by very superior numbers near the village of
Djioond, he was beaten a:ld obliged to retire and fortify himself in
that locality.
Mir Fethi Khan then entered into negotiations with tlie
Ser br ee Serdarane, demanded to be invested with the same rights
that the Shah of Afghanistan had formerly acknowledged, and
which had bcen held by tlie chief of the Kaloras, promising for
the future an exact payment of the tribute as well as the sum then
due for arrears. Medad Khan accepted this a1 rangement, which
was confirmed by his sovereign, but Mir Fetbi Khan, who only
wished to gain time to collect his treasure and his forces, in order
that he might defy his suzerain with the greater chance of success,
refused to pay the tribute tlie third year after his installation as
Governor of Scinde, and proclaimed his independence. Timoor
Shah being unable to send troops and thus oblige him to return
to his duty, Sciiidc remained independent of Afghanidan up t o
the time of the Shah's death.
The second occasion on which this sovereign took the field in
person was in his conquest of Sarnlacand arid Bokhara, to punish
the inhabitants of Balkh and Akl~cheh, who had driven out their
Afghan governor and revolted against him at tlie instigation of
Sultan Murad Khan, Emir of Bokhara, and of Jlavnr-ul-nahar.
When the Shah approached Balkh, those who had raised the
standard of rebellion, and in whose support Sultan JIurad Khan
had sent a contingent of troops, lcft the town to oppose the Shah,
and encamped at a short distance from him. If Timoor Shah had
at o~lce attacked the Uzbeks hc would most certainly have crushed
them, for his army \vaq much superior to theirs, not only in numbers
but in the spirit of the troops ; but the rivalry which existed betwecn
the serdars, and thc vexation felt by tbose who commanded the
tribes at being obliged to leave their lucrative appointments, caused
them to temporize and thus compromise the success of the Afghan
arms ; and his attempts to conciliate these chiefs were so prolonged
that the army was at last completely without provisions.
The fall of Timoor Shah was the object of the serdars, and this
they hoped to accomplish without its appearing to be thcir fault,
trusting that his successor would grant them the advantages which
they had hoped, but in vain, to receive from him. The king pene-
trated their design, and to avoid an i rrrp~rabl e disaster mme to an
C~ AP . VlII. EVESTS IN KHORASSAN. 101
undentanding with the rebels, withdrew from the conquest of
Navar-d-nahar, and retired to Kabul, preserving a feeble appearance
of authority on Balkh and -%khcheh, which from this day became
pretty nearly independent. They accepted, it is true, a governor
named by Timoor Shah, but they took care previously to point out cer-
tain persons from amongst whom that officer sho~lld be taken. The
authority of the governor thus chose11 was very limited; the people
hegoverned merely furnished him with the means of subsistcnce for
himself and a very small number of personal servants ; but they
paid him neither taxes nor ~11~u-y and subjected him to every kind
of annoyance. The consequence of this was that Timoor Sliah
was at length unable to find any person who would accept the
appointment of governor of these turbule~it citipe, which led to a
hundred jokes and witticisms more or lcss wounding to the feelings
of the sovereign, particularly from those who were hostile to him.
The Loutis, who wandered from town to town with monkeys and
other animals, taught them to cast earth upon their heads (a sign
of the deepest grief amongst Asiatim) when they were asked whether
they would be governors of Balkh or Akhcheh.
From the period at which Timoor Shah succeeded to the throne
uorassan had been in a permanent state of revolt. Shah Rokh
Xirza, who recognised the suzerainty of this sovereign as he had
done that of his father, claimed his assistance against his old friend
Mamech Khan of Tchinaran, who had five years bcfore seized and
continued to hold possession of Meshed, in which city he exercised
a most fearful tyranny. Tinioor Shah sent 30,000 men, under the
orden of the Serdaree Serdarane, to overthrow the usurper.
On his arrival at Meshed Mamech Khan left the city and shut
himself up in his fortress of Tchinaran, in which place Medad
Khan t hoqht it would be as well not to-disturb him ; he contented
himself therefore by ordeiing his villages to be ~illaged, his territory
ravaged, and, replacing Shah Rokh a t the head of the government
of Ireshed, he returned to Kabul ; but he had scarcely reached
the capital when news was brought to him that Mamech Khan
had been enabled to collect a few thousand horsemen, and once
more devastate the province, and that his position became every
day more menacing. Timoor Shah was obliged to send Medad
Khan to put down this fresh revolt, and on his arrival llamech
Khan again retired within the walls of his fortress, but this
time the Afghans laid sicge to the place, and soon forced him
ioa PLOT AGAINST TIMOORS LIFE. CHAP. VIII.
to surrender at discretion. Tlle Stnrdaree Serdarane, however,
treated Mamech with generosity, leR him in possession of his
Khanat, and was satisfied with accepting a light contribution in
money towanis the expenses of the war and a thousand beasts of
burden loaded with provisions : after which he set out on his return
to Kabul ; but the simoom blew with such intensity when he arrived
in the plains of Furrah that he died, and with him a great number
of his soldiers.
A few days subsequently to this circumstance the Khoramanees
were informed of it and immediately rose against the Afghans and
their protkgQ Shah Rokh Mirza, which obliged Timoor Shah to send
a third army the following year to reduce them to obedience. He
placed these troops under the rnmmand of Ahmed Khan Noorzye,
son of Nasser Ullah Khan, who, although with great difficulty, sue-
ceeded in putting down the revolt. From this moment up to the
end of the reign of Timoor, the Afghans were never engaged in
any conflict; nevertheless the year preceding the death of that
prince was remarkable for an event in which the Shah was nearly
coming to a violent end.
I n accordance with his usual custom Timoor went to pass a few
months at Peshawur, but this year he remained at that city a longer
period than usual, detained there by an insurrectional movement
which threatened to develop itself further and extend as far as
Lahore. Arseleh Khan, of the RIohmund tribe, and Yaghoot h%n,
chief of the eunuchs of the late king, who with several other
Afghan chiefs were dissatisfied with Timoor, determined upon hi
ruin. I t was agreed amongst them that Yaghoot Khan, who
commanded the guard of the royal harem, should connive at the
entrance of Arseleh Khan and his people when the king retired
there, and put him to death, after which they were to proclaim hi
nephew, Iskander Khan, a son of Suleiman Mirza, king in his
stead.
On the day agreed upon for the execution of this conspiracy,
2500 hill-riflemen, and as many resolute inhabitants of Peshawur,
well armed, suddenly assembled in a large open space covered
with r'uins, habitually deserted and situated on the side of the
grand square opposite to the citadel, on which a few thousand
Kuzzilbaah horse, forming the king's guard, were always en-
camped. It was about two hours after noon, the time at which
eastern nations take their siesta ; the palace guard were therefore all
CIIAP. VIII. ITS FAILUItE. I ( 3
a~leep, or very nearly so, and the conspirators made choice of this
moment to penetrate into the citadel by a sally-port, of which
Taghoot Khan had given them the key. By a rare chance
Timoor Shah had not yet fallen asleep, and, hearing the tumult
and a distant hubbub of voices, he perceived at once that he was
threatened by some impending danger, and quickly retired to the
summit of a tower at one of the angles of the citadel looking into
the large square. The assassins, never thinking for a moment that
he would hide himself in a place where no one ever put his foot,
did not search for him there and went on ; but when they returned
they were attracted by hi shouts, and saw the king waving his
Cashmeer turban in the air as a signal of distress to the Goolam Kuz-
zilbashes, who were snoring below ; the conspirators endeavoured
to get at him by breaking the doors, but one of them, being iron-
bound and padlocked, resisted all their efforts to open it, which gave
the guards time to come up and vigorously attack the insurgents,
who were quickly reduced to the simple contingent of the moun-
taineers, for the Peahawur men had dispersed when they saw that
the alarm was given. The Goolama, who were soon supported by
&r troops, cut the conspirators to pieces, and but very few of them
were enabled to escape-Arseleh Khan fled to his tribe, who lived
in the valleys enclosed between the mountains of the Ilaicht-naggar,
a rough country, full of difficulties, in which the Afghan cavalry
would have had but very little chance of success had they ventured
to pursue him. Timoor employed cunning in his attempts to seize
the culprit ; he feigned forgiveness and a wish to pardon Arselch
hhn, declaring daily at his drrrbar, and also in private, that he
admitted he had been occasionally unjust towards him, and that
he desired nothing more than to be able to repair the injuries he
had done him. He made these sentiments well known in public ;
and when he hiew they had reached the ears of Arseleh Khan, he sent
one of the great nobles of his court to him, accompanied by a large
suite of servants carrying a Koran, on a page of which he had
inscribed an oath that he would pardon his fault, and affixed his
-1 to this document. Arseleh Khan, placing confidence in the
sanctity of the book which had received on its pages this solemn
promise from the king, invited the envoy a~i d his suite to lodge
in his own house, treated him with great splendour and conai-
deration, aud after a few days returned with the embassy to
Kabul ; the Khan's throat was cut the day that he entered the city.
101 DEATH OF TINOOR SIIAH. C~I AP. VIII.
Timoor Shah, a little reassured by the death of this chief, now
ordered a massacre of the people of Peshawur who had joined in
the revolt, and 6xed the extent of i t to one in three of its inhabit-
ants; this command was unfortunately but too well obeyed, and
Peshawur was very nearly depopulated by these executions, which
were preceded and followed by a general emigration.
From this period Timoor Shah became suspiciouq morose, and
restless, and his clemency, which had till then rendered his reign
remarkable, entirely ceased, and it terminated in an act of unpa-
ralleled cruelty. Hi s last days passed away in alternate paroxysms
of remorse and fear ; he could not quiet his conscie~lce and atsolve
it from the p i l t of the wholesale slaughter of which we have just
spoken, nor the nturder of Arseleh Khan, brought about hy per-
jury, and also having carried off by force the wife of an Afghan
of Kandahar, to give her to a certain Bfohamed Khan, one of his
favourites, who had conceived a passion for her. Timoor Shah
survived only ten months after the attack on his life ; and his
death, in 1793, was occasioned by an i~iflammation of the intes-
tines, accompanied by violent fits of vomiting. Several of his con-
temporaries, whom we have had occasion to consult on the subject
of his death, assure us that he was poisoned by one of the women
of his harem, the sister of a Popolzye chief, who was hostile to him.
I n spite of the several acts which have just been mentioned, the
reign of Timoor Shah is cited in Afghanistan for the justice,
equity, and paternal feeling with which he treated his subjects.
He had many difliculties to surmount; for the aerdars -rho had .
placed his father on the throne, and divided with him the direc-
tion of affairs, considered themselves much more like the tutors
of his son than his councillors. The king endeavoured for a
long period to release himself from this thraldom, but, seeing that
his efforts were vain, he gave himself up to that life of ease and
effeminacy with- which European authors have so sharply re-
proached him, without reflecting whether i t was possible for him
to follow a different line of conduct. They would have been less
severe if they had given themselves the trouble to inquire what
were the causes of this apathy. They heard from the Afghans
that which they have themselves repeated ; but we must 11ot forget
that this people admit amongst the number of their great men
those only who gorge themselves with pillage, who carry war and
devastation everywhere, and who satisfy them in their eager desiw
Cmp. VIU. HIS CHARACTER. 106
for riches; it was only by employing such means that the great
Abmed Shah, a sovereign, be it observed, highly to be respected
as an Afghan, was enabled to make liilnsclf popular with the plun-
dering tribes of which his nation was composed. His son, instead
of enriching them by continual wars, was obliged to come to the
assistance of those he had to protect by taking funds from his own
treasury ; and this was quite enough to bring upon him the slander
and ill feeling of the people. An Afghan loves to live at other
people's expense ; everything which tends to make him respect the
property of his neighbour, to be subject to laws which prevent him
from ran,wking and destroyicg, is opposed to his nature ; is it,
thertforr, astonishing that, being animated by such sentiments, the
reign of Timoor Shah should appear to him weak and effeminate ?
I had occasion, during my journey in Afghanistan, to converse with
some respectable serdars, who, having held high positio~is at the
court of this sovereign, were able to appreciate his character. These
individuals assured me that the intelligence and activity of this
prince were equal to his courage and firmness ; and it was these
qualities which had led his father to give him the preference over
his other sons ; but it would have been absolute folly for him to
have entered into an open struggle with the old serdars, who were
venerated by the Afghans, with a view of concentrating all the
power within his o m hands, for this contest could terminate only
to hi disadvantage, and would have ended in his complete ruin.
He preferred the wise and prudent path of reasonable concessions
-to that dangerous, and always uncertain, one of civil war ; if he
aas debauched, it may be affirmed that in this he only imitated
the majority of Eastern sovereigns--even those who rank highest
in the pages of historians. They have always considered, and will
al ~a~sconsi der , so long as there is no change of habits in Asia,
the a b ~ q of the physical powers and pleasures as the first and most
imprescriptible of their rights. Timoor, however, without doubt
would have been less effeminate if, like hi father, he had had
the power in his own hands ; but, not having serious subjeds to
attend to, he gave himself up to frivolous ones.
When the serdars who had been the companions of Ahmed Shah
were dead, their sons succeeded to the influence which the former
had taken in the affairs of government, and Timoor was unable
to resist their demands. These chiefs disposed of the tribes ; they
could alienate them from him in a moment, and he was, therefore,
r
106 SONS OF TIMOOR. CIIAP. Y11I.
obliged to be on good terms with them. Unfortunately these yow
serdars were passionate and ambitious; being without the expe-
rience of their fathers, they never knew how to preserve amongst
themselves that union which had existed amongst the latter ; and
Timoor, instead d finding in them the characteristic3 which are
necessary to triumph over difficulties, passed hi time in endeavour-
ing to heal their misunderstandings, which could not be done with-
out a great deal of tact, so that their feelings should not be wounded
and that he should still appcar to preserve the authority of a sove-
reign over them. I t was the just medium that Timoor adopted
with them all, and the clever concessions which he made to ambitious
chiefs eager for change, which assured to him a reign of twenty
years, exempt from the scenes of anarchy that stained with blood
those of his successors. I t was in consequence of his mns not
having followed their father's example that they were hurled from
the throne of Afghanistan, and ended their days by the sword or in
exile.
Timoor Shah left thirty-six children ; of these twenty-three were
sons, namely-
Humayoon Mirza.-Elis mother was of the tribe of Suddozye.
Mahmood Mirza, I-Iadji Firooz Eddin Mirza. -Their mother
was of the tribe of Popolzye.
Abbas Mirza, Kohendil Mirza.-Their mother was of the tribe
of Isakzye.
Zeman Mirza, Shoodja-ool-Moolk 3firza.-Thcir mother was of
the tribe of Y oosoofzye.
Ahmed Mirza, Mohamed Sultan Mirza, Yezdane Bakhch
3lirza.-Their mother was of the tribe of Noorzye.
Kechver Dtirza, Sultan Ali Mirza, Nadir Mirza-Their mother
was a great-grandchild of Nadir Shah.
Eyoob Mirza, Hassan Mirza.-Their mother was a Popolzye.
Echreff Mirza, Muzafer Mirza, Djehan W ~ l a Mirza-Their
mother was of the tribe of Etchekzye.
Mohamed Murad AIirza, AIirane Mirza, Hoosein Mi r a -
Their mother was of the tribe of Mohamedzye.
Achem Mirza, Chapoor Mirza.-Their mother was a Mogul.
I t is essential that the reader should notice with attention the
names of those princes who are born of the same mother, because
the half-brothers habitually detest them, and in cases of revolt
are nearly always united against them. In taking up arms they
Cnar. VIII. SOh'S OF TIMOOR. 107
are nearly always sure to have the support of the tribe to which
their mother belonged.
Nearly all these princes were, as may be seen by the above
table, born of Afghan mothers, with the exception of Kechver,
Sultan Ali, and Nadir, who were descended from a great-grand-
child of Nadir Shah, and Achem and Chapoor Mirza, whose
mother was a daughter of the Mogul Emperor Ahmed Shah Gour-
kanee, whom Timoor married in 1750. All these princes had
each from ten to fifteen children ; those who survived the disasters
which have befallen their dynasty have sought refuge in India,
where the greater number of them are pensioners of the East India
Company.
AFGEIAXISTAN AT TIMOOR'S DEATLI.
Crrar. I S .
CHAP TER IX.
Afghanistan at t he death of Timoor - Ilitrigrles for t he auccesaion - Payendeh
Khan supports Ze~nnn Mirza- Afghan tactic8 - &man is pml ni med Shah
-He marches agninst his brother at Kaudahar -Flight of Humajacm
Mim-Tyranny of Zelnnn Shah-His ~a n y i n a r y acta-Gives up Balkh to
Persia - &man marches ngai~ist tile Punjab - Humayoon seizes Kandabar -
Zeman takes the city by treachery- Humayoon irr made prisoner -Hia
brother puta out his eyes - &man advances r~pon Scinde- Mnhmood Yira
endeavours to intercept him - Bnttle of Ooilrrek - Zenian advances on He&
-Takes the city - Mnl~~nood hlirza retires to Persia - Advanma on Fur r ah -
Battle of Emaret - 3Inhrnood invesh Hernt - Cunning of Zemnn Shah - Hah-
n~oorl quita his camp- Ilis allies are beaten and disperse-&man Sl~ah arrim
at Herat-Mal~ruood retires to Bokharn and Khiva-Revolt of t he S&--
Zeuian reduces Lahore - Disnsten of his army - He reach- Kabul and
1iand.rhar - Fnhl tendencic? of Shah Zeman - Discontent of the A f g h a -
The vizier Vefndnr Khan -Conepiracy of the Se r dm - Payendeh Khan and
his accon~plices executed - Fllgiit of Fethi Khan - Revolta - Fethi Khan
accolnpanied by Mahmood takes Fur r al ~ and Kandnhar-The anny dr ~e r t ~
Zeman- Battle between the brothers-&man is beaten and his eyes put
out - Vefadiu Khan is executed - Zeumn retires to Bokhara - Character uf
the Shah.
AFGUAXISTAS, at the death of Timoor Shah, comprehended the
princip~1itic.s of Cashn~eer, Iahorc, Peshawur, Kabul, Balkh,
Khulm, Kandahar, 3looltau, and IIerat ; those of Kelat aud
Beloochistan, as well as Persian Khor-an, acknowlcdgtd her as
suzerain. Scinde also, though not having paid for five years the
tribute agreed upon by RIir Fctlii Khan, chief of the Talpooras, was
nevertheless classed as amongst tlie nuniber of 1:er dependencies.
Less far-sighted than his father rlhmcd Shah, the deceased prince
had neither designated the son who uas to succeed him to the
throne, nor obtained the recognition of any one of them by the
serdars. The niajority of liis sons at the time of Timoor's death
were governors of various provinces. The eldest, IIumagoon Mirza,
his successor to thc throne by right, Fns a t Iiandahar, Mahmood
Mirza at IIcrat, Abbas Mirza at Peshawur, Zeman Mi r a at
Kabul, Shoodja-001-Moolk a t Ghuznee, Koliendil a t Cashmeer ;
and the royal corpse had not receivcd the rites of sepulture when hi
sons were already disputing the succession. The majority of them
had hastened to Kabul to be present when their father drew his
CHAP. IS. IhTRIGUES FOR TEIE SUCCESSION. 109
last breath; the others, amongst whom were IIumayoon Mirza
and Mahmood Mirza, remained a t their governments, where
they had made themselves beloved by the people, and might rea-
sonably hope for thcir assistance and support in retaining their
power. 3Iahmood Iiirza had promised his support to Humayoon
Mi r m to aid him in seizing upon the throne, supposing that his
accession to it was disputed ; and the latter, in acknowledgment of
this service, had promised to confirm him in his government of
Herat. The good understanding was not so complete amongst
t he other brothers assembled at Kabul.
.4bbas Mirza, the fourth son of Timoor Shah, renowned for his
Herculean strength, had, in the first instance, a chance of obtaining
possession of the throne ; but the serdars having refused to sanction
his election before his father's obsequies were performed, the un-
toward dclay modified the chances which he might have had of
success; for each serdar attached himself to one or other of the
princes, and endeavoured to influence him in favour of his own
particular interests. The consequence of this was a complete dis-
sension amongst the chiefs--each party flew to arms, and blood
flowed in the streets of Kabul.
Thc most powerful and influential of all the serdars was Pay-
endeh Khan, a son of that I-Iadji Djemal who withdrew his pre-
tensions to the crown in favour of Ahmed Shah. Like his father he
was the head of the family of the Mohamedzyes, and commanding-
in-chief the tribe of tlie Barukzyes This position gave him great
influence amongst the people, who, after the descendants of Sudoo
had been raised to the throne, had withdrawn from them a portion
of their regard, which, replaced by fear, had been bestowed upon
the descendants of Alohamed, whom they considered as alone capable
of maintaining their privileges against tlie excessive power which
they had given to their kings. Payendeh Khan gave his adhesion
t o Zcman l\lirza, the fifth son of Timoor, and succeeded in at-
taching to his 'party the most influential of the Afghan nobility
and the chiefs ,of the Kuzzilbashes at Kabul. Amongst the
former were Ahmed Khan, Noorzye ; Fath-Ullah Khan, Suddozye ;
Noor Mohamed Khan ; Emin-001-Moolk ; Emir Islam Khan,
Djevanchir ; Djaffer Khan, Djevanchir ; Mohamed Khan, Beyat ;
Emir Ullah Khan, Logheree; and many otl~ers of as high rank
and equal power. With their assistance he was enabled in the first
instance to calm the general excitement, and subsequently to ele-
110 ZEMAN PROCLAIMED SHAH. CHAP. IX.
vate the Prince Zeman to the sovereign power in the following
manner :-
On the proposition of Payendeh Khan, the princes agreed to
assemble with the chiefs of tribes in order that the latter might
proceed in all liberty to the election of a sovereign taken from
amongst the former. Each of the sons of Timoor, accompanied by
the serdars, came to this meeting ; and in conformity with an under-
standing which had been already agreed to, no one had any arms,
either concealed or otherwise, about his person. The place selected
for this gathering belonged to Payendeh Khan ; he had previously,
and with great secrecy, strengthened all the doors and windows,
and arranged the apartments in such a manner that no prison could
have been more secure When the princes were assembled, and
some time had been occupied in discussion, Zeman, whose par-
tisans had purposely abstained from appearing there, suddenly,
under some slight pretence, left the assembly. Payendeh Khan,
who, to prevent any suspicion, had not uttered a word in favour of
his candidate, followed him out of the mom, a h which all those
who remained in the house were placed under lock and key, and
troops stationed round it.
The various factions, deprived of their chiefs thus retained pri-
soners and receiving no instructions, allowed themselves to be per-
suaded by Payendeh Khan, and acknowledged Zeman Mirza as
their king. The new sovereign kept his brothers in confine-
ment during five days without giving them anything to eat save
two or three ounces of bread daily, the only way in which he could
bring them to recognise his election. JYhen they and the chieB
who had shared their captivity were released, they resembled so
many skeletons, and left the inhospitable and treacherous roof
under which they had passed these five days of suffering, only to
be transferred to the citadel of the Bala Hissar, within the walls of
which Zeman thought it would be prudent to place them.
The new sovereign commenced his reign by settling a pension
upon the old and devoted servwta of his father, and by various
concessions attached to his person those serdars who had been
opposed to him ; but some few others, for the sake of example, he
put to death ; and as, after all, the Afghans were obliged to have a
king, they contented themselves with the one that had thus Been
elected, who met with no further opposition in Kabul.
Hmnayoon Mirza, informed of the blow thus levelled at hie
CHAP. IX. HIS TYRANNY. 111
rights as the eldest son of Timoor, protested against the usurp-
ation of Zeman, and accelerated his preparations for war ; his
brother, Mahmood Mirza, did the same ; and a good many par-
tisans came forward at their appeal to overthrow the usurper.
But Zeman Shah, who could dispose of the greater and the richest
portions of the kingdom, who was in possession of the royal trea-
sure and the most warlike of the troops, did not remain inactive ;
in a very short apace of time he had assembled a sufficient force to
put down his two antagonists, and, directly he was in a position to
t ake the field, he marched on Kandahar. Though Mahmood had
not yet come to his assistance, Humayoon Mirza advanced boldly
to meet Zeman, andcarne up with him at the little town of Kelat-i-
Ghi l dj qe ; a battle ensued between the rival brothers ; Ilumayoon
was completely beaten, and obliged to fly into Beloochistan, where
he found an asylum at Kelat with the Emir Nasser Khan.
Mahmood Mirza, retained at IIerat by the necessity of calming
the excitement that reigned there, was not able to act up to
the promise he had made his brother EIumayoon to come to his
support ; and Zeman, after the defeat of the latter, made prepara-
tions to subdueMahmood, wl~en several revolts which broke out at
Kabul forced him to return there. At this period evil council-
lors obtained a power over the mind of the Shah ; they persuaded
him that the weakness and condescension of his father to the
serdars had alone checked the increasing impulse given to the
prosperity of Afghanistan by his ancestor Ahmed Shah, and they
recommended him to alter this system, and concentrate the aholute
power in his own hands.
To efi ct this object Zeman Shah commenced by taking the
great appointments of the state from those who had inherited them
as sinecures since the reign of that monarch. Even Payendeh
Khan himself, to whom he was indebted for his throne, was not
made an exception by the instigators of this violent change, for
his influence considerably diminished, and these dismissals did
not long suffice to appease the fears that his ambitious advisers
suggested to Zeman Shah. Individuals of consideration were
attracted to court on the faith of mlemn oatas, arrested, im-
primned, or put to death, and these sanguinary executions spread
ons sterna ti on in Kabul, the citizens of which were soon brought
under a yoke of iron. Such useless cruelties alienated the
112 ZEMAN MARCHES AGAIKST THE PUNJAB. CUP. IS.
Afghans from their new sovereign ; and his brothers, who were
released from the citadel almost immediately after they had been
incarcerated, dispersed over the different provinces, and every-
where excited disobedience to his authority. Obliged to conspire in
secret in presence of the troops that were sent to suppress the disor-
ders of which they themselves were the instigators, they nevertheless
ceased not by their intrigues to endeavour to accomplish the fall of
their relative, and continued very dangerous to his power. Shah
Zeman, fearing that a general reaction would be manifested against
him, was afraid to put those who were in his power to death, as i t was
in the first instance his intention to do ; but these quarrels between
the sons of Timoor Shah were the prelude to scenes of carnage, in
the midst of wliicll the dynasty of the Suddozyes was to end.
I t was about tliis time that Agha Mohamed Khan, founder of the
dynasty of the Kadjarj: in Persia, sent IIohamed IIoosein Khan,
Karaguzloo, as ambassador to Shah Zeman, requesting the cewion
of Balkh, which he required in order that he might be able to
undertake in all security the expedition which he proposed to make
against Beghee Khan, at that period king of Bokhara. Zeman
Shah, being then greatly embarrassed, could not refuse this con-
cession to the Kadjar, who was at Meshed with a-numerous army ;
he consented, therefore, not only to his demand, but promised
also to assist him with his own troops. Subsequently Agha Mo-
hamed Khan having been called to the west by the menaced
invasion of the Russians, tliis treaty was never carried out.
During the events that we have related above the tire was
smouldering which was so soon to burst forth in the midst of the
Afghan nation. The Punjab, annexed to the kingdom by Ahmed
Shah, attempted to regain its independence, and the Shah Zeman
immediately took the field to chastise the rebels ; but he had scarcely
crossed the Iridus when he learnt that, assisted by the Emirs of
Beloochistan, his brother Humayoon had seized upon Kandahar.
This intelligence obliged him to put off his expedition to Lahore,
and he set off by forced marches, and by the direct road across the
mountains, to attack the former city. On the approach of his brother,
Humayoon was betrkyed by his Afghan partisans, who wished to
seize and deliver him up to Zeman ; but, assisted by the Beloochees,
he succeeded in escaping from them, and again fled to Beloochistan.
The Shah sent a thousand cavalry in pursuit of him, from whose
C w . 19. BATTLE OF GOUHREE. 113
clutches he escaped for several days ; but having, unfortunately for
him, returned on his road to gain Herat, they came up with and
arrested hi in the district of Zemindavar, after which, and in
obedience to the orders they had received from Shah Zeman, they
put out his eyea The Shah, delighted with this fresh act of cruelty,
which, he fancied, ought to strengthen the power he had usurped,
thought of marching against the Emirs of Scinde, as much with the
desire of punishing them for the support they had given to Huma-
yoon, as to force them to pay the arrears of tribute which they
owed, and which they had ~d to pay several yean before the
desth of Timoor Shah.
Shah Zeman had reached the Bolan Pass when he heard
that Mahmood Mirza, after having established his power at
Herat, had just taken the field with an excellent army, and in-
tended to advance upon his rear while he was engaged with his
enemies in Scinde. F o r d therefore by nm&ty, he came to terms
with Fathi Ullah Khan Talpoora, and for the sum of 300,0001.
gave up the remainder of the arrears, which amounted to three
times that sum, and confirmed him in the government of
Scinde, after which he moved by forced marches to meet hi
brother.
Mahmood Mirza, quite as well informed of the movementa of
Zeman as the Shah was of his, halted when he heard of the king's
return to Kandahar, and having taken up a position in the mountains
of the Siah-bend, across which he had advanced, only moved forward
when he learnt that Zeman was two or three marches from his
encampment. The two armies came in sight, and attacked at
Gourrek, a large village situated between Girishk and Zemindavtir,
and fought with fury during fifteen successive hours. At length
fortune declared itself against Mahmood Mirza, who, beaten,
turned, and cut off h m his communications, was obliged to fly and
retire within the walls of Furrah, followed only by a hundred of
his dependants.
ARer this Shah Zeman, without giving himself any further
tronble about his antagonist, marched straight upon Herat, and
encamped under its walls, but several aasaults which he made
were repulsed with energy, and he was on the point of retreating
when the mother of Mahmood Mirza arrived in his camp to make
propceals in the name of her son, who she mur ed Zeman had no
desire for the throne, and would be quite satisfied simply with the
I
114 ZEMAN TAKES HERAT. CHAP. IX.
government of Herat. The Shah, who was anxious to carry his
arms to other points that were serious1 y menaced, was delighted
with the proposition, and accepted it immediatetly.
Kamran illirza, the son of RIahmood, and Hadji Firooz Eddin,
his brother, who had been appointed governor of the city in
Mahmood's absence, had remained within the citadel, and were
a h i d to go into the town lest the fortress should be taken from
them by some treacherous act on the part of the garrison. Not
having received any information .respecting the transaction which
had just taken place between the two brothers, their joy waa not
greater than their astonishment when they saw Zeman Shah in full
retreat, which they attributed to the arrival of Riahmood Mirza a t
the head of fresh forces. Desirous, therefore, of making a diver-
sion in his favour, they assembled in haste the troops that were a t
hand, and pursued the Shah ; but they had scarcely reached the
royal residence of Roouz-bagh, situated seven miles south of Herat,
when the Parsivan, Kalech Khan (a serdar of the Taymoonis, suze-
rain lord of Khaff, a man of great influence in the principality, and
reputation in warlike affairs), who had been intrusted by Kamran
and Firooz Eddin with the command of the citadel during their
absence, despatched a messenger to Zeman Shah to inform him
that he held the fortrese at his disposal, and that he ought to come
immediately and occupy it with his own troops.
The princes, informed of this unfortunate circumstance, returned
instantly to Herat, which still held out for them, and attacked the
citadel on all sides ; but it was in vain that they cannonaded it.
Kalech Khan, whom they summoned, and ordered to return to
his duty, answered only by redoubling his fire. The place was
h n g , well provisioned, and capable of resisting any assault for
several months, while it required only two days for Zeman Shah
to come and occupy it. Directly he appeared, the princes, see-
ing themselves abandoned by their partizans, fled in the direction
of Khorassan ; and Zeman, meeting with no further opposition,
took possession of Ilerat, where he remained four months. He
appointed his 8011 Kabsar Mirza governor of the province, and
gave the command of the Heratee troops, as well as 1000 Afghan
horse, tn the Serdar Kalech Khan, who had delivered up the place
to him. Zeman Iihan, Popolzye, was appointed Vizier to K a i w
Mirza, and received the title in partibus of governor of Persian
Khorassan, which Zeman Shah had the intention of uniting with
CHAP. IX. MAHMOOD ADVANCES ON FURRAH. 115
Afghanistan. With this view he left a corps of troop8 with the
Popolzye Serdar, independently of those commanded by Kalech
Khan, in order that he might be enabled to invade that province,
the conquest of which was resolved upon. After having taken these
measures the king returned to Iiandahar, where he remained but
a short time, and a few days afker arrived at Kabul.
But Mahmood Mirza, without either money or an army, could
do but little, and came to the determination of going to Teheran
and demanding assistance from Feth Ali, the Shah of Persia,
who had for some years been seated on the throne of the Kad-
jars ; and this sovereign promised him support and his reinstalla-
tion in the government of Herat, on condition that he admitted
hi suzerainty. This occurrence took place in the year 1798,
during which the revolt of Sedik Khan obliged Feth Ali to pro-
ceed to the Azerbaidjan ; but before his departure he recommended
Mahmood Mirza to the care of the Emir Assad Ullah Khan,
governor of Kachan, and son of the Ethemad Dooulet, Iladji
Ibrahim of Shiraz. Mahmood Mirza followed the Emir Assad
Ullah Khan to Kachan, but, observing that Feth Ali Shah prolonged
his stay in the north of hi kingdom, the prince got weary of wait-
ing for the support that had been promised him, and wrote to the
Shah, requesting that he might be permitted to leave the residence
which he had assigned him. The King of Persia having consented
to this request, Mahmood proceeded to Iihommn, where he hoped
to be able to raise some recruits ; nor was he deceived in this
hope, fur Mir Ali Khan, an Arab, the governor of the district of
Ghain, espoused his cause, and they took the field with 3000
infantry, marching in the first instance in the d i i i o n of Furrah.
The inhabitants of this city were favourable to the cause of Mah-
mood, and d i i t l y they heard of his approach they came out several
days' march to meet him, when a great number of them enrolled
themselves in his army.
The news of the arrival of Mahmood Mirza had spread rapidly
in Herat, much exaggerating his succe%s, and he was described
.
as having arrived at Furrah with 50,000 men, subduing every-
thing on his road. These reports carried consternation into the
minds of the citizens; all those who 1 d deserted the Prince
Mahmood, dreading his anger, made their preparations for de-
parture ; and the Prince Ka ' w, himself believing in the accu-
1 2
llG BATTLE OF EMARET. CEUP. IX'
racy of the intelligence, repaired and provisioned the citadel in
great haste ; but more truthful accounts followed and modified the
alarm of the prince and the scared inhabitants.
The report of this triumphant march brought to Mahmood Mirza's
standard a reinforcement of several thousand men ; amongst these
was the Noorzye Serdar, Djabber Khan, who brought with hi a
contingent of a thousand horsemen ; but when he saw what a small
army Riahmood's was, he repented of the step he had taken, and
under cover of a dark night quitted the camp, and proceeded in
great haste to Herat, where he made the real state of things
known. Reassurd by this information, Kaissar BIirza assembled
the troops of Kalech Khan, and, uniting tliem to those of Zeman
Khan, Popolzye (who, on lcarniilg the news, had returned
promptly from Khorassan, in the direction of which he had moved),
marched with these two divisions against his uncle. Nahmood,
seeing that Furrah was favourable to his cause, left that town on his
right, advanced at once to meet his opponent, came up with and at-
tacked him near the village of Emaret, and routed him completely.
The vanquished army retired in haste to Herat, and closed the
gates. Rlahmood Riirza followed, but, being unable to invest
the place entirely by reason of the smallness of his force, he
determined to encamp at a spot on the banks of the I-Ieri-rood
about three miles from the walls. The Vizier Zeman Khan, having
discovered that the sympathies of the Ileratees were in favour of
Blahmood, conceived that a temporizing line of conduct could
not but be advantageous to the latter: he resolved therefore, as
force was not on the side of Kaissar, to obtain the victory by cun-
ning. After having obtained the permission of that prince, he
wrote a letter to Ii i r Ali Khan, the Arab, as if it was the reply to
mme terms of arrangement which the latter had made to K a h
Mirza, aud which consisted in his obtaining some favour of that
prince, in exchange for which Mir Ali promised to deliver Mah-
mood Mirza into his hands. The adroit Vizier confided this letter
to an intelligent man, aiid advised him to manage in such a
way that he should be suspected and arrested by some of the
prince's troops, and then pretend great anxiety that the letter in
question should not be seen The scheme was carried out as he
wished ; the camp guard seized the messenger and conducted their
prisoner to Mahmood Mirza, to whom they presented the letter
CIIAP. IX. ZEMLV ARRIVES AT HERAT. 117
which they had taken. Mahmood, alarmed at the snare thus
revealed to him, asked the advice of an Afghan noble, Mo-
hamed Akrem Khan, as to what steps should be taken, and lie
advised him to avoid by flight the trap that had been laid for
them.
Nevertheless, the contents of this letter did not remain so entirely
a secret from Ni r Ali Khan, but that he received some i n h a t i o n
respecting it. He hastened, therefore, immediately to Mahmood,
and swore and protested in the most energetic terms to the truth of
his devotion to his person and his cause. The prince feigned to
believe him ; but, when night came, he fled from the camp, ac-
companied by his son Kamran, his brother Hadji Firooz Eddin,
the Serdar Akrem Khan, and a few devoted servanta ; and when he
thought himself in safety he sent his son and his brother to Teheran
to claim the promised assistance of Feth Ali Shah, proceeding
himself to Bokhara tu endeavour to interest the Emir in his
favour.
Mahmood Nirza had scarcely left the camp and his ally Mir
Ali Khan, than Kaissar JIirza was informed of the fad, and he
profited by the confusion and astonishment into which this event
had thrown the Ghainians, to fall upon and rout them thoroughly-
a great many were made prisoners and brought to Herat. As for
blir Ali Khan, he had great difficulty in effecting his escape, and
reached Ghain with only a few horse, having met m'ucll privation
and danger on the road.
Shah Zeman, then at Kabul, was soon informed that his brother
Mahmood had returned to Afghanistan, and some false reports
induced him to believe that Kaissar RIirza, after having been beaten
a t Emuret, had also evacuated the city of Herat on the approach
of Mahmood, who had taken possession. I I e therefore assembled
his army without loss of time, and took the field with a view to its
recapture, for the country and the roads were so thoroughly scoured
by the partisans of RIahmood, that no messenger had been able to
reach him with true intelligence of the actual state of things; it
was only on his arrival at IIernt itself that he knew positively what
was p i n g . Delighted to find that the evil was not so great as
he had anticipated, he encamped his army on the banks of the
Iferi-rood, and, followed by his court, subsequently entered the
city. When he learnt that his brother had gone to Bokhara he
immediately despatched the Kazee, Abdul Irak, to the Emir
118 REVOLT OF THE SIKHS. CHAP. IX.
of that country, to represent that by the terms of the treaty
concluded between Timoor Shah and the Emir he was bound
to deliver up Mahmood Mirza to him as a disturber of the tran-
quillity of the Afghan kingdom ; but that, nevertheless, if he
found himself bound by the duties of hospitality, he should
remain satisfied if he would order the prince t o be watched at
Bokhara in such a manner that he could not escape and aggn
foment discord in his dominions. Sultan Ali JIurad detained tbe
Afghan envoy for some time at his court without giving hima
categorical answer : he finished, nevertheless, by promising that
blahmood Rlirza should be detained in his capital, and that he
would answer for it witlr his head that he should not leave it. The
Kazee leR Bokhara without having comprehended the meaning of
these words of the Emir, who had dwelt especially upon the lsst
part of his reply, the real and secret intention of which WM to
gratify upon the fugitive prince the mortal hatred which he felt for
the family of the Suddozyes ; his death was indeed only def ed
a t the earnest request of a great and influential Uzbek nobleman,
by name Fezl Ahmed, who interested himself in llis behalf. Mah-
mood, informed by Fezl Ahmed of the plot which was in prepara-
tion against his life, managed to deceive the ~i gi l ance of his g d
and fled to Khiva, when Rlohamed &him Khan, the sovereigo of
that Khanat, for some time treated him with p t hospitality ; but
as in the end he was unable to render him the assistance which be
required to renew the war, Mahmood Mirza left Khiva and rejoined
his son and his brother at Teheran, to which city he had sent
subsequently to his flight from the camp of the Emir of Ghain.
After a residence of four months a t Herat, Zercan Shah received
letters &om the governor of Peshawur informing him that on his
departure &om Kabul the Sikh mountaineers of Yambou had made
a descent upon Lahore, and plundered and sacked the eiV
The Serdar Ahmed Khan, at the time governor of Lahore, did
his best to frustrate their intention ; he went out and attacked
them, but his soldiers fled at the first onset, and the Khan was killed
in endeavouring to cover their retreat. On the receipt of this d$-
astrous intelligence, Shah Zeman appointed Mir Efzel Khan, son
of the Serdaree Serdarane, Medad Khan, vizier to his son
sar, after which, taking with him Zeman Khan, Popolzye, in wh@
military talents he had the greatest confideuce, he left immediate]
for Kabul by the difficult and mountai~lous road which traverses
C'ria~. IX. DISASTERS OF ZEMAX'S ARMY. 119
the country of the Ilazarahs, Poocht Kooh, accompanied only by
one hundred and fifty horse. As to the mass of his army, artillery,
and baggage, he sent them by Kandahar, under the conduct
of his minister Vefadar Wa n and the Serdar Ahmed Khan
Noonye. Zeman Shah, who arrived in the capital in twelve days,
took a large sum from his treasury to make formidable prepara-
tions for carrying on the war with activity ; and directly the troops
which arrived by way of Kandahar had joined those he had just
raised he left for the Punjab. The Sikh mountaineers abandoned
Lahore at his approach and retired into their fastne~ws ; he there-
fore took peaceable possession of the city. As the inhabitants had
taken no part i n the last revolt, in which they had bt-n maltreakd
by the mountaineers, he thought he could place confidence in
them, and consented to the request which they n\ade, namely,
that in future the governor of Lahore should be selected by the
Shah h m amonpt the principal Sikh chiefs, to the exclusion of
the Afghans. I l e chose, therefore, for this post one of them, by
name Runjwt Sing, who had even then acquired a great reputation
for talent and courage ; and aRer having duly installed him, Zeman
Shah departed on his return to Kabul. This march was for him
and his army one long series of misfortunes ; his artillery and a
great part of his were lost at the parsage of the Jelum ;
the rain, which fell in torrents and almost daily, had so broken
up the roads that they were impassable; the soldiers, worn out
by their sufferings, either dropped to the rear or deserted, and
the plundering tribes took advantage of the distressed condition
of the army to pillage the baggage and strip the stragglers, who
were incapable of defending themselves. I n fact, it was the dgbris of
ail army of attenuated men, which, harassed by a thousand miseries
and privations, that Zeman succeeded in bringing into Peshawur.
Here he remained a month to rest and refresh his troops, after
whieh, having installed 11;s brother, Sliooja-001-Moolk, as governor
of the city, he proceeded to Kabul, where he made but a very ehort
stay, for he was under the necessity of going on to Kandahar
in spite of the severity of the winter to suppress the disposition to
revolt in that city.
Such revolts originated more especially in the dincontent which
the powerful tribe of the Barukzyes felt at seeing their chiefa, the
Mohamedzyes, set aside aud debarred from holding any public
appointment, and meeting wit11 no consideration at court. The
120 THE VIZIER VEFADAR KHAN. CHAP. IX.
reader should remember that, from the day on which Sudoo and
Mohamed had been raised to a superior rank by Shah Abbas the
Great, the descendants of the first had enjoyed under the Seffavean
dynasty an almost regal power in Afghanistan. The descendants
of the second, without having so great an influence, held nevertheless
the highest appointments in the state, and were not less venerated
than the Suddozyea. When Ahmed Shah ascended the throne,
he, out of gratitude to Hadji Djemal, a chief of the Mohamedzyes,
respected the privileges of that family, the chiefs of which constantly
held the most important commands in his army and the great
offices at his court. Timoor Shah, who followed the example of
his father, had the tact always to attach them to his party, and
Zeman Shah was the first who dared to alter this state of things,
which, sanctioned by time, had all the force of law.
Payendeh Khan, chief of the Mohamedzyes, was, as we have
already remarked, stripped of all the appointments that he held,
and this was the first grievance of the Barukzyes against royalty.
The prime minister of Zeman Shah, Vefadar Khan, although be-
longing to the royal tribe of Popolzye, was of low extraction.
The Shah did nothing without having first taken his advice,
and this personage was the instigator of all the harsh measures
which the Shah had adopted against the great families of the
kingdom ; Vefadar Khan found his own interest in the confiscations
which habitually followed, and they also delivered him from dan-
gerous rivals. Zeman remained deaf to the milder counsels
which were given him, and a fatality seemed to urge him for-
ward from day to day in this impolitic and unjust path. The
prime minister, having sprung from tlie lower ranks of the no-
bility, was despised by the higher, and he revenged himself by
oppressing them and elevating unknown persons in their place,
who became so many tools in his own hands. The system
thus adopted by Zeman of governing in the most absolute
manner, without the concurrence and support of the serdars, had
nevertheless, up to this time, produced only irritation in the public
mind, and some partial revolts ; but the discontent was general,
particularly amongst tlie most influential and powerful chie$ who
had all of them been more or less despoiled. Although Vefadar
Khan was not ignorant of the extent to which he was detested by
these persons, he played nevertheless a double game, and nourished
iu their minds sentiments of hostility to the king. The Khan en-
CEAP. IX. CONSPIRACY OF SERDARS. 121
deavoured to compromise his sovereign in their eyes, by making
them believe that, in whatever he did, he simply executed the wishes
of the Shah, and that his intervention with the king was the means
of saving them from much greater disasters. His friendly pro-
testations were always accompanied by hypocritical marks of inte-
rest in their behalf, such rn the mmisaion of a tax or the conces-
sion of some land, and led them to believe that he had great
diffilty in procuring these hvours fiom the Shah, regretting that
it was not in his power to render them a greater service, thus lead-
ing them to hope that they would be in a much better position
in future. In this way he by turns flattered and caressed all par-
ties, boasting everywhere the favours he had granted, and seeking
every opportunity of laying upon the king all the odium of his
tyranny and the bloody executions of which he himeelf was the
sole originator, hoping by such conduct to overthrow his sovereign,
and by these intrigues attain himself the regal power. He fancied
he should obtain his end by exciting, when the propitious moment
arrived, a tumult amongst the people, and expected to receive the
support of the new serdars of his own creation, who were devoted to
him. His numerous emissaries glided amongst the populace, and,
though apparently perfectly disinterested, worked upon them for the
vizier's own purposes. The brothers of the king also were undcr
his influence, and he made use of them and led each in his turn
to believe that he was endeavouring to raise him to the throne.
The intrigues and underhand practices of this ambitious man proved
that he had as much craft and subtlety as he had talent for go-
verning; the steps he took were always well considered, and to
the point, and his plan was so well conducted that it might have
~ucoeeded if he had had the boldness to bring it more rapidly to
an issue; but the heads of a few more serdars, who had taken
umbrage at him, were wanting : he temporized, therefore, and this
delay was fatal.
The Afghan serdars, for the most part discontented, formed
a w e t league, in order that they might come to some un-
derstanding as to the measures that must be taken to free them-
selves fiom the iron yoke and sanguinary persecutions which
weighed upon them ; but to give a greater chance of success to
their enterprise, they delegated five of the most powerful amongst
them, who alone were to decide upon the means to be employed-
the others binding themselves to be ready on the day appointed,
122 CONSPIRACY OF SERDARS. CHAP. 11,
and to execute without hesitation whatever should be determined
upon. As the police of Vtfadar Khan was perfectly organized,
and nothing escaped their Argus eyes, the five delegates fixed upon
the houd of a dervish, in high repute for his sanctity, as their
place of meeting, for his residence had been always frequented by tbe
most considerable of the Afghan nobility, who went by the appella-
tion of his mutids. IIe never received more than six persons at a
time, and his door was shut against every one until these six de
parted to make way for others. Payendeh Khan had the clever-
ness to induce this holy man to join the conspirators, and he w e d
that, by meeting at his house and taking advantage of the custom
so long established there, lie and the other delegates would mpe
the inquiries which might arise. Afier a lively discussion at
one of these meetings, in which cach of them stated the giev-
ances of his tribe, it was admitted that their nation had suffered
beyond what any meu of spirit could tolerate-that Zeman Shah and
his minister ought to be overthrown, and the first replaced by
the prince Shooja-001-Moolk, his half-brother, at that time gov&or
of Peshawur.
The chiefs present at this meeting were Payendeh Khan, Mo-
hamed Sherif Khan, Moonshee h h e e (cashier-in-chief), Timf
Ali Khan, chief of the eunuchs, Sultan Khan, Soorzye, and Rabim
Khan, Alizye. Before separating they fixed upon a day for the
execution of their project, and also drew up several articles, forming
a kind of constitution, which they were to give to their countrymen.
The principal clauses in this documer~t were, that henceforth the
crown should be elective ; that the Serdars alone had the right to
vote a t such election, and also to depose those sovereigns who
proved themselves unworthy of the trust which had been reposed in
thern. But unfortunately the conspirators procrastinated, and their
plans were betrayed to the prinie minister by the &l oonsh~
Bashee. Vefadar Khan, thinking this an admirable opportunity
of getting rid of his principal opponents at o~l e fell swoop im-
mediately informed the Shah of the conspiracy wliich had been
revealed, who recommended that the greatest secrecy should be
observed, and at once relieved his guards, of whose fidelity be
was doubtful, replacing them by others on whom he thought he
could rely. The following day he made considerable pmnt s
to his servants and officers, and also to the people, to dispose
them in his favour, and on the mcceeding one sent for all the
CHAP. IX. FLIGHT OF FETHI KHAN. 125
chi& who were concerned in the plot ; but separately, and under
the pretext that he was desirous of conversing with them upon
public affairs, so that they should not have the least suspicion
of his motive. However, on their arrival at the palace, they were
seized and imprisoned in the citadel. A few hours after the Shah
ascended the throne in great state, and, ordering them to be
brought into hi presence, demanded why they had conspired
against him ? to which they replied, that they had sworn to de-
throne him, but not to put him to death ; that they neer could
have had an idea of attacking his royal person if they had not been
firmly convinced that all their representations to induce him to
dismishis vizier would be fruitless ; it was his ruin alone they were
bent upon, and it was the hope of putting an end to this wretch
that had led them to conspire against their king. After having
listened to this avowal, Zeman Shah ordered them to be exe-
cuted in his presence, their bodies to be left on the public square
outside the citadel, and remain there for three days exposed to the
public gaze.
As he now feared some movement on the part of the Barukzyeg
the chief of which tribe he had just put to death, he ordered
that all the Nohamedzye serdars should be arrested, but the
greater part of them, having been warned in time, were enabled to
save themselves by flight, or take refuge in the mosque of Ahmed
Shah,-a sanctuary never violated. Fethi Khan, the eldest son of
Payendeh Khan, who was more particularly sought after by the
express orders of the Shah, with a view of putting him to death,
also escaped the vigilance of the soldiers that were sent in pursuit
of him. Having received notice of their intentions, he got over
the walls, and, having excellent horses awaiting him in a garden
adjacent to the city, he reached Girishk, seventy-three miles distant,
in eight h o w From thence he took the road over the mountains
and acms country, in order that no trace should be found of him,
and directed his course to Persia, where he rejoined Nahmood
Mirza, who, as we have already remarked, had, for the second time,
taken up his residence at the court of the Kadjars. On this occa-
sion, as on the former one, he had been very well received by Feth
Ali Shah, who had placed himself at the head of an army, with
a view of reinstating him in his government of Herat; but on
his arrival at Nishapoor he learnt that fresh disturbances had
broken out in the Azerbaidjan, which obhged him to return to Irak
124 MAHMOOV TAKES FURRAH, CHAP. IX
with his troops, and dismise Mahmood Mi na, to whom he gave a
subsidy and assigned Turchiz as his place of residence, promising
that he would send him troops when order was restored in the
north of the empire, so that the prince might proceed against Herat
I t was at Turchiz that the Serdar Fetlii Khan joined Mahmood
Mirza, and the greater part of his brothers soon amved at the
same place, who, like him, had also their father's death to avenge.
ARer the sanguinary executions of the chiefs a t Kandahar, the
Afghans' in all parts of the kingdom rose against Zeman Shah.
The Punjab and Peshawur in particular openly raised the
standard of revolt. There were also some attempts a t insurrection
in Kabul, which obliged the King to proceed there in great haste;
but fearing also for the tranquillity of Randahar, he left there
a part of his army, and the Serdar Mir Ali Wa n , a devoted,
energetic, and intelligent man, as governor.
While Zeman Shah was in a state of complete uncertainty
as to what step he should take to pacify his kingdom, Fetbi
~ h a n , who had, as well as his brothers, devoted himself to
the causs of Mahmood Mirza, urged that prince to enter Afghan-
istan once more, and overthrow his brother. Their pressing soli-
citations at length prevailed, and he marched on Ghain, buf
on his arrival in that district, he mw that the inhabitants did
not feel disposed to pardon liim for the check they had sup
tained, owing to liis flight when they formed part of his am~y
before Herat, and that in consequence they were very little inclined
to assist him. 31ahrnood almost regretted having left Twhk
and thought of returning ; but Fetlii Khan somewhat restored his
courage, and induced him to renounce this intention. At the
same time he sent two of his brothers to the fortress of F u d
to endeavour to keep matters quiet and obtain intelligence ; this
was easy enough, for the inhabitants of that town were elltirely
devoted to illahmood Jlirza, to whom they opened their gate
when lie presented himself before them, accompanied only by
eighteen horsemen, which formed all liis ariny. This s u m
obtained for him the support of some chiefs of Khorassan, and he
soon found himself at the head of a small force. He then made
an appeal to the Afghan nation, and in the manifesto which he
issued he drew a vivid picture of the cruelties and vices of Zeman
Shah and his minister Vefadar Khan, and announced his de*
of marching on Kabul, to deliver the people from their oppres-
CHAP. IX. AND KANDAHAR. 125
sion. The tribe of the Rarukzyeq who recognised Fethi Khan
as their chief, hastened en muse to place themselves under the
orders of their young general, and this example was soon fol-
lowed by the greater number of the Dooranee tribes, when Mah-
mood marched on Kandahar. The governor, Mir Ali Khan, in-
formed of his approach, went out to meet him at the head of
four thousand cavalry, but, completely routed and forced to fly, he
had scarcely time to retlre within the citadel. Mahmood Mirza
followed him step by step, and invested the city, which he be-
sieged without success during forty-two days. At length, on
the forty-third the assault was given, and Fethi Khan, who
conducted it, was the first man that scaled the walls, and his
soldiers followed rapidly. They were treacherously aided by
Bakhch Khan and lIassan Khan, two Afghan chiefs, who, osten-
sibly of the Shah Zeman's party, were secretly doing all they
could to make that of BLahmood Mirza triumph, and but for their
help the place would not have been taken without great difficulty,
When Mir Ali Khau saw that the affair was desperate, he ordered
these two traitors to be brought into his presence, and, feeling
sure of their perfidy, put them to death on the spot, after which he
mounted his horse and escaped by a secret door, accompanied
only by a few horsemen.
Directly Mahmood Rlirza was in possession of Kandahar he
was obliged to levy a large sum upon the inhabitants for the
maintenance of his army ; but the persuasive manners and talents
of Fethi Khan induced them to support this contribution with-
out murmuring, and they remained devoted to the prince. On
hearing what was passing at Kandahar, Zeman Shah sent an
army of 15,000 horse, under the command of the Serdar Ahmed
Khan, against Mahmood, for he was averse to leaving the capital
himself for fear he should lose it in his absence. This officer
was but little satisfied with the Shah, and still leas ao with his
minister Vefadar Khan, and, in the hope that he would be better
treated by Blahmood, he went over to him, with all his army, at
.
Mookpoor. In anticipation of ulterior events, Shah Zeman had,
aRer the departure of Ahmed Khan, assembled fresh troops, but
when they heard of the defection of the c o p under that serdar
they at once disbanded and retired to their homes. An outbreak
occurring at the Bame time in Kabul, Zeman Shah was under the
necessity of evacuating the city and retiring in the direction of
126 BATTLE BETWEEN ZEMAN AND MAHNOOD. CHAP. DL
Jellalabad.
On leaving the gates of the capital he had with him
only two hundred cavalry and four hundred artillerymen, with theii
guns, stores, and ammunition ; his minister, Vefadar Khan, and the
Serdar Zeman Khan, Popolzye, were the only chiefi who re-
mained faithful, and they retired with him and his party within
the fortified village of Koleh Acheg, the name of its owner, and im-
mediately set to work to repair the walls and provision it. From
hence a fresh appeal was made to the partizans of the Shah, and,
as the royal treasure was still in his hands, he was joined by a
pretty good number of recruits, but much more in the hope of
receiving high pay than from any devotion to his person. HOT-
ever that might be, Zeman again found himself in a position to
give battle to hi brother.
After the 15,000 cavalry of Ahmed Khan had joined the my
of Mahmood Nirza, the prince marched rapidly upon and seized
Kabul, without meeting with the slightest resistance. The Emir
Islam Khan and Djaffer Khan, two Kuzzilbash chieh, who only
could have defended the city, were allied by marriage to the
Mohamedzyes, and went over to their side the moment tbef
appeared.
Mahmood, thus successful, decided upon dislodging Zeman
Shah from the fortified position he had taken up. The task as
a difficult one, for the latter had saved all his artillery, while
the prince had not one single piece to oppose to him. Never
theless, he hesitated not, and again took the field. The armie
of the two brothers met at the halt of Ouchpane, when t ht of
the Shah was completely beaten and dispersed, and he had the
greatest difficulty in regaining Kaleh Acheg. Mahmood fol-
lowed him, and immediately assaulted his adversary's stronghold,
but, defended by both nature and art, and garrisoned by brare
men determined to die for their king, it reaisted for eleven dsp
the continuous efforts of the besiegers. However, the time
arrived when they could hold out no longer, and the Shah, accom-
panied by the serdars who were with him, escaped during the night,
and retired into another small fortress near Jugdulluk, also beloeg-
ing to Acheg Khan.
This chief, alarmed at the
that disastrous consequences might result to him for the b q i -
tality he had shown to his sovereign, sent a messenger to ~ a h m d
to inform him of the Shah's retreat. The prince immediatdY
sent a serdar, with a strong escort and a surgeon, to the spot
CJW. IX. DOWNFALL AND MISFORTUNES OF ZEMAN. 12i
which the Khan had designated, when Zeman was taken prisoner,
and, in conformity with the orders of Mahmood, his eye8 were
immediately put out - a punishment he richly merited for the
same cruelty which he had practised upon Humayoon Nirza,
bk elder brother. Vefadar Khan, Zeman Khan, Popolzye, and
Nohamed Khan, the brother of the Vizier, also taken prisonera
with blah Zeman, were sent to Kabul, and there publicly exe-
mted Thus terminated the career of this ambitious minister, who
could only govern by intrigue and murder, and this in order that
he might supplant his master, which he would have done, had not
his courage failed him at the moment his plan was on the eve of
execution. He perished by a death to wliich he had condemned
hundreds, and which he so thoroughly deserved himself.
Though blind, Shah Zeman, with the assistance of a few devoted
friend^, subquent l y managed to deceive the vigilance of his guards,
and fled to Bokhara, where fresh misfortunes awaited him. His
daughter, who followed him in his exile, and who was remarkable
for her great beauty, was torn with violence from him by the Emir
Haidar Turreh, who had inherited from his father a hatred of the
Suddozye family. After this abduction he was on the point of
putting Zeman to death, which would infallibly have happened, if
he had not again succeeded in making his escape.
From Bokhara this king, hitherto so powerful, but now so unfor-
tunate, went t o Herat, which was then governed by the Prince
Hadji Firooz Eddin, half-brother of the Shah Mahmood, who
respected his misfortunes and gave him a generous reception;
and after having treated him in the most hospitable manner
during several months, he gave him an escort which secured
his safe retreat to India. Zeman retired to Loodiana, where
he lived on a pension from the East India Company, devoted to
the observances of his faith, and did not a t any subsequent period
miK himself up with the revolutions of which his country was so
frequently the theatre after his fall. He was still living in 1846.
This prince, like all the Afghans, was cruel ; but this arose much
more from the fact that he was influenced by a bad minister,
in whom he placed too much confidence, and who knew how to
inspiire him with chimerical fears, than because he was of a na-
turally cruel disposition, and wished to gratify it. His greatest
crime was, that he was absolute, and would reign on that principle.
Thk wounded the pride of the serdars, and was in opposition to
128 CHARACTER OF ZEMAN. CHAP. IS.
the received opinions amongst them as to the extent of the aove
reign power. Wi t h a different vizier, he might have hoped that
his reign would be as long, and possibly more glorious, than that
of his father, for he was personally very brave, very active, always
on horseback, bringing one war to a conclusion only to commence
another ; nor was he wanting in intelligence : but he lost all his
future chances by making the Mohamedzye chiefs discontented, for
their rights to the great offices of the state were quite as sacred in
the eyes of the Afghans as those of the Suddozyes to the throne.
The moment he endeavoured to abrogate those rights his fall be-
came certain ; but, in spite of the sanguinary executions he was
guilty of at the instigatiou of his minister, the Afghans have a
greater respect for his memory than that of any of the other sons
of Timoor Shah.
CHAP. 9. ACCESSION OF MAEMOOD SHAH. 1 8
CHAPTER X.
Afahmood ascends the throne - First ads of the Shnh - Revolt of the Qhildj-
q e s - Kaissar Mima in driven from Herat - Hadji Firooz Eddin made
governor of that city - Knku Minn attack% him, but in obliged to retire -
Kamran, a aon of Mahmood, and K a k alternately take possession of Kan-
dahar - Di or den and conflict with the Kuzeilbsshes - Peace in reatored at
Kabul - Conepiracy ngainst Shah Mabmood - He in dethroned - His brother
Shooja nu& him - Mahmood remains a priaoner - Kamrm is expelled
from Kandahar by Kaissrv M i m - The latter, defeated by the Herataes,
evacurrtea the city - The Persiane besiege Herat -They are beaten nnd retire -
Shsh SLooja =hen against the Tnlpooras - Returns to Kabul - English
embaasy to Kabul - DiiXcultiea of the reign of Shah Shooja - The Serdar Fetlii
Khan intrigues nnd fli+from Kabul - He is arreatrd by K a i m Mirza - Dost
Mohamed escapes and pillages Bakooa - Shere dil Khan mist8 Shah Mahmood
t o escape - The latter and the Moharuedzyee release Fethi Khan - Mahrnood
marches on Knbul - Seirm the city - Rattle of Nettmla - Shooja ia put to
flight - Endeavours to keep the field - Retires to Loodiana.
AFTER seven years of conflict and misfortunes 3Inhmood Mirza
ascended tlie throne of his fathers in the year 1800, and when
Zeman Shah was overthrown he took the title of Shah, and
made his solemn entry into Kabul. He behaved with the ut-
most generosity to his troops, even to such an extent that he
exhausted t.he greater part of the treasure nccumulated in the
coffers of the state by his father and grandfather. He a120
enriched the chiefs who had aswisted him, and gave them the
highest appointments at his court : the S e Ar Fethi Khan received
the title of Shah Doort Khan; * Shere Mohamed Khan, son of
the Vizier Shah Velee Khan, was named Mooktaf-ed-Dooulet, and
to him was delegated the government of the kingdom ; the Serdar
Abdullah Khan, Ali Kioozye, father of Yar Mohamed Khan,
who had been confined in the Bala Hissar by Shah Zeman, was
released from that fortress, and made Governor of Cashmeer ; and,
finally, he sent his son Kamrail Mirza, with several brothers of the
Sr da r Fethi Khan, against Shooja-ool-Moolk, who commanded at
Peshawur, to take the city and seize that prince. Shooja did
not wait for them, but fled at their approach; so Kamran took
p o ~ s i o n of Pesliawur without any fighting.
* Wend of the k i n g . - F h .
R
130 KAISSAR MIRZA DRIVEN FROM UERAT. C E A P . ~ .
A few capital punishments, which Mahmood ordered ahr his
installation to power, excited a little irritation amongst the nomade
tribes, the chiefs of which had more especially felt the effecta of
hi* anger ; but as these rigorous measures affected his adversaries
only, the Shah's party felt no uneasiness, and considered that he
had a right to chastise those who had been opposed to him.
Nevertheless the Ghildjzyes, the born enemies of every Abdalee
sovereign, revolted at the outaet against his authority, and were
desirous of placing one of their own tribe upon the throne;
Mahmood was obliged to send the Serdars Fethi Kban and
Ahmed Khan against the rebels, who beat them in four or five
encounters, and terminated the revolt by makng them conform
to the existing state of things.
On the other hand, fortune came to the aid of the Shah Mahmood;
for Kaissar Mirza, the son of Shah Zeman, lost the government of
Herat, and this without any attempt on the part of Mahmood to
dispoaseas him of it. The circumstances were as follows :-
Mir Efzel Khan, the Vizier of Kaissar Mirza, collceived the
idea of overthrowing the prince immediately after the fall of his
father, and at this intrigue he worked ardently, and formed with
great ease a powerful party on which he could entirely rely.
When he thought he was sufficiently powerful, he resolved on
putting Kaissar to death, but the prince, informed of the plot in
time, escaped from Herat, and ought refuge at Kaff-rooge, a town
of Khorassan, leaving his wives and children under the protec-
tion of the Scrdar Kalech Khan, who, though less influential than
Mir Efzel Khan, was still sufficiently powerful not to be apprehen-
sive on account of the support and protection he gave to this
unfortunate family.
After the flight of Kaissar Mirza, Mir Efzel, well convinced that
Shah Mahmood, occupied at this time with the Ghildjzyeg could
not by any possibility come and disturb him, endeavoured to esta-
blish his authority in Herat. 'I'h inhabitants, who were attached
to him, would not agree to this except with a certain reserva-
tion; but, on the other Iiand, they rejected and repelled the
secret intrigues of Kalech Khan, the antagonist of the u q r ,
who wished to assassinate him. The Heratees demanded that
Efzel Khan, though retaining the appointment of vizier, which
they guaranteed him, should receive as governor, in the p l m of
Kai..sar Mirza, one of the blood royal, unless he preferred the
CHAP. X. HADJI FIROOZ EDDIN. 131
return of that prince himself; but Mir Efzel, fearing the resene
ment of the latter, hastened to find a successor agreeably to the
wishea of the people.
Hadji Firooz Eddin, who, as we have already remarked, retired
to Teheran, had on leaving that capital gone on a pilgrimage
to Mecca. On his return Afghanistan was groaning under the
sanguinary executions of Shah Zeman, and the war was then going
on between him and Hahmood Mi za ; the Iladji, who was anxious
not to be a witness of these sad scenes, retired therefore to Turchiz
in Khorassan, which the Shah of Persia had =signed to him as his
residence, and here he occupied himself in the purchase and sale
of horses, camels, and other beasts of burden. An envoy from
Mir Efzel Khan came to him there, and proposed for his
acceptance the governmeilt of Herat ; but this prince, devoid of
ambition, and caring little for the grandeur of such a position,
declined the offer, preferring to continue his commercial pursuib.
'l'hia refusal was not at all to the taste of Mir Efzel, who, pressed
by the intrigues of Kalech Khan, was more earnestly solicited from
day to day to recall Kaissar blirza. To allay, therefore, the
impatience of thc people, he pretended that he had received a
letter from IIadji Firooz Eddin accepting the government of the
city; this, however, he had himself forged, and, contemporane-
ously with making the letter public, despatched in haste a few
horsemen to Turchiz, who, under the pretext of wishing to purchase
some horses, induced the prince to meet them in a retired spot,
when they carried him off by main force, and brought him to
IIerat, nolenr volens, where he was obliged to accept the title of
Governor.
Kaissar Mirza, seeing that his uncle had carried the day
against him, would not submit to the decision of the IIeratees,
and marched against Herat at the head of a small army of
Afghans snd Khorassanees, which he had succeeded in raising.
lIadji Firooz allowed him to advance as far as Shekivar, a
situated twenty-one rniles west of Herat, where he
attacked his adversary, when Kaissar was completely worsted,
and obliged to tnke to fl'ght.
I n accordance with a plan
agreed upon previously, and of which the troops had been
informed, the prince after his defeat directed his course south-
ward into the plain of Bakooa, where the fugitives went to
rejoin him ; when they all arrived he marched against Kandahar,
K 2
132 CONFLICTS WITH THE KUZZILBBSHES. CEAP. X.
hoping to surprise Kamran Mirza, who commanded there, and
capture that city. I n this attempt, as it turned out, he was
successful, but a few days after the inhabitants revolted, and d r o ~e
him out of Kandahar. Kamran Mirza, who had retired to Kelat
i Ghildjzye, waa recalled by them, so that tliese two princes
succeeded each other three times during the space of two months,
according aa the party which supported either had the upper hand;
nevertheless Kamran Mirza finished by remaining master of the
position, and Kaissar fled once more.
Mahmood Mirza had been the sovereign ruler of Afghanistan
during two years and six months, when the city of Kahul be me
the scene of sanguinary disorders, originating in a religious schism
between the Afghans, who are Sooneeq and t he Kuzzilhsha
of the sect of Shiahs; these riots wriously compr omi s the
power of Shah Mahmood, nevertheless lie surmounted the di5-
culty, but the support he gave to the heretical Shiahs alienated
the Afghans from him, and contributed greatly to his fall, which
took place some shod time after.
These disorders were occasioned by a circumstance arising out of
the horrible inclination the Persians have for a vice which it would
sully these pages to mention. Some of the Kuzzilbashes m d
for several days a young Afghan lad of great beauty in their bow,
during which time he was treated in the most infamous manuer,
and this not only from their depraved passions, but from their
hatred to Soonees. Rtstored to liberty, the youth informed his
parents of what had taken.place, when they immediately complained
to Shah Mahmood ; but the king, not wishing to alienate the Kuzzil-
bashes, whose adhesion had been, and might be again, of grerrt
service to him, refused to legislate upon the matter, and forwarded
it to the religious tribunal from which it came. The
parties, although dissatisfied in that the Shah eluded their com-
plaint, nevertheless conformed to his orders, mid to
the mosque to consult the Syud Mir Va@z, a man highly venerated
by the Afghans, and whose hostility to the Shah Mahmood was no
secret to any one. When the complainants appeared, the S J ~
was preaching to an immense crowd of persons, and they inter
rupted him to make known their business with loud cries and
rending their clothes. On learning the nature of it, Mir Vaez
at once gave them a fetvo authorising the extermination of all
Shiahs in Kabul, whom he held in detestation. Il'hen it was
CHAP. X. PEACE RESTORED. 133
Imom that this fetm had been issued, the Afghans assembled in
arm, and in great numbers, around the mosque, and &wards
went, full of excitement, to exterminate the Kuzzilbashes. The
first place to which they proceeded was the quarter of the Khaffis,
a people originally from Khaff, massacred all those whom they met,
and p i i d and burnt their houses. Recovered in some degree frola
the first movement of surprise which this sudden attack had caused
them, the Kuzzilbashes assembled, fully determined to defend their
property and their lives to the last extremity. Nevertheless, their
situation became every moment more critical, for, after a stout de-
fence of two days, they saw, on the morning of the third, all the
heights that commanded their position occupied by the Afghans
from the neighbouring villages, who had come to the assistance of
the citizens The Shah Mahmood had sent Mooktar ed Dooulet
and Ahmed Khan several times to the assailants, to endeavour to
prevail upon them to desist from their sanguinary intentions, but
this step, instead of appeasing, only irritated them the more,
excited as they were by the mollahs and some serdars, who were
jealous of the favour shorn to the Kuzzilbash chiefs by the Shah.
A h four days' fighting, during which four hundred persons at
least, and on -either side, had lost their lives, the Serdar Fethi
Khan, who, by reason of the alliances which existed between his
family and the Kuzzilbashes, had, up to this time, refrained from
taking any part in the affair, became alarmed, and, apprehensive
that b g s might take a still more serious turn, was anxious to put
some bounds to the furious harangues of Mir VaBz, who spared not
even royalty itself. Fethi Khan therefore stepped forward, and,
with his brother, declaring in favour of the Kuzzilbashes, rushed at
the head of their partisans upon the disturbers of public order, and
di& them with matchlock and sabre, to the great regret
of the sedan opposed to Mahmood, who were also envious of the
favour in which he was held by hi sovereign. From this moment
they conspired against them, and swore to overthrow them both.
An oaxsion for doing thii did not present itself for two years, when
Fethi Khan was obliged to march with an army to Bamian to put
down some disorders amongst the Hazarahs. Immediately afbr
his departure, Mir VaEz, the Serdar Ahmed Khan, and Mooktar ed
Dooulet, the principal chiefs of the conspiracy, sent an express to
the prince Shooja-od-Moolk, the younger brother of Shah Mah-
moM1, requesting him to comc immediately to Kabul, and ovcrthro+
134 MAHMOOD DETHRONED. CHAP. X.
the latter, promising to give him their support and that of the
Afghans in general. This ~rince, who had received information of
this plot long before, was not very far distant h m Peshawur, which
he had secretly approached, and, on the receipt of the letter written
-
him by the conspirators, advanced rapidly towards Kabul with all
the men he could collect. Shah Mahmood was one of the last
persons who head of his arrival, for no one had revealed the fact to
him, and he only ascertained it by remarking the excitement which
everywhere prevailed. He was not a person who could suggest to
himself the energetic measures which the exigencies of the moment
~qui r ed, and the man of action who had placed him on the throne,
and through whom he governed, namely, Fethi Khan, was a t a
distance, and wholly ignorant of what was passing at Kabul-
all the warriors who had been despatched to him by Sliah Mah-
mood had also been detained, and could not join him in person,
for he was closely watched in his palace.
Fccling the imminence of his danger, Mahmood took refuge in
the Bale IIissar, and the inhabitants, satisfied by keeping an eye
upon him from the outside of the citadel, went in crowds to meet
Shooja-ool-Moolk, whom they brought into the city in triumph,
and placed on the throne amidst the loudest acclamations.
I have, up to this point, followed the manuscripts of two Eastern
authors, whose works I have frequently quoted in the course of my
narrative: that of Mirza Ali Mohamed has led me only to the
close of the Afghan dominion in Persia ; from that period, up to the
arrival of Shah Shooja at Kabul, I have drawn my materials from
the writings of Abdullah Khan Heratee, piclc-Klictmet, gentleman
of the chamber, or equerry, to the Shah b r a n of Herat; but
I must add that his narrative is very sunlmary add destitute of
da t a ; and I have been obliged to make researches elsewhere to
find those I have recorded. 1 have also joined to the information
taken from his manuscript many other particulars which I collected
myself during my travels in Afghanistan, from the mouths of con-
temporaries of Shah Timoor and of his sons, who themselves took
part in the evcnta of those times. The reign of Shah S h o ~ j ~ - ~ ~ l -
Moolk is the one upon which I am not so well informed, and,
having no European library to refer to, it will be impossible for me
to fill up the very iinportant omissions ~l i i ch, without doubt, exist
in the history of this reign.
The first act of Shah Shooja, as king, was to seize Shah
CEAP. X. THE PERSIANS BESIEGE HERAT. 135
Wmood, delivered up to him by his own pards, and to
order the I c t talionis to be enforced by putting out his eyes, as
Mahmood had done those of the Shah Zeman; Mooktar ed
Dooulet having interceded for him, Shooja revoked this order out
of consideration to hi supporter; but he detained the ex-king a
prisoner, and confined him in a dungeon of the Bala Hissar.
After having taken this precautionary measure, the king confidd
a division of his army to hi nephew K a i w Mirza, the son of
Shah Zeman, in order that he might turn Kamran Mirza, a son of
Mahmood Shah, out of Kandahar, where he commanded; but,
meeting half-way Alem Khan, nephew of the Serdar Ahmed Khan,
he learnt, greatly to his satisfaction we may presume, that this had
already been done. The inhabitants had risen at the instigation
of Alem Khan, and driven Kamran from the city ; no opposition,
therefore, was offered to the ~r i nce on entering Kandahar, of
which, in virtue of new orders from his uncle, he became governor.
On leaving t he city, Kamran Mirza took the road towards Merat,
where his uncle Hadji Firooz Eddin gave him a kind reception, and
confided to him the government of the district of Furrah, adjacent to
Kandahar, where he was in a position to observe the events that
were passing i n that city, and to lay hands upon it by surprise, or
otherwise., as occasion might present itself.
Some time after Eladji Fiooz Eddin, influenced by his mother,
who was also the mother of Shah Mahmood, coneented to march an
itmy against Kabul, and make an attempt to release his brother ; he
gave the command of these t roop to his son Malek Kasem Mirza
and his nephew Kamran Mirza. The prince Kaissar, tardily in-
formed of their march, came out nevertheless from Kandahar and
attac4ted the Hemt ea near Kdeh d'Azim Khan, but he was beaten
and forced to fly once more, leaving the victors mastere of Kandahar.
Hadji Firooz Eddin had scarcely obtained this success when he
learnt that Mohamed Velee Mirza, Governor-General of Khorassan,
had marched an army commanded by the Naib Mohamed Khan
Badjar to take Herat. IIe therefore recalled his nephew and hi
who abandoned in their turn Kandahar to Kaissar Mirza.
IVhile awaiting their arrival, Hadji Firooz Eddin assembled in
haste a few thousand horse of the Eimak tribes, and moved out
of Herat to meet the PeMians; the encounter took place near
Chekivan, but he was beaten and obliged to make a speedy retreat
into Elerat, which was soon bi eged by the victors.
The Persians
136 SHAH SHOOJA bfARCHES ON SCINDE. CHAP. X.
had good artilIery, and their troop had received for some time past
a certain amount of instruction and organization on the European
system ; they might therefore hope to make themselves masters of
the place in a short space of time. But t h i hope was not realized,
owing to their want of vigilance, for the Akhan princes, returning
from Kandahar, fell upon their rear, which they put to the rout,
while Hadji Firooz sallied from the city and attacked them in
f nl t , so that, taken between two fires, they must have thought them-
selves fortunate in being abIe to effect their retreat with the loss
of a few hundred men killed and three or four guns taken. They
repaid themselves however for this check by ravaging the country
through which they retreated, and bringing with them to Meshed
more than one hundred thousand cattle.
This was the first time after the death of Nadir Shah that the
Persians put forward their claims to Herat ; since then they have
made very many attempts to take it, without more success than in
thii instance : nevertheless they have exercised'from this period a
certain influence upon its governor, who, for the Bake of being at
peace with them, acknowledgd, although evasively, the suzerainty
of the Shah of Persia aRer this attack ; and agreed to pay a tribute,
the terms of which were left altogether undetermined: neither the
amount nor the time it was to be paid was stated ; it was much or
little accordiig to circumstances and the means which the Persia&
might have of enforcing payment. Shah Shooja had enough trouble
to consolidate his power in Kabul, for a thousand factions were in
a state of agitation around him ; he punished some and compro-
mised matters with others, and had at length succeeded in establish-
ing some order. The Serdar Fethi Khan, after his return from
Bmian, attached himself to his party and became one of his minis-
ters ; it was this chief who advised him to give up his life of repose
and make war, which alonc could conciliate and obtain for him the
respect of the Afghans. Ae the Shah had a predilection for a
military life, this advice was adopted, the invasion of &inde re-
rnl vd upon, and, after having assembled an army of 30,000 men,
the king marched on that county. The chicf of the Talpoom
endeavoured to avoid the storm, and sent his minister Walee
Mohamed Khan to the Shah, offering to pay him 320,0001. which
he was indebted to him for arrears of tribute ; but the Serdar Fethi
~ h a n , who saw the king was inclined to accept this offer, opposed it
in every way that he could. His advice would most probably hare
CHAP. X ENGLISH EMBASSY TO KABUL 137
been listened to if disastrous intelligence had not been received from
Kabul: the northern tribes were in a state of agitation, and the
capital itself was not tranquil ; which reasons induced the Shah
to terminate his misunderstanding with the Emirs of Scinde and
accept the 320,00OL, which having done he returned in great haste
to Kabul Having restored tranquillity there, he made an expe-
dition eastward, with a view of retaking passession of Cashmeer, and
reducing the Serdar Runjeet Sing, Governor of Lahore, tu obedience ;
but he tailed in thii enterprise also, and returned to Kabul, having
mffered considerable 1-
Though Shah Shooja's reign was so short, it was nevertheless one
of t h e which had the greatest chance of being prosperous. The
Akhans seemed tired of the demon of discord, but unfortunately
there was nothing of a conciliatory character about the Shah ; he
alienated those whom he had the greatest interest in attaching to
his cause, and an unforeseen occurrence, by which he ought to have
obtained strength, served only to excite in him the love of absolute
authority, and in the end turned to his prejudice.
The British government, after having subdued in succession all
the sovereigns of India one after the other, saw itself menaced in
the middle of its triumphs by a danger against which it sought
to protect itself by all the means in ita power. The Emperors
Napoleon and Alexander had just agreed to undertake an hostile ex-
pedition against India, passing through Persia Feth ,4li Shah, who
then reigned in the latter country, was not so stanch an ally that
England could trust him ; she thought therefore of establishing
her firet lime of defence beyond the Persian frontier, and sought the
friendship of the Afghans to form her advanced guard. With this
policy in view, the Governor-General of India sent Mr. El~hinstone
as ambassador to Kabul, where he made a treaty of alliance offen-
sive and defensive with Shah Shooja-ool-Moolk ; the ambassador
was exceedingly well received, and each day the Shah gave him a
freshentertainment in the royal palace. The siege of Herat, which
Mohamed Velee Mirza had just undertaken, and the result of
which had been so unfortunate, wa s the counterpart to this embmsy.
It is well known how the rupture which took place between France
and Russia, and the ascendancy obtained by England at the court
of Teheran by scattering her gold on all sides, led to the failure of
Napoleon's plans, which might otherwise have been completely
suaxsful, and overthrown the then political state of India
38 CHARACTER OF SHAH SHOOJA. CHAP. X.
Shah Shooja-001-Moolk had the reputation, and with reason,
of being the most talented of the sons of Timoor Shah. With
great firmness of character and tried courage, it was plainly to be
seen by more than one circumstance that he was not a man to
support intrigues, or serve as an instrument to a party. It was,
therefore, a little against the grain that the serdars had submitted
to the coercion of Mu VGz, Ahmed Khan, and Mooktar-ed-
Dooulet, the result of which was the elevation of Shah Shooja to tbe
throne ; for they clearly saw that under such a sovereign they must
take a straight course and obey without making those representa-
tions which the Afghans lore so much to present to their superiors.
Pressed by circumutnnccs, they could not do otherwise than accept
the candidate for the throne without conditions, for his usu'p~tion
was the only means by which they could withdraw themselve
from the vengeance of Shah Mahmood, and that of the Serdar
Fethi Khan, in the eyes of whom they had become ostensibly
compromised sincc the unfortunate day when the Soonees and
Shiahs had massacred one another in the city of Kabul. Never-
t hel ~s, they still hoped that in accepting Shah Shooja as king he
would keep his authority within just limits ; but they were mistaken,
for the Shah, who at once penetrated their intentions, cut ahort
all their demands from the very day he ascended the h o e ,
by an act of sovereign power of the most absolute character. This
tyrnnnical feeling soon became habitual to him, and it increased
by degrees with all those who displeased him, however powerful ot
influential they might be. The Mohamedzyes themselves were
deprived of their appointments, and their chief, Fethi Khan, dia
graced by the king. The serdars, who vegetated in obscurity and
were the least to be feared, were taken from their retreats and
placed in positions of importance-in a word, Shooja shook himself
free from the yoke, and transformed everything, and he never afta-
wards gave any proofs of that independent spirit which had led
others to have such an high opinion of him when he was only a
prince of the blood. But it must be admitted, and to his praise,
that he was always grateful to those who had raised him to power:
Mir Vd z , Ahmed Khan, and Mooktar-ed-Dooulet, wen! much
more hi friends than his dependents ; but this friendship could not
preserve them from the sad fate that awaited them ; and they f d all
three from the elevated rank in which fortune had p l d them by
the revolutions which the Barukzyes and their numemus adherents
CEAP. L HIS DIFFICULTIES. 139
stirred up amongst the Afghans
Mooktar-ed-Dooulet, obliged to
give up the post of vizier in favour of the Serdar Akrem Khan,
was in prison, and it wss without doubt from the day that he retired
from affairs that the decadence in the reign of Shah Shooja may be
dated The Serdar Ahmed Khan, less unfortunate t4an Mooktar,
died sword in hand, while putting down a revolt in which the
most faithful of the Shah's friends lost their lives. The sons of
these two chic$, who exercised so great an influence over the
Afghans, took from that time pnrt in the revolt, and from this
moment the reign of Shah Shooja-ool-Moolk was nothing more than
a succession of dangers, sufferings, and bitter anxiety. If he had
been content to remove with some show of reason those who impeded
tbe march of government by their intrigues, or if, while repressing
them with more severity, he had acted with justice on the &grant
proofs of their crimes, the rest lea^ diepaition of the Afghans would
not have been alarmed, and he might have aspired to a reign not
less glorious than that of his grandfather Ahmed Shah, with whom
he had more than one point of resemblance. Rut he was capricious
and singular like his brother Zeman, whose cruelty was necessary
to consolidate the power in his own hands.
Discontent eoon became general amongst all classes of Shah
Shooja's subjects, even amongst his most devoted adherents, who
also murmured loudly ; but without taking into consideration their
irritation and remonstrances, he continued to give vent to his
haughty and absolute disposition. The Afghans, who eaw in him
the most talented of the Suddozyes, resisted for a long time the
wishes of their serdarq who, habituated to raise and d e p e their
kings, were anxious to be rid of him ; and the want of agreement
on the choice of a successor whzh they must give the nation
was the reason why they delayed his fall indefinitely. There is
even some probability that this prince would have been able to
maintain his hold upon the throne if the Serdar Fethi Khan had
not been amongst the number of his adversaries ; Shooja imagined
he could despise him, and, instead of conciliating him, which would
have been the wisest course, he did everything to increase his dis-
satisfaction.
This false policy cost him dear.
After his disgrace Fethi Khan, disliking Kabul as a residence,
proceeded to Kandahar, his native city, and in the environs of
which the greater part of the tribe of the Barukzyes resided. When
he arrived Kaissar Mirza was governor, and he promised that he
140 IMPRISONMENT OF FETHI KHAN. CHAP. X. 1
should be respected and protected by him as long ae he did not
interfere in the affairs of government. Fethi Khan was not then in
a position to make conditions, and was obliged to accept those which
were offered him ; but he prepared everything in secret for the.
restoration of Shah Mahmood. Whether Kaisssr was informed of
this, or whether he thought the step necessary to his uncle's safety,
he ordered the serdar to be seized on his leaving an audience which
had been accorded him; and the officers who were commis-
sioned to arrest him precipitated themselves upon him with such
violence that he fell with his face to the ground, and knocked out
several of his teeth. Profiting by this circumstance, they gagged
him to stop his cries, bound his feet and his hands, and made him
a close prisoner; his young brother, Dost Mohamed Khan, who
was near him, assisttd by a few servants, attempted his rescue, but,
overpowered by numbers, he was obliged to take to flight to escape
the same treatment. He succeeded, however, in collecting a few
hundred Barukzyes in the city, and with these attacked the citadel,
but, received by a volley from the garrison, he was obliged to retire,
and, hastily leaving the town, retreated to the fortress of Girishk,
the governor of which was devoted to his family. After this he
scoured the plain of Ibkooa with the Barukzyes who had followed
him, plundered the caravans, and soon found himself in possession
1
of 6001., which he spent in obtaining recruits and adherents to his
cause.
I
The Serdar Fethi Khan had previously to hi arrest despatched
I
his brother Shere dil Khan to Kabul, with the view of facilitating
the escape of Shah Mahmood from prison, and recommended him,
above all things, not to permit any Afghan to take part in this
enterprise, but to cmploy Kuzzilbashes exclusively. This Persian ,
tribe, as we have already stated, consisted of 12,000 families when
they were brought to Kabul by Nadir Shah, but subsequently to the
death of that conqueror their numbers had considerably augmented.
Up to the reign of Shah Mahmood the Afghans treated them
upon a footing of equality, but after the sanguinary confiict
which arose between them on the occasion of the horrible crime
committed by these Persian colonists they were oppressed in every
kind of way, though Fethi Khan had always remained on good
terms with them, which led them very naturally to &st him in
delivering Shah Mahmood. The undertaking wau a difficult one,
for Shah Shooja kept him closely guarded ; but whatever might hare
C~ AP . S. ESCAPE OF SHAH MABMOOD. 141
been the vigilance of his ~c;lolers; the Kuzzilbashes finished by
evading i t Tools werc sccn?tly conveyed to the prisoner, and
such was the energy with which he used them, that in eight hours
be had dug down to the conduit by which he was to escape beyond
the city walls I t was night when he gained the outside, and the
Kuuilbashes, who were on the watch, conducted him to a tomb
in a churchyard situated near the walls of the Bala Hissar,
and, having covered the place of his retreat with branches and
earth, they retired, recommending him to have patience for a few
days until the pursuit which it was certain would take place began
to slacken. The next morning a hundred emissaries were d o
pkhed on every side, with orders to put him to death directly
he fell into their hands, but the majority of them soon returned to
inform the Shah that their endeavours to find him had becn
unavailing. ARer having passed several days in this subterranean
a&, Mahmood learnt that his brother had made useless search for
him : he therefore left his retreat in the middle of the night, and,
accompanied by Shere dil Khan and a few devoted adherentg
galloped southward, when they were soon joined by Dost
Mohamed Khan, in whose company they plundered three rich
avavana Wi t h the proceeds of these robberies they were enabled
to rake a ~ na l l force, aRer which they acted upon a larger scale ;
the villages were in their turn put under contribution, and they
then laid siege to Kandahar.
During three month Kaissar BIiiza repulsed all the attacks of the
beaiegen, but after this, being without either provisions or munitions
of war, he came to a compromise with them, setting the Serdar
Fethi Khan a t liberty, on condition that they raised the siege and
retired h m Kandahar. \Vhen the wrdar was released, Nahmood
Shah was strongly inclined to break his promise, and constrain his
nephew to give up the city, but Fcthi Khan prevented hill]; he
repmented to him that the throne was at Kabul, and not at
Kandahar, and this determined Mahmood to march on the capital ;
they left, nevertheless, two thousand Barukzye horse encamped
within a short distance h m the former city.
I n e n Shah Shooja heard that Kandahar was besieged by
Mshmood, he collected his t.roops and left Kabul with 25,000
picked men to relieve it, but after a few days' march more than
half deserted ; the Kuzzilbashes especially all left his court and
returned to Kabul, which obliged the Shah to fall back on his
142 SHAH MAHMOOD'RESTORED. CRAP. X.
capital, but he had scarcely arrived there when a revolt forced
him to evacuate it, and he retired and took up a position in a vast
plain surrounding the gardens of Neemla, near Gundamuck. Shah
Mahmood and Fethi Khan, who followed him close, remained in
Kabul only long enough to take possession of it ; they then confided
it to the caxe'of the Kuzzilbashes, and hastened against Shah
Shooja, whose army was advantageously posted and numbered
20,000 combatants. Though mustering only 3000 horse, Fetlii
Khan charged them with impetuosity at a moment when they
least expected it, and before they had even time to form up in
order of battle : the result was a complete rout, for it threw
the mass into utter confusion ; fear took possession of them, and
they fled from the field. Akrem Khan, the vizier of Shah Shooja,
was killed, and the king escaped to the mountains of the Khyber,
abandoning on the field of battle all his baggage and the royal
treasure, which, independent of a sum of 2,000,0001., coutained
precious stones of immense value. Shah Mahmood secured an
enormous booty, and entered Kabul anlidst the acclamations of
the inconstant people of that city, mounted on an elephant which
Shah Shooja had ordered to be richly caparisoned for his own
triumphant elltry into the capital.
Shah Shooja remained only a short time in the Kliyber, and
retired soon after towards the south, where he hoped, by joining
his nephew, Kaissar Mirza, to take the offensive and regain his
crown. Directing his course towards Kandahar by the mountains
bordering the Indus, he obtained some recruits on the road ; but in
spite of the secrecy with which he endeavoured to conduct liis march,
it became known, and, to add to hi disgrace, his nephew was
driven from Kandahar by the Serdar Poor dil Khan, a brother
of Fethi Khan. A h r this Poor dil Khan attilckcd Shooja
with superior forces, who was fortunate in being able to escape
by a rapid flight; this was in 1809, four months having elapsed
between his first and second defeat. Powerless rather than dis-
couraged, he retired shortly after to Loodiana, where he resided
near his brother the Shah Zeman, living from that time, like that
prince, on the bounty of the Eqst India Company, but not kfore
he had gone through many severe trials.
SKETCH OF SHAH SHOOJA.
CHAPTER XI.
Sii A. Burnes' sketch of S h h S11oc)ja - Fethi Khm is appointed Vizier - Shall
Mahmood devoted t o plemure - Influence of t he vizier - Ks mm, the aon of
Shah W m w d - His ferocious disposition - He kills his c o d Kainenr -
Fethi Khan reduces the Belwchea - Eetabliehes order and necurity -Afghan
alliance with the Si k h - They unite and seize Cnshxneer - Fethi Khan break^
his word to the Sikhs-The latter seize upon Attok - Brilliant exploit of
Dort Mohamed - Panio of the Afghan. - Hunjeet Sing pillages Cmhmeer -
The pretensions of Persia on Herat - Hoosein Ali Mirza marches againat
t hat city - Fethi KhRn marches to the relief of Herat - The vizier arrests
IIadji F i z Eddin - The prince'^ harem is violated and plundered by Dost
Mohamed - Flight of Mir Efzel Khan to Meshed - Battle of Kkffir Kaleh -
Retreat of both parties - The Afghana obtain the plunder - b r a n conapirea
againat Fethi Khan - Shah Mahruood commands the vizier's eyes to be put
out - Kmmran arrivea at Herat and executes the order - The brothers of the
vizier, Share dil Khan and Kohendil Khan, encape - Poor dil Khan re&ns a
prisoner.
SIR ALEXANDER BURNES, an enlightened and conscientious traveller
i n Afghanistan, gives a sketch of the life which Shah Shooja led
&r the battle of Neemla. This narrative was taken from a
little work written by Shah Shooja himself; I made every endea-
vour when in Afghanistan and Persia to procure this book, but
without result-as it is highly interesting, I present it here from
the pages of Burnes.
b b After Shah Shooja-ool-Moolk had been defeated at Kcemla lle
had wandered as a fugitive in various corners of his dominions ;
and his adventures, which have been detailed by himself in a
small volume, are replete with interest. After his discomfiture at
Kandahar he was seized by Ata Mohamed Khan, the son of
his former vizier, and subjected to much indignity. He was for
some time confined in the fortress of rittok. The lancet was fre-
quently held over his eyes ; and his keeper once took him into the
middle of the .Indus, with his arms bound, threatening him with
instant death The object of such severity was to extract from
him the celebrated diamond called Koh-i-Noor, or mountain of
light, which he was known to possess. I n the mean while At a
Mohamed Khan proceeded to Cashmeer, and carried the cap-
tive inonarch in hie train. On the fall of that valley he was
released by Futeh Khan and joined his family at Laliore. Hi s
1 44 SKETCH OF SHAH SHOOJA. CHAP. XT.
queen, as I may well call the Wdadar Begum, the most influen-
tial lady of his harem, had used every persuasion to prevent
Shooja's placing himself in the power of Runjeet Sing, but he dis-
regarded her advice, and in the end had ample reason to regret
his having neglected i t This lady was a woman of most bold and
determined character ; and her counsel had often proved valuable
to her husband, both in his days of power and disaster.
At Lahore, while at the mercy of the Sikhs, and absent from
her husband, she preserved her own and his honour in a most
heroic manner. Runjeet Sing pressed her urgently to surrender
the Koh-i-Noor, or valuable diamond which was in her possession ;
and evinced intentions of forcing it from her. He also sought to
transfer the daughters of the unfortunate king to his own harem.
The queen seized on the person who conveyed the message, and
had him soundly chastised. She also intimated to the &Iaharadja,
that, if he continued his dishonourable demanda, she would pound
the diamond in a mortar, and first administer it to her daughters,
and those under her protection, and then swallow it herself: add-
.
ing, ' May the blood of all of us be on your head ! ' This lady
succeeded in the end in escaping from Lahore disguised as a
Hindoo ; and planned the deliverance of her husband, which shortly
followed. This was only effected at the expense of the p e a t
diamond. A narration of the circumstances relative to its ~ u r -
render would prove interesting, but it would be out of place in
this sketch. I t is sufficient to mention that an imprisonment of
the closest nature, insult, and even hunger, fell to the lot of this
ur~fortunate monarch.
" The ungenerous part which the king of the Sikhs was enacting
towards her husband aroused the energies of the queen, who had
settled herself at the British station of Loodiana She arranged
the placing of horses on the road, and Shooja and his people
made every exertion in Lnhore. They hired all the houses which
adjoined those in which they lodged, and opened a pwge into
the street by cutting through seven walls. A few hours after
the household had retired to rest, the king descended by the aper-
ture and issued into the street in the dresa of the Punjab. 'Bt:
city wall had yet to be passed, and the gates were shut. Shooja
crept through the common sewer of the city, and fled with two
or three servants towards the hill country of Kislitwar. Here he
once more raised the standard of a monarch, and planned an
FETHI KBAK VIZIER. CIIAP. XI. 146
attack on h h me c r , in which he was mi st ed by the Hnjah of
Kishtwar. The expedition would have been successful, for the
Governor of Cashmeer had evacuated his frontier position, but an
untimely season blocked the roads with snow, interrupted the
appl i es, and once more frustrated the hopes of Shah Shooja.
Wanderi ng by a cheerless and ungenial country, the Shah at
length reached the British station of Sabathoo in the outer Hima-
laya, from which he repaired to Loodiana, where his family had
found an asylum. He here joined them, and has since shared the
bounty of t he British Government. Few lnonarclis and few men
have been subjected to greater reverses of fortune than Shooja-ool-
Moolk ; and we find our sympathies enlisted in his cause by a
knowledge of his misfortunes"
Shah Mahmood had now for the second time reaped the fruits
of the clever combinations of Fethi Khan, whose military talents
were completely developed. It was much more in answer to
his appeal that the Afghans, particularly the powerful tribe of the
Barukzyes, had responded, than from any wish which they had
to see Shah Mahmood again upon the throne. This prince,
al t bough tried by many vicissitudes, had learnt nothing by adver-
sity ; he wished for power with reference only to the sweets of
life and the pleasures which it procured, leaving to others the car-
of government. I t was on the Serdar Fethi Khan that he heaped
these, either because he was convinced that it was impossible for
him to reign without the co-operation of that chief, or from a fcel-
i ng of gratitude, or, more likely still, because he was convinced of
hi s great capacity; he made him his prime minister, gave him
t he most extensive powers, and laid upon him the difficult tmk of
the Afghan nation. From this time he gave himself
u p to, and gratified, his depraved inclinations; effeminate and
8elf-indulgent, he thought of nothing but his pleasures and
o+es of every kind and description, living in utter ignorance
of al l that was passing around him. Fethi Khan did not abuse
this unlimited confidence, and soon restored to his country the
+endour and glory of the days of the great Shah Ahmed, which
had totally disappeared since the pacific reign of his son Timoor.
' n e name of Fethi Khan soon became celebrated and popular
throughout Central Asia ; the Afghans more especially held him
in t he greatest admiration, and had, on the contrary, the greatest
~ n k m p t for their king. Nevertheless such was at this .epoch
L
146 KAMRAN MIRZA. CHAP. XI.
the veneration they had for the Suddozyes, that they never
thought of dethroning him in favour of his fortunate and able
general. I t is true many persons have given Fethi Khan cr edi t
for the most ambitious views, but on a close examination of the
facta one remains convinced that this chief was aincere when
he protested his devotion to the Shah, and was contented with t he
high position to which his sovereign had raised him. What indeed
could he gain by becoming king? only another title, which would
have caused him immense embarrassment, and a host of enemies,
without giving him more power. All the affairs of the kingdom
were submitted to his discretion ; he made his brothers in succession
governors of all the provinces; he had the administration of the
finances and the army; his orders were not subject to the least
control. \j:hat could he desire more? Nothing! and Shah
Mahmood considered himself extremely fortunate in having as
his minister a man who fulfilled his responsible and arduous
duties so wcll. But those who envicd the minister did not find
him to their liking, and were constantly seeking for an opportunity
i
of inspiring the weak monarch with chimerical fears; amongst
these was his son Kamran, but hia intrigues had no other result in
the first instance than to cause his own removal from office, and
I
under the following circumstances.
Kamran Mirza, a h r having rejoined his father under the
walls of Kandahar, returned with him to Kabul. This prince,
althougli still young, had already become remarkable for his
i
j
haughty exterior, cruelties without number, and a great inclination
!
for debauch, and he was on the point of proceeding to Kandahar as
:
governor of that province when he made himself conspicuous by
circumstanm of a most odious character. His cousin Ka-ksar
Mirza, son of Shah Zeman, had not followed the example of Shah
Shooja, as after having been removed from his government, of
which Kamran was going to take possession, he made hi mb-
mission to his uncle Shah Mahmood, and remained from that time
at Kabul under the special protection of the Senlar Fethi Khan.
Kamran Mirza, who still entertained great resentment agamst the
prince for all the disappointments he had made him feel on vari-
occasions at Kandahar, ordered hi111 to be seized one morning, and
put to the torture, with a view of forcing him to give up some
diamonds which he had forgotten to take with him in one of his
hurried flights from that city, and which he pretended had Mien
I
i
CEAP. XI. ABILITIES OF FETHI KHAN. 147
into hi cousin's posseasion. Shah Mahmood, having been informed
of this circums&uce, immediately interfered, and made him release
his nephew, but a few days after, Kamran, meeting Raissar
Mina in one of the royal gardens, apostrophized the latter in most
opprobrious terma Kaissar had the imprudence to reply, when
K a m n felkd him to the earth with a wrestler's club which he
b k from the hands of a person in his suite. Fethi Khan eeized
this opportunity of representing to Shah Mahmood how his son
with such a disposition might compromise himself with a nation so
snsceptible as the Afghans, and it was determined between the king
and his minister that no appointment should be given to Kamran
Mirza, and that he should for the future remain at court under the
surveillance of his father. From this moment the hatred of the
prince was redoubled against the vizier, and he was ever after
mixed up in all the intrigues and conspiracies that wcre formed
against him.
The first object of Fethi Khan, after the restoration of Shah
Mahmood to power, was to make the Emirs of Scinde and Belooch-
istan return to their duty; he then reduced to obedience the
greater part of the tribe of the Hazarahs, settled in the heart of
the mountains of the Paropamisus. He also restored order in all
the provinces; made the laws, the observance of which had k n
very much relaxed, to be respected ; regulated the adminis-
tration, which, up to that period, had been in a most intricate
state, giving rise to the most nefarious exactions and embezzle-
ments of the most scandalous kind ; and lastly it might be said
that security reigned everywhere. This remarkable man united to
a superior genius a great aptitude for governing and for war:
n d one of hi predecessors had been able to reduce rebels
to obedience with the same promptitude, or keep them after-
wa ds in the path of duty ; he struck hard, but he was generous
after the victory was gained, and shone by his excessive libe-
.
rality : always in the midst of combats, he still found time
to direct the helm of state, and was ready for everything,-
in activity he had no equal. He was the eldest of twenty-one
brothers, all men of mark, who powerfully assisted him by their
support ; he placed them, as we have already said, at the head
of the provincial governments, putting much more faith in
them than in the princes of the ,blood or ambitious serdars,
who, jealous of hi fame, were occupied only in creating embar-
L 2
148 ALLTAXCE II'ITn THE SIKHS. C'n~r. XT.
rassments for him, or in endeavouring to injure him in the
opinion of his sovereign. Hadji Firooz Eddin was the only prince
whom he allowed to remain undisturbed in his government of
Herat ; and this, simply because the troops were occupied else-
where ; his fall was therefore delayed. He intrusted the govern-
ment of Beloochista~l to his brother Raliim dil Khan, who rc-
sided at Shikapoor. Poor dil Khan was installed a t Kandahar ;
Sultan Mohamed Khan at Peshawur ; Shere dil Khan at Gl ~umee ;
Kohendil Khan at Bamian; and the others under their ordvrs
in districts of these provinces; he nevertheless retained some of
them near his person. Amongst these were Mohamed Azim
Khan, Djabber Khan, Nawab Assad Ullah Khan, who were men
of capacity, and assisted him in the administration of affairs
Hi s young brother, Dost Mohamed Khan, had the entire charge
and management of his household, which did not prevent him from
mounting his horse and fighting like his other brothers.
After having completed the preparations for war, in which 111:
had been engaged during two years, Fethi Khan marched in
1811 against Cashmeer, which had thrown off the Afghan domi-
nion, and was then held by the Serdar Attah Mohamcd Khan, a
son of the vizier Akrem Khan, killed at the battle of Neen~la. TIe
would also have willingly marched against Hunjeet Sing, governor
of Lahore, who, after the fall of Shah Zeman, had proclaimed his
independence in the Punjab, but it would have been undertaking too
much at a time ; moreover the vizier preferred making use of him in
his plans for the reconstruction of the empire, and falling upon
him afterwards when he had no further necessity for his services.
I I e therefore induced him to sign a treaty, in which he gave him
nine lacs of rupees (90,0001.), to be taken from the revenues of
the province of Cashmeer, on condition that the Sikh anny shoiild
assist him in reconquering that country : this treaty was coo-
cluded on the banks of the Jelum, where the two chiefs met,
attended with a sufficient escort. The Afghan minister had
with him eighteen of his brothers, who advised him to put an end
to the Sikh chieftain a t this meeting, offering themselves to
be the assassins. Fethi Khan rejected this proposition, but
much less because he would not be guilty of a base action,
a thing which Asiatics never look upon in tile light that we do,
than because he required the support of the Sikh army, twelve
thousand men of which formed a junction with hi immediately
CIIAP. XI. THE SIKHS SEIZE ATTOK. 149
after the treaty was signed.
On receiving this augmentation of
his forces, he proceeded towards Cashmeer, by way of Benlber.
The little army of the rebels had posted themselves in the defiles of
the Pi-pindjal to dispute his passage, but, seeing themselves me-
naced in front by Fethi Khan, and in the rear by hi brother
Kohendil Khan, who had turned their position with a c or p of
cavalry, they retired without fighting. The Afghans had, there-
fore, no one to disturb them in their advance, and they took pos-
stusion of the plain of Cashmeer without opposition. The city also
had scarcely been invested when it sumelidered at discretion, and
the citadel alone, to which the Serdar Attah Mohamed Khan had
retired, continued to offer any further resistance ; nevertheless, after
thirteen days of negotiation, that chief, rather than be besieged,
capitulated. He was a Inan of great talent, energetic, brave,
influential, and respected by the Afghans. Fethi Khan wished to
make a friend of him ; he treated him, therefore, with great dis-'
tinction, and recommended him to the good offices of Shah Mah-
mood. Runjeet Sing tried, but without succes, to induce Fethi
Khan to confer upon him the government of Cashmeer ; but the
vizier, who saw the drift. of his proposal, namely, to reimburse
himself in the first instance the expenses of the war, and after-
w;u& to ensure to himself the payment of the sum guaranteed
by t he treaty, eluded his request, and confided the administration
of this fair province to his brother, the Serdar Mohamed Azim
Khan, who, aRer him, was thc eldest eon of Payendeh Khan-
Runjeet was therefore minus his expenses, and did not even
me i v e the nine lacs of rupees which had been promised him.
Frustrated in his ambitious design, he turned his attention to
Attok, a fortress situated on an eminence close to the Induq
commanding the principal passage of that river; and the go-
vernor, who was a brother of the Serdar Attah Khan, having sur-
rendered this important place to him, in consideration of a lac
of rupees, and certain promises which satisfied his ambition, the
Sikhs, on entering Attok, openly abandoncd the Afghan party, and
hastened to put the place in a good state of defence.
lt7hen Fethi Khan was informed of the desertion of his allies,
he quitted Cashmeer to march against Runjeet ; sending for-
ward his brother Dost Mohamed Khan, at the head of two
thousand horse, to clear the way, and followd close with all hia
f o r c e On the approach of the advanced guard of the Afghan
150 EXPLOIT OF DOST MOHAMED. CHAP. XI.
the Sikhs descended into the plain of Tchatch, which lies to the
east of Attok, and took up a position about three miles and a half
fiom the fortress, on some hills where they had not only the
advantage in the ground, but also that of securing the only
spring of water in the country. Dost Mohamed Khan, who,
for a reason so important, felt the necessity of seizing this point,
and desirous of distinguishing himself in the first command
with which his brother had intrusted him, fell with impetuosity
upon the Sikhs without waiting for the arrival of the Afghan army,
which followed him a league in the rear. In this charge he
captured the enemy's artillery ; but his sliccess did not last
long; the Sikhs rallied, and, after having received reinforcements,
renewed the attack with a force eight times superior to his.
Finding that he had committed himself, he sent an exprese to
Fethi Khan to hasten his march, and while awaiting hllj reply
-valiantly resisted the enemy, and would neither retire himself, nor
could the Sikhs force him to do so. Unfortunately the Dast's me+
sage never reached Fethi Khan, tlie messnger taking a wrong di-
rection and losing his way. The vizier was also led into error by
persons ill-informed of what had transpired, who assured him that
his brother had been killed and his division nearly destroyed, and h e
1
made therefore an dchelon movement towards the Indus in or der
to avoid the Sikhs, ordered the heavy baggage to be burnt, and
crossed the river without being disturbed by the enemy. Though
tardily made acquainted with the movements of the Afghan army,
Dost Mohamed hesitated not to retreat by the road it had taken,
the Sikhs retiring to Attok. Fethi Khan, under the p n x we of
threatening circumstances which arose in the west of Afghanistan,
was obliged to give up for the time his belligerent policy against
Rur~jeet Sing ; indeed he was coinpelled to weaken the garrison of
Caslimeer to reinforce his army. This encouraged the Sikh chief-
L~i n to make several inroads on tlie territory of that province, the
revenues of which he seized, an act the Afghan governor could not
prevent.
Before entering upon the details of the new campaign which the
Scrdar Fethi Khan had to sustain against the Persians, it is neces-
sary, in order that the reader may comprehend the motives which
led to the war, that we should look back a little a t the events
recorded in the preceding pages.
I t has been mentioned that the prince Hadji Firooz Eddin,
CHAP. XI. PRETENSIONS OF PERSIA ON HERAT. 151
removed with violence from Turchiz by the orders of Mir Efzel
Khan, had in the year 1800 been elected, in spite of himself,
sovereign Prince of Herat. The just and mild character of his
rule had obtained for him the love and respect of all classes of the
population : ambitious individuals, whn wished to overthrow him,
were unable to find support anywhere, and during the sixteen years
that he had governed thii province he was never seriously disturbed
except by the unfortunate expedition of Kaissar Mirza, and
thme which were almost annually sent against him by the Shah
of Persia, Feth ..4li, who laid claim to the principality as having
once formed part of that kingdom. But up to this period Hadji
Firooz Eddin had paralyzed his efforts, sometimes by repelling
the Peraians by force of arms, but more frequently by paying a
small tribute which wm exacted from him ; nevertheless, he had
always protested against the pretensions of the Persian monarch,
and declared that Feth Ali Shah had no more legitimate claim
upon Herat than he had upon the other countries which had
emancipated themselves from the domini011 of Persia during the
last century ; that the dynasty of the Kadjan had, it is true, esta-
blished itself on the ruins of a vast empire, but that these remains
had been absorbed in the organization of several kingdoms, which
in forming themselres had taken less account of territorial limita
than of the r a m which inhabited them ; that none of them had the
right to impose laws upon the others without their consent ; that the
independence of these races, particularly that of the Afghans, had
been made sacred by the elevation of the Suddozyes to the throne,
the king then on the musnud being the third of that tribe ; that as
the grandson of Shah Ahmed, founder of this dynasty, he reigned
as the legitimate sovereign over a province the majority of the
inhabitant8 of which were Afghans ; in short, that Feth Ali Shah
in his capacity of Shah of Persia wa s not more justified in makisg
this claim upon I-Ierat, than the Afghan priuces would be in laying
claim to the possession of Ispahan, Shiraz, or Kerman, for the
simple reason that Mir Mahmood and Mir Echreff had reigned
over those provinces. In support of these arguments, IIadji
Firooz Eddin sent detachments of troops across the frontier to the
assistance of some chiefs in Khorassan whom Feth Ali Shah had
not yet been able to bring under his rule. Of this vast province
be really possessed only Meshed ; Nishapoor, Koochan, Boojnoord,
Tubbus, Toorbut, Haidarieh, and Ghain were pretty nearly inde-
1.52 AFFAIRS OF HERAT. C E A ~ . Xl.
pndent , and, under the authority of the khans with whom the
Governor of Ilerat had just entered into alliance, and in exciting
whom against E'eth Ali Shah he hoped to give the Persian army
ellough occupation to prevent it from being seilt against himself.
I I e was, however, mistaken, for after a vigorous effort Feth Ali
Shah finished by triumphing over their insubordination. The
anger which this sovereign felt against Hadji Fmz Eddin, who
had provoked it, became fatal to the latter; lie soon saw Ilerat
menaced by a formidable army, and necessity obliged him to have
recourse to the aid of Shah Mahmood, whose assistance was almost
as dangerous for him as the enmity of the Shah of Persia
\Vhen tlie Persian battalions were all -embled at Meshed,
I-Ioosein Ali Mirza, son of Feth Ali Shah, took the command. Kalech
b n , the celebrated Serdar of the Taymoonis, a man dreaded by
the Ileratees, also joined the Persian prince with a contingent of ex-
cellent troops, and, if tliey had at once entered upon the campaign,
there can be no doubt that they would have taken Herat ; but
IIoosein Ali Afirza delayed the march of the m y for a reinforce-
riient of several guns of large calibre which he could have done
very well without. This gave the Vizier Fet l ~i Khan time to come
to the relief of the place ; his troops cleared the two hundred
leagues which separated them from Herat with a rapidity unex-
ampled in that country, arld arrived there before the Persians
had even crossed their own frontier.
I t was not without good reason that Hadji Firooz waited till
he was in the last extremity before he claimed the assistance of his
brother. During the sixteen years that he governed Herat he
had always been independent of him, though they were ou good
terms. I t was only when tlie successes of Fethi Khan in Belooch-
istan and Scinde made him fear that he should be removed from
\
his government, that he wrote to the latter protesting the truth of
his respect for and submission to the king; but dirwtly the
vizier had left those province to proceed to CaYhmecr, he kept only
half the promises he had made. I t is true he coined money
in the name of the Shah Malimood, but he never paid him a far-
thing of the tribute which had been agreed upon.
~ e t h i Khan, who was too much occupied in the East to enforce
a more complete submission, appeared for the moment to rest
satisfied with this state of things at IIerat, but IIadji F i z
Eddin clearly understood that the vizier was only temporizing with
CIIAP. XI. OUTRAGE ON HADJI FIROOZ. . 183
him, and that, as soon as he was relieved from the embarrnssnients
which had arisen with Runjeet, he would in his turn be obliged to
conform to his brother's views. I t was, therefore, with very-great
regret that he saw himself obliged to call this grncral to his
assistance, whom he had so great an interest in wi ng employed
anywhere rather than at Ilerat ; but there was no time to
hesitate, for the danger that menaced him left him no other alter-
native.
Fethi Khan arrived at IIerat towards the close of 1816. Madji
F i mz received him with great honours, and made him pro-
testations of fidelity and friendship ; but his conduct betrayed
the fears that w i l e d him, and contributed more than anything
el* that had occurred up to that time to deprive him of liis
government. Well convinced that if Fethi Khan entered the city
his own power was at an end, he permitted him to do so with an
csmrt of fifty honemen only ; the anny was obliged to enanip
under the walls. The vizier dissirnulatcd his displeasure, and
even accepted the proposition with an outward appearance of
respect; but lie rendered this of a very illusory character by
the choice he made of the persons who accompanied him. All
these were allied to some family or other in Ilerat, aud they soon
induced their relatives to make common cause with them ; so that
on the fourtli day after the vizier's arrival they delivered up to him
the gates of the city-the citadel surrendered on the following day.
He also arrested Hadji Firooz Eddin, and sent him, but under
honourable c ~o r t , to Kabul, to give the king an account of his long
admillistration. Fethi Khan had not up to this point passed the
limits of justice ; but whether he was animated with a certain feeling
of resentment against the prince, or that his orders were exceeded,
he was deprived of all his riches, and, as thcy were concealed in his
harem, this sacred asylum was forced, and the party deputed to
scize them, of whom his brother Dost Mohamed was the com-
mander, made an indiscriminate pillage ; the princesses were
even stripped of their clothes, and the Dost himself tore off a sash
ornamented with precious stones which supported the trousers of
the daughter of Shah Mahmood, the wife of his own nephew
Malek Kassem Mirza, son of Hadji Firooz Eddin.
Mir Efiel Khan, Isakzye, who had much assisted in the elevation of
I I dj i Firooz Eddin to power, afterwards hcanle his prime minister.
He was the most influential person at Ilerat after the governor,
154 BATTLE OF KIAFFIR KALEH. CEAP. XI.
and strongly opposed any appeal to Fethi Khan for assistance, but
the advice of Hadji A@, one of his officers, had prevailed over hi
Foreseeing that which subsequently took place, Mir Efzel Khan
resigned the command of the army and retired to Persia before
the arrival of the vizier, and it was a happy thought of his, for the
latter put out the eyes of Hadji Agai, and Efzel Khan would have
shared a similar fate.
After these measures, which Fethi Khan thought neeessay
for the security of the kingdom, had been taken, he marched
against the enemy, encamped in front of the town of K m n ,
about sixty miles from Herat, situated in the plain of Kiaffir
Kaleh, on the extreme frontier of Persia and Herat. The battle
commenced at dawn of day. The Persian prince, Hoosein Ali
Mirza, had a splendid army under his command, which he d i 5
posed as follows :-In the first line he placed four regiments of
regular infantry, under the orders of the Serdar Zoolfagar Khan ;*
this general, to give confidence to his newly orvanised troops, who,
@.
appreciating only cavalry, were grievously hsconcerted at not
being in that arm of the service, killed his magnificent Arab
horse in front of his division, and placed himself at their head on
foot. In spite, however, of this proof of courage, when his corps
was attacked by the cavalry of Shere dil Khan, brother of the vizier,
it was completely routed ; they rallied, however, after a time behind
the caravanserai and ruins on one side of the plain, and furiously
recommenced the combat, which lasted till four o'clock in the after-
noon, when the Persians, having 10,000 men hors de combat, began
their retreat. A charge of cavalry made just at the right moment by
the Serdar Kohendil Khan, also a brother of the vizier, turned this
retreat into a complete rout, and the Persians precipitately aban-
doned tlie field. Fethi Khan immediately advanced to ascertain
the position ,of things in his front, but he received a spent ball in
his mouth, and, falling from his horse, was obliged to be carried to
his tent. This fact having become known amongst the Afghans,
they thought their chief was dead, and the Persians victorious ; and
losing at once all the courage they had so recently displayed,
broke as if seized with a sudden panic. The first fugitives who
arrived at Herat spread terror through the city ; a part of the inha-
bitants left at once, and the remainder prepared to receive their
The Sabre of A1i.-Fmicr.
Cnar. XI. KAMRAN CONSPIRES AGAINST FETHI. 155
new masters, when Fethi Khan arrived very ir props to restore
cwnfidence, for his wound was not a serious one, and he was always
able to direct the agairs of government.
' f i e Persians retreated with scarcely a halt aa far as Meshed,
and were not a little astonished to learn a few days after their
defeat that the Afghans believed that they were the victors, in
spite of their having lost their artillery and baggage, which were
not, it is true, taken possession of by their adversaries until nine
days aRer the battle.
AAer this victory, which disgusted the Persians for some time
with the idea of attempting to take Herat, Fethi Khan occupied
himself in fixinq the revenues of the province, and in recon-
structing the dilapidated fortifications of the city. His just and
enlightened administration obtained for him the esteem and affec-
tion of the inhabitants. I have had opportuliities of conversing
with many Heratees who were acquainted with this remarkable
man, and they spoke of him with veneration. His virtues were as
great as his courage ; he was completely devoted to the glory and
interests of his country ; his fame was carried to the highest point
by his last victory ; and he was making his preparations for the
conquest of Khorassan, when a fearful catastrophe deprived
Af,bhanistan of this worthy man, and annihilated the generolls
designs which he had conceived for her, and which would have
made that kingdom as prosperous and powerful as it had been
under the great Ahmed Shah.
Ka mm Mirza, a monster of rice and ferocity, guiltless of ever
having felt one noble or generous sentiment, witnessed with the
greatest displeasure the successes of Fethi Khan, by whom he had
been prevented from taking part in the government on account of
the murder of Kaissar Mirza. From that day he had thought only
of taking vengeance upon the vizier, and sought every opportunity of
rendering him an object of suspicion to his father, to whom he spoke
in depreciating terms of all his actions; he tried also in every possible
way to excite the jealousy of the other serdars, who were already
only too much disposed to side with him, and who always fell in with
his views when he brought any complaints to the notice of the
Shah ; but Mahmood, delighted to find himself powerful with so
little trouble, and enabled to gratify his own depraved inclinations
without being obliged to take any part in public affiim which
were so well conducted, refused for a long time to believe in the
156 1~ECISYl"TON OF KAMRAN AT IIERAT. CHAP. XT.
disloyal and infamous accusations brought against his minister.
Obliged however to listen continually to a reytition of them, and
thinking over his extraordinary success, and the influence he had
obtained in consequence, he at length finished by entertaining a
few misgivings, but he was completely amazed when he saw
Hadji Firooz Eddin arrive at Kabul. This prince protested
loudly against the manner in which he had been treated by
the vizier, the invasion of his harem, the loss of his property,
and spared no exaggeration to make his brother believe the
/
accuracy of his statements. Kaniran Mirza came to his aid,
and used every effort to convince the king that his royal dignity
had been insulted in the person of his brother, thus brought
before him loaded with chains like a vile criminal, and also in
that of his own daughter, the wife of Malek Kassem, from
whose person Dost ~ k h a n i e d Khan had stripped the last vest-
nicnt which could protect her from his gaze and tliat of his
a~sociatc%. The serdars, who were jealous of the vizier's power,
supported these representations, bringing to the notice of the feble
monarch a host of other disgraceful actions of which they said
Fcthi Khau had been guilty. They assured the Shah that he had
determined upon his ruin; that the king ought to be before-
hand with him, and put him to dcatli ; that there were at his
court twenty chiefs braver and more capable than he was; until
at length Mahmood Shah, yielding to the lowest feelings of
jealousy, had not the strength of mind to resist their arguments,
and he gave an order that the eycs of Fethi Khan should be
put out.
Kamran would not rely upon any one but himself to execute
this diabolical sentence : he kept the king's instructions as secret as
.he could, and left for Herat imrnediatcly, towards the close of
1817, to be sure of his victim. The prince had broken his parole,
for it had been agreed between Mahmood Shah and his vizier
that he was not to leave the court, and that fact must have been a
warning to the latter, who was also told by his friends of the fate
that awaited him ; but he would not believe in such base cruelty
and ingratitude, and took no precautions to guard himself h m
tlie malice of his enemies. He received tlie eon of his sovereign
with the most profound respect and tlie greatest honour, and,
instead of evinciug any mistrust, geemet1 as if he wished to induce
him to forget the past, intreating him tliat lie would for the future
CHAP. XI. FETRI BLINDED-FLIGHT OF HIS BROTHERS. 157
go hand in hand with him in consolidating the power of the
Suddozye dynasty and raising the glory of the Afghan nation.
The vizier had been to him every morning to receive his orders
since the prince arrived at Herat ; the best intelligence seemed to
exist between them ; and Fethi 'Khan had already accused hie
friends of having given themselves up to chimerical fears, when,
one day on entering the Bagh-Shah (a royal pl ace outside tlie
city, and the residence of the prince), he was arrested with his
suite, which consisted only of twenty persons, and his eyes were
immediately put out
The same fate was reserved for the thrce brothers of the
vizier, namely, Poor dil Khan, Shere tlil Iclian, and Kohendil
Khan, who, during the time that this abomillable cruelty was
being committed, were in the royal palace of the Tchahar-bagh in
t he city, quietly playing at chess. Generally speaking, they ac-
companied their brother in his visits to the prince, but on this day,
Poor dil Khan being indisposed, he dispensed with their attend-
ance. \{'hen Kamran saw that the three other victims had
not come within reach of his vengeance, he was suffocated with
rage, and sent a detachment of soldiers to arrcet them immedi-
ately. Fortunately, however, one of their servants, hearing by
accident of the danger which threatened them, ran to the palace
and informed them of what had occurred, but lie had scarcely
fulfilled this act of devotion when the satellites of Kamran Mirza
filled the court of the Tchahar-bagh. Flight was now almost
impossible, for every mode of egress was carefully guarded,
and the only mode of escape was to put a bold front upon the
matter, which the three brothen did. They were accompanied
by only two servants, one armed ~ i t h a sabre, the other with a
d . ~ p r , and Poor dil IClian, being unwell, retired to a terrace of
the house with them ; but Shere dil Khan, arming himself with
the sabre, and Kohendil Khan with tlie dagger, rushed upon
the soldiers with such impetuosity and resolution, that the fellows,
thinking, in all probability, that they were supported by their
servants, fled terrified from the house. Taking advantage of
this moment of panic, the two heroes promptly rejoined their
brother, and from the terrace leaped on to that of a hoiise
adjoining the palace without being seen, and escaped to their
residence with the utmost haste. After having armed them-
selves to the teeth, they mounted their horses, and accompanied by
1 58 POOR DIL KHAN PRISONER. CHAP. XI.
a few of their followers took to flight, but on arriving at the city
gates they found two hundred soldiers there to dispute their
passage, and through these they had to cut their way. Shere
dil Khan and Kohendil Khan were fortunate enough to do so
without receiving a scratch, but Poor dil Khan, weakened by sick-
ness, had his horse killed under him, when a score of men threw
themselves upon him, bound hie hands, and carried him to Kamran
Mirza The prince, seeing that two victims had still escaped him,
dissimulated the regret he felt, and assured Poor dil Khan, whom
he put in prison, that no harm would befall him, hop in^ that he
would be able to make use of him at a future time as a means of
securing by craft his principal adversaries.
Kamran Mirza remained some time longer at Herat, endea-
vouring by promises and presents to aecure the army to hi own
interests ; but always preoccupied with the idea of completing his
sanguinary work, and putting to death the brothers and adher-
ents of Fethi Khan, he went to Kandahar, where he hoped to
succeed in this object.
.
KAMRAN'S PROMISES.
* - A
CHAPTER XII.
Shere dil Khan raiaen Kandahar-Kamran proceeds them-Poor dil Khnn
emcapes - Ctuelties of Ka mm upon Fethi Khan - Brothers of the Vider -
Dost Mohsmed Khnn - Cause of his quarrel with Fethi Khan - He mima Kabul
-Flight of the Royal Family - Mabmwd and Kampn meet at Ghumee -
Doet Mohamed puta them to flight - Murder of Fethi Khan- The Shah and his
son an, pursued and arrive at IIerat - Misunderstanding between the princes -
They acknowledge the suzerainty of Pumia- Quarrels between Mahmood and
Kamran - Hadji Firooz and Kalech Khan attack Kannnn - The latter is killed
and Hadji Firooz made prisoner - Ka mm and the Persians at variance -
Revolt of Furrah- Kamnm proceeds to that place-Moustapha Khan and
Mohamed Hoosein revolt at Herat -Cause of this - Djehang~iir Mirza is
procl~iirned chief, and afterwards deposed - IIadji Firooz succeeds him -Death
;
of Meuhvali Khan- Hadji Firooz retirea to Meshed - Molistnpha Khan closee
the gatas of Herat sgaiust Kamran - He besieges the city, but retires on the
approach of Shere dil Khan - The l at ar also retires - Cruelty of Moustapha
Khan - Conspiracy of Syud Mu Sedik- Ramran enters Herat -Miserable end
of Moustapha Khan - Vengeance of Kamran - Reflections on the Afghans.
AFTER their flight from Herat Shere dil Khan and his brother
sought refuge in the fortified village of Nadalee, situated about
twenty-three miles from Girishk, which belonged to Adeh, the
mother of Fethi Khan. From thence they despatched emissaries
in all directions to rouse the nomade tribes. A great number of
the Barukzyes responded to their appeal, which formed the nucleus
of a little army, and this was soon increased by numerous deserters
from the royal forces, who would not serve under Kamran.
The prince, observing that the detachments which he sent from
the city were constantly destroyed or repulsed by the partizans of
Fethi Wan, employed the arts of cunning to lead his brothers
to fall into his net. He had dragged about with him the unfor-
tunate minister, and endeavoured to persuade Poor dil Khan,
whom he took from his prison, that he had put his brother's
eyes out only to raise him to the post of vizier: at the same
time he gave him a magnificent robe of honour, made him a
serdar, promised that the firman of vizier should be sent to
him as soon as Shere dil Khan and Kohendi Khan had made
their submission, and prensed him to write and tell them to
come to Kandahar. Poor dil Khan appreciated hiis brilliant
160 FETI-II KHAN'S BROTHERS. CHAP. XTT.
promise at its exact value, but he appeared as if he believed the
prince and entered into his views ; he assured him of his entire
devotion, and behaved as if he intended to keep his word,
but two-days afterwards he fled, and to their greai joy reached
his brothers at Ni~dalee, for their measures had been almost
paralyzed up to that moment by the fear they experienced
that he would be treated by Kamran in the same way that he
had dealt with their eldest brother. His presence also brought
fresh recruits to their ranks, for the Afghans had gnat confidence
in him ; they considered him as one of the most talented of the
sons of Payendeh Khan, and in the differences which existed
between themselves almost always requested him to be the
arbitrator.
Kamran Mirza, irritatd by the flight of Poor dil Khan, which he
might have foreseen, reve~ged himself on the unfortunate Fethi
~(han, upon whom he inflicted a t.housand outrages and me1
tortures. - Having perceived that a ray of light still remained in
thceyev of his victim, he himself introduced a hot iron into the
orbits in order to dry up every part. I t was in this condition that
the butcher dragged him to Ghuznee, where the Shah Mahmood
awaited him, but his courageous minister never asked for mercy,
and, by his firm and resigned bearing, showed himself as great in
adversity as he had been generous in the exercise of his power.
Such cruelties practised upon such a man merited punishment
indeed, and seventeen brothers of the victim soon united to take
their revenge. Their names were as follows :-
The Vizier Fethi Khan
" " I
. . . .
Dend.
Nohamed Azim Khan.. By the same mother
Tinloor Khan . . . . . . . . I ::
. . . . . . . . Poor dil Khan
. . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . .
Sllere dil Khan
Koheu~lil Khan By the same mother
l t ~ l ~ i m dil Khan . . . . . . . .
Mir dil Khan . . . . . . . .
Dost Mohamed Khan . . . . . .
Emir Nohuoed Khan . . . . . . By the ume mother I D&.
Qjemal Khan . . . . . . . . 1 1 8
Sultan Moliamed Khan . . . . Living.
Yu Mohnmrd Khan
1 By the mother
. . . . . .
Pir 3.loha111ed Khan . . . .
.. I
Living.
Syud Mohau~ed Khan . . . . . .
Nawab A& Khan . . . . . .
Nl mb Sau~ut Khan . . . . . . } By the m e mother I Dold'
Nawab Djabbar Khan.. . . . . Living.
Djumhh Khan . . . . . . . . . . Son of a slave .. ,,
CIIAP. XIT. DOST MOHAMED KHAN. 161
Mohamed rizirn Khan, who, after Fetlli Khan, was tlie eldest
of the sons of Payendeh Khan, governed Cashmeer. Being ill at
the time he heard of the atrocious cruelties inflicted on his blind
brother, he could not then join his relatives, but he raised the
standard of revolt in this province against the Shah Mahmood,
and sent Dost Nohamed Khan before him to Kabul, in order
that he might work upon the population to rise in favour of their
cause. This young chief w a the very man for such an under-
taking, for, as it has been shown, he had already made him-
self remarked on several occasions for courage and military
talents, though at the moment his services were required he was
in prison, and the following were the reasons that led to his
captivity.
A few days prior to his attacking the Persians a t Kiaffir Kaleh,
Fet hi Khan ordered him to give up some magnificent pearls the
Dos t had purchased, but which the vizier had already selected for
himself, and stated thus much to the merchant who had them on
s al e; he also required him to restore the girdle ornamented with
brilliants which he had taken from the daughter of Shah Mah-
mood when he broke intu the harem of Hadji Firooz Eddin. But
Uost Mohamed obstinately refusing to comply with his wishes,
it produced a rupture between them, when the latter, fearing
t he consequences of his brother's anger, departed secretly from
t he royal camp, and went to Cashmeer ; Mohamcd Azim Khan,
who was own brother to the vizier, took his part, and demanded
t hat the brilliants and the unlucky pearls should be surrendered
t o him for the purpose of being forwarded to Fethi Khan, who
had foreseen that the theft would give rise to complaints and fresh
intrigues against his family.
The Dost, again refusing to restore these valuables, was detained
a prisoner until they came to release him in order that he might
assist in avenging the brother by whom and for whom he had been so
severely treated. The voice of honour, and revenge for blood, and
still more the conviction that he had been in error, spoke more pow-
erfully to his heart than his resentment; he therefore collected a
small corps of men, and advanced boldly against the capital. Shah
Mahmood, plunged in debauch, was illcapable of watching over his
own safety, and from the moment the insurrection broke out con-
fided the care of Kabul to his grandson Djehanguir Mirza, son of
Kamran, with whom he associated, as his lieutenant and respon-
M
162 MURDER OF FETHI KHAK. CHAP. XII.
sible adviser, his new vizier Mohamed Attah Khan, Popolye:
after this Mahmood retired to the fortress of Ghuznee, from
whence he wrote to his son to come and rejoin him. Doyt Mohamed
Khan, having completely beaten the detachments which Dj ehanpi r
Mirza sent against him, entcrcd Kabul, and obliged that prince
to seek safety in flight; he also took Attah Mohamed Khan
prisoner, had his eyes put out on the public square, and sub-
sequently sent him away into the mountains.
After having been rejoined by Djehanguir Mirza, and a few sol-
diers who were with him, it was not long before Shah Mahmood
was surrounded by the troops which his son Kamran brought from
Kandahar-much weakened it is true in numbers, and much
discouraged, but still able to afford him the hope of reducing
the insurgents if he had been a clever man. The army having
halted a few days at Ghuznee to give Kamran a little repose,
he marched to Kabul to put down the rebels; but Mohamcd
Azim Khan, who, now re-established in health, had just joined
Dost Mohamed, spared him half his journey, and, midway be-
tween Ghuznee and Kabul, offered him battle at the head of four
thousand men The prince, who had twelve thousand, was not i~
the least doubtful of success, but he was wrong in his estimate
of the feeling of his troops; for, on the night preceding the
conflict, they passed over to his adversary. Mohamed Azim and
the Dost pursued Kamran immediately to the walls of Ghuenee,
and soon obliged his father and himself, and those who supported
their party, to evacuate the town.
Shah Mahmood, made desperate by this last d' i t e r , ordered
Fethi Khan, who had now been deprived of his eyesight eight
months, to be brought into his presence, and commanded him to
write to hi brothers, and desire them to return to their duty. But
the unfortunate vizier calmly replied that in losing his sight he
had lost also all his influence over his fellow-men, and that he no
longer occupied himself with the affairs of this world. The king,
enraged at this answer, ordered him to be put to death, and his
enemies, the nobles of the court, were charged with the execution
of the sentence; Kamran Mirza, himself the most cruel of the
Suddozyes, struck the first blow, and at this signal the rest drew
their daggers, rushed upon him, and strove who should make him
feel the greatest torture and suffering. They flayed him alive,
disjointed his members, which they drew from his body one by one,
C ~ A P . I L L . WAKDERINGS OF MAHMOOD AND KAMRAN. 163
and at length decapitated him, which put an end to his agonies.
His corpse, thus mutilated, was abandoned to the public execu-
tioner, who cut it in pieces, threw them into a sack, and carried
them to Ghuznee, where they were interred.
Not a sigh or complaint escaped Fethi Khan amidst these
horrible tortures : he was sustained by the courage of a hero, and
the calm of a pure conscience.
A general cry of indignation arose from one end of Afghanistan
to the other against the murderers of this great man, and those
who had remained faithful to the Suddozye party, not from a fwl-
ing of sympathy, but from a sentimeut of duty, now left i t ; even
the personal friends of the king were moved with compassion at
the manner in which his old and faithful servant was put to death ;
and there were very few serdars whose jealousies were not subdued
by his sad end.
Shah Mahmood, a wanderer and a fugitive, had now only a
few servants around him, repulsed, h a r d , and tracked, and
obliged to shun inhabited places, he dared not stop even in
the most desert spots, so hot was the pursuit The dangers he
underwent were incessant ; he suffered every kind of privation,
having nothing to support life but roots and wild fruits. Nearly
dead from hunger, and in the last stage of despair, the fugitives
endeavoured to reach Kandahar, which Kamran, on leaving
Ghuznee, had confided to the care of Gul Mohamed Khan,
Popolzye ; but he soon learned that the city had fallen into the
hands of the Mohamedzyes, and that with the assistance of Mir
Efzel Khan, Isakzye, Poor dil Khan had seized it. After Fethi
Khan lost his sight, Efzel returned from Persia to live in the midst
of his tribe, encamped in the environs of Koohnichine, a fortress
situated on the banks of the Helmund, which belonged to him,
and Poor dil Khan, without giving himself any concern as to the
antagonistic feeling which existed between Mir Efzel Khan and his
elder brother, came to him and demanded his assistance and
that of his tribe ; tKi was conceded, and the Mir joined the
Mohamedzyes. The two chiefs then marched against Kandahar,
which surrendered to them after a feeble resistance ; but the go-
vernor Gul Mohamed Khan escaped, and reached Herat, the
+n of which was devoted to Kamran Mirza, and the former
knew how to keep them in obedience.
Shah Mahmood, being informed of this fortunate circumstance,
M 2
1G4 QUARRELS OF MAHMOOD AND KAMRAN. CEAP. XIT.
immediately directed his steps towards that city, but, being com-
pletely without provisions and menaced on all sides, he was obliged
to take the least frequented and accessible roads ; the number of
his followers diminished day by day, hunger, fatigue, and priva-
tion accompanying them everjwhere. I t was in this condition
that they crossed the Paro~amisan chain, inhabited by the Haza-
rahs Poocht-Kooli, who, though enemies of the Afghans, never-
theless inspired them with less terror than the latter. At length
Mahmood reached Herat, having with him only his son Kamran,
his brother ITadji Firooz Eddin, and eleven servants who were
devoted to him.
But discord Boon divided this royal trio.
Kamran Mirza had
only desired the fall of Fethi Khan in order that he might himself
direct the government ; he commenced therefore by seizing upon
all authority; Shah Mahmood, who, not without reason, attributed
hi misfortunes to his son, resisted these attempts and determined
to govern for himself, which daily produced between them the
most violent scenes; and Hadji Firooz Eddin, wearied with these
interminable discussions, obtained permission from the king to retire
to Meshed, which he did immediately.
For some time after their arrival at Herat Mahmood and his
son were alarmed by the threats of the Persians, who seemed
disposed to set up anew their claims upon the city, but Shah
Mahmopd and Kamran did not make this matter so much a question
of amour yropre as did Hadji Firooz Eddin, for they admitted
without protest the suzerainty of the Shah of Persia, bound them-
selves to pay him tribute, and thought themselves fortunate in
being able to remain on such conditions the peaceable pwsessors
of the last refuge that they were able to find in Afghanistan.
In 1819, a short time after this agreement had been concluded,
Kamran Aiirza, tired of the tenacity with which his father main-
tained hie rights as sovereign, drove him from IIerat, but Shah
Mahmood, having collected a small army amongst the Eimaks,
laid siege to the city in 1820. He was however beaten and
obliged to fly to the Hazarahs Zeidnat : nevertheless he did not
consider himself vanquished, and for a time appeared to have
recovered the energy of his youth to fight his son. After having
reinforced his ariny he returned in 1821, and besieged Herat a
second time ; but having invested it for a few days, the serdars
interfered between father and son, and effected a reconciliation,
CEAF. XII. HADJI FIROOZ ATTACKS KAMRAN. 1G5
upon the understandir~g that Shah Mahmood was to have the title
of king, and enjoy all the honours, and his son the power he so
much coveted.
\\'bile these two princes were disputing in the west the posses-
sion of one corner of Afghanistan, the other portions of the king-
dom passed into the hands of the Mohamedzyes and the Sikhs.
The former were too much occupied with their war against the
latter, and their differences with one another, to carry their arms
~~ Herat, and repaid themselves by agitating that province
Kith rumours and secret conspiracies, so that Kamran had at first
peat difficulty in making his authority respected, and when it was
a little strengthened he had to repulse the attacks which were
made by his adversaries from the exterior.
When Hadji Firooz Eddin, by no means satisfied with the con-
duct either of his brother or his nephew, retired to Meshed,
he met there the famous Serdar Kalech Khan, Taymooni, who
represented to him how wrong he had been to leave Herat, where
neither Mahmood nor Kamran had the least chance of being
able to maintain his position, while he, Firooz Eddin, who had
governed that country for years to the general satisfaction of the
people, would most assuredly have been before long raised by
them to the sovereign power. This serdar said, in short, all that
he could to awaken his ambition, and offered his support to
reinstate him in power. The prince for a long time resisted
these arguments, but at length, overcome by liis solicitations, de-
cided upon taking Kaleclis advice and reign again over a people
and a province which he had rendered happy and flourishing
for sixteen years of his paternal administration. Kalech Khan
made all the preparations which could suggest themselves to the
mind of a clever man, and the expedition was undertaken in 1822.
It was kept 80 secret that Kamran Mirza, who had gone to hunt in -
the country round K~saan, a town situated about fifteen hours from
IIerat, on the road to Meshed, was surprised by the advanced
guard of Hadji Firooz, and very nearly made prisoner; the
devotion of four of his servants, who defended his house, aiid
were all killed at the entrance, while he gained the fields by a back
door, alone secured him the opportunity of flight. Arrived a t
Berat, he immediately despatched his minister, Attah Khan, and
several other officers, in all dircctions to assemble the contingents of
the nomade tribes, who promptly arrived to his assistance and
166 KAMRAX AND THE PERSLAXS AT VARIAXCE. CHAP. SII.
relieved the city.
Wllile these troops, under the orders of A#ah
Khan, Ali Kioouzye, attacked the army of Hadji Firooz, the
prince Kamran left the city at the head of two thousand Afghans,
and fell upon the enemy's rear. The conflict lasted thirteen h o w ;
very little powder was expended, for the two armies fought with
cold steel foot to foot, and perhaps no more obstinate battle was
ever fought under the walls of Herat ; when it was over there
might be counted more dead bodies than living men. The vic-
tory nevertheless remained for a long time uncertain, but the
death of Kalech Khan turned the tide of battle in favour nf
Kamran. This serdar had singled out and pursued the prince
with fury, and in a few yards more he would have c r d
swords with the miscreant torturer of Fethi Khan ; but fortune
was not in the ascendant for him, his horse came down in a
ravine and injured the khan's neck in the fall. His soldiers,
seeing him in this disabled state, turned and fled, and, the enemy
having made him prisoner, Kamran sabred his foe himself--on
this occasion as on every other he showed himself ferocious in the
combat, and cruel when victorious. fIadji Firooz was also
captured, and he would not have been spared any more than his
general if Shah Ifahmood had not interfered energetically in his
favour ; but he was subsequently confined in the citadel, where he
was closely watched.
The prince Kamran was scarcely delivered from this danger
when he was called upon to deal with another. The united
chiefs of Khorassan attacked Herat in 1823; this expedition
was undertaken by ordcr of Fcth Ali Shah, King of Persia,
to force Kamran to pay the tribute, which under various pre-
texts he had never done. During three months the Khoras-
sanees made many unsuccessful efforts to take the city, and they
did not leave the province until they had completely ravaged it.
These inroade of the Persians were frequently renewed, and
Kamran repulsed them a11 by force of arms whenever there was a
chance of his coming victorious out of tlie contest ; but he much more
frequently met and bent to the storm, as IIadji Firooz had been
forced to do before him, by paying a small tribute to the Shah of
Persia, and in conforming to some frivolous ceremonies of vassalage.
Kamran hlirza had scarcely shaken off these enemies from
without when he had to contend with diwgrccable complications
within the province of Herat, and in the year 1824 tlicy extend~ul
CHAP. XII. REVOLTS AT FURRAH AND HERAT. 167
to the districts which up to that time had been pretty quiet.
That of Furrah more particularly pushed matters to the last
extremity: the inhabitants finished by separating themselves from
the capital to form an alliance with Kandahar, and Kamran was
obhged to march in person with an army to reduce them to
obedience.
Before departing on this expedition the prince took every p r t ~
caution to preserve the tranquillity of Herat in his absence. At
the time Shah Mahmood accommodated matters with his son, he
lost all hi influence, and was forced by Kamran to retire
to the Bagh Shah, a palace situated about a gullshot from
the city, where he could at his ease give himself up to his
depraved inclinations. The citadel with a good garrison was
confided to the charge of Moustapha Khan, Zoori, who had
always been devoted to him, and he appointed his maternal uncle
Ilohamed Hoovein Khan governor of the city, with the title of
~ k d . These two personages were to have equal authority and a
voice in the direction of affairs, and Kamran hoped that in opposing
one to h e other he would be able to secure a greater guarantee
for their fidelity. Hi eldest son, Djehanguir Mirza, was left in
Herat to control their actions, but they held this prince in little
consideration, who became simply the promulgator of the orders
which they gave, and not the representative of the regal authority.
The Vekil Mohamed Hoosein Khan had great influence in the
city, and the Serdar Moustapha Khan a still greater in the army.
At firat they seemed to act perfectly well together, but they were
united only in appearance ; each sought secretly to overthrow the
other, and to put Kamran on one side that he might govern in
his place. They also attempted to dissimulate their ambitious
pulpose from one another, when an occurrence wholly unexpected
arose, and made them participate in concert in a revolt which
each of them had individually premeditated.
The troops left for Furrah in the hope that, as stated by
Kamran, they would receive their pay directly they arrived in that
district, but this promise not having been performed they began
murmur, and the prince was forced to send to EIerat for money.
One of the officers of his household, by name Meuhvalee Khan,
ass char gg with this mission, and to him Kamran gavc a
note of hand for six thousand tomauns, which he ordered his uncle
Warned Hoosein Khafi to pay with the least possible delay.
168 REVOLT AT HERAT. CUAP. XII.
Meuhvalee Khan performed this duty in the most haughty and
arrogant manner, because the money was not ready; the Vekil
begged him to have ~at i ence for a few days, but the officer de-
maiidcd that the sum should be given him on the iustant, and apos-
trophized Hoosein Khan in menacing and opprobrious terms. The
Serdar Moustapha Khan, who was present during this altercation,
represented to his colleague that Rleuhvalee Klian must be cogni-
zant of some evil intention which Kamran entertained towards them :
For," said he, " if a subordinate addresses us in such a manner,
what will not the priilce do when lie returns ? " The imagination
of these chiefs, already prepared for revolt, soon became heated ;
they immediately arrested the messenger, and decided upon over-
throwing Ka~nr an ; hut when tl~cy came to discuss the basis upon
which the government was to be established, and who should be its
chief, tliey found i t was not easy to come to an understanding
between themselves, and the question was adjourned. Never-
theless, they agreed upon the main point-namely, the over-
throw of the prince Kamran; and also that his son Djehanguir
must be compromised in the eyes of the people, and rendered
odious by being induced to commit some unnecessary act of
cruelty. Tlicy began, therefore, by making him issue a pro-
clamation that his father's rule was at an end ; and it would seem
that this prince, then about twenty-two years of age, agreed very
willingly to this proposition, thinking without doubt that them was
no more harm in taking' the place of his father Kamran than
there had been in his dethroning Mabmood Shah. Accordingly
Djehanguir was proclaimed Sovereign Prince of Herat, and his
first act was to pronounce the condem~iation of Meuhvalee Khan.
The sentence was a terrible one : they first cut off his nose, his
ears, and his fingers, and from hour to hour scored him with sabre-
wounds. The agonies of this unfortunate man lasted two days,
after which one of the officers of Djellanguir Mirza dragged him
through the bazaars, and in a loud voice invited all those who
were friends of the new sovereign to throw a stone a t the
wretch, while two hundred men, who had been assembled then:
previously by the serdar and the Vekil, also stoned the miserable
sufferer.
Directly Mohamed Iloosein and Rfoustapha Khan had attained
their object by compromising Djehanguir with his father, and
making him detested in the eyes of the Hcratees, tliey improvised a
Ctrap. BII. SECOND REI GN OF HA1)JI FIROOZ. 169
revolt by which the prince was overthrown and imprisoned, and
the executive power placed in their own hands. This w7as the cri-
tical moment for these ambitious men, for they had penetrated the
intentions of each other. The Vekil, who did not feel himself
strong enough to attack the serdar openly, and dislodge him from
the citadel, released lladji Firooz from the prison in which he
was confined, and made the citizens acknowledge him as their
sovereign. Moustapha Khan, thus forestalled, saw very well that
he could not obtain anything from the inhabitants if he stood
alone, for Hadji Firooz was their idol; they still remembered
how much happiness they had enjoyed during his administration of
affairs, and his return to power filled them with joy. As a counter-
poise to this, the serdar went to the Mallmood a t Bagh Shah,
where he lived pretty nearly forgotten, and was ignorant of what
was passing in the city, with the intention of setting him up as
an opponent to IJadji Firooz. This done, blood soon flowed in
IIcrat, and Moustapha Khan, defeated in the first conflict, was
obliged to shut himself up with the old king in the citadel, from
whence he cannonaded the city, which, to avoid complete destruc-
tion, surrendered at discretion.
This second reign of Hadji Firooz Eddin lasted only eighteen
days: the victor Moustapha Khan obliged him to retrlrn once
more and seek refuge at Meshed, to which city he was followed
by the Vekil. The former war still alive in 1845 ; I saw him in my
way through Meshed in that year, and received these details from
his o m lips.
After the deposition of Djehanguir Mirza, and when he saw the
power as he thought escape from him by the election of Firooz
Eddin, Moustaplla Khan, thinking hi chances of success were
small, and calculating still less upon Shah Mahmood, sent an
express to Kamran Biirza to beg him to hasten his return, pro-
mising to stand firm for his party until he made his appearance.
The prince hastened to adopt tliis suggestion, and arrived under the
walls of IIerat the day after his uncle IIadji Firooz and the Vekil
had retired from the city, but he found the gates closed; for the
victorious Moustapha, having now no other competitor, replied to
the summons to open them that he knew no other sovereign than
Shah Mahmood, would obey his orders only, and that those
orders were that his son should not be allowed to enter the
city.
170 CRUELTY OF MOUSTAPHA KHAN. CHAP. SLI.
Kamran invested the place immediately after he received
this message, but he had scarcely opened his trenches when he
was obliged to retire to Laush-Jowaine, a fortified castle and
position to the south of Furrah, to avoid a battle with Shere dil
Khan, Mohamedzye, whose forces were much superior to hi
This serdar had been sent against him by his brother Poor dil
Khan, the sovereign of Kandahar, as much to avenge the death of
Fethi Khan as to seize upon Herat, and this conquest, added to
the others which he had made to the eastward since the fall of
Shah Biahmood, would have made them masters of the whole
of Afghanistan, as we shall see hereafter.
Shere dil Khan, not having succeeded in obtaining possession of
the place by simple summons as he had expected, commenced the
siege, but he was soon forced to raise it, and finally to retreat
towards Kandahar, finding 1iirnsc.lf between two fires ; for an army
from Khorassan, conlmandcd by Mohamed Khan, Garai, whom
Moustapha Khan had called to his support, was in the neigh-
bourhood.
The usurper, now being rid of Hadji Firooz, of Kamran, and of
Shere dil Khan, aatisfied the expectations of his ally Mohamed
Khan, Garai, with a sum of money, and by paying his expenses
during the campaign ; but not feeling sufficiently secure even
after this, he thought that the best method of maintaining his
position was to destroy all those who had opposed him. Blood
again flowed on all sides, and revolt was the only resource that
remained to the miserable Heratees by which they could deliver
themselves from this tyrant.
Syud Biir Sedik Khan, chief of the Afghan branch of the
Berduranees, a tribe from which the majority of the citizens of
Herat had sprung, invited the prince Kamran to approach the
town as secretly as he could, declaring that when he arrived they
would admit him. Though Kamran had since his last flight been
deserted by very nearly the whole of his army, he did not hesitate
to accept this dangerous invitation to regain his power, and,
reaching Herat about midnight, his march not having been dis-
covered, the Syud admitted him into the place without the prince
having been compelled to fire a single shot. The remainder of the
night was occupied in making the arrival of Kaniran known to the
inhabitants, and the citadel in which Bioustapha Khan resided
was surrounded at sunrise by ten thousand armed men, who aroused
CRAP. XI. HIS MISERABLE END. 171
him by a well-sustained fire of artillery and volleys of musketry.
The serdar, surprised by this sudden attack, lost a few men
in the first instance, but after a few hours he completely or-
ganised the defence, which during a month was most vigorously
conducted, and he only made up his mind to surrender when tlie
towers, shaken to their foundations by the explosion of mines,
were on the point of falling, and large breaches opened a wide
passage for the besieging army. In this extremity he sent the Serdar
Dost Mohamed Khan, Popolzye, one of his party, to Kamran, to
offer his submission : at the same time he invoked the clemency of
the conqueror, and sent him a Koran, opefled at the verse which
recommends Mahomedans to bear no hatred, and forgive each
other their faults ; but the prince, certainly very far from a good
Mussulman, and, as I have already remarked, a rare example of
ferocity, fell upon the messenger and cudgelled him with a der-
vish's stick which he happened to have in his hand.
Moustapha Khan, appreciating clearly from this incident the
kind of fate that awaited him, defended himself with desperation
for ten days more-it was a lion encaged. . . . At last the assault
was given; the place fell ; Moustapha was taken prisoner, and
suffered the most dreadful of deaths. His body was burned with
hot irons, his flesh torn with red-hot pincers by shreds ; covered
with wounds and nearly flayed, he was bound to a large tree at
the entrance to the citadel, and on this spot the p p l e con-
gregated to spit in his face, and covered him with every kind of
excrement. At last they ripped open his belly, and he expired
after enduring seven days of the most fearful agony. The
tree to which he was bound was standing in 1845. Kamran
Mirza punished his father, Shah Mahmood, for having assisted the
serdar in this revolt, by depriving him of his wine during one
whole month, which was to him a terrible infiction. As to his
son Djehanguir Mirza, he gave him his liberty, but with it,
as a small recompense for having assisted in dethroning his
father, two thousand cuts with the bastinado on the soles of
hi feet, forgetting that he had been guilty of the same crime
himself. In this family the son, grandson, and grandfather were
all equally worthy of each other, and strove to distinguish them-
selves by the most odious crimes. Such is the Afghan character :
the people of Afghanistan honour that which is vile with us.
From the death of Bioustapha Khan, not one year went round
172 REFLECTIONS ON THE AFGHANS. CHAP. sn.
without Kamran's seeing son~e ambitious character putting his ce
vereipty in question. Alternately victor and vanquished, his reign
was nothing more than a long drama of intestine wars, conspiraciq
and revolts, followed by the most atrocious executions. He cruelly
put to death all who were opposed to him, even those whom he
merely suspected : and numbers of these unfortunate beings were
tl~rown under the feet of elephants, or to hungry tigers, which
he kept for this purpose. There was in his revenge a barbarous
ferocity of which it would be difficult to form a conception; and
the most disgusting feature in it was, that he delighted to be himsslf
the executioner of the sentences which he pronounced. In Europe
the memory of Kamran would have been execrated for ages, but the
Afghans see things in another point of view ; courage so called is
in their eyes the greatest of all virtues : it stands in place of every
other, and to take vengeance upon an enemy, to kill and maasacre
plenty of human beings, passes wit11 them for courage. Directly a
prince, a chief, or a person of lower grade 1s in the possession of a b
solute power, he ought to prove that he has it by the massacres he
orders. They cannot comprehend why an enemy vanquished or dis-
armed should be pardoned, and they regard this as an a d of weak-
ness and pusillanimity. I n their estimation he who makes the most
victims is the most powerful, the most honoured ; and it is very
doubtful whether there is a family in Herat which has not been
deprived of some one of its members by Kamran. Now that he
is dead, the people flock in croads in pilgrimage to hi tomb.
With such sentiments it is not surprising to see the history of this
nation broadly traced in characters of blood.
DEATH OF MAHMOOD.
CHAPTER XIII.
Death of Shah Mahmood - Kamran is suspeded of murdering his father- IIe
mdnlges in every kind of exoese-Death of Attah Khan-Yar Mohamed Khan
is made Vizier of Hernt- Hostility of the Persians against this principality -
Intrigues of Abbas M h - Par Mohamd arrivea nt Meshed - He is put to the
torture by t he Persian prince - Is delivered by the Athar Baahi - Measures of
Yar Mohamed - Revolt of the Syud Mohamed Sedik - He is betrayed Ly
b m a n and executed - The Shah is closely watched by Yar Mohamed - His
sons are d# - Project of Mohamed Shah on Herat - The Bamkz~ffl con-
sent to t he rastoration of Shah Shooja-He plays the despot, and is over-
thrown - Eyoob succeeds him - Mohamed Axim Khan march- against the
Sikha- Runjeet Sing successful against the Afghans -The battle of Noo-
chero- The Afghans are beaten - Death of Azim Khan - The character of
that s e d u - H ~ B son Habib Ullah Khan succeed8 him.
KAYRAN MIRZA was generally suspected of having abridged the
days of his father, the Shah Mahmood, who was found dead in his
bath in 1829; some assert that he was poisoned, and some
that he was strangled, by the command of his son, who was tired of
seeing him raised to power like a puppet every time an ambitious
man revolted against himself. From the time of his father's
decease Kamran took the title of King ; he then seemed to have
lost all energy, and retired within the walls of the citadel of
Herat, remaining almost a stranger to the affairs of govern-
ment, the direction ofwhich he gave up to his minister, the Serdar
Attah Khan, Ali Kioouzye, who had given him many marks of
his attachment, and in whoni he had entire confidence; a h r which,
and following the example of his father, he commenced a life of
drunkenness, opium-eating, and every Eastern vice.
This alteration in the conduct of the prince awakened the hopes
of every party, and each wished to try its strength in several
disturbances, but the vigilance of Attah Khan suppressed them
with so much energy that they withdrew into the shade, and made
no further attempts during his lifetime. This able man, who
had distinguished hilliself as much in war as in the civil admi-
nistration of hi country, died in 1830, leaving threg sons, serdars
174 PAR MOHAMED VIZIER. CHAP. YIII.
like himself. In conformity with the custom of Afghanistan, whcre
the office of prime minister is hereditary like the crown, it was
expected that the eldest of these sons, the Serdar Dine Mohamed
Khan, would succeed his father as vizier. Though young, he had
shown himself worthy of this distinction by his bravery in the
field and his military capacity, of which he had given proof on
several occasions; but, surrounded hy intrigues, he refused to
accept power, and abandoned his rights to his cousin, the Serdar
Yar Mohamed Khan, who, having lost his father at a very tender
age, had been brought up with him in the house of Attah Khan.
The minister had always evinced a great predilection for his
nephew, and frequently expressed an opinion anticipatory of his
future greatness; and Shah Kamran, influenced by a certain
mollah, Mohamed Athar Bashi, the apothecary-in-chief, who
flattered his passions, and administered his drugs to excite them,
accepted Yar Mohamed Khan as his vizier.
This young serdar, who was distinguished for courage
and cleverness, had made numerous parbzans amongst the Hera-
tees. His father Abdullah Khan, Ali Kioouzye, although of
noble extraction, was not in the outset a very great person-
age ; but he rose by merit, and became governor of Cashmeer
at the period when Shah Mdmood first ascended the throne.
That sovereign released him from prison, in which he had been
confined by Shah Zeman, and placed him in this high position ;
thus fortune favoured him, and his son's career was even more
successful.
The ddbut of Yar Mohamed in administrative affain justified
the selection which had been made in his person ; it is, however, to
be prcsunied that he at once turned his views towards the assump
tion of supreme power, for all his acts tended constantly towards
the accomplishment of his ambitious projects. As firm as he was
vigilant, he always held his adversaries in check by depreciating
them ; lie successively removed those most dangerous to his interests
in a manner that did not produce too much discontent, and
endeavoured to smother the rivalry existing between the various
tribes on whose support he could rely ; he proceeded, in short, like
a clever and intelligent man, and the Shall Kamran, confiding in
him, followed his advice in all respects. But Yar Mohamed had
been minister scarcely a year when one of those events so frequent
in Afghanistan arose to check for a moment his dawning fortunea
CUM. 3111. VISITS MESHED. li5
At the commencement of 1832 Feth Ali Shah, always pre-
occupied with the idea of joining the province of Herat to Persia,
assembled 30,000 men at Meshed under the command of A b h s
Mirza, the heir apparent to the throne. For some years past
Russia had encroached considerably on the north of the Persian
territory; England had done the same thing in the south, to
the prejudice of the Indian princes. Nevertheless, she had not
made a progress that would enable her to secure as much influence
in Persia as the Tzar. She commenced, therefore, by fearing that
the Shah of Persia, whom she had abandoned to the Muscovites,
would undertake the conquest of IIerat, and this much more in
amordance with t he wishes of the Emperor Nicholas than his own.
England was alarmed at this demonstration on the side of India of
which Herat is t he key, and brought forth all the springs of her
clever policy t o prevent it, or at least to paralyze the effects of it.
She was, however, in the first instance, somewl~at reassured by the
reflection that, the Persian army being directed by English officcl-s,
could only obtain such success as they would permit. The East
India Company was also clever enough to induce Feth Ali Shah to
turn the expedition from its original object for a time, and reduce
the petty chiefs of Khorassn, who had given only a nominal ohe-
dience to Persia since the reign of Nadir Shah.
On his arrival at Meshed the prince Abbas Mirza despatclird
one of his officers to the Shah Kamran to request him to send Ilia
minister there in order that they might consult together, and
endeavour to terminate their differences in an amicable manner.
The character of the prince inspiring the vizier with every con-
fidence, he accepted this invitation, and went to Meshed attended
by five hundred Afghan horse; but instead of coming to an
amngemeilt as Y ar Mohamed hoped, Abbas Mirza origin-
ated fresh and serious difficulties, and Yar Mohamed was very
Boon obliged to confrsa to himself that he had been led into a
snare. Wi t h great secrecy, therefore, he immediately seut off his
.
men by small detachments to Kootchan, then governed by Reza
Kooli Khan, who had not been subdued by Abbas Mirza, and
recommended them as brave fellows who could powerfully
&st the ally of his sovereign in the defence of his fort, which
Yar Mohamed considered one of the outworks of Herat. I I e
then addressed a communication to the Persian prince containing
most energetic protestations on his strange proceeding with regard
176 ESCAPE OF YAR MOHAMED. Cnr p. XIIT.
to himself; but it was all very fine for him to invoke the inviola-
bility of an ambassador's person, or the rights of individuals ; no
one listened to him, and a few days after, the prince, fearing his
energy and talents, gave an order that his moverncnts should be
carefully watched. After this A b h Mirza endeavoured to bring
him to consent to an arrangement relative to IIcrat, but tlie vizier
would not concede anything which he considered prejudicial to the
interests of the Shah Kamran. The prince even went so far as to cx-
tract two of his teeth to cure his obstinacy, when by the intervention
of some great personages this cruelty, unworthy of one of the Persian
royal family, was abandoned. The Athar Bashi, however, soon
arrived to offer himself as an hostage in the place of Yar Mohamed,
who returned to Hcrat ; but the vizier not having sent the prince
the ransom which he had consented to pay to save his life, the
Athar Bashi was placed in great danger: the death of Abbas
Mirza, which took place towards the close of the year 1833,
facilitated his release, which he succeeded in obtaining at the cost
of 10001. paid to those who had charge of him. He also promised
to send them a similar sum when he reachdd Herat, but this he of
course took very good care not to do.
The ilitrigueo of the English at the court of Feth Ali Shah to
prevent the expedition against Ilerat from being carried out, only
partially succeeded ; the troops were occupied in reducing the
small fortresses still unsubdued of Khorassan, and two years
elapsed between t l ~e period at which they reached Meshed, and
the time when Mohamed Mirza, the eldest son of the hereditary
prince of P e ~ i a , encamped under the walls of Herat with a mp
d'armk to effect a preliminary investment of the place. This
was to be succeeded by a regular siege on the arrival of the rear-
guard under the command of his father, but Mohamed Mirza had
scarcely pitched his knts under the city walls when he heard of
the death of A b h Mirza, in consequence of which he raised
his camp, and retreated on Meshed.
I n e n Yar Mohamed escaped from the Persians he retook, and
with a strong hand, the reins of government: nevertheless his vigi-
lance could not prevent the revolt of the nornade population in some
of the districts situated in the north and east of the principality ;
but, an active general as well as a clever politician, he marched
without delay against the rebels, and subdued them with as much
promptitude as vigour. He subsequently led his troop southward,
CIIIP. XIIT. HIS MEASURES. 1 ii
and made Kamran's authority respected in all the Seirtan. After
this he returned to Herat, and continued to hike a firm course in
furtherance of his secret designs.
Towards the close of the year 1834 an Indian Mussulrnan, who
had been a sergeant in the East India Company's service, came to
Herat, and offered his services to the Shah Kamran, which the
vizier accepted, and from this time the infantry, till then held
in littae estimation there, was drilled, though very indifferent!^,
on the European system.
Taking advantage also of a few years' peace which ensued after
the retreat of the Persians, Yar Mohamed repaired the fortifications
of the city, which' in consequence of the numerous assaults they had
sustained were partly in ruins. IIe created villages, invited the
populations from a distance to settle in them and cultivate the
land lying untilled or unreclaimed, and would have done at that
time what he did at a later period, encouraged industry and com-
merce, and cleared the road3 of myriads of robbers who had
infested them, but such measurks would then have injured his
own interests. I t is true that he governed, but Shah Kamran
reigned, and he had the tact to make the odium of the plundcr-
ing and discontent on the part of the people, fall upon the king,
while he managed to secure to himself all the praise of what-
ever was good. If from the moment of his elevation to the post of
vizier he was remarkable for those qualities which are with difficulty
found united in an Afghan, he was nevertheless not exempt from the
?ices of his countrymen. During the entire reign of the Shah
Ramran he was as avaricious, cruel, and implacable a i i t is possible
for an Afghan to be; but unfortunately this is frequently necessary
with people of this nation, though in his extortions and sanguinary
executions he was not always guided by ally regard for the
public weal : his ambition on such occasions was concealed
under a veil of devotion which he affected to feel for his prince
and his country, and the serdars, who were not his dupes, were
continually on the alert to overthrow him, hut without the least
Mlccese.
Amongst the numerous revolts which he had to repress, that
which broke out at the comme~icernerit of 1837 gave him the most
eerious uneasiness. I t was headed by the same Syud Mir Sedik
Khan, Berduranee, who had surrendered the town of Herat to the
Shah Kamran when he was dethroned by the Serdar Monstapha
N
1 3 PLOTS AGAIXST PAR MOHAMED. CHAP. XIIT.
Khan ; but less fortunate on this occasion, Mir Sedik, having failed
in his enterprise, was taken and executed. The unfortunate Syud
had entered into this conspiracy with the full knowledge and con-
sent of the king, who, beginning to perceive that his vizier was
more powerful than himself, and even restricted his personal libcrt~,
was anxious to throw off the shackles which impeded the freedom
of his actions. Rut he did not dare to strike openly, and it was'
actually the Shah himself who in a drunken fit revealed the plot
to Yar Mohamed, and thus caused the death of Mir Sedik Khan
as well as that of many other chief3 who were completely devoted
to him.
After this occurrence the'vizier removed from the court such
of the king's advisers as were attached to him, and by degrees
replaced them by his own creatures. l i e preserved to the Shah all
the external appearances of respect and obedience, but he found a
thousand ways of eluding his orders and his wishes when they were not
in accordance with hi own views ; and in fact he did as he ple.med.
Shah Kamran, warned by his wives, his sons, and other relatives,
who detested the vizier, at length perceived clearly where all this
would cod, but there was not one spark of that feverish ambition
remaining in him which caused the death of Fethi Khan. The
state of drunkenness in which he continually lived paralyzed all
his energy, and he never seriously attempted to deliver himself
from the tyranny which his minister imposed upon him. He readily
gave his consent, it is true, to a secret league formed by a powerful
party to overthrow Yar Mohamed, a conspiracy at the head of
which were his own sons ; but he withheld his co-operation on two
or three occasions at the very moment when his minister was to
have been put an end to, and at length finished by discovering the
plot to him himself. Yar Mohamed disposed of the chiefs who
had formed these intrigues, and punished the sons of liis sovereign
by reducing to a very small eum the allowance which they received
from the state.
Such was the situation of affairs at Herat, when towards the close
of the year 1837 Mohamed Shah, King of Persia, -iu laid
siege to that capital, and took up the idea which his grandfather
Feth Ali Shah had entertained, of adding this province to his do-
minions ; and this desire was all the more intense, inasmilch as he
considered that he was bound in honour to recommence a siege which
the death of his father Abbas Mirza had alone induced him to
CUAP. SIII. OFFER TO RESTORE SHAH SHOOJA. 179
abandon before he had even fired a shot. The execution of this
project was highly satisfactory to the Russian government, for it
admitted the validity of the Shah's claims upon Herat, and found
independently of these many other legitimate and powerful motives
for approving of the expedition undertaken by that monarch.
Amongst them was the refusal of Shah Kamran to liquidate the
arrears of tribute which he had pledged himself to pay, and the
sums of money taken by his vizier from several Persian caravans
travelling through his territory. The English, who had done
everything in their power to prevent the first expedition against
Herat from being carried out, opposed the second in a still more
decided manner; but as the consequences connected with this
event were of so grave a nature that we cannot treat them sum-
marily, we will enter at a later period into the details of the
various phases through which it passed. In the mean while
we must retrace our steps a little to give some account of what
happened in Kandahar, Kabul, and Cashmeer after Shah Mahmood
and his son Icamran had been driven from Afghanistan proper.
Once master of Kabul, the Serdar Mohanied Azim Khan, who,
on the death of the vizier Fethi Khan, became the oldest surviving
son of Payendeh Khan, reunited the scattered remains of the
Afghan army, and re-established security and order; but his
brother the Nawab Djabbar Khan, by whom he was represented in
the government of Cashmeer, had great difficulty in escaping the
snares set for him by Runjeet Sing, and in suppressing the revolts
which arose from the intrigues of his clever and powerful neighbour.
His other brother, Rahim dil Khan, had been obliged to fly from
Shikapoor immediately after the death of Fethi Khan to escape
from the Beloochees, whom Shah Shooja, who had hurried from
India, had induced to revolt against him.
Poor dil Khan had remained master of Kandahar, but not
thinking himself sufficiently strong to maintain his power as
sovereign, and having no hope of receiving any succour from
Mohamed Azim Khan, who had quite enough to do in Kabul, he
sent his brother Kohendil Khan to Shikapoor, to propose certain
terms to Shah Shooja, which, if accepted, would lead to his resto-
ration to the throne of his ancestors. This prince insisted that
the sons of Payenilch Khan assembled at Kandallar should swear
on the Koran that they were sincere in their devotion to his person,
and after having obtained thia ledge he proceeded to that city,
N 2
from whence he wrote to Mohamed Azim Khan' to claim his rights
over Kabul and Pesl~awur. Mohamed Azim having given in
writing, a similar declaration to that of his brothers, and sent it to
the Shalq Shooja set off immediately to join him at Peshawur
where he then was, and Poor dil Khan accompanied him with a
strong escort. Mohamed -4zim Kluu was in perfect good faith
when he consented to the restoration of Shooja-ool-Moolk, for his
position was not lesv embarrassing than that of Poor dil Khan,
and he had very great difficulty in maintainiug his authority over
the northern provinces of the king don^. Foreseeing well that the
divisions which had crept in between his brothers would lead, ere
long, to the loss of the sovereign power in his family, he thought
that the only way of consolidating the influence of the Moha-
medzyes was to call in a Suddozye prince, whom they would place
like a puppet on the throne, and preserve for themselves all the
executive power. The restoration of Shah Shooja was therefore to
be effected on this basis and understanding ; but such a mode of
proceeding was by no means satisfactory to that prince, whose
imperious and absolute character had not been softened in exile,
and who wished to ascend the throne without making any condi-
tions, or entering into any engagement, either with individuals or
the people at large. llohamed Azim Khan, thinking that he might
bring the king to admit as sacred thc right of his family to the
first offices in the state, re-established him on the throne, and this in
spite of the knowledge that he had of his intractable character.
But Shooja, without taking any account of the ulterior cons-
quences of his conduct, manifested almost from the outset his
arrogance without disguise ; he treated RXohamed Azim Khan
and Poor dil Khan as rebels, took offence because one of their
cousins used a palanquin, and ordcred that for the future this honour
should be rtserved for the princes of the Suddozye farnily alone
Mohamed Azim and his brothers exhausted all the powers of
ar gume~~t that could be dictated by consideration and wisdom to
induce Shah Shooja to listen to reason, but, finding him immovable
in his absolute views, they would not permit liim to proceed to
Kabul ; the prince therefore left the camp, situated thirty-five
miles from Peshawur, and retired within the walls of that town,
with a small body of Sikhs who had attached themselves to his
person, to wl~icli were added a thousand Afghans of the discon-
tented tribe of the Mohamedzyes. Alohamed Azim Khan, des-
CHAP. XIII. SUCCEEDED BY EYoOB hIIRZA. 161
perate at having created fresh difficulties for himself by thua
recalling Shah Shooja, immediately laid siege to Peshawur with all
his army. The prince could not hope to hold the place for any
length of time ; nevertheless, he defended himself, but was even-
tually obliged to evacuate the town sooner than he had expected.
Hi s magazine took fire and destroyed all his munitions of war ;
two hundred of his men were killed by the explosion ; and an
enormous breach was made in the city wall, which opened an easy
passage for the troops of Mohamed Azim.
Obliged to make a precipitate retreat, the Shah managed to
reach Shikapoor, where the Emirs of Scinde consented to receive
him. Sir Alexander Burnes states that they ceded the place to
him and adds,--" A series of intrigues set on foot by his enemies
expelled him even from this retreat, and he fled by the circuitous
route of the desert of Jaysalmere to Loodiana. The conduct of
Shah Sl~ooja was ill-calculated to support his falling fortunes : he
forgot the dignity of a monarch in low intrigues with his subjects,
-in which he tarnished their honour as well as his own. The
fitness of Shooja-001-Moolk for the situation of sovereign seems
ever to have been doubtful. His manners and address are highly
polished, but his judgment does not rise above mediocrity."
I n the year 1819 Mohamed Azim Khan gave way to the repre-
sentations of Eyoob Mirza, another son of Timoor Shah, who came
to hi camp, and promised him that, if the Khan would place him
on the throne, he would appoint him his vizier, and give him all
the power, having no other ambition than that of perpetuating
the possession of the throne of the -4fghans to the descendants of
the great Shah Ahmed, and to see money struck in his own
name. I n short," remarks the author of the work we have just
quoted, '6 Eyoob said, Make me but king and permit money to
be coined in my name, and the whole power and resources of
tlie kingdom may rest with yourself; my ambition will be satisfied
with bread and the title of king.' These conditions were accepted,
nor did this puppet monarch ever violate or attempt to infringe
the terms by which he had gained the name and trappings of
royalty, but continued a tool in the hands of Azim Khan,
who was nominally his vizier. So degraded was now tlie state of
the Royal house of Kabul, that the very robe of honour with which
the minister was installed into the viziership of the empire, was a
portion of his own property, and had been sent ~rivately to the
183 GUCCESSES OF HUSJEET SING. CHAP. XIII.
Shah, who conferred it on the vizier with all the pomp and
display of royalty. Several of the young princes who aspired to
the throne were delivered over to Eyoob and put to death."
Eyoob kept therefore the promise which he llad made to Azim
Khan, even beyond what he had permitted hiulself to hope. The
Afghans will have in their kings activity, cour:i.ge, and energy of
character, but Eyoob was distinguished only by nullity the most
complete : he thought of uothing but himself, and yet he could not
escape the fatality which seemed to pursue the sons of Timoor
Shah. Some letters which he wrote to his brothers Shah Mah-
mood and Shah Shooja having been intercepted, Mohamed Azim
drove him out of Kabul, and put hi brother Sultan Ali Mirza to
death, as he appeared to have encouraged the king in breaking
the pact which united him with the Mohamedzyes.
This would seem to indicate that Eyooh, in giving up so readily
the royal authority, obeyed from necessity rather than choice,
and without doubt only waited for a favourable opportunity to
obtain it ; but be that as it may, neither plan succeeded. At the
same period at which Sultan Ali Mirza was put to death at Kabul
by Azim Khan, another brother of that prince, Mohamed Murad
Mirza, fell under the sword of Kohendil Khan at Kandahar, for a
reason similar to that which llad led to the fall of Eyoob.
For several years past the affairs of government had weighed
heavily upon Mohamed Azim Khan ; the order he established
after having driven Shah Shooja from Peshawur had, after the
dismissal of Shah Eyoob, again given place to agitation : the public
mind was to be quieted ; the serdan were to be satisfied or put
down to procure tranquillity for the kingdom, and that was not an
easy thing to accomplish. Mohamed Azim Khan in his desire to
amooth all these dificulties wished to proceed with some degree of
regularity ; he commenced therefore by marching against the
Sikhs, who, since they had occupied Attok, had taken possesion of
some of the Afghan territory which surrounded it, and began to
be very unpleasant neighbourn to the Dooranees.
That remarkable man Runjeet Sing, profiting by the enfeebled
state to which so many troubles had reduced the Afghans, had
taken from them in succession Attok, Mooltan, Derrehghazee
Khan, Leya, and Cashmeer. Nawab Djabbar Khan, the governor
of this last province, had been forced to evacuate it, and suffered
great loas in effecting his retreat ; the Sikh troops had even punrued
CHAP. XIII. BXYI'LE OF NOOCHERO. 163
him to the right bank of the Indus, and at one time menaced
Pesbawur. Eight thousand of Runjeet's soldiers, under the com-
mand of Boodh Sing, had also just made, from weak entrenchments
hastily thrown up, an heroic defence against a population of fifty
thousand Afghans. The Sikhs, up to this time enslaved, proved
by these brave deeds of arms that their nationality had boldly
developed itself; they felt the necessity of constituting themselves
a eeparate and compact power ; and as this first and sudden impulse
of the natural genius of this people might become fatal to their
neighbours, there was not a moment to lose in repulsing such
formidable adversaries. Azim Khan therefore marched a body
of troops towards the quarter that was threatened ; but though
they obtained marked and somewhat numerous advantages over
Runjeet, they were not able to force him tc, recross the Indus,
which on his invasion of the Afghan territory his cavalry had
passed by swimming at a spot where there was no ford-a feat
unheard of before in the annals of war in that country.
Mohamed Azim Khan had endeavoured to rouse the fanatical
feelings of his soldiers by proclaiming a holy war, but, not having
hen able to arreet the success of this modern Por n by that device,
he was obliged to march in person against him. The Sikh and
Afghan armies met at Noochero in 1822, the latter being divided
into two corps by the Kabul river. The vizier Azim Khan had
conceived his plan of operations very badly : for he and the greater
part of his brothers were on the southern side of the river with the
second division, which it was impossible to move to the support of
tbe k t when it was attacked in person by the whole of Kunjeet's
forces. Nevertheless it sustained the fight valiantly : the infantry,
posted on an eminence, and protected by several pieces of cannon,
received the onset of the Sikhs without flinching, and repulsed four
successive charges which they made with the whole of their cavalry ;
it was only when a fifth was given that the Afghans were obliged
to fall back, and with the loss of their guns-Runjeet conducted
this charge in pereon, and brought up the whole of his reererves.
Mohamed Azim Khan and his brothere were spectators of
this sad disaster without the power, as it is %aid, of being able
to remedy it ; a circumstance which seems incomprehensible,
for the runaways found no difficulty in cro~eing the river and
rejoining them, as did likewise a corps of Sikhs who pursued them.
How then did it happen that Azim Khan could not do the same ?
184 DEATIf OF MOHAMED AZIM. CHAP. XIII.
But supposing the Afghan general had committed this first error, i t
was easy for him to repair it by attacking the Sikhs in their paasage
of the river, which he did not do ; the fact was, his heart failed him,
and he t o ~ k to flight. His apologists have endeavoured to justify
his retreat by saying that it was caused by the shouts that were
heard in the Sikh camp on the night preceding the battle, which
led Azim Khan to believe they had received large reinforce-
ments. But even if this version of the affair was correct, the
error, not to say stupidity, of allowing the Sikhs to cross the river
without making any attempt to stop them, is not the less great;
besides, it may always be said that the Afghan general did not
advance merely to retreat, but to fight, and that he might at least
have saved his guns and his baggage which he abandoned.
The .
Sikhs, taking advantage of the panic that aeized their adversaries,
marched on Peshawur, of which they took possession, and destroyed
the citadel.
The right bank of the Indus remained in the power of the Sikhs
after the battle of Noochero, and Peshawur was an advanced post
over which Runjeet reserved the right of suzerainty. He gave
the government to Sultan Nohamed Khan, one of the brothers of
Azim Khan, e~lforcirlg a small tribute, hoping by this means to
increase the disunion amongst the sons of Payendeh Khan, and
turn it to greater account.
Mohamed Azim Khan, overwhelmed by all these reverses, and
suffering from the effects of a wound which, from his habits of
drinking, had become very irritated, l ee the army, the temporary
command of which he gave to his brother Dost Moharned Khan,
and took the road to Kabul, where he hoped to recover; but this
hope was never realized, for he had not sufficient strength left to
reach the city, and died at the village of Latu-bend about two
days' journey from the capital. For some time past he had felt
convinced his end was approachir~g, and hastened to collect all his
wealth, which amounted to 2,700,0001.* Azim Khan left this
enormous sum to. his son Habib Ullah Khan, and a few hours
before his death he made him swear to employ it and his life in
revenging his father's defeat and the misfortunes of hi county.
The character of the vizier Mohamed Azim Khan has been
estimated very differently by different persons according as they
were partizans of the Suddozyes or the Mohamedzyea, but the
I learnt this from Kohendil Khan, his sons, and bis brother.-Fmin:
CHAP. -YIII. HIS CHARACTER. 166
majority of impartial individuals in Afghanistan are of opinion that
he was a man of moderate abilities, and not equal to his mission ;
that he was wanting in firmness ; that his military talents were of
a mediocre character ; and that his love of wine and ardent spirits
was so great that he-had the commalld of his faculties but for a
very short time during the twenty-four hours. He was, however,
gentle, conciliating, and showed great urbanity of disposition.
l'llOCEEDINGiS OF HABIB ULLAH. CHAP. XlY.
CHAPTER YIV.
Proceedings of Habib Ullah Khm - Diviaio~is betrr-ecn the sons of F'ayendeh
Khan- Hshib Ullah Khan at war with his uncles- Poor nil Kbnn interferm
in Kabul - Union of Sultan Mohamed and Dost Mohamed Rhans -Shere dil
Khan and Poor dil Khan establish peace between their brothers - Dost Yohamd
again at variance- Hia rivalry with Sultntl Mohamed-That prince st
Peshawur - Sir A. Burnw'a opinion of him - Kandahar -Poor dil Khan and
Shere dil Khan - Chardcter of the latter - Sir A. Burnes's opinion of tba
Kandahar chiefs - Character of Doat Mohamed - Sir A. Burnea's opinion of him.
HABI B ULLAU KHAN had sworn to his dying father that he would
take no rest until he had exterminated the Sikhs, but his courage did
not correspond with his promise ; it is true he continued the mu,
but without energy ; and it was only by the power of money that
he was enabled to maintain for a short time his troops in obedience.
Brutalized by his passion for drink, a vice which he inherited from
his parent, he felt very little for the misfortunes of Cis coun*.
Elis mother endeavoured, but in vain, to stimulate his zeal, and
lead him to appreciate more honourable sentiments; but he
remained deaf to her solicitations. This apathy in their chief
discouraged the inferior officers, who by degrees abandoued him,
while the serdars and his uncles neglected the national defence
and interests to quarrel for power amongst themselves. From cis
period the sons of Payendeh Khan were more disunited than even
the Suddozyes, and rushed into a number of little wars which con-
tinued during several years, until a few of them had succeeded in
definitively establishing themselves in the Afghan principalities
Balkh, Khulm, Koondooz, and Badakshane had shaken off the joke
since the fall of Shah Zeman, and governed themselves. As to
Scinde, Shah Shooja was the last of the Afghan kings who received
trihute from that country, and after his disasters the Talpoonr
Emirs considered themselves as completely independent.
Hahib Ul l ~ h had scarcely exercised his power six mouths when,
his money being spent, all consideration for him was at an end; in
Kabul he had only a mere shadow of authority remaining, and that
was soon disputed by his uncles. As to Sultan Mohamed Khan,
who had been made governor of Peshawur by Runjeet, he was not
eatisfied with the small revenues of that province, which he was
obliged to share with his two brothers, Pi r Mohamed Kban and
CUAP. SIV. ISTERFERENCE OF POOH DIL KHAS. 167
Syud Mohamed Khan. Dost Mohamed Khan had made a party
for himself, and resided at Ghumee.
The army of Hahib Ullah Khan, considerably weakened by
desertion, was not in a condition to measure its strength with those
of his uncles united. Aware of this, he sent his brother Akrem
Khan to Kandahar to repre~ent to their uncle Poor dil Khan the
danger there would be to him if he permitted his brothers Sultan
and Dost Mohamed Khan, who then had the reputation of being
ambitious and restless characters, to acquire an influence in his
neigl~bourhood superior to his own, for it might lead to their
creating disturbances in the principality of Kandahar, and possibly
end in their taking it from him if he was not upon his guard ;
Akrem Khan also sent him a few of their letters which had
been intercepted, and in which such intentions had been clearly
manifested.
Poor dil Khan, alarmed at the danger which menaced him,
sent hi brother Shere dil Khan to Kabul at the head of a few
thousand men, and this serdar met Dost Mohained Khan on the
road, beat, and forced him to retire upon Jellalabad, and then
proceeded to Kabul. There, however, instead of giving any
assistance to his nephew Habib Ullah Khan, he deposed him,
plundered him of his riches under a threat of killing him, and united
the remnants of his army with his own. The vanquished chief by
way of consolation now plunged i nt o every kind of debauch, and
continued to reside at Kabul, where he still lives in a miserable
plight, given up to excesses of the mmt filthy kind. Akrem Khan,
hi younger brother, died after his return to Kandahar ; he was a
brave and resolute man, and no friend to ambitious characters : his
death was supposed to have taken place from the effects of poison.
\Vhen Sultan Mohamed Khan and Dost Mohamed Khan saw
the turn affairs had taken at Kabul, they put a stop for a time to
the fratricidal war they had carried on since the death of Azim
Khan, and united their forces with a view of seizing that province.
They then marched against their brother Shere dil Khan, who at
their approach retired within the walls of the Bala Hissar, not
hhg sufficient troops to meet them in the field. Here he had
p t difficulty in maintaining himself during the winter of 1825.
The season was very severe ; the roads were covered with enow, and
impassable ; and it was only in the spring, and after he had been
five months besieged, that Poor dil Khan could brillg him rein-
forcmnents from Kandahar. Directly these arrived they attacked
188 RIFALHF OF CHAP. XlV.
Sultan Mohained and Dost Mohamed, and defeated them after
a most sanguinary struggle. Nevertheless, these serdars did not
consider their cause a hopeless one, and again prepared to t rr the
fortune of war, when Poor dil Khan, by a generous resolution,
stopped the further effusion of blood. He went almost alone to
the camp of his brothers, and pictured to them all the mlamitiea
which the quarrels and divisions of the sons of Payendeh Khan had
brought upon their country. l1 Let us stand close," said he ; "and
to prove to you to what extent our union is dear to me, I will return
to Kandahar, and abandon Kabul to Sultan Mohamed Khan,
our eldest brother; but, before I retire, YOU must swear to me, a~
well as all our brothers now present in both camps, that nothing
shall disunite us for the future." This generous proposition was
accepted, and a good understanding reappeared for some time
amongst the members of this heroic family.'
But Dost Mohamed Khan took the oath that Poor dil Khan bad
exacted only because he felt convinccd that his brothers would never
support hint in his resistance, but he felt very angry that Sultan
Mohamed Khan, who was already in possession of Peshawur, had
been preferred to him a3 sovereign of Kabul, in contempt of the
rights that hc thought he had acquired by the courage he had
everywhere displayed, and by his great popularity with the
Afghans; and without doubt this chief was the bravest and the
most talented politician amongst the brotl~ers of the vizier Fethi
Khan, and had thus contributed more than any of them to over-
throw the Suddozye family. JVith him vexation and spite
overruling every other consideration, he foreswore himself and
prepared to carry arms against Sultan Mohamed Khan ; however,
there was, it is true, a deadly enmity between these two brothers,
which had its origin in a love affair. One of the widows of the
Serdar Azim Khan was a member of the royal family of :be
Suddozyes, and, according to the established custom in Afghan-
istan, was obliged to marry one of the surviving brothers of the
deceased. Sultan Mohamed Khan, who greatly admired her,
had, in the first instance, some chance of becoming her husband,
and a few conferences had already taken place on this subject,
when Dost Mohamed, who knew liow to render his homage accept-
able, made his appearance and married the beautiful widow. Sultan
Mohamed Khan never forgave him this outrage, and swore to
wash it out in his blood whenever an occasion should present itself.
Al l the som of Payendeh Khan were then in one camp or the other.-FmLr.
Ch a p . XIV. DOST MOHAMED AND SULTAN NOHANED. IS9
During the space of two years did Sultan Mohamed and Dost
Mohamed carry on a merciless war one against the other, b ~i t it
terminated in 1826, when Dost Mohamed, victorious on all points,
was enabled to establish definitively his authority a t Kabul.
Mohamed Khan, Beyat, a serdar of the Kuzzilbaslies, gave him his
support in collsequence of the blood relationship which united
them. Hi s sister was the mother of Dost Mol~amed Khan ; and
without the support of the Kuzzilbash chief the Dost would have
had great difficulty in obtaining this triumph over his opponent,
who was assisted by the Sikhs.
Sultan Mohamcd Khan, tlius thrown back upon Peshawur, had
a h the annoyance of finding himself more and more brougllt
under the power of Runjeet Sing. The Maharadja had, up to this
time, been satisfied with receiving a small annual tribute from the
Afghan chief, but, when he saw that Sultan Mohamed was beaten
by the Dost, he deniand~d that one of his sons should be delivered
u p to him as a hostage, and reside a t Lahore. I t would have been
easy for Sultan Mohamed to escape this difficulty by beconling
reconciled to Dost Mol~amed Khan, who was quite willing to receive
hi s advances, and had even taken the initiative in this respect ; but
Sultan Mohamed thought it preferable to persevere in the hatred
he felt to his brother, and made his complete submission to the
Slkhs-the sworn enemies of his country and of his religion.
I was not able to reach Peshawur myself, and could not there-
fore judge of the state of this province or collect any information
respecting the manner in which it was governed by Sultan Mohamed
.Khan, but 1 will supply such information by giving some passages
from the work of Sir A. Burnes, who visited that city in 1832.
" The government of Pe s h a ~ ur has been held by a member of
t he Barukzye family since Futteh Khan placed Shah Mahmood on
the throne of Kabul. Yeshawur owed allegiance and contributed
to the support of the kingdom till the year 1818, when the vizier
was put to death. Azim Khan, his successor, exacted tribute for
it during his lifetime in the name of Eyoob Shah. Since that time
i t has formed a separate chiefship like Kabul and Kandahar, now
subject, however, to the payment of a yearly tribute to the Sikhs.
I t is governcd by the Serdar Sultan Mohamed Khan, who shares
its revenues with two other brothers, Pir and Syud Mohamcd
Khan. A large portion of the country is alienated to different
individuals, and the net revenue falls short of nine lacs of rupecs
per annum. The younger brothers enjoy three lacs, and the chief
100 SIR -4. BURNES'S OPINION CHIP. SIT.
defrays from the remainder the entire expenses of the country, the
tribute to the Sikhs, and likewise supports the numerous families of
two elder brothers, who fell in battle and to whom he succeeded.
" The power of the chief is confined to the plain of Peshawur,
and the hills of Kohat, which form its southern boundary. That
plain is well known as one of the richest portions of the Kabul
dominions. I t is of a circular shape, about thirty-five miles broad,
highly peopled and cultivated, watered by nature and art. Within
this limited space there are numerous villages which pay no taxes.
The Khuttuks, a tribe of Afghans in the east, hold the country for
twenty miles west of the Indus for the small sum of 12001. annually,
which they render to the chief of Peshamr. The villages on the
west, and the Khyber hills, do not pay anythir~g ; and those north
of the Kabul river, with some few exceptions, enjoy a like immunity.
The only places of note in the chiefship are Peshaaur and Husht-
nuggur, which are described by Mr. Elphinstone Peshawur has
fallen into a state of decay with its change of rulers, and it is
doubtful if it boasts of a population of one half the hundred
thousand souls which occupicd i t in 1809. Hushtnuggur is the
seat of one of the younger brothers ; Kohat is held by the other.
The military strength of Peshawur is unimportant. Its contingent
of troops cannot be rated above 3000, two-thirds of whom mag be
cavalry. The chief might rally round him a numerous body of
irregulars, or, as they are called, ' ooloosee ; ' but they are badly
. armed, and not to be relied upon. Six pieces of artillery, and
two liundred regular infantry, complete the power of the chief of
Peshawur. FVith money the services of the Khyberees, and other
hill tribes, may be purchased on an emergency ; but the chief has
no treasury. I n a religious war with the Sikhs, an infuriated
population may be always raised, and has proved itself formidable
on a late occasion, when the Syud Ahmed preached his crusade in
this country ; yet the whole of these combined form a diminutive
force, as compared with his neighbours on the east and west-
the Sikhs, and his brother of Kabul. The political influence of
Peshawur is as limited as its military power. The Sikhs hare
exacted a tribute from it since the death of the vizier's brother,
Azirn Khan, and retain a son of the chief as a hostage for its ful-
filment. I t now amounts to sixty horses, with some rice, which is
peculiar to Peshawur; and it is annually enforced by an army
which crosses the Indus, and lays waste their territories if not
speedily paid. The amount of the tribute depends on the caprice
C~AP. XIV. OF SULTAN MOHAMED KHAN. 191
of Runjeet Sing, but the Sikhs will not make a conquest of
this country. Without nilahommedan auxiliaries they could not
retain it.'
" Thc chiefs of Peshawur and Kabul, who are brothers, are at
enmity. The power of Kabul is far more consolidated than that
of Peshawur, hut the latter has an ally in his brother of Kandahar,
who would resent any attack either on Peshawur or his own country.7
The chiefs of Peshawur and Kandahar have been some time past
concerting an attack on Kabul ; but it is not improbable that the
territories of both may ere long be threatened, and perhaps taken,
by the Khan of Kabul. In such an event, the chief of Peshawur
would call in the aid of the Sikhs. This would probably be given,
since Dost Mohamed of Kabul would never consent to the annual
tribute now paid to Lahore by his brother of Peehawur. Serdar
Sooltan Mohamed Khan entertains hopes of being able to interest
the British Government in his cause should it decline. No chief
in t he kingdom of Kabul entertains a higher respect for the
British Government than Soolbn hlohamed Khan. This has
always been shown by his attention to Europeans who have entered
his cour~try. If misfortunes fell upon him, he might be a useful or
a dangerous partisan. He might espouse the cause of the King
Shah Shooja-001-Moolk ; though that monarch is no favourite with
hi family ; yet the inconsistency and inconstancy of the Afghan
chiefs are proverbial. In any difficulty the chief of Peshawur
wo~lld be ably assisted by Pi r Mohamed, but his other brother is
destitute of energy and enterprise. The whole of the Barukzye
family 1 entertain a dread of Shah Shooja-ool-Bloolk, and the Prince
Kamran of Herat. The one, if aided by the British, would drive
them from their usurped authority ; and the other, if assisted by the
Persians, might perhaps fix himself on the throne of his ancestors.
Sooltan Mohamed Khan bears a fair reputation, but his govern-
ment is most oppressive and vexatious. His agents and underlings
practise all manner of exactions ; goods are taxed far above their
value; and the currency is constantly altered and depreciated.
An enormous tax is levied on the water-mills which grind the flour,
* Bornea ia not quite accurate here, being dead, Kohendil Khan governed
for Pehawur wea actually invaded by Kandahar when 1 visited that city.-
the Sikhs aud governed for a nulnber of Fcrrier.
yeam by General Avitabile, who ww the $ Burnes nl~ould have written hfo-
terror of the Afghans.-Fernier. ha~nedzye, for Ba r u h e ia the dmigna-
t Poor dil Khan and Shere dil Khan tion of the entire tribe.-Fa&.
132 KANDAHAR. ( ' IIAP. XIY.
and it falls heaviest on the lower orders of the people. The chief
is a man about thirty-five ; he is ambitious, and at one time held
the government of Kabul. He is well educated, and with good
talents; p~sseses an engaging manner, he reads and writes and
transacts his business in person. He has not the art of settling
disputes, and his court presents a scene of confusion which is
hardly to be described or believed. The complainants intrude at
all times and places, and state their grievances in the most free
and republican manner, yet nothing is ever settled, and the popula-
tion are heartily disaffected. Like Afghans, the chief of Peshawur
and his relatives live from hand to mouth; they are liberal of
what they possess, and have no wealth. I have been informed that
they could not retain their government without this bpen-handed
liberality. The chief of Peshawur has rallied round him some of
the most celebrated of the Dooranee nation, who share his bounty.
The sons of Akram Khan, and the Mookhtar o Doula, Shah
Shooja's two ministers, as also one of the celebrated Mir Weis, are
among the number ; the latter is an officer of the chief of Peshawur.
The only son of the Vizier Futteh Khan likewise resides with Sultan
Mohamed Khan."
I t has been stated that Kandahar had fallen into the hands
of one of the Mohamedzyes, namely, the Serdar Poor dil Khan,
immediately after the death of the Vizier Fethi Khan. Thii ~erdar
had, like Sultan Riohamed Khan, divided his principality into
several districts which he had given to his half-brothers, Shere dil
Khan, Kohendil Khan, Rahim dil Khan, and Mir dil Khan.
Shere dil Khan, who had the reputation of being the bravest and
the most enterprising of the surviving sons of E'ayendeh Khan, had
received from his brother the command-in-chief of the army of
Kandahar. IJnfortunately this energetic man died while still
young, in 1829 ; a few months after, his brother Poor dil Khan
followed him to the tomb, and the power then reverted to their
next eldest brother, Kohendil Khan Such had been the paternal
and enlightened administration of Poor dil Khan, that his successor,
on whom the Kandaharians had founded the same hopes, was by
general acclamation placed at the head of affairs. I t would appear,
however, by the following extract from Sir A. Burnes's work, that these
hopes were not realized; for this is the opinion of that officer
respecting the government of Kohendil Khan :-
--
Thin rerdar has leh him, and has long resided at Kan&hnr.- Fc-.
" I t has been already mentioned that Shere dil Khan * fled from
Kabul to Kandahar, and formed the present chiefship with the
spoil of his nephew. He was a man of singular habits, in some
respects resembling his brother Futteh Khan, but morose as well
as cruel. They give an anecdote of his lopping off the finger of
one of his boys, telling him at the same time, if he cried, that he
could not be his child or a Bamkzye. The young fellow bore it
with great patience Shere dil Khan in his flight to Kandahar
was accompanied by four brothers. He himself is since dead, as
ah one of his brothers. Kandahar is now governed b y S ' ~ o -
hendil Khan, supported by his two surving brothers, &him dil
and Mehr dil. The revenues amount to about eight lam of
rupees ; his force consists of BOO0 horse and six pieces of artillery ;
but as the city is situated in the heart of the Dooranee country,
and near the native seat of the Barukzye family, he could perhaps
increase his cavalry on an emergency.
"The government is not papular, nor would it appear from the
acts of oppression that it deserved to be so. The chief is on bad
terms with most of his neighbourn I n common with all his fainily,
be is inimical to Kamran of Herat, and has a t different times
attempted to seize that city. He is also at issue with the chief of
Kabul. The connexion between the Peshawur and Kandahar
branch- of the namkzyes is very close and secure ; but their
united efforts will not, in all probability, injure their brother of
Kabul. The Kandahar chief also weks to form a settlement on
the Indus; and has for several years past sent his troops to
threaten Shikapoor in Scinde The Ameers of that country have
been hitherto able to resist his attacks; but, as there is an open
and easy comm~~nication between Kandahor and the rndus by the
Bolan pass, the chief is not likely to discontinue his endeavours in
that quarter. I n a disorgaiiized state of Scinde he might easily
possess himself of Shikapoor ; and such a state of events seems by
no means improbable in the country of the Ameers. The chief
of Kandahar would gladly interest the ruler of the Punjab in his
muse; but it is not probable that he will procure his assistance,
as he himself looks upon Shikapoor with an eye of cupidity."
' Burnes appears to have thought dc facto ; but Poor dil Khan enjoyed by
h t Shere dil Khan WRB the w~erei gn right the prerugative~ of a sovrrei
of hdal l ar ; and thia ia not surpris~ng, which were never contested by %
for Poor dil K h n gave up to him the brothers, and Shera dil Khan dled
mtvs direction of a m , and the without ever having positively reigned.
conaidered him aa their chief -Fem'er.
0
194 DOST MOHAMED KHAN. CHAP. XlV.
After having endeavoured to show the manner in which t he
principalities of Herat, Peshamr, and Kandahar were constituted
subsequently to the dismemberment of the kingdom of the Suddozpes,
i t is desirable that we should throw a glance at Kabul, the most
wealthy and important of the Afghan provinces ; and let us in the first
instance commence with its chief, Dost Mohamed Khan, who came
forth victorious in 1826 from his conflict with Sultan Mohamed Khan.
Dost Mohamed was the favourite brother of the Vizier Fethi
Kha?, and this predilection was not the effect of chance; but i n
spite of the good qualities which were remarkable in the young and
intrepid chieftain, he was certainly not exempt from the ordinary
vices of the Afghans, though dietinguished from them by superior
intelligence and courage, which manifested itself in many heroic
deeds when he was still a very young man. Hi s manners were
pollshed and attractive, and one felt irresistibly drawn towards
him. The preference evinced for him by Fethi Khan obtained
him the hatred of his brothers; nevertheless they affected to be
anxious to pay their court to him to please the vizier, but when
an opportunity offered never failed secretlp to play him some
shabby trick. Dost Mohamed was not one to be made their dupe,
but not wishing to irritate them he took no trouble to conceal
his actions, and repaid them in kind a hundredfold for the evil
he received ; this increaed their hatred, which gave him very little
concern, for, though brave soldiers, his brothers were far from
possessing his capacity and resolution, and in the quarrels which
ensued between them and him he was sure to have the upper hand.
The succes3 which crowned all the projects of the Dost, and the
tenacity with which he met these misunderstandings with his
brothers, had procured him the sobriqtiet of Gurhek (the little
wolf), a name by which he is distinguished amongst them at the
present day. They were very nearly all opposed to him when he
wished to seize upon Kabul, and yet he triumphed over all their
intrigues, and defeated them every time they came to blows.
Directly his power was consolidated in the principality, he occupied
himself in healing the wounds which so many intestine wars and
revolts had inflicted on the country, and it soon felt the vivifying
and paternal influences of his government. I t is true that the
small portion of the kingdom which had fallcn to him did not
allow of his raising a large army and ~ubduirig all the other
provinces which had detached themselves from Kabul, like the
Vizier Fethi Khan, but the finest prize in Afghanistan was still
CHAP. XIV. DOST MOHAMED KHAN. 195
within his grasp ; he had the good sense to be satisfied with it, and,
instead of taking his revenge against his jealous and ambitious
brothers, by dispossessing them of what they had, which he might
easily have done, he preferred to leave them in quiet enjoyment of
their conquests, and occupied himself in making order, security,
and abundance in his own territory succeed to the disasters of war
and the conviilsive throes of revolution. His justice and equity
were admitted by all, and he repressed violence without mercy from
whatever side it arose. The rock upon which all the Afghan sove-
reigns had made shipwreck up to this time was the insubordination
of the serdars, who, having the power and influence over the warlike
portion of the population, and possessing very productive fiefs which
considerably lessened the revenues of the state, took advantage of
these circumstances to agitate the public mind, and to change the
sovereign as it suited their fancy ; but the Dost soon made it clear
to them, and at their cost, that it was as difficult as it was danger-
ous for them to endeavour to throw off their allegiance to him.
Without evincing any want of generosity, he obliged them to
moderate their tyrannical conduct towards their dependants, and
lend their support to the development of commerce and agri-
culture, which he was anxious to improve amongst a people so
idle, as well as to engender in their minds sentiments of a humane
character. The great families submitted unwillingly in the first
instance to this state of things ; but they thought that it was
better to bend to a monarch who waa generous, than to attempt
revolts the issue of which must be a t the least uncertain, and
which might again place them under the insecure and cruel
despotism of the Suddozyes. But we have seen how Sir A.
Burnes estimated the characters of the two brothers at Peshawur
and Kandahar, and i t will not be out of place to give here the
parallels which he has drawn between those chiefs and the state of
their dependencies, and Dost Mohamed and the condition of Kabul.
a In the year 1826 Kabul fell into the hands of Dost Mohamed
Khan, the present chief, and a brother of the vizier Futteh Khan.
Since then he has greatly extended and consolidated his power.
He intrusts the town and dependencies of Ghuznee to a brother,
and admits no one else to share his fortunes. The limits of thc
chiefship extend to IIiridoo Koosh and Bamian. On the west it
is bounded by the hill country of thc Hazarahs; to the south
is Ghuznee, and to the east it stretches half way to Peshawur,
terminating a t the garden of Neemla. Much of the country is
0 2
196 SIR A. BURNES'S OPIXIOS Cur . Si V.
mountainous ; it contains a large proportion of arable land which
is most productive. I t lies along the base of hills, and derives a
richness from the soil washed from then]. The revenues of Kahul
amount to eighteen lacs of rupees. Its military force is greater
than any among the Afghans, since the chief retains a body of@
horse, who are +ell mounted and accoutred. I-Ie has also 2000
infantry, with other auxiliaries, village troops, and a park of fourteen
guns which are well served for a native state. This country ia
by nature strong and mountainous, though it has good roads
through it.
" The reputation of Dost Mohamed Khan is made known to a
traveller long before he enters his country, and no one better merits
\he high character which he has obtained. He is unremitting in
his attention to business, and attends daily at the Court-house with
the Kazee-o-Mollahs to decide every cause according to the law.
The Koran and its commentaries may not be the standard of legis-
lative excellence ; but this sort of decision is exceedingly popular
with the people, sirice it fixes a line, and relieves them from the ju
uagum aut irtcqqnitum of a dcspot. Trade has received the greatest
encouragement from him, and he has derived his own reward, since
the rcceipts of the Custom-house of the city have increased
50,000 rupees, and now furnish him with a net revenue of two
lacs per annum. One in forty, i.e. 23 per cent., is the only duty
levied in his territory ; and the merchant may travel without guard
or protection from one frontier to another, an unheard of circum-
stance in the time of the kings. The chiefof Kabul, in his zeal for
orthodox government, has deprived his subjects of the luxury of
wine and spirits as being prohibited by his creed. The enactment
has driven the Jews and Armenians from liis country, since they
had no other means to procure a subsistence. A good Nahom-
medan ought not to regret the loss of such luxuries ; but with this
single exception I hcard of no coulplaint against the rule ctf ]last
hi ohamed Khan. That chief, in common with many of the Afghan
nation, was addicted in early life to mine and its concomitant r i m
His prohibition of them may be, therefore, capricious ; but he as
well as his court hold out a bright example to the community. The
justice of this chief affords a constant theme of praise to all clams:
the peamnt rejoices at the absence of tyranny ; the citizen at the
s ~f et y of his homc and t l ~ c strict municipal regulations rcgardiug
weights and measures ; the mcrchaut at the equity of the deckio~ls
and the protection of his property; and the soldiers a t the regular
CUP. XlV. OF DOST MOHAMED KHAN. 197
manner in which their arrears are discharged. A man in power
can have no higher praise. Dost Mohamed Khan has not attained
his fortieth year; his mother was a Persian, and he has been
trained up with people of that nation, which has sharpened his
understanding, and given him advantages over all hie brothers.
One is struck with the intelligence, knowledge, and curiosity which
he displays, as well as his accoml)lished manners and address.
He isdoubtlcss t he most powerful chief in Afghanistan, and may
yet raise himself by his abilities to a much greater rank in his
native couutry.
" The differences which cxist between Dost Mohamed and his
brothers lessen t he influence of all parties, and would lay open the
state to intrigue and faction if invaded. 'I'he family of Barukzye *
have nothing to fear from any othcr Afghan tribe, since they
- p u p all in numbers as much as in p0wer.t Thc chiefs of
Pejhawur and Kandnhar do not want the wish to injure their
brother of K;ibul, but they cannot accomplish their purpose. Both
of them have llad a footing in Kabul, and l ~ o k with envy on the
pmperity of Dost Mohamed Khan. Both have emissaries at his
murt, who excite disturbance ; and both cherish hopes of rooting
out one whom they consider a usurper. The task will be found
difficult, for t he chief of Kabul, besides the moderation and justice.
which secure him so many friends, enjoys an advantage in his
Persian descent which will prove of material service to him in
adrersity. He holds the karlike clan of Junanshire in his interests,
and takes every occasion to conciliate this tribe, which has so often
turned the scale in favour of different pretenders to the throne.
IIe has acquired their language (the Turkish), and promoted their
iukregts and wellbeing.
"The Persians of Kabul amount to 12,000 families ; they reside
in a separate quarter of the city, which keeps up an esprit de corpa
among them; it also gives them a knowledge of their power
which may prove ml ut aq or prejudicial to the factions that divide
the country according to circumstances. The state of fear which an
enemy on both sides must inspire has had a bad effect on Dost
Noharned Khan's administration. With his own house as an
* M~hRmedz~e.-~errier. consists of only four or five thousand
t This h an error into which Burnea families. If it is the tribe of BRlvkzye
h ~ f ~ l l e n ; if it is the family or branch to to which he alludm, it in probable that
Vhichthi:~~~nsof ~aj endehKhanbel on~ it containa 45,000 or 55,000 familee.-
that he refem to, he should have men-
F ~ . u r .
boned them ss Mohamedqm, and that
199 DOST MOHAMED KHAN. CEUP. YIV.
object of care, he is not likely to pursue conquests abroad, or
retrieve the fallen state of Kabul. This alone deters him from
taking Herat, the only province of the kingdom of Afghanistan
now held by a descendant of the royal family, and the Prince
Kamran rules more from tolerance in his enemies than his own
power. He receives no aid from his countrymen, since the whole of
the chiefs of Afghanistan arc his enemies, and desire his destruc-
tion, in revenge for the assassination of their brother Futteh Khan.
&rat has, therefore, bcc~me a dependency of Persia. Th e town
itself has of late been several times entered by the troops of that
nation, and only spared by the ready tender of money on the part
of its governor.* I t was threatened in September, 1832, by the
Prince Royal in person, who made a pecuniary demand, and also
required that the coinage of the city should be struck in the name
of the King of Persia. I t is probable that both these requests will
-
be granted,? since Kamran would gladly hold his power on any
terms. The Persians do not appear to contemplate any permanent
settlement in Herat, since it wollld incur the expense of retaining
a force that would diminish the tribute now gained fmm it.
Kamran is said to be in possession of some of the crown jewels of
Kabul, and derives a large revenue from I-Ierat, which is situated
in one of the most fertile countries of the world. By this wealth
he is yet able to retain about his person some of the Afghan chiefs,
and a n raise a body of 4000 or 5000 horse. He has no political
con~iexions in any quarter ; but still clings to the hope of being
able to re-establish the monarchy of his father. He has the
character of a cruel and tyrannical man, is destitute of friends, and
odious to his countrymen.
" The same causes which prevented Dost Mohamed from marching
against Herat prevented him also from making some endeavours
to wrest Mooltan and Dera Ghazee Khan from the Sikh IHe last
year made a demonstration against Jellalahd, a district between
Kabul and Peshawur, worth about seven lacs of rupees a year.
He will probably annex it to his power, but until able to coerce
or subdue either Peshawir or Kandahar, Dost Mohamed Khan
cannot rise above a chief, or be aught than one among many in
Afghanistan. I n the present state of politics in that country he
is nevertheless the most rising man in the Kabul dominions"
* Thi ia an error; the territory baa t I have witnessed the c o n t y . -
been entered, but the city not.-Ferricr. Ferricr.
CHAP. XV. KOHESDIL AND SULTAN MOHAliED.
CHAPTER XV.
Shah Shooja taken up arms againsithe Barukzyea -Dost Moharned W a n marchea
to the relief of Kandahar - Shah Shooja receive8 a check - That sovereign is
completely defeated - He retires to Kelat - Sultan Mohnmed arrives at Kabul
-Machiations of that serdar aguimt Dost Mohamed Khan - Resolution of
the latter - The Dost, now elected Emir, mnrches against the Si ha - Defeat.
them at Djamrood- Sir A. Burnea at Kabul The Eugliah are hostile to
Doat Mohamed-Sumner'e nccount of the Huasiaxls and the English in Asia
- Mohamed Shah determinee to invade Herat - He is supported by the
RusaiPns.
SUCH was the state of things when Burnes visited Kabul in 1832.
The result of his opinion, as of my own, which is also that of the
Afghans in general, is that Kohendil Khan, the sovereign of
Kandahar, had not the same superiority of 'mind as his brother,
and was far from following in the same steps. The people were
discontented with him, and he might have been reproached,
as well as Sultan Mohamed Khan, who did not govern a t
Peshawur a whit better than he did, with sentiments of jealousy and
hostility. to Dost Mohamed, whose enlightened and loyal govern-
ment they sougllt to impede and ridicule in a manner little
honourable to themselves. Ambition is an unfaithful mirror, which
reflects things much less in their natural aspect than that in
which mankind is pleased to colour characters and personal
interests. Wi t h these perverted feelings, Kohendil Khan and
Sultan Mohamed Khan constantly pursued a hostile line of con-
duct towards their brother, who was desirous of being on the best
terms with them ; and they accused him, but without the least
reason, of wishing to seize their territories-thcre was danger
for them it is true, but this danger was in another quarter.
Sultan Mohamed Khan, already subdued by Runjeet Sing, was
on the eve of being totally overthrown by the Maharadja, and, if
Kohendil Khan did not succumb to him first, it was because he
owed his preservation entirely to the generous support ahich he
rcceived from his brother Dost Mohamed Khan, as we shall now
Bee.
Shah Shooja-001-Moolk, although often beaten, had not re-
200 PROCEEDINGS OF SHAH SHOOJA. CHAP. XV.
nounced his right to the throne. From the period at which he wae,
for .the first time, overthrown by Fethi Khan, he had made eight
attempts to regain it by force of arms ; he failed-but his courage
remained unshaken, and he had succeeded in interesting the
Anglo-Indian goven~ment in his fate. They required a sovereiqn
in Afghanistan devoted to their views, but, afraid to assist him
openly, the Governor-General supported his cause with some Sikh
regiments, with which, through his intervention and promises of
concession of territory on the part of Shah Shoj a, Runjeet Sing
agreed to furnish the Suddozye prince. This fact has been
proved by the letters of Sir Claude \\'ade, a t that time political
agent a t Loodiana, which letters were found amongst the &,rrdge
of Shah Shooja-001-Moolk after his defeat; a good many anlongst
them were addressed to some of the Afghan serdar~. 'l'he British
agent excited these chiefs to revolt, and assured them that his
government would know how to appreciate the support that they
might give to their legitimate sovereign.
I n January, 1834, Shah Shooja quitted Loodiana; in the month
of May he crossed the Indus, and, in the first instance, seized upon
Shikapoor, belonging to the Emirs of Scinde, but to which he
laid claim. He then marched towards Kandahar at the head of
an army of 22,000 Afghans and Hindostanees, the latter drilled
and manceuvring on the European system, and obse-ing its
discipline, some of them being deserters from the Company's
service.
Kohendil Khan, having assembled in haste what troops he could
collect, marched to meet the king as far as the valley of Pisheen
to close the passage, but he was defeated and obliged to make a
rapid retreat on Kandahar, whence he despatched messenger
after messenger to inform Dost Mohamed of the storm which
had burst upon him. On the reception of this news the chief of
Kabul made the following reply : \\'henever you are menaced
let me know, and, as I am your enemy now, so I will be your
friend then." After which, forgetting the just complaints which
he had against this ungrateful brother, he remembered only the
ties of kilidred and blood which united them, and hurried to hi
assistance with his army. But, before setting out, he despatched
an officer to Sir Claude Wade to ascertain from him if it was true
that the Shah was openly supported by his government? tbat if
his reply was in the affirmative, he should think about i t ; if, on
CHAP. XV. DOST MOHAMED RELIEVES KANDAHAR. 201
the contrary, it was in the negative, he should fight. The political
agent of the Company replied that the Indian government had
taken no part in the expedition, but that Shah Shooja had its best
wishes for his succcss.
The "best widhes" of the English government did not stop
Dost Mohamed ; his march, which he liad delayed in order that he
might receive the reply of Sir Claude IVade, he now hastened ; and
it was indeed high time that he should arrive at Kandahar, for Shah
Shooja had taken up a position between the old and the new city,
and pressed the siege closely. The pound frorn which he opened
his attack was intersected by numerdus watercourses and covered
with large gardens, enclosed with mud walls, in which the soldiers
made many gaps to pass through ; and these obstacles were far
from favourable to the manaeuvres of cavalry, of which arm the
greater part of both armies was composed ; nevertheless, conflicts
took place daily on both sides in these labyrinths. The encounters
were the more murderous, inasmuch as the combatants, surrounded
by walls, preferred being killed on the spot to yielding one inch
of ground, and such close fighting soon weakened both parties.
Shah Shooja had great difficulty in repairing his losses, though the
advantage on the whole was on his side, and on the 29th of June,
1834, he made a general assault upon the place. His troops
displayed great bravery ; four times repulsed, four times they
retunied to the assault, but at Inst they were obliged to retreat,
leaving the ditches of the town filled with their dead and wounded.
The Ilost's army arrived a t this juncture, and from that day Shah
Shooja was under a double disadvantage, for he was obliged
t o divide his forces to repel the sorties of the besieged con~manded
by Kohendil Khan, and the attack of the Dost in his rear.
Thi s war, or rather this butchery, lasted during fifty-four days,
and the Afghans affirm that 16,000 men were killed before the
place.
After having lost a pitched battle against Ilost Mohamed Khan,
Shah Shooja fought only to clear a passage for himself and his troops,
and make good his rctreat to Shikapoor; but hotly pursued by
the Mohamedzyes, he was cut off from his communications, and
thrown back upon the interior of the kingdom. Soon after he was
abandoned by his soldiers, and had only fifty horsemen with him
when he arrived a t Herat, and demanded a refuge and liospitality
of the Shah Kanlran ; but his nephew, who never loved him, and
202 PROCEEDISGS OF SULTAN MOHAMED. CRU. XV.
was afraid that he might intrigue with a view of supplanting him,
refused him permission to enter the city. ' f i e defeated Shah
was therefore obliged to retire upon Furrah, through the arid
deserts of Beloochistan. \That he suffered in traversing its parched
and burning sands, under the scorching rays of the sun, without
food or water, wanting in short everything, is incredible, and the
Mohamedzyes, who pursued him, were on the point of taking him
prisoner at the moment he entered Kelat Nassir and was safe
from further molestation. The Emir of this town had freed himself
fmni the Afghan dominion during his reign, but he received him
hospitably, and furnished hie guest with the means of gaining
Loodiana in a manner suitable to his rank. Here he again
resided, pensioned by the English, who reserved hini for a new
invasion in which he subsequently lost his life, and England met
with the greatest disaster that she as ever called upon to register
in the military annals of her Indian empire.
Mohamed Akbar Khan, the favourite son of Dost 3iohsmed
Khan, distinguished himself, in the campaign that had just
terminated, by a courage which might almost be termed fool-
l~ardy, and military talents which even then gave indications of
what his future career might be.
This victory definitively confirmed the Mohamedzyes in tbe
possession of eastern Afghanistan ; but, instead of profiting by it to
etrengthen their position, it became the signal for fresh dissensions
amonst them, the result of which was the recall of Shah Shooja
a few years later, supported by an English army. \Vhile Dost
Mohamed Khan was gone to assist his brother against this expa-
triated sovereign, Sultan Mohamed Khan had been removed from
,
his government of Peshawur by Runjeet Sing; forced, therefore,
to retire to Jelldabad, he, with a view of remedying this re-
.
verse, thought he might profit by the absence of Dost Mohamed
Khan to seize Kabul. Hi s two brothera, Pir Mohamed gha
and Syud Mohamed Khan, joined him in this enterprise, which
they had already commenced when they heard of the victorg the
Dost had gained at Kandahar and at the same time his return
to Kabul. They therefore remained some days undecided as to
,
what line they should adopt ; but the success of their plan being,
to say the least, doubtful, and they not as yet committed to
it, they gave up the project, pretended to feel an ardent desire
to be on the most friendly terms with their victorious brother,
1
CHAP. XV. DOST MOHAMED ELECTED EMIR. 203
went boldly to meet the Dost to congratulate him on a success
which, as it annihilated all their hopes, they curded from the
bottom of their hearts. Although informed of their faithless
proceedings, Dost Mohamed thought it would be better to leave
them to think that he was ignorant of their schemes, imagining
that in acting thus he might bring their dissensions to a close.
He received his brothers, therefore, with courtesy and all the
appearance of sincere friendship, and spared nothing to attach them
t o his cause. Moreover, directly he returned to Kabul he deter-
mined to revenge the affront which had just been put upon them by
Runjeet, and proclaimed a holy war against the Sikhs ; neverthe
less, before undertaking it, he was desirous of exalting himself in
the eyes of the Afghans, and received from a council, composed of
the serdars of the principality, the title of Sovereign Prince.
Mir Vaez, the grand Mollah of Kabul, proclaimed him Emir ool
Moamerime? and on this occasion repeated the same form of
ceremrinial that had been used at the coronation of Ahmed Shah
and his successors. \Vlien the festivities of his enthronement
were over he sent 9000 horse against the Sikhs commanded by
one of his brothers, but, as they obtained only a doubtful success,
he left Kabul and placed himself a t their head ; the Afghans were
encouraged by his arrival, but the result was not more fortunate
than before. This was owing to the intrigues of Sultan Mohamed
Khan and his brothers, who were negotiating secretly with Runjeet
Sing; and the Emir Dost Mohamed, having convinced himself
of this fact, abandoned the war, which could only be d isastrous
to him, and returned to Kabul. There he occupied himself in rein-
forcing his army, intending to enter at some future time upon an-
other campaign, with greater chances of success,' which were not to
be hoped for so long as Sultan Mohamed Khan was ready to play
the traitor.
All the public hnctionaries of whose fidelity the Dost was not
'perfectly sure were now dismissed ; he made his sons governors
of the various provinces and districts, and further intrigues failed
in consequence of the wise measures which lie adopted. Sultan
Mohamed Khan and his two brothers, seeing that they were wholly
powerless in Kabul, threw themselves completely into the hands of
Runjeet Sing, who appointed the former governor of Rota, a
Commander of the Faithful.-Fwrier.
204 DOST MOHAYED DEFEATS THE SIKHS. CHAP. XP.
fortress in the north of the Punjab, the inhabitants of which were
for the most part Mohamedans.
The Sikhs, finding that Ilost Mohamed hesitated to renew the
attack, niistook his discretion for fear, and Haree Sing, governor
of the Maharadja at Pesliawur, threatened some villages depend-
ant on Kabul, and was guilty of numerous exactions against the
Afghans of that country. The Emir, wearied with all these
annoyances, declared war against Runjcet, and gave the command
of his army to his sons Moharned Efzel Khan and Mohamed
Akbar Khan, with orders to advance immediately against the
Sikhs. This time fortune declared in favour of the Afghans. They
attacked their enemies a t Djamrood, near the entrance of the
Khyber Pass, to which they had advanced, and defeated them
completely ; their general, Iiaree Sing, being killed in this battle.
The Emir, who evinced great moderation after his victory, respected
the territory of his enemy, and claimed the intervention of Lord
Auckland, Governor-General of the British possessions in India
EIe demanded that the Indus should for the future be the line of
demarcation between the two states, and consented on this con-
dition to abandon Cashmeer to the Sikhs for ever, though it was
an Afghan province, and the majority of the population were hi
countrymen. Lord Auckland rejected these reasonable proposi-
tions; and, in his reply, left Dmt Mohamed only a /rope that
Runjeet Sing would be requested by him to restore the govern-
ment of Peshawur to his brother, Sultan Mohamed h7/lan ; adding,
that he could not, consisteiltly with the friendly relations exisng
between the niaharadja and the East India Company, force hi to
make a restitution, the legitimacy of which was, in his eyes, a
questionable point. Burnes was sent to Kabul to make known
this decision of his Excellency to Dost Mohamed ; and the Emir
naturally preferred leaving Peshawur to Hunjeet, to seeing it
again in the hands of his mortal enemy, Sultan Mohamed Khan.
I t was about this time that the army of Mohamed Shah, king of
Persia, marched against IIerat, and the Emir was far from
desirous of forming a treaty with that sovereign, for all his sym-
pathies were with the English, and he had done everything i n his
power to enter into a sincere alliance with the East India Com-
pany ; but Messieurs the Directors would listen to nothing; they
had admitted as a principle, that the consolidation and extensiou
of Runjeet Sing's power, under their immediate protection,
CHAP. XV. THE EXGLISB HOSI'ILE TO HIM. 205
a counterpoise against every evil that could happen to them, and
every advantaue the Russians could gain arising from the Treaty
of Turkomantchai signed between the latter power and Persia in
1827. Hence arose the tenacity with which the East India Com-
pany supported the invasions of the Maharadja and rejected the
loyal concessions of the Emir Dost Mohamed, who from that
moment had no other hope of safety than by allying himself with
Russia and Persia.
Let us not, however, anticipate, but come to that famous siege
of Herat, which was nearly altering the status of every country in
Central Asia. Almost all those persons who have written on the
changes which it occasioned during the last few years in Afghan-
istan have allowed a party spirit more or less strong, with which,
God be praised, the author has nothing to do, to influence their
opinions. Merely a traveller in the country, my constant aim was
to m c h for truth, and to speak it with impartiality ; having no
political interest to defend, nor dignity or diplomatic pride to
maintain, free from constraint, aiid having been able to mix
with all classes of the population, information came to me from
all sides, and many fresh circumstances were revealed to me. I n
-
adding them to those already known, I have given a sketch of the
whole, and endeavoured to make it as accurate as possible with
m p c t to the events that have recently taken place in Central
Asia. To attain this object with the greater certainty, I have
selected from amongst the narratives, which have hitherto appeared,
those which seemed to me to contain the most exact detail of facta,
borrowed from them whatever appeared to he true, and rejected all
that seemed open to the suspicion of a single doubt.
The extracts are from the text of these authorities, which could
not piin by a transformation of style, and the information that I
have collected is added. I shall begin by giving the reader
an idea of what were the respective positions of the English
and the Russians in Asia at the time the siege of Herat was
undertaken, but a reservation is necessary on my part. Though
assenting to the mode in which the writers whose works I am
about to make use of, and who have examined matters to the
core, have appreciated them, I do not intend to be responsible
- -
for oriy remarks that can wound the susceptibility of any
nation which is the subject of them. hiy object is to make known
facts without malice or prejudice, to give these facts impartially,
206 SUhfNER'S ACCOUNT OF THE CHAP. XV.
with simply their historical interest attached to them, and not to
remimillate against any individual whatever. The first quotation
is taken from a work by Mr. George Sumner of Boston, who
seems to me to have treated what relates to the English in a
manner which is tolerably satisfactory. The following is his
opinion :-
I' I t has been generally thought that the war made on the
Afghans by the English was to be attributed to a fear of the
encroachments of, and invasion by, Russia, but it has since been
acknowledged that this fear was only a chimera. Let us examine
this question. First, to make the subject more clear, we will
speak of the position of England in the East: there we see an
immense empire, with more than 100,000,000 of subjects, a large
army, large revenues, and towns containing a million of inhabitants,
entirely under the control and government of a company of
merchants and capitalists, who, tranquilly seated behind their
counters, give their instructions and orders to their agents, and in
less than eighty years have succeeded in raising a power which
seems almost to equal that of Alexander or Tamerlane.
The condition in which they found the various states of India
waa no doubt exceedingly favourable to the increase of this empire ;
but another cause, tending almost equally to that increase, was the
vast field that it opened to talent of every description, and the
facility that every able officer, however low his rank or position,
there found of attaining wealth and distinction, by courageously
devoting himself to the interests of those whom he served.
" I t ought to be remarked, in speaking of the facility with which
India was subjugated, that the plan of conquest adopted at the com-
mencement by Clive, and since constantly followed by the English,
did not originate with them. I t was conceived by the French
General Dupleix, when that talented officer commanded a t
Madras. His proposition to the French government was imme-
diately rejected, and drew upon its author reproaches that the most
recent biographers have not endeavoured to remove-indeed they
have continued them. I t was to employ only a small number of
European troops in the conquest of India, and to take advantage
of the dissensions amongst the princes and rajahs of the country,
to foment discord in their differcnt states, and, finally, to assist
any one of them who, after his success, showed a disposition to
become a docile instrument in the hands of the nation that had
C ~ A P . XV. RUSSIASS AND EXGLISH IN ASIA. 207
supported him. Divide et impera. By adopting this plan the East
India Company has worked by degrees to the north and north-west,
invading, one after the other, princes, rajahs, and emirs, and even
the Great Mogul himself had to accept their alliance and submit
to their rule. The Company has occupied Delhi, the capital of
the empire of Aurungzebe, crossed the Sutlej, rendered tributary
the sovereign of Lahore, and has travelled thus far without knowing
when or where it ought to stop, until it found itself face to face
with another power, of which the mind was as active and the
resources as great, of which the interest and capability of advancing
southwards were just as unlimited as those of England acting in the
opposite direction-that power is Russia.
" When the expedition of the Shah of Persia against Herat, in
1835 and 1836, was determined upon, the northern limit of the
states belonging to the English, and paying taxes to them, was
the river Sutlej, which flows south-west, and joins the Indus at a
distance about 200 miles north of Delhi.
" Beyond, and in the delta formed by the Sutlej and the Indus,
is the Punjab, the kingdom of the Sikhs, with their remarkable
sovereign, Runjcet Sing of I ~h o r e . I I e had hastened to treat with
the British government in 1832; Burnes said of him that he
might be regarded as one of the most faithful allies of the English,
and the Maharadjah proved this by joining with them against the
Afghans.
. " Cbossing the kingdom of Runjeet, we come to the unhappy
country of Afghanistan, which witnessed the recent disasters of the
British amy. To the north of Kabul, the capital of that province,
extends a portion of the Himalaya range of mountains, across
which, in summer, there are at least two passes open to caravans,
leading direct to the Khanats of Badakshane, Balkh, and h k h a r a
IC'ith these Russia has formed great commercial interests, but the
government of that country pretends that she has not yet any well-
established political relations there.
" From Kandahar, another city in Afghanistan, the road is open
towards Herat, on the Persian frontiers, and, passing through Persia,
we reach the Caspian Sea and the southern boundary of Russia.
Between Afghanistan and Russia then there is on one side, besides
the three I<hanats that we have mentioned, a vast extent of deserts,
and on thc other side is Persia, which, like Turkey, seems scarcely
to have forgotten its past splendour and ancient renown. This
2u8 RUSSIANS A-UD ESGLISH IX ASIA. CEAP. SV.
nation, enfeebled within and powerless without, has become more
and more tottering, and seems ready to fall before the first enemy
who shall attack hkr with vigour.
" Thus it is evident that the country of Afghanistan, of which
Europe thought very little fifty years ago, is without doubt destined
to be the theatre of important events, on which the powers of
Central Asia will be tested, and their destiny decided.
" I t was in Afghanistan, that Alexander the Great, on his
march towards the Indus, stopped to rest his soldiers, who ate
with delight the refreshing fruits of the villages in which we
now find Kabul. Through it also y d Ghengiz Khan and
Tamerlane, when they undertook their expeditions to Indi a On
this distant point is now fixed the attention of the two great
countries, who look upon it as the pivot on which, in some degree,
must turn their respective interests in India. Count Neselrode,
in a despatch of October 20th, 1838, recommended England to
respect Afghanistan. ' Great Britain and Russia,' said he, ' can have
but one desire, tliat of maintaining peace in Central Asia, and
supporting the independence of the peoples who are the legitimate
possessors and the arrcient inhabitants.'
" The friend of England, Runjcet Sing, was not a mt e d in his
progress by this manifestation on the part of one of the ,greatest
powers of Asia. He had already committed depredations in Afghan-
istan, reduced Peshawur to a state of vassalage, and prepared other
more hostile movements towards the south-east. M'hen the Shah
of Persia, remembering that his dominions had in former times ex-
tended to Delhi, determined to recover or reduce Herut (which tad
been part of his legitimate possessions, and which is the capital of
that province of Afghanistan situated farthest to the north-west),
he was probably instigated to attempt this reassumption of his ancient
rights by Count Simonich, then Russian minister a t Teheran ; at
least it was supposed so."
The position of the English in India, and the tendency of
thek future policy, are clearly set forth in this extract; but it
would not be of much interest if it were not followed by a
sketch of the Russian policy in Central Asin. This question was
considcrcd in 1843, in a monthly review, by '& A. Cho&ko,"
who ha3 proved himself as well informed as the philologkt of
Boston. After having rapidly t r ac~d the efforts which had lrcn
made by the cabinet of St. Yetenburgh to render its policy
CHAP. XV. RUSSIAN POLICY IN CENTRAL ASIA. 209
dominant in Europe, and, above all, in Turkey, the writer turns
his attention to Asia, and unfolds, with startling truth, the suc-
cessive invasions of the Colossus of the North on that continent.
The reviewer commences by citing the opinion of a contemporary
historian: "Vainly," say Lesur, "were the dangers pointed out
of permitting this intrusion of an enslaved and barbarous people
into the system of European politics ; Russia has been elevated as
much by the errors of others as by her own genius. The last treaties
with Turkey, Persia, and the powers assembled at Vienna, have
established her dominion on the right bank of the Danube, at the
extremity of the Gulf of Bothnia, and from the Vistula to Kam-
tcbatka She commands the Black Sea, she suffers noue but hcr
own armed flag to float over the Caspian, and the shrine of tile
Kadjars is placed under her protection." After this quotation
the reviewer continues : " Subsequently to the year 1819 Russian
agents left Tiflis, envoys to the Khans of Khiva and bkha r a Their
instructions were to obtain the abrogation of the trade in slaves,
and to announce their mission as the acco~pplishment of a great
duty on the part of the head of the Russian empire. Russia, who
had generally imposed slavery upon civilized nations, pretended
to restore liberty to slaves, and she knew not how to proceed
otherwise than by the sword : she threatened to conquer. The
Autocrat expected the refusal that his envoys returned with, but
he wished to give a colour to the war for which he was prepar-
ing, and his battalions were already marching from Tiflis upon
Orenburg. Their reports also informed the Emperor Alexander
that his projects against Turkestan wen: premature ; he could not
ensure his object until he had deprived Persia of the states she
on the borders of the Caspian Sea, and that collquest
could not be attempted without further success against Turkey.
But the patient constancy with which Russia carries on her ~chen~es
is well known ; aggesssion against Turkey would dissipate any sus-
picions that might arise, while an invasion of Persia would only
confirm them. The disposition of the Greeks to revolt was therefore
encouraged, and Alexander showed himself again in the character
of defender of an oppressed people. But he contented himself
with pleading their cause with the Sultan ; and several influential
personages of his court having endeavoured to turn to their ad-
vantage the discuseions that arose in 1823 with the Porte, ta
provoke a rupture, the Emperor sent them into exile.
P
210 RUMTAN POLICY IN CEXTRAI, ASIA. CHAP. XV.
" The long looked for epoch for the acllievement of the pmjcct to
the accomplishment of which all hi3 intrigues had been directed,
arrived in 1824. I n the spring of that year he saw the ambassadors
of the Khirghizes arrive at his court to render him horn*
as the supreme chief of the Tartars. I n virtue of this title he
granted them a code of civil laws, drawn up in the Russian language
and in the language of their country ; this he bestowed upon tlienl
in collsequeiice of their having acknowledg~vl theniselvcs vassal3 of
his empire ; the Emperor also promised to visit them, and d:d in
fact very soon after set out for Orenburg.
" Such was the rash and inconsiderate contempt of the nations of
the west for the people whom they called the barbarians of Asia,
that this step on the part of Alexander occasior!ed no suspicion.
The country of thc IChirghizes attracted no attixition, though it was
the very same kingdom of Kharism, formerly so powerful, and
which once entirely ruled Central Asia
" A brilliant reception awaited the Tzar at Orenburg. Tlic
khans of the most &stant tribes came tl~ere to acknowledge their
prince, and proclaim aloud his sovereignty. The Ru~si an journah
were filled with accounts of the homage which the numberless
hordes scattered ovcr Asia came to ofier to their new chief.
They had bestowed upon him, as formerly on their cclebratrd
Temondjinc, the Tartar surname which signifies The Greatest-
Djengliis.
" The Emperor soon quitted Orenburg to visit some of the
Khirghiz hordes, and u-as satisfied that he should find in then1 all
the submission that he could expect from their riotnadic habits.
" Alexander went again to Orellburg in 1825, and took the
empress, then an invalid, with him, intending to leave her at
Tangarsk, the climate of which place, the mildest in Russia, would,
it was hoped, re-establish lier health : but as, on the contrary, she
grew worse, he would not quit her. It was then that he was
attacked by the mysterious malady which had already carried to
the grave his father, tlic Emperor Paul, and which also terminated
hi own life, for he had drawn upon himself the same enemies.
" Everything was in readiness for the Persian war, and the com-
mencemcnt of it was in the following year the first act of bs suc-
cessor; it might therefore from that momeilt bc concluded that
Nicholas was worthy to continue the policy of Alexander. The
rupture of the treaty of Gulistan appeared to be the work of
CHAP. XV. ItUSSIAN rOL1CY IN CENTRAL ASIA. 21 1
Persia, and the conjecture might be read in the papera that she
was emboldened to that step by the secret intervention and pro-
mises of England.
" The treaty of Turkomantchai, of which the preliminaries were
signed November 3rd, 1827, was the result of this clever comedy.
Russia acquired two khanats which in a military point of view com-
manded the Persian provinces, occupied the countries south-west
of the Caspian Sea, and succeeded to the rights which Persia had
preserved over that Turkomania which had been the ancient
kingdom of Samarcand. These rights were of the =me nature as
those recognised by the Khirghizes, and became much stronger,
being thenceforth exercised by the acknowledged chief of the
Tartar nation.
" Nevertheless, whatever dangers were revealed, the blindness of
England continued and manifested itself by the impolitic battle of
Navarino, in which the Turkish navy was aln~ost entirely de-
stroyed. The result of it was the treaty of Adrianople, and after-
wards that of Uukiar Skelessi, which confirmed to the Emperor
Nicholas his preponderating influence in Turkey.
" The succcsor of Alexander then appeared sure of the expected
triumph of the policy so long followed in Asia. His numerous
army was concentrated upon Orenburg, and orders were given
for the opeuing of the campaign in the tirst fine weather of 1831,
when the insurrection iu Poland suddenly obliged him to march
his troops to the Vistula.
"The British ministry was the first that opened its eyes, as is
proved by its intrigues to cause, though prematurely, the breaking
out of the rebellion ; and it ~acrificcd that unfortunate people to
its own safety, by hurrying them into action to avoid being taken
a t a disadvantage itsel
'' l hki ng immediate measures for the protection of the Indian
Empire, of which the chiefs, absorbed in commercial calculations,
had too much neglected the political interests, the ministry ad-
dressed to the Governor-General, Lord Auckland, fresh instruc-
tions ; and it was at this time that Captain Conolly and Lieute-
nant Burnes were sent on their respective journeys. The first
started from St. Petcrsburg to pass through the countries of the
Khirghizes, Turkestan, and Persia, while the second left Delhi to
explore Afghanistan, Bokhara, and Persia. Burnes had already
shown great capability in other expeditions, but the object of liis
r 2
212 RUSSIAN POLICY IN CENTRAL ASIA. CHAY. Xy.
travels was not dissembled. I t was evident that his purpose was
to investigate the intrigues of the Russians, and the extent to
which their efforts to lay the foundations of political power in
Turkestan, under the appearance of commercial intercourse, had
succeeded. Burnes allowed it to be seen that he was convinced
the project of marching an army across so much arid andunculti-
vated steppe was impracticable; but the passage of his narrative
in which he insists with the greatest force upon this assertion
suffices to prove that he had presented Lord Auckland with notes
and information to the contrary. Here follows the paisage:
' When one has met with a n f f c l t such a horrible scarcity of
water, and found pasture for.the horses so difficult to obtain, oph-
thalmia so prevalent, and so many other impediments, it will be
understood that this desert can with difficulty be crossed even by
a few squadrons of light cavalry. But who would think of crossing
i t ? If the descendants of the Scytlrians and the Parthians have
the pretens'on to enter upon this conflict, they can do so without
exciting much attention from Englishmen.' I f the traveller
thus deluded himself, one may be allowed to think that his Bri-
tish pride had strangely blinded him. \\%at difficulty could
there be in procuring water in a country from which the river
had only been turned aside ? What obstacles could hinder the
raising of forage in a country lately so fertile and of which the
sterility* was so recent?"?
This sketch gives a very accurate idca of the object the Tzar
had in extending his dominion towards the south ; i t is astonishing
therefore that the English Government should have been alarmed
a t the project formed by the Shah of Persia, under the advice of
Russia, to sieze Herat. We will admit, like many other persons,
and as several newspapers have done, that the possibility of a
Russian expedition to India is a chimera if we had based our
opinion, as there is everything to lead us to suppose these writers
did, on the authority of Burnes ; but as the Government at Cal-
cutta knew very well that the obstacles were not so seriow as this
The dietrict of Mew here spoken
the spring grase and water ara to be
of wa. ravaged by the Tartars and fonnd everywhere in the desorta of
Usbeks in 1786. Kbiva and Bokhara. The fecility with
t The critic is perfectly correct in which a Rtlesian expedition could thru
his remarks upon Isurnes, and, had he reach India has been shown in 'Cllnvan
r s ~e s ae d more information, he might Journeys.'-ESrrier.
are added, that in the winter and in
CHAP. SV. PROGRESS OF ENGLISH CONQUEST. 213'
officer wished them to believe, the Governor-General in Council
was right to take precautions against any invasion which could be
made from the north of Europe into Central Asia He ought
indeed to have don(? this with more e n e r a at the outsct, and with
less delay, by which means he would have avoided many diploma-
tic embarrassments, and many in~portant disasters, the wounds
from which will not be healed for a long space of time, though,
without doubt, England gained her object. Merat has remained
independent, and Russia has retired within the limits stipulated in
the treaty of Turkomantchai, while England has brought her
frontier up to the west bank of the Indus, and passed that river at
two points; Peshawur in the north, and Shikapoor in the south,
are two igtes-de-pont which cover the principal approaches to the
river, and menace the Afghans. But let us not anticipate.
FIRST DII'LOMATJC DISCUSSIONS CEAP. XVI.
CHAPTER XVI.
First diplomatic discussions relative to the siege of Herat -Mr. Ellis is succeeded
by Mr. M'Neil - The Persiane invade the principality of Herat - The minister
of the Shah playa a double game - Captain Eldred Pottinger at Herat-
Ruseian officers in the Persian camp - Samoun Khan -Colonel Blwemberg-
General Roroffski -Colonel Semineau - S~ege of Qorian - Hecrimination against
the latter o5cer - Rusainn aud Englieh agenta in the Persian camp-Their
hostility egdrj t Colonel Sernineau-Operatione at the siege of Gorian-Fd
of the place - Shere Mohamed Khan -Par Mohnrned's reply to his brother -
Duration of the eiege.
IT has been already remarked that the idea of laying siege to
Herat for the purpose of effectually putting a stop to the incur-
sions of the Heratees on the Persian territory, and forcing Kamran
to pay tribute, originated with Mohamed Shah, but it should be said
that immediately the subject was made known to the Russian Go-
vernment it mct with its eager support and encouragement ; not
because the views of Russia extended at that period so far as to
undertake an invasion of British India, for she was not then in the
least prepared for so great an enterprise, but because she ever
obeys that spirit of forecast, ,evoked by Peter the Great, which
always leads her, whenever an opportunity presents itself, to extend
her influence in the direction of the Indus, as ahe did not long ago
to the banks of the Bosphorus at Constantinople. At that time
the Russians were contented with the possessions which they held
in Asia, but they could not, as clever politicians, see without
jealousy the successive invasions of England ; they therefore forced
her to extend her frontiers out of all reason, exciting her fears
by demonstrations of an ambitious character, hoping by that
means to make her consume with greater rapidity the immense
resources at her command, and to irritate the numerous peoples she
has subjected, who serve her much more from a sentiment of fear
than because they are habituated to, or love, her rule.
The projects of Riohamed Shah on Herat began to see the
light about the commencement of 1835. Mr. Ellis, then British
minister at the court of Teheran, at once informed his government
of the fact by pointing out the active part which the Rmian
millister in Persia, General Sirnonitch, had taken in connexion
Cur. SVI. RELATIVE TO THE SIEGE OF HERAT. 215
with the resolution which had been formed by the Persian
monarch. The British Ambassador danced atttendance in the
diplomatic antechamber eighteen months to persuade Lord
Palmerston, the Foreign Minister of Her Majesty, of the com-
plicity manifested by Russia in this war, which was evidently
undertaken with views hostile to England. I t was in vain Mr.
Elk informed his Lordship that, after having offered his mediation
to mooth the misunderstanding existing between the Shah of
Persia and the sovereign Prince of IIerat, the Persian Government
had refused to allow Major Todd, the officer attached to his mie-
sion, to be the bearer of his letter to Shah Kamran ; and that he
was obliged to place it in the hands of the Persian authorities
in d e r that i t might reach its destination ; in other words, to
besubmitted to the supervision and control of Russian agents.
The British minister further stated that Count Simonitch openly
encouraged the war against Herat, that each day he hastened
fmard the preparations as well as the concentration of troops at
Teheran, promising, in the name of his government, subsidies of all
kinds and even the support of some Russian regiments. I t was
equally useless that, under the profound impression that he foresaw
a very serious misfortune impending over his country, Mr. Ellis
mote to his superior thus :-&& I have the complete conviction that
the English Government cannot permit the extension of the Persian
Empire, in the direction of Afghanistan, without placing the interior
trauquillity of British India in danger. This extension will bring
Russian influence to the very threshold of our Indian Empire ; and
as Persia will not, or dare not, enter into a sincere alliance with
England, our policy for the future should be to consider her not as
a barrier which covers India, but as the fitst parallel from whence
the assault will be given."
Lord Palmemton* was not much moved or affected by this infor-
mation: his policy at that time was not anti-Russian, and. he
p&td in seeing in the reports of his subordinate at Teheran,
only, and prhapa unreasonably, timid anticipations which nothing
could justify. Left without instructions, obliged very frequently to
have r e c o w to his recollection as to what the English policy had
An article from the pen of Mom.
able information on facts relating to
A. Thomas, in the ' Revue des &ux
these negotiations.-Perrim.
Mondas,' has furnished me with valu-
216 DIPLOMATIC DISCUSSIONS. CIIAP. XI?.
been during his service in India, to enable himself to make a few
feeble remonstrances to Mohamed Shah, and almost always cen-
sured by his chief for the fears which he expressed, the unfortunate
Mr. Ellis did not know what p r t he was to play at Teheran.
The minister of Russia, on the contrary, always advanced boldly
in the warlike policy which he counselled, and had driven the Shah
to cay on : supported by his goveniment he dared everything, and
his most trifling wishes were accepted as orders by the Court of
Teheran. If Lord Palmerston, pressed by Mr. Ellis, was hardy
enough to make a few weak remonstrances to the cabinet of St
Petersburg, Monsieur de Nesselrode denied facts as clear ae the
sun, and it was almost by menaces that he replied to the constant
demands of the Engliah minister that a good understanding should
exist between the two governments upon the affairs of Persia The
noble Lord, deceived by Russian duplicity, considered it acrime in
his minister at Teheran to have seen too well and appreciated too
clearly the state of things there. The Prime Minister had been
disturbed tit a moment when the Russian alliance was without
doubt necessary to him, a s a balance, and he could not make up
his mind to open his eyes to an event and give his attention to a
subject which took him by surprise and deranged his plans.
The correspondence of the Foreign Office relative to this affair
is nothing more than a series of reproaches upon what Lord
Palmerston then denominated chimerical ideas, which his subor-
dinate had conceived respecting General Simonitcli ; his Lordship
requests Mr. Ellis to act in concert with that diplomatist, respecting
whose intentions, so far as he is concerned, he is quite satisfied, and
to make coufidential representations to the Shah's Government on
the embarrassment which his inconsiderate aggession against Shah
Kamran must expose him to. In short, he has nothing to transmit
to Mr. Ellis but timid counsel to assist him in meeting an evil, the
cauae of which his Lordship obsti~iately refuses to comprehend;
he will see nothing because he is determined to avoid a conflict
with Russia, and he keeps on such good terms with that power a
to embolden her to redouble her exertions in encouraging the Shah
to seize upon Herat. However, this cautious policy could not save
Lord Palmerston from the consequences 'of the entanglements
which it created for him, and he finishcd by being completely the
dupe of his own acts. He believes the word of the Cabinet of St.
Petersburg, and yet he doubts more and more the accuracy of the
CUAP, SYI. MIt. ELLIS SUCCEEUED BY MR. M'NEIL. 217
reports of his own minister at Teheran. The far-sighted Mr. Ellis
then has to endure all the ill-humour of Lord Palnierston, and lie
is recalled without mercy for not having been able to stop events
the development of which was owing to the too great confidence of
his chief in the assertions of the Russian Government.
The noble Lord still endeavoured to disguise to himself the check
which his policy had inflicted upon English influence in Persia ;
nevertheless he subsequently made choice of ail energetic man, well
known for his hostility to Russia, to fill the post of British minister
at the court of Teheran. Mr. M'Neil belonged to that school of
diplomatists who are perfectly happy in the midst of agitation, and
for whom European principles disappear before the necessities of the
tortuous diplomacy of Asia After having passed twenty-five years
in India or Persia, he had returned to England towards the end of
the year 1834, and, not approving of the policy that had been
followed by his government in Persia since the accession of
Nohamed Shah to the throne, he had, through the press, fought
the question with all the obstinacy inherent in the English cha-
racter, stating that there wa s no necessity for drawing the sword
from the scabbard to baffle the Russian intrigues at Teheran,
that it was only requisite for England to declare distinctly to the
Shah her opposition to the war with Herat for that monarch to a b
etain from carrying on any further the preparations for the expe-
dition. This view of the subject, one so simple, which Lord
Palmemton ought to have adopted from the first, at length broke
in upon his Lordship's mind, but nevertheless he preserved it as a
last resource in w e he should find thz Shah intractable in every
other way ; and as he was aware that Mr. M'Neil was active even
to restlessness, resolute even to temerity, his instructions were
similar to those which had been given to Mr. Ellis. ' h e new
Envoy was desired to diecourage the ambitious projecta of the
Shah, and to offer his mediation in arranging the misundentanding
which had arisen between Per ~i a and Herat ; in short, he was to
continue a spectator of Russian intrigues without being able to
offer one energetic word in opposition to them. Mr. M'Neil was
not more ~uccessful than his predecessor, and complained to his
government with as much force as perspicuity, demanding that
his instructions should be bxtended in order that he might have
the power of acting with some hope of success. But Lord
Palmerston appeared to send him duplicates of all the replies that
218 THE PERSIASS ISVADE HERAT. CHAP. XVI.
he had formerly given to Mr. Ellis. His Lordship could not yet
make up his mind to take the initiative in a vigorous opposition to
Russia, and he endeavoured to maintain a peace H hich that power
seemed little anxious to preserve. Lord Palmerston wa s not very
fortunate in his appreciation of diplomatic aEairs, for, when he
certified in his letters to the sincerity of the part played at Teheran
by Count Simonitch, that nobleman admitted his bad faith in his
-
own correspondence. Tlie noble Lord waited with imperturbable
tranquillity till repration should be made by the Persian Govern-
ment for conduct with which he was offended, and this at the very
moment when Mr. M6Neil received the assurance that the Shah
declined to make any ; and as Lord Palmerston had purposely
deferred sending his instructions, his envoy found himself opposed,
with his hands tied, to the ever active manoeuvres of Russia, and
the determination of the Shah to seize Elerat.
That which Messrs. Ellis and MbNeil had foreseen at length
occurred ; the Persians took the field in 1837, and in the month
of October entered the province of Herat ; but it is necessary to
add that the energetic representations which Mr. M6Neil made to
the Shah on his own responsibility had led to indecision and a slight
sensation of fear in the council of his ministers, which the non-
realization of the proinises made eighteen months before by
General Simonitch also powerfully contributed to develop. The
I'crsians had waited, but in vain, up to this time for the material
intervention promised by Russia, and the Russian diplomatist, who
had been urged to give a guarantee in writing to the effect that
it would be forthcoming, had just refused to do so. Mohamed
Shat~ had conceived some just apprehensions upon this subject,
which led him for a moment to think of renouncing his project,
for he was afraid that his quondam ally would abandon him in the
height of the conflict which the war with Herat might cause
between himself and England. But the cleverness of Count
Simonitch surmounted this difficulty also, and the Shah took the
field without an afterthought, determined to seize upon the for-
tress which he was going to attack ; but his prime minister, Hadji
Mirza Agassc, an old and obstinate man, directing as he pleased
the opinions of the King, was far from sharing these sentiments.
IIe readily consented that the Persian-army should invest Herat,
but hc had secretly decided in his own mind to allow the siege
operations to languish until the Russians had fulfilled the verb1
CUAP. SVI . CAPTAIN POTTINGER AT HERAT. 219
stipulations which their diplomatist had made with him, and, as
these engagements were never carried out, the city was not taken.
This resolution of the Vizier is the solution of the enigma which so
many persons have attempted, but in vain, to discover. Twenty-
five days at the utmost ought to have been sufficient to take Herat ;
nevertheless it sustained a siege of more than nine months, to the
great displeasure of Mohamed Shah, who, deceived by his minis-
ters and generals, was ignorant that tliere were some amongst them
who had been gained over to the English party and intended to
retreat without having accomplished the projected conquest But
the folly and incapacity of the Persian officers in directing the
operations of the siege, as well as the eccentric measures adopted
by the prime minister, were more than sufficient to cause the failure
of the euterprise without the addition of bad faith.
The newspapers assured us at the time, and many persons still
.
think so, that the Persian army was accompanied by many Russians,
officers and men, when it marched against Herat, and that the
place was defended by several English officers ; there is exaggera-
tion in these two aesertions which I will clear away.
In the treaty of 1813 between England and Persia it was stipu-
lated that, if war broke out between the Persians and the Afghans,
the English Government should remain neutral, but it might never-
theless become a mediator if requested to do so by both parties.
\Ve have seen that England up to this time had not failed on her
part with respect to that clause ; but the eagerness with which the
Russians had advised the Persians to undertake a siege that threat-
ened the dearest interests of England, without doubt induced the
Governor-General to pay very little attention to it, and he sent
Captain Eldred Pottinger to defend Herat. The Indian news-
papers pretended that " this officer, travelling in the neighbourhood
of that city, entered it by chance at the moment the siege com-
menced, and that it was with his assistance and advice as well as
the e~~ouruyernerlt yicer~ hy the Etqlislt Goncrnment, that the
inhabitants were enabled to hold out for nine months." The first
part of this assertion is not accurate. Captain Pottinger, sent by his
Governmerit with a secret mission, arrived at Herat disguised as a
IIindoo physician, and was kriown there only to three merchants of
Herat, who wcrc devoted to Englisl~ iriterests-Shah Kamran and
his vizier did not hear of liis arrival until the army invested the
place. This \r7:u the moment chosen by the English officer to
220 SAMSOUN KHAN. CHAP. XVI.
offer the support of hi professional services, as well as subsidies
of all kinds on the part of his Government, to assist the Shah
Icamran in making a stand against the Persians. This offer
was accepted with joy, but such was still the discretion of the chiefs
of Herat that the inhabitants were actually not aware that the
pretended Hindoo physician was an English officer, until Mr.
MLNeil arrived in their city in March, 1838. From that moment
Captain Pottinger resumed his European uniform, and did not
attempt to conceal himself any longer. He was the only Eng-
lishman who remained in the place during the whole period of
the siege; but it should be added that Major Todd and some
few other officers, who were like himeelf attached to the Persian
embassy, entered the city on several occasions with a fhg of truce,
and it is reasonable to suppose that the advice of these officers was
calculated to strengthen the resolution of Yar Mohamed Khan in
continuing the defence.
As to the Russian officers, there was not one in the Persian army,
for the Sertip* Samsoun Khan, of Ruasian origin, could not be
considered such ; he had resided in Persia for many years, a ~ ~ d ,
having refimd to take advantage of the amnesties granted by
the Emperor of Russia to his subjects who were deserters, Sam-
soun Khan was much more of a Persian than a Russian, as all
those who knew him could aver. Besides, his military knowledge
was too mediocre to influence the operations of the Persians, for
his rank in the Russian army had never been higher than that
of a quartermaster sergeant. of dragoons. At the time of the
siege he commanded the Persian battalion of the Ckaldean,
Armenian, and Nestorian Christians, to which were attached seven
or eight hundred Russian deserters, nearly all of whom were
common soldiers ; a very small number of these had been eergeanta
and corporals, and they had for the most part arrived in Persia
long before there was any question of the siege of Elerat. [These
deserters were, in 1839, in consequence of the representations of
the British Government, reclaimed and given up to the Emperor of
Ruasia, and that event led to a new conflict between Russia and
Persia The Shah, on the ground of the duties of hospit;ility, re-
f w d to give up these Russian deserters, but the Emperor Nicholas
just at that moment visited his Trans-Caucasian provinces, travelling
* Gneral of Brigade.
CHAP. XVI. EUROPEAN OFFICERS IN THE FEI~SIAN SEIIVICE. 221
indeed as far as Erivan ; and to this place Mohamed Shah sent his
eldest son, Nasser Eddin Mirza, to compliment l ~i s Russian Majrsty.
Count Sirnonitch then declared to the Shah that, if he did not give
up the Russian d~scrters, the heir to the Persian throne should remain
an hostage in Russia until he did so; there was therefore nothing
to be done but to yield, and to this alternat~ve the Shah consented.]
Nor can it be said that Lieutenant-Colonel Baremberg, of the
Russian Engineers, was attached to the Persian army, for he
formedpart of the mission of Count Si~nonitch. I t is true that these
two superior officers were actively mixed up in the affairs of IIerat,
but in a diplomatic sense ;-they never ostensibly directed the
operations of the siege, and their position was simply that of
advisers.
Two other European officers were in the service of the Shah :
one of them, ~en' er al Boroffski, a Pole and a Russian subject, had,
through the protection given him by the English, advanced to this
rank in the Persian army, but he had never served in any part of
Europe, and had no military experience whatever ; he was reported
brave, but courage alone is not sufficient to direct the operations
of a siege.
The other was General Semineau, at that time Colonel of Engi-
neers, a Sardinian subject, and an old officer of the Empire, serving
in the Shah's army as a French~nan-his mother was French and
born a t St. Tropez, his father at Nice. The English accused
General Semineau of serving the interests of Russia, because he
performed his duty 3 they were, however, in an excellent position
to know that, when the campaign against Herat commenced, this
officer was on the very worst terms with Count Simonitch. In Per-
sia, however, duty is a thing which always comes after personal
interest, and there is nothing astonishing in the fact that the
English had great doubts of the Colonel's conduct being disin-
terested.
The Count Simonitch and Mr. M'Neil had remained at Teheran,
but each of them detached an officer of his legation to the royal
camp. The Russian dragoman Goutt, and the English Colonel
Stoddart, taking example from their chiefs, carrid on an active
paper war. To the first was attached an officer of cavalry of
the same nation, by name Vikovitch, who had made himself a
reputation for talent in Tartary, and been employed in several
222 COLONEL SEMINEAU. CHAP. YVI.
missions with succes. I I e spoke with fluency several languaga
and oriental dialects, and his government destined him, as we shall
see further on, to prepare the way for Russian influence in Afghan-
istan.
Amongst the Persian nobles, too numerous to mention, to whom
the Shah had contided the various commands of his troop, there
was not one who was capable of taking up the encalilping ground
for an army, or directing scientifically the operations of the siege.
1% Majesty was obliged to make Colonel Semineau take upon
himself the duties of chief of the staff, and director of the artillery
and engineers, which brought upon him from the first the jealousy
and opposition of the Perjian officers, who were besides urged to
annoy him by the Rutlsian and English agents, according as his
acta happened to be adverse to the policy or proceedings of either.
The Russian was the first who endeavoured to injure him, ill the
opinion of the Shah and his minister, stating that the Colonel paid
and received visits to and from Colonel Stoddart, which was a peat
impropriety in the eyes of Count Simonitch, but subsequently, when
facts proved that Colonel Semineau was a loyal and honest man,
though on terms of good social feeling with nlen of all parties, and
performed his duty before every other consideration, tile attacks
came from the opposite side. Ullfortunately the Persian Govern-
ment lent but too willing an ear to this gokip, and such neak-
ness annihilated all the good that could result from the active co-
operation of this officer in carrying on the siege.
The Persian army advanced very slowly upon Herat, and turned
aside to wage an irregular warfare against the Turcomans, Yamoods,
and Goklans, before repairing to its ultcrior destination ; neverthe-
less, when it arrived under the walls of Goritm, a fortress garrisoned
by the troops of Sl,ali Kamran, arid situated thirty-five miles west
of Merat, in the middlc of a large plaiu ten miles in width, it then
numbered from 34,000 to 35,000 men, well provided with artillery
and munitions of war. Colonel Semineau ordered the army to
encamp a gunshot from the fortreas on ground sheltered by a ridge
of hills which covered it at this short distance. ARer having
marked out the encampment for each corps, he proceeded to make
a still closer reconnaissance of the town, and was received by a
sharp fire of mosketry, but he continued his examination of
the place, and, this duty having been accomplished, he retiretl
CRAP. XVI. HIS PLAN CIF AT1'ACR. 223
to a short distance from the noise uf the camp, and traccd a
sketch of the plan of attack which he thought it desirable to
make. While thus employed, other divisions of the army arrivcct
in s umi on, and with them the Rwi a n agent Goutt, ul.o,
seeking every opportu~rity of annoying the ('olonel, was loud
in hi exclamations against the spot he had clrosen for the camp.
"It is treasonable," exclaimed the l:ussiao, " placilrg us so close
to the poignard of the Afghans; he wibhes our throats a r t ; he
is sold to the English," $c. kc. Great confusion and tumult
followed, and maledictions without number were hurled at the
Colonel. The mules remained still laden, and every one was on
the point of carrying his baggage elsewhere, when the arrival of tlie
Shah put a stop to these irregular proceedings. Tlre Persian chiefs
made their complaints in bitter terms, but the King well knew
their ignorance, for his military studies, which had been directed
by French and English officers, enabled him to forrn a correct
judgment of the circumstances ; he aerit himaelf to the summit of
the hills adjoining the camp to ascertain the eligibility of the posi-
tion, and saw at a glance that the spot chosen by Semineau was a
most favourable one, as the enemy's shot flew over tlie camp. The
Sbah therefore maintained the dispositions made by Semineau, who,
ignorant of what had taken lace, went to communicate with the
sorereign about half an hour after, and was received by him in his
uually kind manner. The Colonel's plan of attack presented three
points, on either of which it could be made with a fair hope of
pmmpt success : but the one wlected was on the reverse side of t l ~c
ridge of hills against which the troops were encamped, for from
hence the ground sloped towards the lace. " Well, then," slid
the Sbah to Semineau, it is you who shall direct tlie attack," arid
gave him r r i t kn orden to the colonels of four battalions to place
themselves immediately under the Colonel's command, and obey
him in everything. These four regiments were the Bahader-haw
or grenadiers, the K h m h or guards, the Demavend, so called from
the di~trict of that name, and Karaguzloo, of the tribe of that name.
These troops were employed in making the gabions and fascines
that were necessary, and on the following night Seniincau broke
gmund and commenced his trenches, but he had then to avoid
a danger which he did not in the least suspect. The Persiari
chiefs, who were ordered to conduct the other attacks, did not
224 SIEGE OF GORTAN. CHAP. SVI.
advance methodically and in silence like the Colonel, but disco-
vered their position to the besieged by a brisk cannonade, under
cover of which their troops advailced on the open plain, but the
besieged Gorians replied with a musketry fire w well kept up
that many of the Persians were soon hors de combat. The Persian
guns being badly laid, the shot passed over the town at a consi-
derable height, and, after having described their curve, fell into
the middle of Semineau's division, who was not a little astonished;
nevertheless, after taking some precautions, he proceeded with his
trenches. His plan consisted in dividing his corps into two bri-
gades, to attack an angle of the bastion that it was intended to
destroy ; and when the trenches had arrived at the point at which
the two brigades were to separate, they were to construct their re-
spective batteries, at a good distance from one another. But the
semi-Russian Sertip, Samsoun Khan, of the grenadier regiment, to
whom the Colonel had given the command of the second brigade,
obstinately determined remain where he was and batter the angle
in front, being at a distance equal to the point blank fire of one of
his own pieces.
His adviser on this occasion was a gunner, like himself a deserter
from the Russian service, who had convinced him that a canuon-
shot striking a mark at a short distance would not make a hole,
but fall to the ground after having struck the wall, al ~d that, to
obtain the most completely destructive effect, it was necessary that
it should acquire greater power in alonger trajet. I mention these
trifling circumstances, to a certain extent foreign to the subject-
matter of this work, only with a view of showing how ignorant the
Persian officera were in general, and Sarnsoun Khan in particular.
Colonel Semineau, after having made reiterated representations
to this officer, and threatened to retire if he persisted in this obti-
nacy, at length acceded to his wishes, leaving to him all the respon-
sibility of his conduct. As to his own operations, he continued
his trenches in order that he might be able to place his guns on
the spot he had determined upon at the outset.
Samsoun Khan had constructed the embrasures of his battery with
old wooden boxes filled with earth, which were of couwe knocked
all to pieces by the first fire, and ten of his men were killed at day-
break ; his casualties Foon amounted to forty-five or fifty, and his
battery was laid completely ope11 This decided him in coming
CHAP. XVI. ITS FALL. 225
round to Semineaa's opinion, and to construct a fresh battery in the
proper place.
If I have been di ffw upon these accessory details of the siege
of Herat, it is not that they are of any real importance, but that
I wish to give an idea of the obstacles raised by Persians, English,
and Russians, at every step, to impede Colonel Semineau, who
alone was sincere in the prosecution of the war which had been
SO rashly undertaken. Samsoun Khan, as a Russian deserter, exer-
cised some influence over the troops, and he was also considered
one of the most experienced generals of Mohamed Shah. What
has been stated above will give a correct idea of his capacity, and
enable the reader to imagine that of his Persian colleagues, which
was inferior to his, both on scientific grounds as well as courage.
Colonel Semineau had not advanced so rapidly with his trenches,
or rather towards a result, as the commanders of the othcr attacks,
who had from the first established their batteries at too great a
distance from the place ; but with a view to more satisfactory pro-
ceedings, he arrived after several days' hard work within five-and-
forty yards of the fortress, and this without losing a single man.
His batteries, constructed upon the ordinary rules of engineering,
being ready, he gave notice to the king of the hour at which he
intended to open his fire, and Mohamed Shah, anxious to see the
effect, took up a position on the neighbouring heights to have a
good view. Semineau obtained the success which from his able
dispositions he had reason to expect: the great tower a t the
angle gave way, and the ricochet fire would soon have destroyed
the smaller towers, which were on the prolongation of this face
and the upper part of the wall which connected them one with
mother. Mohamed Shah, who had served in the wan against
Russia and been presel~t at different sieges, had never witnessed
mything like this, and exclaimed, when he sawr the result of the
fire, It is only to-day that I understand what may be done with
artillery." The Afghans, not less surprised than the Shah, and
alarmed at the disastrous consequences which would follow if the
h n were taken by assault, hung out a flag of truce near the angle
of the bastion, and, Semineau having given orders to cease firing,
they advanced to the top of the breach and dcclarcd that they
~mnder ed at discretion. Two hours after, the Serdar Shere
31ohamed Khan, the brother of Yar Moharncd Khan, who com-
manded in the town, came to the Shah and made his submission ;
U
.
226 YAR MOHAMED. CHAP. SVI.
the Persian troops occupied Gorian the same day, and their army,
which was now at liberty to advance to the siege of Herat, arrived
under the walls of that city in the beginning of November. The
Serdar Shere Mohamed Khan wrote to his brother from the camp
to inform him of the reason which had induced him to surrender
Gorian, and advised him not to continue a conflict which the
insufficiency of his means of defence would not permit him to
prolong against the Persian army, for, said he, " there is an Euro-
pean officer with it who can in forty-eight hours raze Herat to the
ground." He also stated that in persisting in his resistance he
would only lead to the ruin of his country and great misfortunes
for himself; that it would therefore be much better for him to
throw himself upon the generosity of Mobamed Shah and open to
him the gates of the city. Yar Mohamed, indignant a t this
message, replied, " I t may be very well for you, who knew not how
to die at your post in defence of the fortress which I confided to
your care, to give such advice, but for myself, as long as there
remains one cartridge to fire, a sabrc in my hand, and one breath
of life in my body, I will never bow my head before the Kadjars : I
will not surrer~der- Herat until the tectli which Abbas Mirza
ordered to be pulled out of my head at Meshed are replaced. If
till then the fortune of war goes against me, I shall know how to
escape dishonour by dying in the breach." He kept his word,
and his heroic defence during nine months is one of the finest
military exploits which modern history funiishes in &i a
C ~ A P . XVIT. APPEARANCE AND POSITION OF EERAT. 227
CHAPTER XVII.
Hernt - Appearance and poeition of the city - Its fortifications and environs -
Attack of the Persians on the suburbs - Colonel Semineau's' plan of attack -
Absurdities of the Persians-Underhand intrigues and eccentricities of Hadji-
Mine Agaawe-Means adoptad by him to prevent succeae- Conspiracy in
Hemt in favour of the Persians - The plot is discovered - Monster cannon -
Treachery and death of M h Naghi - Dintinguished conduct of Colonel
Gemineau - Cowardice of Meuhbalee Khan - Colonel Semineau declinm to take
part in the operations-The Afghans siupriae Hadji Khan-Scarcity of pro-
viniom in the Afghan camp-Privations of the enemy in Hemt-DifBculties
of their position - Djellal Eddin Mina and Chem Eddin desert to the Persians
- Mr. M'Neil arrives at the Persian camp - Proceedings of that minister -
Diplomatic notea between the Rueaians and the English-Mr. M'Neil b&
with the Persian government - His messengers are m t e d - Mr. NINeil's
conduct in the Persian camp -He leaves for Tauria.
THE fortified town of Herat, supposed to have been founded by
Alexander the Great, is a quadrangle of a miles long on the north
and south sides, and rather more on the east and west. Ita extent
would be immense if all the suburbs were included, particularly
those stretching to the west of the town beyond the Dervazeh Irak,
or Gate of Irak ; all these suburbs are partially covered with ruins,
and numerous walled gardens about half a gunshot from the town.
A thick rampart, constructed of earth brought from the interior of
the city, surrounds it and forms its defence. The height of this
rampart is not everywhere equal, but the average may be about
90 feet, and it is supported on the inside by counterforts of masonry.
Earth has also been taken for a distai~ce of 108 yards beyond the
ditch, and 4 in the construction of this work, and being a pure
clay it has become exceedingly solid. The rampart has the
appearance of a long hill surrounding the city, and on the crest of
it a thick wall has been built about 32 feet high, flanked with
round towers, which, as well as the curtains that connect them
with each other, are loopholed for musketry; it is only in the
enormous and massive towers at the angles that cannon can be
mounted.
Generally speaking, the ground from the edge of the ditch
towards the county, in a radius of 250 yards, is of a marshy
nature ; water is found at a depth of from 8 to 10 feet, especially
Q 2
on the southern side of the city, for the general inclination of the
ground is from north to south. Streams, which all run east and
west, water the environs and supply the ditch ; and i t flows out on
the south side opposite the large tower which forms the angle of
the place, called Koordj Khakhister, or Tower of Cinders. \.\'hen
the Persians first arrived before Herat the immediate neighbour-
hood was well wooded-an immense number of vines and vast
plantations of poplar, willow, cypress, and above all fir, filled the
Bagh Shah, or King's Garden, and bordered the avenue which
extended about a mile thence up to the gate of the city.
At half a cannon-shot south of the town is a canal with steep
banks, supplied with water by the Heri-rood, which is four miles
distant from the city, and on this canal are a great number of mills;
it is fordable only at a few points, on which account at different
distances little bridges have been built, each of a single arch.
There are five gates to the city of Her at To the north of it,
near the Dervazeh Melek, or Meshed, are two citadels-Ark Noon
or the New Citadel, and Ark Keuheuneh or the Old Citadel-which
nearly join each other. The first commands the second, in which
there is an enormous round tower, that then served as the palac*
of the Shah Kamran.
Also on the north, parallel to the walls, and about 1250 yards from
them, rises the long hill of Talleh-bingui, which forms a ridge on
that side. Beyond this hill stands one of the most beautiful
mosques ever built in Asia: it is surmounted by nine minarets,
from the summits of which the interior of the town can be wen,
and ita distance from it is about the longest range of a twelve-
pounder. Herat is not commanded by any of the Lills in the
environs ; Talleh-bingui, which is used for a cemetery, is the
highest.
RIohamed Shah pitched his camp about a mile and a half south-
weet of the city, on the right bank of the great canal already men-
tioned, and as soon a3 his troops arrived he conlmanded them to
invest the place on all sides. To do this was not difficult, for the
Persians were ten times as numerous as the Afghans, who bad
only 4000 men to defend it. They had confined themselves to
this small nnmber in order to economise the provisions they had
stored up a long time previously, having foreseen the attack ther
were now callcd upon to repel.
The first day that the Persians attacked the city the Afghans
CHAP. BVII. COLOSEL SESiINEAU'S PLAK OF ATTACK. 229
opposed the occupation of the suburbs with as much courage as obsti-
nacy ; it was necessary to dislodge them from each house in succes-
sion ; the smallest tuft of trees, the smallest piece of wall, were cover
of which they availed themselves with great readiness, and from
thence directed a most murderous fire on their aggressors. Artillery
did no further service for the Serbaz or Persian infantry than batter
the towers and covered ways, fro111 which a treble fire of musketry
proceeded. The Afghans had a few pieces of heavy calibre which
they had placed on the large towen, and the fire from these guns
took the assailants in flank and occasioned them immense loss.
However, their ardour was not abated, and such was the progress
they made, that, in the evening, the Afghans, fearing their position
would be turned and their communications cut off, at last retreated
and abandoned the suburbs to the Persians, who immediately
surrounded the city and took up a position wherever an inequality
in the ground presented itself to shelter them from the uninter-
rupted fire which proceeded from the ramparts.
Colonel Semineau then made a careful reconnaissance of the for-
tifications, and traced a plan of attack, which he submitted on the
following morning to the Shah. I n this he indicated, as the best
point on which to make a regular appr~ach, the great tower at the
angle of the city, called Koordj Khodja* Abdul IIamid, of which
he had the opportunity of examining with a glass, from the
minarets of Talleh-bingui, the front within the town The King
thought the plan was an excellent one ; but such was his wretched
vacillation, and so strong were the intrigues of the English party,
that it was never acted upon, and the attack was indefinitely de-
layed
The Shah was afraid of offending the dserent Persian corn-
manders, for, moved by presumptuous vanity. they refused to be
directed by an European, and promised, if allowed to act for them-
selves, to take the city in eight days. This emulation amongst his
lieutenants, which evinced itself by false oaths and hollow proksta-
tions of devotion, the Shah thought he ought not to discourage ; and
as eachasserted he was braver and wiser than all the rest, he made
each independent in his command, and ordered them to take up
positions according to their own good pleasure on whatever points
they considered most eligible: they were also to attack as they
blaster-tower.
230 lNTRIGUES AND ECCENTRIClTIES Cnar. XVII.
pleased, without any regard to acting in concert, as each would
then derive from his own deeds the honour that would attach to
them.
Sad indeed were the consequences of these incredible arrange-
ments : everything in the trenches was done at random, excepting
that it might be said they agreed on one point only, namely, to
make the greatest pqi bl e noise without arriving at any result.
The artillery played without judgment on the whole circumference
of the place, and wasted their shot in a point-blank fire against thc
rampart, which all the cannon-balls in the world could not destroy.
The first operation in each trench was an endeavour to bring down
the tower and curtains on the crest of the rampart, before they
thought of how they were to pass the ditch : to effect the latter pur-
pose the Persian generals could devise no brighter scheme than
letting off the water ; therefore they broke the dam and laid it dry,
greatly to the convenience of the Afghans, who till then could not
get in or out of the city excepting at the gates, which were masked.
From that time they constantly harassed the Persians by surprises
on all points, the great advantage of exit and entrance having been
given them by their enemies.
Although the operations were thus disjointed and subject to the
caprice of a score and a half of commanders in the trenches, Hadji
Mirza Agassee, an old Mollah, entirely ignorant of military science,
reserved to himself the chief direction of the siege ; his object, as
before stated, wes to prolong it till the diplomatic struggle in
which he had, with Russia, engaged against England, should be
decided. But as the Shah had not at that time been convinced by
his arguments, and pressed his generals to take the town as quickly
as possible, the prime minister gave them secret counter-orders to
do nothing ; they fought therefore without a purpose ; men were lost
without necessity, and treason w& the order of the day.
Colonel Semineau alone was ignorant of these disloyal intrigues,
and conducted his operations on the side assigned to him, the Gate
of Kandahar, with his habitual resolution, but the prime minkter
found means to paralyze his best measures by giving him as
coadjutors Persian officers who did not execute his orders. On
the other hand, Hadji Mirza Agassee committed a thousand extra-
vagances, more like the lucubrations of a diseased brain than the
rational conceptions of tlle commander of an army. The following
fack will only give a slight idea of his eccentricities ; were they all
Cu u . SFII. OF HADJI MIHZA AGASSEE. 231
to be chronicled, they would fill volumes-a few only shall be men-
tioned.
Two or three of the commanders in the trenches, being sufficiently
powerful to have nothing to fear from the minister, and being even
hostile to him, had not been favoured with his views, and having
pushed their works with ardour were more prepared to attempt an
assault; but i t was necessary that a diversion in their favour
should be made by the troops in the other trenches. This diver-
sion was ostensibly promised to them by Hadji Mirza Agassee,
but he secretly forbade those who were to carry it out from doing
so; the gallant fellows therefore who made the assault found
themselves betrayed, and, crushed by the Afghans, lost heart for
any future attempt.
At another time ammunition was wanting at the moment of
attack ; or the cartridges for the guns and musketry were blank.
This happened several times in the trenches commanded by
Prince Seifet Dooulet ; nevertheless lie was not discouraged, and,
after having made the necessary arrangements, applied to the
prime minister for permission to make an attack that should reach
the very heart of the city. Hi s request was granted, but a condi-
tion was attached to it, namely, that he must trust nothing to
chance, but make a trial first. " If you succeed," said he to the
prince, LL do not advance too far, retire after a slight engagement ;
be satisfied with knowing that you have the advantage, that should
be sufficient for you; we shall see later what can be attempted
definitively." I n vain the gallant prince represented that the
Afghans were quite ignorant of the works in his trenches, that to
make a simple trial would only serve to expose them, and enable
them to mnstruct other works that might cornplekly neutralize the
effect of hie. Th e minister remained immoveable in his deter-
mination, and this spirited of?icer was obliged to give up his
cherished hopes of saving his sovereign and distinguishing himself.
From that time the intriguers tempered his zeal by withholding
the ammunition and ~rojectiles that were requisite for the ope-
rations he had to conduct; and EIadji Mirza Agaswx, saying
that he had scarcely enough himself to defend the king's camp
if it should be attacked, coldly added, " You must do the best
pou can, it is your affair." Upon receiving this reply, Seifet
Dooulet, and those chiefs who were similarly circumstanced,
cut some thousands of h l l s out of the ruins of the marble
232 COSSPIRACY IiV HERAT. CHAP. XVII.
tombs on the Talleh-bingui, but after they had put their troops
to all that labour the powder requisite to discharge them a t
the enemy was denied these energetic officers. The king had
masked all the gates of the town as soon as he arrived before it,
but a few days after the Hadji said that they ought to give
the Afghans the power to move out ; and the reason he as-
signed for this strange conduct was that the rebels should have
an opportunity of escaping. " If I were to be master of the town
in ten days," he said, " tliere would be too many of them to punish."
At the same time he by degrees formed a Persian party in the
city, who conferred with him, proposing to admit during the
night some of the king's troops, and deliver to him all the artillery
of the Shah Kamran; everything was agreed upon, and t he
sound of the trumpet was to be the signal for the Persians
to enter the city. The trumpet did sound, but the Persians
never appeared ; and, in the& stead, the accomplices in this
'
treason saw approaching the troops of Yar Mohamed Khan, who
came down lipon them and cut them to piecea Hadji Mirza
Agassee had himself revealed the whole plot to the Vizier of Shah
Icamran I
Again : Mohamed Shah had ordered that a 96-pounder should be
cast upon the spot, which with some difficulty was done, but when it
was mounted the prime minister discovered that it required too much
ammunition, and he was very indignant with the commander of the
artillery. " What a fool you are I" he mid to him ; "cannot you
see that this piece was cast far more for the purpose of t er r i f ~i ng
than of destroying the Afghans? tell your men to fire over the
town ; that will frighten the Shah Kamran, and every morning you
can send a waggon and a few artillerymen round to the other side
to pick up the balls that will have fallen beyond it."
Thus it will be seen that the prime minister was in no hurry t o
take Herat, but neither was he diaposed to abandon the siege, for
as soon as the troops were installed he made each battalion clear a
piece of ground and sow it, which plainly showed that he intended
to remain till the next harvest. As long as Mohanled Shah was
not prevailed upon by the Hadji to waive his original ideas of the
siege of Herot, he showed himself far less benevolently inclined
to the Afghans and their adherents than his minister was, and
ordered that all who were takcn prisoners should be put to death :
hc often commanded that these executions should take place under
CIIAP. XVII. PROCEEDlNCiS OF COLONEL SEMINEAU. 233
his own eyes, and, when beholding the vast space of bloodstained
ground, was once heard to say " I n Gulistan est," "This is a
garden of roses."
In another instance, when the treason of biirza Naghee was de-
tected, the same savage feeling was manifested. That officer was
in a high position at court, and his guilt was proved by an inter-
cepted letter of his to the Shah Kamran, in which he informed the
Afghan prince of what was doing in the Persian camp, and recom-
mended him also to warn Mr. M'Neil to hasten his arrival, if he
wished to prevent the fall of the town. The Shah sent immediately
for the criminal, and, perfectly regardless of the entreaties of the
Hadji, ordered that he should lose his life under the bastinn~do,
and that his body should be exposed on a gibbet before the ram-
parts of the city.
The prime minister was well aware that his sovereign would
have more than enough to do to annihilate all the traitors in his
camp, and for this simple reason-they were most of them his own
friends ; from that moment he determined to induce the Shah to
participate in his views, and finally suweeded in his object. But
both the one and the other stood so much in awe of General
Simonitch that they concealed from him the little inclination they
had to continue this war with the Afghans, and they prolonged it
olily to avoid incurring the indignation of that diplomatist.
Colonel Semineau was no longer an obstacle to the proceedings of
the prime minister, for, shortly after the arrival of the army, he had
by a series of intrigues forced him to abstain from taking further part
in the active operations. The day after that on which the place was
invested the Colonel advanced, with 200 recruits who had arrived
in camp the evening before, to an I m w Zadeh,* situated a t a
short distance from the Gate of Kandahar, and there took up his
position; the ground about it was undulating and very much
broken, and for a considerable space covered with burial-grounds,
gardens, and the ruins of houses and out-buildings. Once in pos-
session of the Imaum Zadeh, he entrenched it, andconnected it by
some small earthworks with an ab-ambar,? situated about 11 yards
i u front of his position. This brought him so near the gate of the
town as to give rise to a hope that some lucky chance or clever
caul) de main might one day or other put the place in his hands,
* Saint's tomb. t Reservoir of water.
234 ATTACK OF TEIE AFGHAKS. CHAP. XVII.
and, had he been at all supported in his plans, that would haye
happened.
The first night he held this post was exceedingly dark, and
favoured an attack that 2000 Afghans moving silently out of the
town attempted against it. The Imaum Zadeh was at the time but
imperfectly protected by a slight earthwork scarcely finished, and
the enemy crept up to it unperceived, until noticed by Colonel Semi-
neau himself, who was returning from an inspection of hi works.
He had scarcely regained the tonib when a Herculean soldier who
had followed him crawled up the breastwork with his sword rai-d
to cleave him to the ground, but before he could do so he fell by
a ball from the Colonel's pistol. The Afghans, seeing they were
discovered by this rash action of their comrade, at once rushed
towards the work, and, as they gained the top, would certainly hare
remained masters of it if Semineau had lost his coolness for a ni*
ment. His recruits, under fire for the first time, stood astounded
at being thus assailed by at least twice their number, and but for
the energetic conduct of their commander, which restored their
courage, would have been massacred without dealing a blow even
in selfdefence. When they had repulsed their enemies with the
bayonet, the Colonel placed them round the breastwork, conjuring
them to stand, which they had every inclination not to do, an-
noyed as they were by a well-sustained fire from the walls, though
the stupidity and clumsiness of the Afghans assisted them in no
slight degree. The besieged threw fire-balls from the town to guide
their party, but these never reached the Imaum Zadeh; they feu
short amongst the Afghans, and consequently rendered them visible
to the Persians, by whose bullets they were cruelly decimated. They
could not return the fire because they had only their eabres with
them, and therefore fell by hundreds on the work ; and after four
hours' hard fighting, seeing that it was impossible to overcome the
resistance maintained by the little garrison, they retired into the
city.
A Persian Sertip, Bieuhbalee Khan, and a relation of the prime
minister, who was posted 200 yards in rear of the Imaum Zadeh with
300 men, with orders to support the Colonel, instead of executing
the duty assigned to him, as soon as he heard the firing made dl
his preparations to escape in case the enemy should reach his psi-
tion ; but the next morning, when he heard that the men whom he
had abandoned had been victorious in the struggle, and still held
CHAP. XVII. COWARDICE OF MEUHBALEE KHAN. 235
the post intrusted to them, he could not believe it, and gave as an
excuse for his inaction that he did not consider himself in sufficient
stmgtb to advance to their wsistance, that he believed they were
all killed, and co~wquently that it was useless to try to help them.
The truth was that this inaction fell in with the views of the
prime minister as well as of this coward.
A Persian proverb s a p " I t is not always those who sow the
awn who reap the crop," and Meuhbalee Khan remembered it:
hastily wrapping a handkerchief round one hand, he hurried with
his feigned wound into the presence of Mohamed Shah, and gave
hie sovereign a most flowery description of the courage he had
dqlayed in the defence of the Imaum Zadeh, without even naming
the brave Semineau, but the monarch, enlightened by more trutl~ful
informers, presented the Colonel with a watch set in jewels, an
acknowledgment of the royal appreciation of his services, which is
in Persia considered as equivalent to receiving a decoration. Not-
ribtanding the 0agrant falsehood in which this craven Meuhbalce
was thus deteded, the Hadji insisted upon his remaining the
colleague of Colonel Semineau in the intrenchments in front of the
bdahar Gate, to the great annoyance of that officer, who well
kuew the cowardice, ignorance, and treachery of the Sertip : in an
evil moment, however, he yielded to the desire of the Hadji, and
very unfortunately, for a few days after, in his absence, the Khan
doffed the Afghans to take the works constructed with so much
trouble and defended at such a cost of life, decamping with the
men under his orders.
From that 'moment Semineau, who till then had constantly
8truggled against the cowardice and treachery of others, ceased to
take any part in the siege, and retired to his tent in disgust, a result
which lerfectly fell in with the schemes of Hadji Agasee. Never-
theleas, when he waited upon the Shah, this brave soldier hesitated
not to tell him his opinion, and point out to him that he was
betrayed. The weak-minded monarch bent his head and reflected ;
but never profited by the information and advice given to him.
His minister directed his conduct as he pleased, and knew how to
remove from hie mind the most unfavourable impressions regarding
himself.
The Afghans distinguished themselves daily by the most daring
attacks upon the besiegers: sometimes a handful of horsemen would
h e from the town, charge a whole corps of Persian infantry, and
23G THE AFGIIASS SURI'RISE HADJI KHAN. CHAP. XIIT.
never retire without making many prisoners or committing great
slaughter; sometimes a detachme~lt would fight till the death of
the last man amongst them: theirs was always hand-to-hand
work with the sabre, and was perfectly murderous. One day
they surprised two battalions of Chaghaghis posted on the Talleh-
bingui, killed 400 of their men, and carried off two guns
Their commander, the Sertip Hadji Khan, had very imp~dently
at nightfall of the previous day admitted within his lines 100
Afghans, who lwsought him to grant them hospitality, assuring him
that they had always been on the side of Mohamed Shah, but that
it had never been possible for therc to escape from the city till then.
The too confiding Scrtip allowed them to remain with his o m men,
and at midnight they sprung upon the piled arms of the soldicn
sleeping beside them, and with the aid of 200 of their countrymen,
who had followed them and crept up the hills to the works, made
a frightful carnage, after which they retired with one prisoner, a
captain of artillery, and the two guns that he commandcul.
The Persian army, harassed without intermission by sorties of
this description, never had a moment's repose : it maintained itself
with difficulty, for tlie provisions were brought from a great dig
tance, and often intercepted by parties of Afghans who scoured
the surrounding country. The neigllbourhood of Ilcrat had sup
plied the bazaars of the camp very well for three or four montbs,
and these resources would have lasted three times as long if they
lrad been properly managed ; but they were wasted and misud,
and it was not long hf or e the half-famished soldiers of Moha-
med Shah were reduced to browse upon clover, and seek for wild
roots to satisfy their hunger. By marauding, in which they were
great adepts, they sometimes managed to procure a little corn or
barley, of which they made coarse bread, and ate i t ravenowllp
half baked.
The beleaguered city was in no better condition ; the Afgham
felt the miseries of famine even in a worse degree than their
enemies. They were in want of the first necessaries of life-salt
was sold a t 20s. an ounce ; the horses, camels, mules, asses, and
even animals reckoned unclean by Milssulmans, had been consumed
and the population was dreadfully reduced by hunger. The rater
in the canals which supplied the city having been tunled 05 by the
Persians, it was necessary to have recourse to that in the tank%
which was very brackish, and also insufficient, for most of thcm
CKAP. XVII. DISTRESS IN HERAT. 23 7
being supplied from the outside of the town were soon dried up,
and this added one more to the terrible sufferings of the inlia-
bitants. Yar Mohamed placed sentries on all the cisterns that were
supplied by springs, and the water that rose in them was parsi-
moniously dealt out to the people every twenty-four hours. The
bazaars, public squares, and mosques were crowded with sufferers
imploring the pity of the serdars as they went by, and begging
for food; to prove their misery they laid out before them the
corpses of their townsmen who had died of hunger, but the chiefs,
reduced to extremity themselves, could only encourage them by
words and their own stern resignation. To all these horrors was
a t length superadded the failure of ammunition. Yar Mohamed
Khan, it was true, ordered some to be made, but either the mate-
rials were bad or the workmen ignorant, for the powder burned
in the cannon and left the ball as it was put in.
The original defenders of the city, who amounted a t the begin-
.
ning of the sicge to 4000, were reduced to half that number in the
first month of the operations, owing as much to the defectiors
produced by the intrigues of the Russians and Persians, as from
their losses in action; but, as the Afghans are nearly all sol-
diers by birth, Yar Mohamed filled up his ranks with tradesmen
and workmen. Those who were for defending the place to the
last extremity, a t the head of whom were the Vizier, his cousin the
Serdar Dine Mollanled Khan, and Captain Pottinger, were im-
moveable in their resolution ; but those who were for submitting,
and who affected to act in the name of the Shah Kamran, were
daily intriguing, and tried frequently to give the city up to the
besiegers ; 60 that but a handful of brave Afghans were frequently
obliged to repel the attacks from the enemy outside the walls, and
those from their countrymen within as well ; but this contest was of
short duration, for the traitors, seeing the fruitlessness of their dis-
loyalty, took refuge in the camp of Mohamed Shah, with the excep-
tion of their nominal chief Shah Kamran, who was imprisoned and
closely watched in the citadel, where he could get drunk at his
ease ; he ceased not to urge the surrender of the place, but, though
Yar Mohamed treated him with external respect, it was long since
he had paid the least regard to his commands.
Amongst the Afghaus who had joined the Persian army were
Qel at Edtlin Mirza, a son, and the Serdar Chems Eddin Khan,
a brother-in-law, of the Shah Kamrar~ ; the former was governor of
233 MR. M'NEIL 1N THE PERSIAN CAMP. CHAP. X\T.
Subzawar, the latter of Furrah, fortified places south of Herat
They had brought with them 1000 Popolzyes and Noorzyes, who
were a valuable reinforcement to the Persians ; also 2000 H d s
of Kalehnoon, who, by the clever policy of Assaf Dooulet, the
maternal uncle of Mohamed Shah, were attached to the Persian
party. Thii welcome addition to his forces saved the king from
the necessity of raising the siege so soon as h m the utterly
destitute state of his army he must otherwise have done, and he
afterwards proved his gratitude to these chiefs by bestowing lucra-
tive grants upon all, and continuing their rank in the Persian
army when they followed him in his retreat.
I t has been stated that General Simonitch and Mr. M'Neil had
remained at Teheran after the departure of the Shah for Herat,
the latter greatly distressed at an event which he had long before
announced by anticipation to his own government, but which he
had constantly assured the Persians would never happen. " In
the present state of his finances," he said, "the Shah will never
get 10,000 men together to take into the field." The facts had
not justified his predictions, and he persisted against them so far as
to doubt that Herat was attacked, even after the arrival of the
army under its walls; but at last he was obliged to believe it.
Learning that the siege had commenced, and that the place was
on the point of being taken in spite of hi intrigues amongst the
Penian chiefs, and the useless efforts of his agent Colonel Stod-
dart to induce the Shah to retire, he became so alarmed that
he determined to visit the royal camp himself. He had, it is
true, no order from his government to authorize his taking this
journey, but he provided himself with a very indirect one from the
Governor-General of India, and arrived on the 8th of March,
1838, under the walls of Herat. The coldness of his reception,
and the displeasure evident in the king's countenance, would have
hunt ed any less hardened diplomatist than himself; but in spite
of the insufficiency of his instructions, he attacked the question of
the retreat afresh with his usual tenacity, and used all the arp-
ments that diplomacy or even threats could furnish to induce the
Shah to retire, but without success.
The following extracts are from the work of M. Alexanh
Thomas, ' Simple L propos de I'liistoire Diplomatique,' which has
been my guide in all that concerns the negotiations that took
place between Russia, Persia, and Great Britain. This excellent
CEAP. XVII. HIS PROCEEDINGS. 230
work is exceedingly dry, but that has not prevented me from con-
sulting it ; its length has obliged me to make a dose abrid,gment
of a portion; and to the extracts, which I shall give nearly
verbatim, I have only added circumetances that had been for-
gotten-for the asperity of hi opinions I leave Mons. Thomas
responsible. Mr. MGNeil," says this author, " pressed and me-
naced, but the Shah excused himself as he did to Mr. Ellis-' he
is not a free agent, he is afraid of giving umbrage to the Russian
Government by abandoning the place ; if he had known he was
running the risk of losing the friendship of the British Govern-
ment, he aould not have gone so far; if Mr. M'Neil was in a
position to inform him that if he did not at once desist he would
be attacked by the British, he would desiit at once : he must ahso-
lutely be so spoken to, so treated by Great Britain, to support him
against Russia'
" ,Mr. MbNeil did hi best and gained time : he went from the
besiegers to the besieged, from the city to the camp, carrying,
dictatug, changing the concessions of both parties; but when he
went into Herat he was always careful to take with him Major
D'Arc~Todd of the artillery, in order that he might assist Captain
Pottinger with hi advice. However, by dint of perseverance and
parley, the British Envoy had succeeded in settling the prelimi-
naries of peace, whcn the Russian Ambassador reached the Per-
sian camp ; a despatch also arrived from Lord Palmerston dated
February 12, 1838, enclosing an extract from one from Lord
Durham, the British Ambassador at St. Petersburg, in which it was
stated that ' Count Nesselrode said that he was convinced that our
minister had been misinformed, and that Count Simonitch had
never given any such advice to the Shaii as that which had been
attributed to him, namely, to seize Herat.' Lord Palmerston
proceeded, therefore, to address fresh reproofs to his agent, though
it appeared that his lordship w a ~ not entirely convinced by Lord
Durham's assertion, for he demanded, timidly it is true, but
still he demanded, from M. de Nesselrode the recall of Count
Simonitch from Teheran, and also that of the Russian deserters
employed in the army of the Persian sovereign ; however, this did
not prevent him from writing to Mr. MbNeil that the general was
offended at his bad opinion of him, recommended him to be less
suspicious for the future, and to live on good terms with his
colleague ; information which, instead of extinguishing, only added
240 PROCEEDIKGS OF MR. N'XEIL. CHAP. XTII.
fuel to the fire. Its first effect was to break off the prelimi-
naries of peace to which the British envoy had brought both
parties to consent; and the second was immediately to restore
to Count Simonitch his influence in the councils of the Shah,
while Mr. MbNeil lost all his. This letter from Lord Palmerston
deprived him of all power of action, for it contained not a aord
about Herat-no notice whatever of Russia ; it seemed to reduce
the pacific conclusion of the whole affair to the secondary question
of a good understanding between the two diplomatists.
" Mr. M'Neil had then nothing more to say ; his credit fell rapidly
wheu it was seen that he was not supported ; annoyances and affronts
of all kinds were put upon the English ; Russia, who recalled her
deserters, exacted the withdrawal of all the English oEcen in the
service of the Shah ; and by one of those unhappy coincidences to
which Lord Palmerston always exposes himself by his consideration
for doubtful friends, and which only produce vexatious results, the
British officers were requested to withdraw from the camp before
Herat, just when Mr. MbNeil had received the order to leave
them at the disposition of the Shah as long as he was not obli,d
to quit the Persian territory himself.. He was almost driven to
the last extremity-he ought to break all diplomatic relations aith
the Shah, and retire without having even officially opened any
discussion touching upon Russian intrigues. He did break them,
and retired for a doubtful and almost insignificant affront from
the Persian court Notwithstanding the strict orders of Mo-
hamed Shah that no one should have any communication with
Herat, Mr. M'Neil continued to have secret correspondence aith
the besieged, and a courier with some despatch= address4 to him
was arrested by the Persian videttes; the Persian monarch had
perhaps a right to be more indignant at this than hc was, but he only
sent the letters to the Britieh envoy, and begged him not to expose
himself to have others intercepted. Probably few sovereigns would
have shown more moderation on such an occasion, but Mr. MLNeil
considered himself affronted by this act, which he looked upon as an
infringement of his rights, and insisted upon an apology from the
prime minister; this was refused, and he adopted the refusal ss
the basis of his rupture with the Persian Government. Without
taking into account the continued hostility of Russia, which far
* Deepatch, March 10, 1838.
CHAP. XVII. PROCEEDIGGS OF MR. M'NEIL. 24 1
three years had menaced the barriers of British India, Mr.
M'Neil announces to his own Government his rupture with that
oftlle Shah in the following terms :-
" ' Meshed, June 25, 183s.
" ' After having exhausted all the means I could devise to
induce the Persian Government to grant me reparation and satis-
faction for the violence offered to the messenger, and finding that
I could obtain nothing, I felt compelled, not only in consequence
of the evident determination of the Persian Government not to
grant what I had demanded, but also because of its perseverance
in a course of proceeding towards me in camp which I felt was
lowering the character of the mimion in the estimation both of
Persians and Afghans, to quit the court, and I am now on my
way to the Turkish frontier, where I shall hope to receive further
instructions from your Lordship. What course the Persian
Government will now pursue I know not : some public act of re-
paration, which will prove to the people of Persia and of Central
Asia that we are not with impunity to be insulted, is in my opinion
illdispensably necessary-I will not say to restore us to our former
position, but to enable us to retain one of any credit or respectability.
Both the Persiaus and the Afghans in the Shah's camp saw with
amazement the Persian Government treating a British mission as
a proscribed body, and punishing persons who ventured to hold
even a casual communication with it ; while some of the members
of the Russian mimion took to task, and threatened to get punished
for that offence, persons who occasionally visited a t my tent,
taking some precautions to prevent their being discovered.'
" I n the month of May, 1838, before he quitted the camp, the
British envoy despatched Major Todd to Lord Auckland, Governor-
General of India, with despatches that informed him of the rupture
which had takeu place. After rapidly crossing Afghanistan the
Major arrived in July at Simla, where he found his Lordship, who
wm greatly impressed with the importance of the letters placed in
his hands ; it has even been affirmed that they were the cause of
his determination to make war on Kabul the following year.
On the eve of his departure from the camp Mr. M'Neil obtained
to go into the city once more to make a last attempt a t
a reconciliation between the Persians and the Afghans ; he passed
the night in Herat, but, instead of fulfilling his promise, it was
found that he had only been there to make presents to Shah
R
242 DEPARTURE OF MR. M'NEIL. CHAP. SVII.
Kamran and his adherents to induce them to renounce their
project of surrendering the place. The next day he went to the
Shah, and told him that the Heratees would not hear of peace, and
that he must raise the siege. On the refusal of the Shah, the
British ambassador struck his tents, and left for Tauriz, where he
decided to wait for further instructions froin his Government, to
which, on the 1 lth April, 1838, he wrote as followa : ' The question
of Herat seems therefore to be the question of all Afghanistan, for
it is no secret to any one that the British Government has been
desirous to prevent its fall, and that Ruesia, on the contrary, has
been solicitous to aee it in the hands of Persia.' "
CHAP. XVIIT. MR. Mrh'EIL'S LETTER.
CHAPTER XVIII.
Mr. M'Neil'r letter to the Muchteid of Ispahan -Lord Palmenton no longer con-
tinuer his half-mepaurn - The English occupy the island of K-k -
Captain Vikovitch at Kandahar and Kabul-He returns to the Persian camp
with the envoys of these two principalitien - Treaty between Persia and
Kandahnr-Violent declaration of Lord Palmerston to the Persian government
-General Simonitch arrives in the Peraian camp - The Persians take courage
- Hadji Mirza's opposition to Count Simonitch - Colonel Semineau's plan of
attack udopted - Siege operations renewed - The arucault - Treachery of the
Persian chiefs - General Boroffski is killed and the Persians are repulsed -
Colonel Semineau is wounded- He sends in hia resignation, which ia not
accepled - Is promoted to the rank of General, and receives a Pernian order -
The English ultimatum arrives at the Persian camp - Conduct of the Heratees
during the assault.
MR. M'NEIL had scarcely reached Meshed when he allowed free
scope to his resentment against the Persians; and he carried
matters to such extremes, that one is in truth tempted to ask if his
actions ought not to place him under the ban of civilised nations.
On his accession to the throne Mohamed Shah had met with
opposition fiom three of his uncles, and one, Seifet Dooulet,
Governor of Ispahan, had been supported in a semi-revolt against
him by Syud Mohamed Bagher, the great Muchteid of that city,
whose power over the masses was great; indeed he could raise
them with a word. The British envoy knew that after the fall of
Seifet the chief of Islam had retained a feeling of resentment
against Mohamed Shah, which he did not even take the pains
to conceal; Mr. MrNeil wrote, therefore, a furious letter to the
Suyd, in wbich he in~inuated that he ought to preach a crusade
against his sovereign, and left him to believe that he would in so
doing be supported by the British, who were, he said, attached
to the Persian people, and were angry only with their unworthy
monarch. Happily the enlightened mind of Syud Mohamed
Bagher saw this attempt in its proper light ; he sent Mr. N6Neil's
letter to the Shah, and replied thus to the Envoy himself: "'She
Persians have always been remarkable for their attachment to their
kings, and to you, an Europeap Envoy, less than to any one else
does it appertain to raise a storm in a country where the English
R 2
244 THE ENGLISH OCCCI'Y KARIIACK. CHAP. XTIII.
have always been received according to the dictates of the law^ of
hospitality." Thus was arrested the progress of an evil which
might have proved immense. "Xr. XILNeil," says Monsieur
Thomas, "had not reached Tauriz when he received from Lord
Palmerston a reply to one of his despatches, anterior to that in
which he had announced his rupture with the Persian Government.
I t was after having stretched his patience to the very utmost, and
when there was not the least hope of gaining his point by aidom
and firmness, that the British Agent received from his Lordship
the permission to act energetically in the name of Great Britain.
" ' The Shah should have been told from the beginuing,' said
Lord Palmerston, ' that the British Government perceived in this
expedition a hostility entirely incompatible with the spirit of the
alliance entered into between Persia and Great Britain.'
" At the same time an English fleet sent by the Indian Gorern-
ment disembarked on the coast of Persia, and took possession of
the Island of liarrack. As soon as Mr. hl'n'eil received this intel-
ligence he sent Colonel Stoddart, as the bearer of an ultimatum, to
the camp of Nohamed Shah, informing that sovereign that Great
Britain had determined to arrest his projects of conquest in
Afghanistan, and that, if he did not immediately raise the siege of
Herat, the taking of Karrack by the English would he followed by
further and morc significant acts of hostility on their part."
England was not ignorant whence this injury proceeded, but she
could hardly attack the source without creating a fresh compli-
cation of interests, and English pride is not so hasty as to be unable
to resign itself, when desirable, to a cold-blooded policy. Not
daring to go direct to the Russian Court, whose incognito, thou$
but loosely kept, she respected, she dealt a side blow, as if to
warn and disconcert those who would be tempted to try to profit by
their manczuvres. However that might be, Mr. MbNeil, armed
with the last despatch that he had received, was perfectly at liberQ
to act or threaten as he pleased, but the power came too late, as the
opportunity was lost; the rupture with Moharned Shah nils
complete, ' and in his reply the British Envoy could only infonu
Lord Palmerston of the extent of the mischief.
I t has been stated that when the Persian army marclied h n
Teheran it wa s accompanied by a Russian officer naxned Vikoritch,
who quitted it at Nishapoor, having had numerous audieucer of the
Shah and his prime ruinister : very soon after he reached Iiandilhar,
CHAP. XVIII. T R E A T Y B E T WE E S PERSI A AND KANDAHAR. 245
where in twelve days he concluded a treaty offensive and defensive
with Kohendil Khan, Sovereign Serdar of that principality.
After this he went to Kabul, where he remained wveral months.
Burnes, who had been some time in that city whcu the Russian
officer arrived, was charged by his government with the ful-
filment of a mission very similar to that of the Russian ; namely,
to smooth the existiilg differences between the Emir of Kabul and
the Maharadjah of the Punjab.
Vikovitch was at first not well received by Dost Mohamed, whose
tendencies were entirely English ; but the Emir, having found only
hesitation and injustice in the mediation he had requested of Lord
Auckland for the settlement of the difficulties existing between
himself and Runjeet Sing, he was in despair, and turned to the
side of the Russians and the Persians.
IVhen the Russian diplomatist quitted Kabul he was accom-
panied by an Afghan Syud named Yaya, whom the Emir sent to
Mohamed Shah to follow up the negotiations commenced by Viko-
vitch ; they remained several days at Kandahar, and left with
Jlohamed Omar Khan, the second son of Kohendil Khan, who
was charged by his father with a mission to the Persian monarch
analngous to that of the Syud of Kabul. These three personages
arrived at the royal camp at Herat some time after Mr. M'Neil had
quitted it, and the following is his appreciation of the results of the
Russian officer's embassy.
He writes to his government, " Before my messenger (Colonel
Stoddart, bearer of the ultimatum) could reach the Shah of Persia,
a treaty had been concluded between the Prince of Kandahar and
his Persian Majesty, and the Russian minister had formally gua-
ranteed the fulfilment of the engagements contracted by the two
parties. A treaty of the same nature was in course of completion
with Kabul also, and Captain Vikovitch, after having been received
by the Shah in his camp, had set out a second time for that city
and Kandahar, furnished with immense sums of money for the
purpose of terminating arrangements so auspiciously commenced to
establish Persian domination and Russian supremacy in all the
Afghan states The entire country from the Russian frontier on
the Araxes to the banks of the Indus had been secretly tampered
with and raised by Muecovite agents, soine openly accredited,
others without any ostensible public duty, all engaged in forming a
line of influence which not only counteracted the views and interesb
246 DECLARATION OF LORD PALMERSTON. CEAP. XVIII.
of Great Britain, but disturbed and threatened her empire in the
East."
" Lord Palmerston," observes Mons. Thomas, " replied to
Mr. M'Neil on the 27th July, 1838, and wishing to ward off
fresh perils, as well as the embarrassments pointed out by his
agent, he at last gave up the reserve and temporising with which
up to that period he had acted towards Persia; he discovered
in the treaty of 1814, not a reason for political inaction, as he had
affirmed at the commencement, but a perfect right of intervent,ion,
which is what the terms of the treaty most positively deny : nothing
can be more clear. ' If war,' it ia said therein, 'should be
declared between the Afghans and the Persians, the English
Government would not interfere on either side, unless its pacific
mediation should be solicited by both the contending parties.'
His Lordship went further even than he had ever done before, and,
not content with pointing out Russian influence as a permanent
stumblingblock in the way of Persia, as a fatal snare which Persia
should mistrust for her own sake and in her own interest, he loudly
proclaimed that 'the suggestions of Russia were antagonistic to the
peace and prosperity of Great Britain.'
" This was a great effort," says Mons. Thomas, " an useless effort
after the extremities to which he had been reduced with Persia,
aimless and without result, if it did not bear upon a point other
than that on M hich it eeemed to be directed." The following is an
extract from Lord Palmerston's despatch to Mr. M'Neil, dated
Foreign O$ce, July 27th, 1838 :-" I have to instruct you to
state to the Shah of Persia, that, whereas the spirit and purport of
the treaty between Persia and Great Britain is that Persia should
be a defensive barrier for the British possessions in India, and that
the Persian Government should co-operate with that of Great
Britain in defending British India, it appears, on the contrary,
that the Shah is occupied in subverting those intervening states
between Persia and India which might prove additional barriers of
defence for the British possessions, and that in these operations he
has openly connected himself with an European power for purposes
avowedly unfriendly, if not absolutely hostile, to British interests ;
that, under these circumstances, and as he has thought fit to enter
upon a course of proceeding wholly at variance with the spirit and
intent of the above-mentioned treaty, Great Britain will feel her-
elf at liberty to adopt, without reference to that treaty, such mea-
CEAP. XVIII. GENERAL SINOKITCH IN THE PERSIAN CAMP. 247
mres as a due regard for her own interests and the security of her
dominions may suggest" * -
"Lord Palmerston," remarks Mona Thomas, " had failed to
preserve the Persian alliance at a time when it might have been
done by moderation and firmness only, and now that it waa lost he
adopted violence and menaces to regain i t I t was the British
Government, throwing aside the indecision caused by the fear of
Ruseia, taking at last an extreme line, not against Russia, which
it always treated with deference,-not against Persia, which re-
mained its sturdy enemy under the protection of the Tzar,-but
against the whole of the East, which it then wished to terrify
with the power of Great Britain, and this after having displayed
her weakness for four years. I t now became necessary to raise
Persia from the depths into which she had fallen by accepting the
Russian alliance, and some great exploit was to be performed in
the name of England alone ; the weakness wit11 which the Tzar's
proceedings in Persia had been combated was bitterly repented of,
and they must now be stopped in Afghanistan us by a thunderbolt:
SO great was the fear of being outstripped by the indefatigable
activity of Muscovite diplomacy, that it was thought preferable to
destroy it at the outset" We shall see to what this new system led,
and will judge of it by its fruits.
General Simonitch made up his mind to leave Teheran wheli he
8aw that Mr. M'Neil had gone to the royal camp, and, in propor-
tion as the reception of the British minister had been cold and
reserved, waa his Majesty's manner to the Kussian gracious and
expressive of his anxiety to please; for as Mr. M'Neil had, in
consequence of not being supported by his government, lost the
influence that he had at one time succeeded in obtaining, and
had even come to a rupture with the Persian Court, General
Simonitch had become more powerful than ever, and the Shah,
against the advice of his first minister, was devoted to him body
and soul. This diplomatist was a Dalmatian, who, being in the
French army in 1812 or 1813, was taken prisoner by the Russians,
and after the fall of Napoleon entered their service. I t is true he
Mohamed Shah had renounced annihilated ever since the day on which
thL convention long before the British the Cabinet of London had refused to
Oovemment; and when preseed by Mr. pay to that of Teheran the sl~bsidies
Ellis and Mr. M'Neil to conform to it, that Great Britain had by the name
he mid that in his eyes it had been treaty engaged to furnish.-Fambr.
218 CONDUCT OF HADJI MIRZA. C ~ A P . STIII.
treated the Persian King with rough respect, which had a certain
effect upon tlie weak but goodnatured monarch, who entertained
a species of veneration for all those who had served under
that Emperor; and after having been sharply rebuked by the
Russian ambassador for all the deception that had been prac-
tised from the commencement of tlie siege, the Shah ordered the
chiefs of his army to act henceforth in conformity with the instruc-
tions of the Russian minister.
Hadji Mirza Agassee, thus thwarted in hi scheme of retreating,
exerted himself as much as possible to get tliese ordcrs revoked, but
in vain He then tried to paralyse their effect by nianifest ill-will in
furnishing the materials, ammunition, and stores requisite for the
works necessitated by the new arrangements that were adopted. He
did not conceal the vexation he felt even to General Simonitch,
and explained his opinion to him very categorically. " W h y should
I take Herat ? " he said to the dragoman ; " why should I e x p a
crowd of innocent people to perish for the fault of one individual
only ?-of Yar Mohamed Khan, who takes aH the revenues of the
province for his own profit, instead of paying me the tribute ; and who
authorized all the pillage that has been committed by the Afghans
upon the Persian merchants. And then, it would be impossible for
me to keep Herat with Persian soldiers, idle gluttons, who the
moment they are masters of the place will think only of eating pillau,
and amusing themselves with the women. The Afghans, whose bag-
gage is light enough, for they have never anything to lose, will come
back some day and cut their throats. Besides, you have not given
me the material support that you promised ; on the contrary, you
have taken away the Russian deserters: all this ought to induce
the Shah to raise this unhappy siege, which ruins the country and
creates difficulties with England."
But General Simonitch was not to be impeded by this obsti-
nate old man. He immediately sent for Colonel Semineau, whose
straightforward conduct had won his esteem, and in some degree
reproached him for the tardy manner in which the operations
were conducted. The Colonel exculpated himself by showing
it was not his fault, as treachery and tlie general ill-feeling had
obliged him to hold himself aloof after the first few days of the siege ;
a t the same time he submitted to him the plan of attack which he had
presented to the Shah seven months before, but never received autl~o-
rity to put into execution. The General then desired Lieutenant-
CHAP. XVIII. SEMINEAU'S PLAN ADOPTED. 249
.
Colonel Blaremberg, the Russian officer of Engineers attached to
the embassy, to inspect the works in the trenches, and as speedily
as possible report his opinion of them. M. Blaremberg was won
convinced that they were conducted in a manner entirely contrary
to the rules of common sense, and that the wisest course to take
would be even then to adopt the plan of Colonel Semineau, and
this was the one subsequently carried out by General Pimonitch.
Fascines and gabions were immediately made in great numbers ;
and as the soldiers would do nothing without being well paid,
the Russian minister drew from his own treasury the funds
necessary to satisfy them, and they worked accordingly, but he
alienated the chiefs from his cauee because he never gratified
their avarice. They had taken Englkh gold as a soothing antidote
to the excess of their zeal, and would not have been less happy
to pocket that of the Russians as a stimulus to it ; but the General,
thinking perhaps that he should not want their help, never he-
stowed an obolus upon them, which led to a thoussand intrigues
on their part to baffle the new plan of attack. The following,
taken from Colonel Semineau's notes, will give a rough idea of the
disconnected character of the operations.
'6 For eight months," i t is therein stated, "have we fought with-
out result, and 4.000 soldiers have been disabled, which in Persia
very nearly means killed, for the slightest wound cannot be success-
fully treated, excepting by astrologers, who take the title of doctor
without having the slightest idea of the knowledge that belongs to
i t ; besides, they are particularly careful to keep out of the way
when the army is in the field.
After the expiration of these eight monthq during which we had
only experienced heavy losses, and without any corresponding
result, his Persian Majesty, by the advice of General Simonitch,
sought to enlighten himself by a council of war, at which he pre-
sided in person. After many propositions more er less extravagant
had been made, my turn came, and I reverted to the plan that I
had given in a t the commencement of the siege. But this raised a
terrible storm against me ; not a chief would confine himself to a
uniform and wellconsidered line of operations. Each persisted in
wanting to act separately with his own force, and claiming for him-
self the honour of taking Herat or any other success he might
obtain : they therefore with one voice rejected my project. How-
ever, addressing myself to his Majesty, who seemed on the point of
250 SIEGE OPERATIONS RESEWED. CHAP. XVIII.
yielding to his officers, I represented to him that it would be folly
to sacrifice the public interest for the sake of individuals ; that
each corps would take its turn in the trenches that I intended to
open, according to the rules of war; and that in point of fact the
city could only be taken in the name of Mohamed Shah, who ought
to have the honour of the victory, without that circumstance in the
least detracting from the glory that would belong to the generals.
This advice pleased the King ; and as nothing more was wanting to
induce the council to hold the same opinion, the order was imme-
diately given to commence the attack upon the angle of Khodja
Abdul Hamid under my direction in chief. But I had yet to
encounter many a spiteful impediment in the construction of my
trenches, and it was entirely owing to the determination of General
Simonitch that I could partly surmount them. For example, one
day, in the middle of a most difficult work, the Shah sent for me
and commanded me to throw a bridge over a ravine twenty miles
from the camp, which would have occupied several days, and
during my absence my trenches must neccessarily have been at
a standstill. Happily Lieutenant-Colonel Blaremberg prevailed
upon the King to revoke this order.
'' I opened my first trench at the farthest ruins of the Meuhelle
Arabha,. and, having arrived within 437 yards of the edge of the
town ditch, I constructed large and spacious cavaliers, using only
gabions, palisades, and fascines, which I raised to the height of 32Q
feet ; this height was not sufficient to enfilade the second covered
way, but one of our batteries had a plunging fire into the first and
the ditch. From the cavaliers I had a good view of the prolongation
of the curtains in the enceinte, as well as along those of the second
covered way. I placed in battery eight 12-pounders on each cava-
lier, and made the embrasures h portihe, and it was not till every-
thing was complete that I worked from this point to reach the edp
of the ditch of the angle attacked. The Afghans had made
galleries with fotrgasses to defend the approaches, from which they
hoped to obtain great results ; but as these underground works bad
been executed some time, it was not difficult to d i v e r , by the
colour of the grass withered above them, the direction they had
given to their minea A caponiPre, which they had made in the
ditch, and in sight of my battery, enabled the enemy to communicate
CHAP. YJ'III. SIEGE OPERATIONS. 251
with his mines. These I turned by counter-mines, at which we
secretly worked. When our chambers were charged and matches
ready I sent two balls at the caponi&re, which swept it away, and
the people who were in it took refuge in their mines. At that
moment I ordered oura to be sprung ; the explosion destroyed the
Afghan works, and the miners were suffocated ; from that day they
abandoned all their works beyond the counterscarp, and of this
circ~lmstance I took advantage to push my treliches without delay
up to the ditch. But the Afghans, perceiving the object of the
cavaliers, altered their determination, and early in the night estab-
lished traverses to defend the covered ways on both sides of the
angle of attack ; I was not uneasy at that, becau3e the space that
I required opposite the batteries was free, and they in no way
impeded me in forwarding my works, foot by foot, up to the crest
of the rampart of the town. I would not breach it till I had suffi-
ciently filled up the ditch at the point at which we were to pass
it ; this I managed to do by three chambers outside the counter-
scarp, and, springing them all at once, the earth was thrown
into the ditch and filled it. We then opened from the two bat-
teries in the cavaliers, each of which was armed with eight pieces
of heavy artillery, convisting of twelve, eighteen, and twenty-four
pounders. The fire from these guns at forty-three yards from
the edge of the ditch, and sixty-five yards from the large tower,
took it obliquely, and after a cannonade of four hours, not
only was that vast and massive work razed to the ground, but
also the adjacent one on either side of the angle ; 1 wished to use
some field-howitzers, but, being short, they blew out the cheeks of
the embrasures. On the night of this day, the results of which had
as much astonished the Persians as the Afghans, we filled the ditch
with the fragments of the wall and bags of hay, and at daybreak
we might have made the assault, but, knowing the daring of the
enemy, and the inexperience of our own troops, I conceived it my
duty to save bloodshed as much as possible, by conducting the
approach in zigzags up to the crest of the breach, where I had
intended to establish a tiid de pie, to protect the 'infantry, who were
to descend into the city. I asked for the requisite quantity of tim-
ber, fascines, and gabions to construct this, which could have been
done in three days, but a cabal at court had vowed to b d e me
t ~ s much as possible; on this occasion they put the very stars in
requisition against me, declaring that it was abeolutely necessary
252 THE ASSAULT. CHAP. XVIII.
the assault should be made on the following day, the 24th of July,
because a happy conjunction of them promised infallible s u ms
I n consequence four battalions were told off for the asault, and
noon was the hour appointed for storming the place. I t was well
chosen, for the Afghans, overcome by the heat, habitually gare up
a few hours to repose in the middle of the day, and, till then, the
Persians had done the same ; the former therefore were far from
supposing that this would be the moment selected for the attack.-
it was indeed a complete surprise. But unfortunately, of the four
battalions that ought to have marched, one only, the Karapzloo,
and that reduced by its losses to 400 men, appeared at the breach.
Pressing had been the denlands, the entreaties of these devoted
men for aminunition, and -yet seven i-ounds per man was all
the prime minister would grant then1 ; and as he knew full well
that the other battalions, being his countrymen, Bfakooeg would
not stir a foot, he gave but four to each serbaz. The messengem
1 sent into the camp, one after another, to procure what I re-
quired, always returned with a vague answer, and, in short, it
was impossible for me to obtain anything. On the other hand, the
Sertip Hadji Khan, who had behaved so ill some months before
near the Imnum Zadeh, and who had received orders to hold his
brigade in reserve to support, if necessary, the storming party, went
in quite a different direction, and attacked another part of the city,
in the hope of having the credit of taking i t But this absurd
diversion injured far more than it contributed to the success of the
enterprise. The 400 serbaz who threw themselves into the breach'
quickly disposed of the guard in the covered ways ; they were half
asleep, and a crowd of their comrades, who rushed to their mist-
ance, were swept away by om batteries, which then c m d their
fire behind the point of attack. This brave band of Karaguzloos
carried the Persian colours to the vcry crest of the breach, and had
the courage and constancy there to maintain themselves for hous
waiting for ammunition, in the mean time using their bayonets,
bricks, and stones, to keep off the Afghans, who in very superior
numbers fired on them in front and flank. The science of the
engineer, and the devotion of the soldier, could avail nothing in
such a position. The -4fghan serdar Dine Mohamed Khan, who
commanded the defence, fought like a hero. With his pistol he
laid at his feet the brave Nabee Khan, chief of the h-
guzloos, whose courage and loyalty merited a better fate, and
CHAP. XTIII. THE ASSAULT. 253
cut down the trumpeter who sounded the advance, and had just
.
planted the flag on the breach, but he could not force that hand-
ful of Persians to retreat ; the death of their chief had only
doubly excited them, and the majority of them preferred death on
the field of honour to retreating one single step. I n vain they
called upon the other three battalions to help them; a secret order
retained them where they stood. The gold of England and the
orders of the Hadji Mirza Agassee had tied them hand and foot.
The soldiers looked on like the hobituks of the pit of certain
theatres : each gave hibopinion, and with more or less noise or sym-
pathy. They'll mount, they'll mount ;' or, ' They will never
do it.' Such were the cries that accompanied these noble Kara-
guzloos to the top of the breach. I had also demanded the aid of
400 riflemen of the Garai tribe, well known for the correctness of
their aim, in order to maiptain a sharp and continuous fire from
the foot of the entrenched cavaliers upon the faces of the angles of
attack, but what were my astonishment and indignation to see them
remain passive spectators of the fight ! Thew sharpshooters were
under the command of a great Persian nobleman, a relative of tlte
Shah's, who ought to have been more interested than I was in the
taking of IIerat ; and when I approached him to express my feelings
at the conduct of his men, he replied, in the most ironical man-
ner, 'Give them powder and ball, of which they are perfectly desti-
tote, and they will do anything you require.'
"I then saw clearly that treachery on all sides would cause the
failure of the assault, and there remained but one man in whom I
had yet a hope left,-this was General Boroffski. He had in the first
instance been protected by the English, but his proud nature could
not adapt itself to their demands, and General Simonitch had endea-
voured, and with tolerable success, to attach him to the Russian cause,
promising to interest the Emperor in his position, and to endeavour
to procure his recognition of the General as the son of Prince R., of
whom he was the natural child. Borofliki had no military acquire-
ments, but he was brave, and the serbaz always followed him with
the utmost confidence ; about two sections rallied round him, and
hurried to the breach to support those who were already engaged,
but he had scarcely reached the ditch when a ball struck him in the
lower part of the body, and gave him the wound which sent him to
his grave M y eyes followed Boroffski on his way to the assault,
254 THE PERSIAXS REPULSED. C u . HYIII.
and I saw him fall mortally kounded ; I have always thought, from
tlie directio~i the ball took, that it came from a Persian mustet;
and I can state as much with regard to myself, for I was hit in the
shoulder by a ball from behind me as I faced the rampart
" The unhappy serbaz, who were as much dippointed at this
fresh misfortune, and as heartily enraged with their chiefs, as I aaa,
addressed them in the most insulting terms, but they were'at laJt
obliged, to their bitter regret, to abandon the breach they had ea
valiantly stormed and held for fire mortal hours; they slowly
obeyed the bugle that sounded the re-t, and, mutilated as
they were, the shattered survivors of this heroic battalion retid
with mournful steps to their encampment. After having visited the
minister to report to him the result of the operations, and reproach
him with his disloyal conduct, I, like those brave men, shut m , d
up in my tRnt, and I determined to renounce the Persian service
for' ever, and even my arrears of pay. I told Hadji Mirza that I
should resign, but the Shah, always kind and considerate to me,
pressed me so much not to do so that I yie!ded to his persua-
sions ; and as soon as he had obtained my promise to that effert,
he sent me the brevet of General and the red ribbon of the order
of the Lion and the Sun"
General Semineau, having been in entire ignorance of everything
that passed, had acted with his accustomed loyalty of characterland
especially regretted that he had been refused the three days to carry
his works to the crest of the breach, for then treason itself could not
have prevented him from taking this important place. Under cover
of the nid de pie crowning the culminating point of the attack, he
could have established one or two pieces of cannon in battery, the
fire of which would have protected the troops in their descent into
the town ; this would not have been easy, because the interior side
of the Cpaulement was raised to the height of nineteen to twenty-two
feet ir pic, and supported by brickwork which served as a counter-
fort. At the top of the Cpaulement was a banquette on ahicb two
men would have difficulty in walking abreast, and the Persian MI-
diem in following this must have been under the murderous fire of
the besieged from the surrounding houses, before they could pet to
the rampe ~ h i c h led into the city: all therefore was not done
when the breach was gained. General Semineau, who devoted
himself solely to his profession of engineer, and interfered not in
CUP. XVIIT. YAR MOHAMED. 265
politics, was abl ut el y ignorant of the reason for which he was so
pitilessly refused the three days he so much required ; but on the
24th of July, 1838, Colonel Stoddart was expected to arrive
at the royal camp, with the ultimatum of Mr. McNeil, by
which the Shah was threatened with war with England if he
did not raise the siege. On the 22nd General Simonitch had
received a despatch from M. de N~esselrode, which informed
him that he had been diiavowed by him, that he was recalled
from Teheran, and that he was besides charged to inform the
Shah that his Majesty must no longer expect to be supported
in his undertaking by the Russian Government. Count Simonitch
thought less of the blow thus dealt to himself than of the failure of
an enterprise that he had conducted with such ability, and, partly
by persuasion, partly by threats, obtained the order for the
assault on the day named. Colonel Stoddart could not arrive till
night, the place might be taken by the Persians before the .ultima-
tum arrived, and, its fall being a fait accompli, negotiations might
be continued on a different footing ; Russia could then more posi-
tively resist the demands of England: but the treachery of the
prime minister annihilated all the operations of General Semineau,
to whom fortune was adverse in every way. The city itself, in
consequence of the intended flight of Yar Mohamed, was on the
point of yielding. That chief could not imagine that the Persians
would loose their hold after having advanced their works so
near, and, when the fight was at the sharpest, he retired &om the
assault in all haste to make preparations for departure. In
the act of mounting his horse he sent to the troops to say they
might surrender, but he was detained by Captain Pottinger, who
entreated him to grant an hour's delay, at the expiration of
which time he could leave the city if success attended not the
efforts of his gallant soldiers on the breach, when the vizier acceded
to his request.
The Britieh officer, well acquainted with the details of Mr.
MINeil's policy and negotiation, was not ignorant of the reasons
which led General Simonitch to llurry the assault ; and his prac-
tised eye soon perceived that, though made with vigour, it was not
supported : he saw the irresolute battalions quite undecided as to
what they ought to do, and could not mistake such characteristic
+. British policy had once more the upper hand, and Captain
Pottinger had not prejudged t.he circumsta~ices when he hoped for
256 THE SIEGE RAISED. CHAP. STIII.
the retreat of the asaailanb. In this terrific struggle the Afghan
women and all the children over ten years of age hastened to the
breach to exert their feeble power in aid of their defenders. and
showered down bricks and stones upon the Persiana The Afghans
had determined to slay all their women and cl~ildren, and afterwards
each other, if the Persians succeeded in getting into the place
Mohamed Shah remained two months inactive under the walls
of Herat after this assault, and in September, 1838, he raised tbe
siege and retired to his capital. Scarcely had he amved there
when the Russian Government, not very grateful for his docility,
obliged him to pay a fourth part of the expenses of the war stipu-
lated in the treaty of Turkomantchai.
1171en the Persians retired, Syud Yaya, the envoy of Kabul, and
Mohamed Omar Khan, the envoy of Kandahar, accompanied the
Shah to Teheran, while Captain Vikovitch, who had presented
them at the royal camp, followed them as far as Kussan, afron-
tier town of !Herat; here he turned to the south, and, after
having examined in a strategical point of view the road which
passes by Khd, Birdjan, Duroo, and Furrah, he went to Kandahar.
There he had several audiences of Kohendil Khan, to whom he paid
56001. in consideration of an engagement entered into by that prince
to recommence the siege of Herat, which the threats of Great
Britain had forced Mohamed Shah to abandon. In coxquence
the Serdar Mohamed Sedik Khan, the eldest son of Kohendil
Khan, at the head of three or four thousand men, entered the temtorj
of Herat and commenced hostilities Captain Vikovitch remained
forty days at Kandahar, and when he left that city to return to
Teheran great was his astonishment, on arriving at Furrah, to find
the army of Mohamed Sedik Khan encamped there and perfectly
unoccupied, except in the appropriation of the boot? it had leried
in the district by carrying fire and sword into every how. He
had detached a small advanced guard, but that had not proceeded
beyond the small town of Subzawar. This fatal delay, of which
Vikovitch felt the full importance, brought on an angry conta
betwecn that officer and the Afghan serdar. Vikovitch demanded
the prompt execution of the convention between himself and
Kohendil Khan, or, in case of further delay, the immediate mtitu-
ti011 of the 12,000 ducats ; but Mohamed Sedik Khan was highly
indignant. " The money you gave me." said he, " would not
provide my army with horseshoes. If you wish me to advance,
Carp. SVIII. DISGRACE AKD DEAI'H OF PIKOVITCH. 257
give me as much again." Vikovitch, who knew well that to pay
more was simply throwing the money away, decisively rejected this
proposition, which a t one time the serdar seemed inclined to
enforce, and not by words only. IIe even thought of plundering
the Russian officer, and would perhaps have proceeded to personal
violence, had he not been restrained by the fear that the Shah
might make some retaliation upon Mohamed Omar Khan, then at
his court on a mission to that sovereign. These facts were told
me by the d&m himself.
Mohamed Sedik hesitated not to abandon the project of seizing
Herat, and returned to his father to confer upon the plan for
opping the English invasion, then vaguely rumoured in Afghan-
istan. As to Captain Vikovitch, he was obliged to continue his
journey without recovering the 12,000 ducats that were extorted
from him by the S e r t h of Icandahar. Afier having visited the
fortress of Laush Jowaine and the nortli of Lake Roostem, he took
the road by Toon and Tubbus towards Teheran, and very soon
after returned to Russia, where, as the reward of all his exertions,
he found himelf in fatal disgrace. This crying injustice wounded
him so deeply, that he put a period to his life with his own pistol
in a hotel at St. Petersburg : it is stated that before he committed
that deplorable act he destroyed the documents that he had col-
bed on hi various journeys in Asia.
DESOLATIOS OF HEHAT. CHAP. XIS.
CHAPTER XIX.
The Penrisne ahandon the eiege of Herat - The Serdars of Kandahar and CPptain
Vikovitch - Desolation of Herat - Yar Mohamed implores t he assistance of the
neighbouring principalities - Yar Mohamed sells the Heratees t o the Turcomau
-The English prepare ta invade Afghnnistan - Misunderstanding between Dost
Mohamed and Runjeet sihg- Intervention of t he English-Their want of
good fnith toward8 Dust Nohnmed - Their partiality for Runjeet - Negotiations
between t he English and the Doat - Battle of Djarnrood - Buruea at Knbul-
He meets with Vikovitch, who is coldly received by the Emir -The Dmt
makea frank explanations t o t he Er~glish - He ie supported by Burns at
Calcutta - Burnes ia triumphant over Vikovitch - Note of Lord Palmerston to
M. de Nesselrode-Reply of t he Russian cabinet - The lnat attempt of the
Doet to secure the alliance of +he English - Efforta t o the contrary on the @
of Sir W. M'Nnghten and Sir Claude Wade - Lord Auckland declnre~ for
Shooja - Coytelnation of t he Dost at this intelligence - Reflections on the
Engliah policy.
IT is impossible to conceive the reckless devastation committed
by the Persian soldiers in the principality of Ilerat during the ten
months of the siege of its capital: they made a perfect desert of
that once rich and fertile country. The city, torn up by shot and
shell, was nothing but a mass of shapeless ruins, and the house,
caravanserais, and bazaars, were all pulled down to repair the
breaches in the ramparts ; it was in fact a heap of cinders, ruin,
and desolation.
To crown their misfortunes, the wretched citizens, who had been
nearly starved during the siege, were for a long time short of pm
visions after it was raised, and the famine was almost as bad as it
had bee11 previously, for the ground had not been tilled, and every
one had consumed the provisions he had laid by before the ahival
of the Persians. All the villages, from seventy to ninety miles
round, had been completely pillaged to supply the besieging army,
and the population of the country stripped of everything, as were the
citizens who left the city before the siege, and now returned in
crowds to Herat, where there was not a p i n of corn to support
t hem The famine soon made frightful ravages, and produced
every day horrible scenes worthy of cannibals-in fact, its aondi-
tion was fearful to contemplate.
To put an end to this misery, Yar Mohamed Khan appealed to
CHAP. XIX. THE PEOPLE SOLD INTO SLAVERY. 259
the chiefs of the small principalities round Herat, and, in the name
of Mahomet, implored their generosity, and entreated them to send
corn to the desolated city ; at the same time he remitted the duty
on every dedcription of grain.
The merchants of Turkestan, Kandahar, and the Eimak Khanats
quickly responded to this appeal, but much more with the view of
realizing enormous profits than of relieving such bitter distress.
The majority of the Heratees, not having a groat in their pockets
to purchase bread for their families, in many instances sold them-
selves to the Turkomans for ten battemens of corn: fathers sold
their children for as small a sum, and the children thankfully sanc-
tioned the bargain which saved them from the terrible pangs
of hunger.
Yar Mohamed entered largely into this traffic, not, as his unhappy
people did, to save their lives, but to replenish his coffers, the con-
tents of which had been considerably exhausted by the war. Hc
sold to tho Uzbeks all the Heratees who were guilty of the most
trifling misdemeanoun; and when they esw this, and ceased
to commit them, thereby destroying his source of gain, he sent
agents into the bazaars to excite disorder, and by that means
secured a supply of slaves for his market The slightest alter-
cation or a loud word amongst a harmless group of citizens, and
his satellites were always at hand to pounce upon these unfortunate
beings; even those wlio were attracted to the spot by curiosity
only were taken, and a couple of hours afterwards sold or exchanged
by their relentless vizier for a camel, or a mule, or anything else
that might better suit him. Taeuty young men was the price that
he usually gave for a Turkoman horse, a hundred tomauns in value.
This trade continued for some considerable time, but the English
at last succeeded in putting a stop'to it, the inducement being a
subidy which they paid to the court of Herat.
\Vestern Afghanistan had scarcely escaped the Persian yoke, at
the coet of all these fearful calamities against which it had still to
struggle, when the English, to repay Russia and the Shah for all
their provocations, prepared a formidable expedition to invade
Kandahar and Kabul. This important act was preceded by
negotiations sufficiently singular, of which I will endeavour to give
a rough sketch.
We have stated that Runjeet Sing, the ambitious Maharadjah of
the Punjab, after having wrested from the Afghans their finest
9 2
2GO DOST MOHAMED AhT RUNJEET SING. CHAP. XIX.
provinces, prepared to push his conquests still further into their
territory, when his intention was seen through by Dost Mohamed,
who, as the English said (but the fact has not been ~roved), sought
the alliance of the King of Persia, and proposed to assist him in his
expedition against Herat, provided that the Shah would on the
other hand protect him against the Sikhs, who were supported by
the East India Company. The English also reproached the Dost
with having written to the Emperor of Russia requesting his
alliance. This letter was, it is =id, sent to St. Petersburg by an
Afghan envoy, properly accredited ; but the assertion is denied by
M. de Nesselrode, who declared in one of his despatches, har i ng
date October 20th, 1838, that this envoy was simply a commercial
agent, having no instructions or authority to meddle with politics.
The adversaries of the Emir went so far as to give a copy of his
letter, but Dost Mohamed declared that it was a lying invention of
the enemy ; and to those who are acquainted with the extent to which
false doc~~ments are made use of in Asia, and the advantages which
the English have themselves derived from them in f ubdui ~~g the
princes and rajahs of India, one doubts the propriety of giving an
opinion on the validity of the one which the Emir is reproached with
having written. This doubt is all the more admissible, inasmuch ae
a t the epoch at which this document was said to have been pre-
pared he was the warmest partisan of the English in Afghanistan,
and remained so after they had driven him from that country.
The following is the letter referred to, written in the early part of
the year 1836 :-
" There have been great differences and quarrels between myself
and the royal house of the Suddozyes. The English Government
is inclined to support Shoojah-001-Moolk. The whole of India is
governed by them, and they are on friendly terms with R~nj e e t
Sing, the lord of the Punjab, which lies in their neighbourhood.
The British Government exhibit no favourable opinions towards
me. I (literally the creature of God), with all my power, have hn
always fighting with the Sikhs; your Imperial Government ha
made friendship with the Persians ; and if your Majesty will gra-
ciously be pleased to arrange matters in the Afghan county, and
msint this nation (which amounts to twenty lacs of families), you
will place me under obligations.
"I hope your Imperial Majesty will do me the favour by allon-
ing me to be received, like the Persians, under the protection
CHAP. XIS. ISTERVESTION OF THE EXGLISH. 2Gl
of the government of Russia Under your royal favour I can
perform, along with my Afghans, various praiseworthy services. It
would be highly proper, whatever your Imperial Majesty may be
pleased to do."
Supposing that Dost Nohamed did write this letter, where was
the crime in his doing so? Had he not a right to look for alliances
spinst his enemies? Was there more justice therefore in the
English supporting Runjeet Sing in his spoliation of the Afghans ?
But who was this Runjeet-who were the Sikhs? A nation of
yesterday ; always in subjection, without ancestors or traditions,
ad governed for the first time by a chief of their own nation: and
this chi 4 this Runjeet, who it cannot be denied possesses some
cery great qualities, how was he brought up? From whom did lie
bold his power? Was it not from an Afghan sovereign, the Shah
&man, who made him governor of the Punjab? Has he not
thrown off hi allegiance to that monarch's successors, and pro-
cki~ned himself sovereign of that country ? Is then the origin of
his power more legitimate than that of Dost Mohamed, who a t least
has in hi favour the old traditions of his family to prove that his
ancestors always had in his country a power almost equal to that of
the Afghan sovereigns ?
The English had, probably, thought of this more than once ; but
reason is a poor argument in the eyes of those who for twenty years
had been wishing to have in Kabul a sovereign who would be a
docile and submissive instrument of theirs. They also sanctioned
the spoliations committed upon the finest Afghan provinces by
Runjeet. He had seized Mooltan in 1810, Cashmeer in 1819,
Peshawur in 1823, and that Runjeet affirmed, with the entire
consent of Shah Shooja-001-Moolk, the dethroned king, who had
placed himself under his protection, and was considered by him and
the English as the legitimate sovereign of Afghanistan, qualified
b~ that title to make whatever concessions of territory he pleased.
But why should Shooja be the legitimate sovereign of Afghanistan
more than any other of his twenty brothers?-than Zeman or Mah-
mood, for instance, who had been kings before him, and had done
nothing to disinherit their children or deprive them of their rights to
the throne ? Shah Kamran and Shah Eyoob had always protested
against the pretensions of Shooja to the throne. Why, then, should
the English be so regardless of their remonstrances and opposition,
and the opinions of the generality of the Afghans? This policy
262 LETTER OF DOST YOHAMED. CHAP. XIX.
concealed an ambitious project ; the Anglo-Indian Government
was possessed with a passion for t e t o r i a l extension, and in no
way sensitive as to the justice of the cause of Dost Mohamed
from the moment they found that he would not bend to their wishes ;
and not being in a condition to depose him themselves, they
weakened his power as much as possible by meam of their ally
Runject, who annually sent an m y to ravage some part of the
Afghan kingdom.
Although the Goven~ment of Calcutta showed a marked p d i -
lection for that ruler, it did not fail still to maintain its relatiom
with and show some consideration for Dost Mohamed, who had on
his part been guilty of very great duplicity, if he had really mitten
to the Emperor Nicholas the letter which they accused him of
sending, for very nearly a t the same time, viz. on the 31st May,
1836, following, he addressed Lord Auckland, who had recently
arrived in India, in the most humble terms, as follows :-
I t may be known to your Lordship that, relying on the prin-
ciples of benevolence and philanthropy which distinguish the Britii
Government, I look upon myself and country as bound to i t ; and
the letten I have received from that quarter have all been replete
with friendly sentiments and attention, and to the effect that, in tbe
time of need, the obligations of friendship should fulfilled. The
late transactions in this quarter, the conduct of reckless and mis-
guided Sikhs and their breach of treaty, are well known to your
Lordship. Communicate to me whatever may now suggest itself
to your wisdom for the settlement of the affairs of thii country, that
it may serve as a rule for my guidance.
" I hope your Lordship will consider me and my country as jour
own, and favour me often by the receipt of your friendly lettem
Whatever directions your Lordship may be pleased to issue for the
administration of this country, I will act accordingly."
Lord Auckland replied to this con~munication on the ZZnd of
August, 1836, with the greatest kindness, very highly praised his
discreet policy, and promised his impartial intervention to effect a
reconciliation between the Afghan prince and the Sikhs.
During the time that this correspondence was passing, the Per-
sian expedition against Herat was prepared and openly encouraged
by General Si oni t ch; but i t was November, 1837, before the
army of Mohalned Shah arrived under the walls of that city.
Early in the same year, however, Dost Mohamed, p m w q of
CUP. XIX. SIR A. BUmES AT KABUL. 263
the provocations of the Sikhs, and finding that he derived no
benefit, but rather the contrary, from the intervention of Lord
Auckland, determined upon avenging his own cause, and seized
upon the opportunity offered him in the month of May by the i ndi e
d o n of the Xaharadjah (who recalled his t r oop from the Afghan
frontier in order to celebrate, with the greater pomp, the marriage
of his grandson Nahal Sing), to march 15,000 men into the province
of Peshawur. They were commanded by the Dost's two sons,
Jiohamed Efzel Khan and Mohamed Akbnr Khan, who attacked
the Sikhs a t D j a m r d on the 1st of May, 1837. The combat waa
ohstinate and t he carnage dreadful, but victory crowned the banner
of the brothers a t the heavy cost of 7000 men.
The Governmerit of Calcutta, already sufficiently alarmed by the
Persian expedition against IIerat, became still more so on hearing
of the defeat of their faithful ally Runjeet, and despatched with all
speed Sir A. Burnes to Kabul, to endeavour to arrest the progress
of the victorious Afghans.
The British Envoy arrived in that city in September, and waa
received with great honours by Dost Mohamed, who greatly
esteemed him. The instructions of Lord Auckland sere, that he
was simply to enter into commercial relations and pacific interven-
tion between the Emir and the Maharadjah ; he added also that he
msauthorized to do this in the interest of the Afg..an chief and
to avert hie ruin. I t was sufficiently surprising that his Lordship
should use such language respecting a prince who had hitherto
80 well known how to d e f e ~~d himself, who had set forth no
demands but what were perfectly reasonable, and in accordance
with which he would, if admitted, have laid down his arms. The
task of Burnes was difficult ; but he was fortunate enough to obtain
from the Emir a temporary suspension of hostilities, and it was
while he was occupied in this negotiation that Captain Vikovitch
arrived at Kabul, namely, in December, 1837. l ' he English have
asserted that he brought the reply of the Emperor Nicholas to the
letter the Emir had written his Imperial Majesty in the commence-
ment of 1836.
\Yhatever might have been the real object of his presence there,
Vikovitch met with a cold reception, and Dost Mohamed made
bis arrival the pretext for paying a visit to Sir A. Burnes, and
requesting his advice as to what he ought to do under the circum-
stances The Emir declared from the first that he had determined
264 COLD IlECEPTION OF VlKOVITCH. CHAP. X1X.
not to adopt an alliance or political relations with any. other
foreign power than England, that he would receive no foreign
agent so long as he had the hope of conciliating the sympathy of
the Anglo-Tndian Government, and that for all he cared he was
willing to dismiss the Russian officer, or arreat him on his journey ;
indeed, to treat him as Burnes might wish. I t must be admitted
that this was very extraordinary language for a man to use who
had been. recerltly accused of having written to the Emperor of
Russia in the most respectful and submissive terms. Nevertheless
Vikovitch was allowed to enter Kabul, but only at the request of
Burnes, who took copies of all the lettelv brought by the latter to
the Emir, and the conduct of Dost Mohamed was in every way
*calculated to inspire the English Government with confidence.
The following letter from the Envoy to Lord Auckland proves this
to have been the case :-
" January 15,1838.-Since I have been here I have learnt that
8 Persian agent, bearing presents for Dost Mohamed, has pene-
trated the country as far as Kandahar," and he has announced
hi~liself as the bearer of most seductive promises; but he was
nevertheless obliged to leave Afghanistan almost immediately,
because no one invited him to come on to Kabul. ~ f t e r him a
Russian agent came, by name Vikovitch ; he brought flattering
compliments and offers of lasting engagements, but he was received
with only the respect due to any stranger and the regular forms of
hospitality. The Emir has said that his interest was in the English
alliance, and that he would not abandon that while he had a hope
of obtaining it."
The reasons which Uurnes gave to his Government seemed to
him so cpnclusive, that he did not for a moment think that the
authorities at Calcutta would reject the alliance of a chief so de-
voted to the English as Dost Rlohamed; and to smooth every
species of difficulty, he eserted himself to establish a friendly un-
derstanding between the Dost and the Sikhs. The Emir, a witness
of his efforts, testified his gratitude for them ; but his confidence in
the equity of the Directors pf the India Company towards
him was not so great as that .of the English officer.
Knowing how strong was their predilection for Runjeet Sing, and
This agent amred with Vikovitch in October, 1837, and remained them
when the lutter went on to Kabul.-Fmrkr.
CHAP. XlY. FRASK DECLARATIOXS OF DOST MOHAMED. 265
having a vague suspicion that the Court would come to a partial
determination, the Dost neglected no means of persuading them of
his entire devotion. " I n return," said the Emir to Burnes, " I ask
but little, but that little is just and reaso~iable. I ask the English
to protect me from the spoliations of the Sikhs and the resent-
ment of the Persians, who will never forgiv; me for having made
common cause with your countrymen; they must also force the
former to give me back Peshawur, which is the only point that
- protects my frontier on this side of the Indus, and oppose any
attempt of the latter to reduce Herat and Kandahar to a state of
vassalage : then I am theirs, body and soul. I shall never have
recourse to others till I have lost all hope in you, and even in acting
thus it would be with regret to save only Afghanistan and my own
honour, not fro111 ill-will towards England. On the contrary, I
should be happy to be advised and protected by her, and in return
should make every effort to second her views, political and com-
mercial."
This frank and explicit declaration of the Dost's could not
leave Lord Auckland in any doubt of his loyalty or sincerity. It
was quite sufficient to induce him to fall back upon the natural
course of British policy in India, and to maintain the Afghan in-
dependence against every other state, instead of joining with the
Sikhs to attack i t on the one hand, while the Hussians, in alli-
ance with the Persians and the Serdars of Kandahar, ruined it on
the other.
The arrival of Vikovitch at Kabul, and the copies of the letters
presented by him to the Emir, produced a lively sensation a t
Calcutta, and formed the subject of a note sent by Lord Clan-
ricarde to the cabinet of St. Petenburg, which plainly allowed the
determination of the British Government to act vigorously to be
perceived. The following is an extract from that document :-
" The undersigned is further instructed to state that the British
Government possess a copy of a Treaty which has been concluded
between Persia and the Afghan ruler of Kandahar, the execution
of which has been guaranteed by Count Simonich, and has given
to this Treaty, which tends to afford Ruwia, if she adopts the
guarantee, a pretence to compel the Shah of Persia not only
to make himself master of Herat, but to deliver over that city
afterwards to tile rulers of Kandahar, to be held by them, to-
gether with their other poasessione, in the capacity, which those
266 PALMERSTON'S NOTE TO NESSELRODE. CHAP. SIS.
rulers engage by the Treaty to acknowledge, of tributaries to
Persia.
" The guarantee, moreover, contains a promise to compel Persia
to defend the rulers of Kandahar against attack from any quarter
whatever. It is true that in this stipulation no specific allusion is
made to England ; but the intention of the parties may be inferred
from the original draft of this treaty, of which also Her Najesty's
Government have a copy, and which was less cautiously word&
and in which specific allusion was made to England as one of the
powers against whom assistance was to be given by Russia to the
rulers of Kandahar.
" The undersigned is further instructed to state that a Rk a n
agent of the name of Vicovitch, but sometimes calling himself
Omar Beg, and said to be attached to the staff of the general
commanding at Orenburg, was the bearer of letters from the
Emperor and Count Simonich to the ruler of Kabul, copies of
which are in the possession of the British Government, and that
Count Simonich observed the most perfect silence towards the
British minister at Teheran with respect to the mission of thi
agent ; a reeerve which might seem unnecessary if this agent was
nlerely to deliver the letters of which he was the bearer, and if his
mission was to have no telidency prejudicial to the British inter-
" But the British Governnlent have learned that Count Simonicb
announced to the Shah of Persia that this Russian agent would
counsel the ruler of Kabul to seek assistance of the Persian
Government to support him in his hostilities with the ruler of the
Punjab ; and the further reports which the British Government
have received of the language held by this Russian agent at
Kandahar and at Kabul can lead to no other conclusion than
that he strenuously exerted himself to detach the rulers of those
Afghan states from all connexion with England, and to iuduce
them to place their reliance upon Persia in the first instance, and
ultimately upon Russia.
" If the British Government could entertain a doubt of the
correctness of the foregoing information, that doubt would, in a
great measure, be removed by the unfriendly Ian- with respect
to the British Government which Count Simonich held some time
ago to the agent of Kt~bul a t the court of Persia, and of which the
British Government possess proof in the report made by that agent
to the ruler of Kabul."
CHAP. XIX. THE REPLY. 267
Lord Clanricarde concludes by declaring " that Rmi a is free
to pursue with respect to the matters in question whatever course
may appear to the Cabinet of St. Petenburg most conducive to the
interests of Russia. But the British Government considem itself
entitled to ask of the Cabinet of St Petersburg whether the
intentions and the policy of Russia towards Peraia and Great
Britain are to be deduced from the declarations of Count Nessel-
rode and Mr. Rodofinikin to the Earl of Durham, or from the
acts of Count Simonich and M. Vikovitch in Asia."
The Russian Government was not much disturbed by this note,
nevertheless it did vouchsafe to give a few explanations, but, in a
most ironical manner. I t denied facts as clear as the sun, with an
audacity so sustained and so calm that any minister less experi-
enced than Lord Palmerston would have allowed himself to be
deceived by the language of Count Nesselrode. The following
are some extracts from the despatch which that diplomatist
addressed to Count Pozzo di Borgo, to be communicated to the
Foreign Office, October 20th, 1838 :-
" You state that on this occasion Il er Britannic Majesty's
Principal Secretary-ofstate for Foreign Affairs did not conceal
from you, Monsieur le Comte, that public opinion in England
ascribes to Russian influence a decisive part in the events now
passing in Persia, and attributes to our Cabinet intentions danger-
ous to the security of the British possessions in Asia
This consideration is so serious, it is calculated to have so
pernicious an influence orr all our relations with Great Britain, that
we do not hesihte a single instnnt to meet the English Cabinet
with a frank and spontaneous explanation. The policy, M.
lJAmbassadeur, which the Emperor pursues in that quarter is
guided by the same principles which direct it in Europe. Far
from any idea of encroachment, that policy has only for its object
the maintenance of the rights of Ruasia, and respect for those
legitimately acquired by all other powers.
a The idea of assailing the security and tranquillity of the pos-
sessions of Great Britain in India has consequently never pre-
sented itself, and will never present itself, to the mind of our
august master. I-Ie desires only what is just and what is possible.
6b If the British Government places in those principles the con-
fidence which they are calculated to inspire, it will be easy for
you, M. l'Ambassadeur, to clear up the doubts which it has con-
268 CORRESPOKDENCE BET\f7EEN THE C ~ P . XIX.
ceived as to the conduct which we have adopted in the midst of the
recent events in Persia, and specifically with regard to the expedi-
tion of Rlohamed Shah against Herat.
" If we adduce these facts, if we point out the rest l es activity
of certain unaccredited and unrecognised individuals, it is cer-
tainly not our wish to impute to the Government to which they
belong the blame of which they are dcseming. On the contrary,
we consider the British Cabinet to be altogether a stranger to the
tendency which we hare just alluded to. But in like manner as
we place a just reliance on the rectitude of the intentions of the
English Government, so also are we entitled to expect that it
will not raise a doubt as to our own.
<' These remarks, M. le Comte, which the Emperor commands
you to communicate with the most perfect frankness to the English
Ministry, will serve, I hope, to mtisfy it, above all, as to the inten-
tions of our Cabinet, and to place in its true light the conservative
and disinterested policy of our august master. Our attitude,
M. le Comte, will necessarily be regulated according to the
definitive determination which the British Government shall tliink
fit to adopt."
After this display of principle M. de Newl r ode gives his
explanations. Ele declares that the siege of IIerat appears to him
a thing just in itself, but defends himself from the charge of
having instigated the Shah to undertake it. Neverthelcs, he
adds, that if Herat were joined to Kandahar all contests would
cease, and that country would then become accessible to cvery
nation interested in the commerce of Central Asia
The Emperor could not have any reason to injure England, and
the natural obstacles which separate the two empires render a
collision between them impossible. M. Thomm continues his
narrative, and states that " According to Count Nesielrode it was
England who had made the first attack, and he finished by no
longer concealing that Russia well knew, when necessary, how to
manczuvre up to the Indus. I t was therefore for England to
refrain and be careful ; as to the Russians, they had nothing to
reproach themselves with; they denied the existence of any
grievances that could be brought against them ; they had wished
to prevent the attack upon Herat ; Simonitch and Vikovitch were
pacificators ; the latter had been charged simply to fix the extent
of eecurity that Afghanistan would grant to Russian merchants,
CHAP. XIX. C-IBINETS OF LONDON AND PETERSBURG. 260
and not to establish a treaty, or any other political combina-
tion, Russia having no other object than to secure a market for
her manufactures in Central Asia If by accident the agents had
slightly deviated from their instructions, England could not com-
plain. Where is the government that is always served as it wishes
to be? Had England herself the power to control those turbulent
travellers who continually excited disturbances in Asia ?
" Further, Count Nesselrode announced the recall of General
Simonitch, and that Colonel Duhamel, who was appointed to
succeed him, was on his way to Teheran-terminating his despatch
as follows :-
" ' If we recall these facts-if we notice the activity of certain
individuals who put themselves forward without having been
accredited, or even recognised, by their government-it is not
because we wish to impute to the British Government itself the
blame which belongs to them ; on the contrary, we consider the
British Cabinet as being entirely above such actions as we point
out ; but as we place confidence in the rectitude of her intentions,
we consider that we have a right to expect she should not throw
#
any doubt over ours.
" ' These remarks, which the Emperor commands your Excel-
lency to communicate in full to the British Cabinet, will, I hope,
serve to satisfy it, and place in its proper light the conservative
and disinterested policy of our august master. Our attitude must
necessarily be regulated by the definitive determination that the
British Government will think fit to adopt' "
But Lord Palmerston, who, to the last, strove to preserve the
illusion that the Cabinet of St. Petersburg was sincere, wrote to
Count Pozzo i Borgo in the following terms on December 20,
1838 :-
" I can assure your Excellency that her Majesty's Government
have given to this important communication all the attention which
it so justly demands ; and I have great pleasure in being able to
state to your Excelle~lcy that this communication has in its general
result been highly satisfactory to her Majesty's Government. The
leading principle which invariably directs the British Governme~~t
in the management of its relations with foreign powers is an
anxious desire to preserve for the Britieh nation the blessings of
peace. But as regards Russia this wish is peculiarly strong;
because an alliance of long standing between Great Britain an
270 COSDUCT OF RUSSI.4. CRAP. XX.
Russia, commercial intercourse valuable to both countries, and
common interests of the highest order, must necessarily lead her
Majesty's Government to deprecate as a great misfortune any
event which might tend to interrupt the good understanding
which so happily subsists between the Cabinets of Petemburg and
London."
Couiit Nesselrode, delighted to have succeeded in calming Lord
Palmerston's fears, wished probably to make him feel that from
the explanations he had given it did not follow that the Russian
Cabinet was determined henceforth to concede to him on all points,
for after having received his reply he addreawd the following dry
answer to his Lordship on January 29, 1839, a reply which reads
far more like a threat than an approach towards the good under-
standing upon which the Noble Lord seemed so self-satisfied:-
" Those explanations," remarks Count Nesselrode, " have
afforded to the two Cabinets the opportunity of reoeiving and of
offering on either side assurances which bear the character of just
reciprocity, and which are inseparable from one another. Our
Cabinet, in taking note of that assurance, expects to receive thc
proof of its entire fulfilment."
Is it possible to show more ability, more subtlety, more acuteness,
than Russia did in these negotiations, or rather deceptions, of four
years' duration? Nothing in her conduct can seriously give offence
to the English. They reproach her with treaties made by her
agents; she disavows them. They are offended a t the aiege of
Herat, which they attribute to her ; she immediately abandons the
Shah to his own resources and withdraws from him the Russian
deserters. She has extended her influence to the frontier of the
British empire in India, without its costing her the smallest sacri-
fice ; she fails, it is true, but she retires without shame and without
loss, and in her retreat she shot a Parthian arrow at her rival, who
only triumphed for the moment, subsequently to meet with the
most dreadful catastrophe.
Though Russia and Persia had appeared to give way on all
points, and Lord Palmerston had shown himself satisfied with
the explanations of M. de Nml r ode, the British nevertheless
continued their preparations in India for the purpose of driving
the Emir Dost Mohamed and Kohendil Khan from the prin-
cipalities of Kabul and Kandahar. Five of the Company's
ships of war also entered the Persian Gulf in the spring of 1834
Crra~. XIX. DOST MOHA&IED'S PROPOSITIONS. 271
and the troops they had on board took possesion of the island of
Karrack, where they waited for flat-bottomed steamers to convey
them into the heart of Persia by the river Karoon. When the siege
of Herat was raised, this expedition was given up ; but the one to
Afghanistan was carried on with vigour to depose a prince who
had wished, at all risks, to become the ally of England, and whose
proposals and concessions she, in her blind policy, constantly
rejected.
Dost Mohamed was thought to possess considerable adminis-
trative ability, and a courage not common even amongst the Af-
ghans These qualities did not constitute any recommendation in
the eyes of the Directors of the East India Company; but the
Emir, who by inclination and conviction felt that the power of
retaining his position could only be derived from them, and that
nothing but their concurrence could enable him to found and
maintain a monarchy, allowed himself to be persuaded by Alex-
ander Burnes to make one last attempt to secure the friend-
ship of England, by intrusting him with a letter to Lord Auck-
land :-
" Let his Lordship," said he, "give me but two words of en-
couragement; let him recognise me as Emir of Kabul, and I will
forget the mortal feud between me and the Shah Kamran, my
enemy by blood, and I will rush to his support with my best troops
to defend him from the Shah of Persia, on the simple coudition of
receiving a subsidy for the troops that I shall employ in the service
of the Company." Me even added, "that for the present he would
not say another word about the restitution of Peshawur."
There was so much disinterestedness and so much good intention
in these propositions, that Sir A. Burnes conceived himself justified
in promising the Dost that he could induce his Government to
accept them ; but what did that avail against a prior decision ? I t
was in vain that he wrote to Calcutta, "There is but one way of
making Afghanistan a barrier against the Russians, and that is to
form a strict alliance with Dost Riohamed, to strengthen his auth*
rity, which has been compromised by family quarrels, and let every
one be thoroughly convinced that the government of India will
never allow any attempts to be made to injure or subvert i t "
But the Court of Ilirectors was far from entertaining the same
opinion, and in its insatiable avidity had long meditated the re-
establishment of Shah Shooja in the government of Afghanistan, in
272 DECISION OF LORD AUCIiLASD. CHAP. XIS.
order to have the finances of that country eutirely at its own dis-
posal. Lord Auckland laid the conflicting opinions of Burnes and of
the Court of Directors before the English Cabinet, who decided
in favour of that of the British officer, as being the only rational
and practicable one; but the contrary opinion, supported by Sir
Mr. MINaghten, Si r Claude Wade, and Sir John MLNeil. which
favoured the secret views of the Directors, prevailed. Sir Claude
Wade, the resident at Loodiana, who was the warmest p d -
san of Shah Shooja, encouraged the warlike propensities of the
East India Company by leading them into the error in which he had
himself been held many years by his protLg6, namely, that the
Barukzye tribe did not contain 60,000 families, as Durnes hadstated,
and that thcir nuinbcrs did not amount to more than 6000; a h
that their chiefs were generally hated by the serdars of the other
Afghan tribes. Opinions so differeut l ~el d by two officers, both of
whom enjoyed in a high degree the confidence of their Government,
arose from one common source, ignorance: like the greater part
of those autliors who have hitherto written on Afghanistan, they
collfuaed the tribes with their subdic.isio?is or branches. Thus :-
Ahmed Shah and his descendants (Shah Shooja, kc.) were of the
tribe of Popolzye, and the branch or family of the Suddozyes.
Hadji Djemal Khan and his posterity (Dost Mohamed, &a) aere
of the tribe of Barukzye, and the branch or family of the Nohsmed-
zges ; and it is probably of this latter branch, which does conslct
of four or five thousand families, that Sir C. I\-ade intended to
speak ; for in Afghanistan, when a descendant of Hadji Djemal is
spoken of, he is not called a " Barukzye chief," but a " hiohamed-
zye chief." I n the same manner Ahmed Shah is not called Ahmed
Shah Popolzye, but Ahmed Shah Suddozye.
The advice of Durnes was rejected and his acts completely dis-
avowed. Lord Auckland also took upon himself to offer to thc
Emir of Kabul the most merciless ultimatum, first demanding, but
in the most polite manner possible, that he should immediately
dismiss Captain Vikovitch ; and next, that he should reriounce all
his rights to the Afghan provinces conquered by the Sikhs, becaw
the noble Lord had determined not to interfere in his favour, from
a fear of displeasing his faithful ally, tlie Maliaradjah of the Punjab.
Burncs exerted all his powers of persuasion and argument, which
marked the intcnse interest he took in the cause of the Emir, to
induce him to accept these hard conditions. The Dost, though
CHAP. XIX. CONSTERNATION OF DOST MOHAJIED. 2 i 3
indignant a t this unworthy treatment, had not actually given his
definitive reply, affirmative or negative, when he received informa-
tion from his agents in India, which left him no doubt of the fact
of the concentration of a British army at Ferozepore with the well-
determined purpose of replacing Shah Shooja on the throne of
Kabul. Simultaneously with this information the Dost received
letters from Captain Vikovitch, written from Kandahar, in which
the fairest promises were made to him. These letters decided him
in his course of action, and he broke off his negotiations with
Burnes, who, having failed in his mission, retired, leaving Dmt
Mohamed in a state of great consternation.
Mons. Thomas then proceeds with his remarks :-" The Dost
could not, he said, hold out a month against England, and the
thoughts of displeasing her filled him with terror. He was not
ignorant that Runjeet was the friend of the English, and that it
would not be wise to attack him. They could a t any moment
support Peshawur, if not with troops a t least with simple remon-
strances, which would have restrained the Maharadjah of Lahore ;
but, on the contrary, they were now more than ever Runject's
declared friends, and preferred him to the Afghans, who were
ready to place themselves a t their disposal. Certainly that was
not the provocation of a very determined enemy. Burnes himself,
when he left, did not think that the Afghans would ever throw
themselves into the arms of the Russians, and unite with the Per-
sians. The fatal policy of England, however, constrained the Dost
to do so, and left him no alternative but ruin or war.
66 After havi~lg been four years a t peace-after having forced
the Shah of Persia to retire from Herat-after having ascertained
with certainty the devotion of Dost Jfohamed-what could excite
the Government of India to such a violent determination ? Why
make war on the Afghans ?
Had a11 Asia risen in arms ? Had
the Persians taken Herat and Kandahar, the Russians Bokhara
and Khiva? No ; but, as Burnes said, it was only because a
Cossack captain, without state or suite, had galloped up to Kabul.
Lord Palmerston, who had hesitated so long before lie interfered
' Worous
officially in Persia, adopted in less than six months a .ti,
intervention in Afghanistan.
He required a war with Kabul,
because he had not known how to ask in proper timc for explana-
tions a t St. Petersburg, which would certainly have been given him
if he had procrastinated, temporised, and tergiversated less. Afraid
T
274 REFLECTIONS ON Eh'QLISH POLICY. C w . SIX
of losing the alliance of Rusi a in Europe, because he had the
misfortune to place faith in it, and the still greater one of preserving
it as a balance of power-necessitated to defer to her, though the
Foreign Office had been obliged during four years to pass over in
silence the Muscovite intrigues, he had not warned the princes
of the East that England considered herself affronted, but eudes-
voured to detach them from these intrigues out of regard for tbeir
interests. He never spoke in the name of his Government, and
they had therefore never listened to him ; however, wi ng India
seriously threatened, he at length took a side, but which? Lord
Palmerston let loose the demon of war all over the East; be
created perils without end for the British empire ; he raised up
against it resentment and vengeance ; he mixed England up more
and more with the internal quarrels of a country in which her d*
minion could only be maintained by neutrality; he hurried her
purpoeely into the path of conquest, and struck wherever the
Russian had set a foot or intended to set one, hoping these grand
strokes of his genius would astonish and lead to reflection, witbout
remembering that such *ant injustice ia never pardoned."
CHAP. XX. LORD AUCKLAND'S MANIFESTO.
CHAPTER XX.
Lord Auckland lends Sir W. M'Naghten
Lahore-Treaty with the Sikhs -
Manifeeto of the Governor-Oeneral fmm Sirnla in justification of hie policg-
Reflections on this docurneut - The possession of Scinde adjourned - The
Emirn are opponed to the advance of the British prmy through their territory
- Mir Romtem of Khyrpoor-Averse to hdi nj the fortreas of Bukkur to the
Englinh, but at length accedes to their req~teat - The result of this to himself
and his family -Conduct of the Rritish authorities in Sciude-Strength of
the army when concentrated at Shikspoor - Extract from Mr. Sumner's work
- Seizure of Kurrachee - English appliances to succm in the invasion of
Afghnnistan - Proceedings of Shah Shooja
AS soon as war had been determined upon, Lord Auckland sent
the Secretary of the Government of India, Sir IYilliam MbNaghten,
to negotiate a treaty with Runjeet Sing and Shah Shooja-001-Moolk,
which he concluded without difficulty; the Shah agreeing to
cede to the Maharadjah all the Afghan provinces he had con-
quered, including even Peshawur, which Dost Blohamed had
refused to give up. This point settled, Lord Auckland published
the following manifesto, in which he set forth his reasons for
making war upon the Afghans :-
" Simla, October ]st, 1898.
"The Right Honourable the Governor-General of India having,
with the concurrence of the Supreme Gouncil, directed the assem-
blage of a British force for service across the Indus, his Lordship
deems it proper to publish the following exposition of the reasons
which have led to this important measure.
"I t ie a matter of notoriety that the treaties entered into by the
British Government in the year 1832, with the Ameers of Sinde,
the Nawab of Bahawulpore, and the Maharajah Kunjeet Sing, had
for their object, by opening the navigation of the Indus, to facili-
tate the extension of commerce, and to gain for the British nation
in Central Asia that legitimate influence which an interchange of
benefits would naturally produce. \ITith a view to invite the aid
of the de facto rulers of Afghanistan to the measures necessary for
giving full effect to those treaties, Captain Burnes was deputed,
towards the close of the year 1836, on a miesioii to Dost Mohamed
Khan, the chief of Kabul. The original objects of that officer's
T 2
276 LORD AUCKLAND'S MBSIFESTO CMP. SX.
mission were purely of a commercial nature. Whilst Captain
Burnes, however, was on his journey to Kabul, information was
received by the Governor-General that the troops of Dost Mohamed
Khan had made a sudden and unprovoked attack on those of our
ancient ally, the Maharajah Runjeet Sing.* I t was naturally to be
apprehended that his Highness the Maharajah would not be slow
to avenge this aggression, and it was to be feared that, the flames
of war being once kindled in the very regions into which we were
endeavouring to extend our commerce, the peaceful and beneficial
purposes of the British Government would be altogether frustrated.
In order to avert a result so calamitous, the Governor-General
resolved on authorizing Captain Burnes intimate to Dost No-
hamed Khan that, if he should evince a disposition to come to just
and reasonable terms with the Maharajah, his Lordship would
exert his good offices with his Highness, for the Maharaph, Kith
the cliaracteristic confidence which he has uniformly placed in the
faith and friendship of the British nation, at once assented to the
proposition of the Governor-General, to the effect that in the mean
time hostilities on his part should be suspendedt
" I t subsequently &me to the knowledge of the Governor-
General that a Persian army was besieging Herat ; that intrigua
were actively prosecuted throughout Afghanistan for the purpose of
extending Persian influence and authority to the banks of, and
even beyond, the Indus; and that the Court of Persia had not
only commenced a course of injury and insult to the officers of her
Majesty's mission in the Persian territory, but had afforded evidence
of being engaged in designs wholly at variance with the principles
and objects of its alliance with Great Britain.$
" After much time spent by Captain Burnes in fruitless n w
tiation at Kabul, it appeared that Dost Mohamed Khan, chiefly in
consequence of his reliance upon Persian encouragement and &t-
ance, persisted, as respected his misunderstanding with the Sikhs,
in urging the most unreasonable pretensions, $ such as the Governor
General could not, consistently with justice and his regard for the
What then of the spoliation of the on both putties, and which mgland
Afghan propincer by Runjeet.-Fem'er. had been the first to break br refusing
t I have no doubt that the English, to pay the sobsidy she had'promisdd
foreseeing that the Punjnb would ere
to Persia.-Fcrrirr.
long be theirs, eupportd Hunjeet in hin
8 The restitution of Pesheaur,
rpo1iations.-Fen-ier.
bulwark of his country, ertorted by
$ An alliance which wna obligatory Runjeet.-Fernier.
CEAP. XX. IN JUSTIFICATION OF HIS~POLICY. 277
friendship of the Maharajah Runjeet Sing, be the channel of sub-
mitting to the consideration of his Highness; that he avowed
schemes of aggrandizement and ambition injurious to the security
and peace of the frontiers of India ; and that he openly threatened,
in furtherance of those schemes, to call in every foreign aid which
he could command. Ultimately he gave his undisguised support
to the Persian designs in Afghanistan, of the unfriendly and inju-
rious character of which, as concerned the British power in India,
he was well apprized, and, by his utter disregard of the views and
interests of the British Government, compelled Captain Burnes to
leave Kabul without having effected any of the objects of his mis-
sion. I t was 'now evident that no further interference could be
exercised by the British Government to bring about a good under-
standing between the Sihk ruler and Dost Mohamed Khan; and
the hostile policy of tlie latter chief showed too plainly that, so
long as Kabul remained under his government, we could never
hope that the tranquillity of our neighbourhood would be secured,
or that the interests of our Indian empire would be preserved
inviolate.
" The Governor-General deems it in this place necessary to
revert to the siege of Herat, and the conduct of the Persian nation.
The siege of that city has now been carried on by the Persian
army for many months.* The attack upon it was a most unjusti-
fiable and cruel aggression, perpetrated and continued, notwith-
standing the solemn and repeated remonstrances of the British
envoy at the court of Persia, and a h r every just and becoming
offer of accommodation had been made and rejected. The besieged
have behaved with a gallantry and fortitude worthy of the justice
of their cause; and the Governor-General would yet indulge the
hope that their heroism may enable them to maintain a succe~sful
defence until succours shall reach them from British India. In the
mean time the ulterior designs of Persia, affecting the interests of
the British Government, have heen. by a succession of events, more
and more openly manifested. The Governor-General has recently
ascertained, by an official despatch from Mr. M'Neil, her Majesty's
envoy, that hi3 Excellency has been compelled, by a refusal of his
just demands, and by a systematic course of disrespect adopted
'towards him by the Persian Government, to quit the court of the
At the date of this manifesto the Shah had abandoned the liege and &led.-
Pmrisr.
2i 8 LORD AUCKLAND'S MANIFESTO CHAP. XX.
Shah, and to make a public declaration of a cessation of all inter-
course between the two governments. The necessity under which
Great Britain is placed of regarding the present advance of the
Persian arms into Afghanistan as an act of hostility towards her-
self, has also been officially communicated to the Shah under the
express order of her Majesty's Government.
"The chiefs of Kandahar (brothers of Dost Mohamed Khan
of Kabul) have avowed their adherence to the Persian policy, with
tlie same full knowledge of its opposition to the rights and interests
of the British nation in India, and have been openly assisting in
the operations against Herat. In the crisis of the affairs consequent
upon the retirement of our envoy from Kabul, the Governor-Gene-
ral felt the importance of taking immediate measures for arresting
the rapid pro,mss of foreign intrigue and aggression towards our
own territories. His attention was naturally drawn at this conjunc-
ture to the position and claims of Shah Shooja-001-Moolk, a monarch
who, when in power, had cordially acceded to the measures of united
resistance to external enmity which were at that time j ud, d
necessary by the British Government, and who, on his empire being
usurped by its present rulers, had found an honourable asylum in
the British dominions.
" I t had been clearly ascertained, from the information furnished
by the various officers who have visited Afghanistan, that the
Barukzye chiefs, from their disunion and unpopularity, were ill
fitted, under any circumstances, to be useful allies to the-British
Government, and to aid us in our just and necessary measures of
national defence. Yet so long as they refrained from proceedings
injurious to our interesb and security, the British Government
acknowledged and respected their authority ; but a different policy
appeared to be now more than justified by the conduct of those
chiefs, and to be indispensable to our own safety. The welfare
of our possessions in the East requires that we should have on our
western frontier an ally who is interested in resisting aggmsions
and establishing tranquillity, in the place of chiefs ranging them-
selves in subservience to a hostile power, and seeking to promote
~chemes of conquest and aggrandizement. After serious and
mature deliberation the Governor-General was satisfied that a
pressing necessity, as well as every consideration of policy and
justice, warranted us in espousing the cause of Shah Shooj aal -
Moolk, whose popularity throughout Afghanistan had been proved
Ca p . XX. I N JUSTIFICATION OF HIS POLICY. 270
to his Lordship by the strong and unanimous testimony of the beat
authorities. Having arrived at this determination, the Governor-
General was further of opinion that it was just and proper, no less
from the position of Maharajah Runjeet Sing, than from his
undeviating friendship towards the British Government, that hie
Highness should have the offer of becoming a party to the con-'
templated operations.
" Mr. M6Naghten was accordingly deputed in June last to the
court of his Highness, and the result of his mission has been the
conclusion of a tripartite treaty by the British Government, the
Maharajah, and Shah Shooja-ool-Moolk, whereby his Highness is
guaranteed in his present possessions, and has bound himself to
co-operate for the restoration of the Shah to the throne of hia
ancestors. The friends and enemies of any one of the contracting
parties have been declared to be the friends and enemies of all.
" Yarious points have been adjusted which had been the subjects
of discussion between the British Government and his Highnese
the Maharaja, the identity of whose interests with those of the
Honourable Company has now been made apparent to all the
surrounding states. A guaranteed independence will, upon favour-
able conditions, be tendered to the Emirs of Scinde; and the
integrity of Herat, in the possession of its present ruler, will be
fully respected ; while by the measures completed, or in progress,
it may reasonably be hoped that the general freedom and security
of commerce will be promoted, the name and just influence of the
British Government will gain their proper footing among the
nations of Central Asia, that tranquillity will be established upon
the moat important frontier of India, and that a lasting barrier
will be raised against hostile intrigue and encroachment.
" His Majesty Shah Shooja-ool-Moolk will enter Afghanistan
surrounded by his own troops, and will be supported against
foreign interference and factious opposition by a British army.
The Governor-General confidently hopes that the Shah will be
replaced on his throne by his own subjects and adherents; and
when once he shall be secured in power, and the independence and
integrity of Afghanistan established, the British army will be
withdrawn. The Governor-General has been led to these measures
by the duty which is imposed upon him of providing for the
security of the poseesaions of the British crown ; but he rejoices
that, in the discharge of his duty, he will be enabled to aeeiet in
260 MIR ROUSTEM OF KHYRPOOR. CHAP. EL
restoring the union and prosperity of the Afghan people. Through-
out the approaching operations British influence will be sedulously
employed to further every measure of general benefit, to reconcile
differences, to secure oblivion for injuries, and to put an end to
the distractions by which, for so many years, the welfare and
happiness of the Afghans have been impaired. Even to the chiefi
whose hostile proceedings have given just cause of offe~ce to the
British Governmalt, i t will ~ e k to secure liberal and honourable
treatment on their te~idering early submission, and ceasing from
opposition to that course of measures which may be judged the
most suitable to the general advantage of their country."
The explanations that have preceded this manifesto do justice to
its inaccuracies, its reserve and want, of frankness. I shall not
therefore comment upon it, but have reproduced i t here to give
an idea of the manner in which the Anglo-Indian government pro-
ceeds in Asia.
The invasion of Afghanistan was only a prelude t o that of
Scinde, but there existed friendly treaties with the Talpoora Emirs,
sovereigns of that country, and the Indian Government could not
then attempt to seize their territory without creating for themselves
too much embarrassment at once ; the taking definitive possession
of it was therefore postponed, but forcing the Emirs to consent to
the passage of the British troops through their country was a
prelude thereto. At one moment war was on the point of b d -
ing out between the East India Company and the Emirs of tbat
part of Scinde which is watered by the Lower Indug for they
energetically opposed the passage of an Englieh army ; but Mir
Roustem of Khyrpoor, their aged chief, prevented them from
going to that extremity, and succeeded in conciliating all parties
JVhen the British forces entered Scinde this venerable chieftain
acceded to all the sacrifices imposed upon him. When asked by the
English to lend them during tlieir operations in &hnnistan the for-
tress of Bukkar, situated on an island at the mouth of the I n d q the
demand appeared to him too humiliating. I t is," he said, "at
once the bulwark and the heart of my country, and my honour
forbids that I should trust that in the hands of strangers." Never-
theless he allowed himself to be persuaded. His whole family
threw themselves on their knees before him to induce him nd to
grant this extraordinary request, but he preferred e x p i n g himself
to their lively and incessant reproaches, to displeasing his friends
CHAP. XX. SEIZURE OF KURRACHEE. 281
the English, in whose word he believed. He lent them the fortress
of Rukkar-it has never been out of their hands since, and to recom-
pense his generous conduct towards them they despoiled him five
years afterwards of the rest of his territory, and possessed themselves
also of that of his brothers and nephews. The officers of General
Napier invaded even the harems of these unfortunate princes, and
carried off the treasures, jewels, and even the clothes of their women.
The Government of India had ordered that the Expeditionary
Army of Afghanistan should consist of 27,000 men, who were to
be ready to take the field in the month of Xovember, 1838. But
when it was known a t Calcutta that the Persians had raised the
siege of Herat it was reduced to an effective force of 21,500, and
this force was assembled on the eastern bank of the Indus, January
16, 1839, under the command of Lient-General Sir John Keane.
Here Shah Shooja l~astened to join him, and a week afterwards
the Emir Roustem placed the troops in possession of the island
fortress of 0~ukkar ; they subsequently crossed the river on a pon-
toon bridge, and were concentrated at Shikapoor in the earliest
days of March.
" This concentration," says Sumner, " was preceded by one of
those acts of violence too often found in the pages of British
history, and which tarnish the glory of the brilliant actions
recorded in it.
" Near the town of Kurrachee, which is situated about fifty miles
north-east of the second mouth of the Indus, on the Scindian side,
is a small fortress belonging to a state with which England was at
peace, and which was attached to her by treaties of friendship aud
commerce. It was thought that it would be useful to hold this
place ; and a British vessel of war and steamboats having arrived
before the fort, February 2, 1839, with two sepoy regiments and
a detachment of European artillery, a messenger was sent on shore
to inform the officer in command that its position rendered the
possession of it indispensable to insure the safety of the vessels of
the Company intrusted with the transport of the munitions of war
and matkriel of their army. The message required the officer to
deliver up the place in a quarter of an hour, if he did not wish
rigorous measures to be taken against him.
" The Scindian officer having refused to yield to the summons,
the troops disembarked, and under cover of the fire of the ships,
moored broadside to the shore, took possession of the fort and
282 AFGHAN SERDARS JOIN THE ENGLISH. CEAP.XX.
town of Kurrachee, and it now forms part of the British dominions
in the East Indies."
The English had neglected nothing that could tend to s e a m a
successful issue to this undertaking ; they had exerted all their arta
of seduction and corruption to induce the serdare of Afghanis&
to attach themselves to their party, and a few of the most in-
fluential had responded to their appeal. Amongst these wen
Iskander Khan, Popolzye ; Mohamed Attah Khan, Popolzye ; and
Walee Mohamed Khan, Isakzye ; who left their tribes on the first
rumour of the war, and joined Shah Shooja at Loodiana, where,
with their concurrence, he formed the nucleus of a government
As soon as that was constituted, they sent numerous emissaries to
their own country, with a view of parading to the Afghans tbe
power and generosity of the English, and to persuade them that
not only would all resistance be useless, but that it would be more
beneficial to themselves to receive them, as they would effect the
restoration of their own royal family. A crowd of &rdars, who
were jealous of those of the Barukzye tribe, whom the Mohamedqe
chiefs greatly favoured, allowed themselves to be easily persuaded
by these emissaries, and joined without delay the British camp
A mal l number only, having no greater sympathy with the No-
hamedzyes, nevertheless feared the consequences of a return of
fortune in favour of that branch, and retired to their homes to wait
till the course of events should be more decided before they took
an open part.
CHAP. XXI. PERSONAL APPEARANCE OF THE AFGHANS. 293
CHAPTER XXI.
Introductory note to ohapter - Character of the Afghana - Their physical deve
lopment - Mental qualities -Indifferent Mussulmam - Their turbulent nature
-Spirit of independence - Love of marauding - Their cupidity extreme -
lnaennible to good faith-The law a dead letter in their eyes- The citizen
and the nomade - Hospitality - Praudial habits of Yar Mohamed - The cha-
racter of their food - Kooroot - Mode of eating - Ignorance of the Afghsns -
Their superstitions - Education - Costume - Dirty habita - Religious feeling
-Administration of the laws -The kz talionis - Punishments - Diseases -
Remedies - Public buildings - Roada - Private hounea - The zoology of
Afghanistan - Domestic animal8 - Nature of the 8oil- Productions of i t -
Aridity of the country - Minerals -Geographical poaition - Climate - Dif6-
culties of rapid communication - Population.
AT the conclusion of General Ferrier's manuscript are some pages
devoted to a description of the Afghan nation, their habits, customs,
education, laws, and religion, and much other general information
respecting Afghanistan, its productions, climate, &c. The author
left it to the translator to decide in which of the two volumes this
infonnation could be placed to the best advantage, namely, ' Cara-
van Journeys,' or the present work. The translator has, therefore,
though it certainly does interrupt the continuous character of the
history, introduced a portion of that Addendum here ; for the reader
will thus have an insight into the character of the Afghan people
before he enters upon that period of their history which is so closely
interwoven with our own, and be, therefore, better able to form an
opinion of it and that sad military catastrophe which is still end
must ever remain so deeply iuteresting to every Englishman.
The Afghans are tall, robust, active, and well formed; their
olive and sometimes sallow complexions and etrongly-marked hard
features give their countenances a savage expression ; the lids of
their black eyes, which are f111l of fire, are tinged with a~itimony,
for this, in their opinion, gives force and adds beauty and a dazzling
brilliancy to them ; their black beard is worn short, and their hair,
of the same colour, is shaved off from the front to the top of the
head, the remainder at the sides being allowed to fall in large curls
over the shoulders. Their step is full of resolution, their bearing
proud, but rough.
284 CHARACTER OF THE AFGHAFS. CHAP. =I.
They are brave even to rashness, excited by the smallest trifle,
enterprising without the least regard to prudence, energetic and
born for war. They possess all the qualities essential to c q it
on successfully, but are utterly ignorant how to take advantage of
and turn them to wcount :. their courage is impulsive, and display
itself most readily in the attack ; if that fails they are easily dis-
heartened, and show no perseverance, for, as they are soon elated,
so are they ar easily discouraged. They are sober, abstemious,
and apparently of an open disposition-great gossips, and curious
to excess. Their anger is not betrayed by any sudden burst of
passion ; on the contrary, all that is brutal and savage in their
nature is manifested with the most perfect calmness, but it is the
volcano slumbering beneath the ashes.
Courage is with them the first of virtues, and usurps the place
of all the others ; they are cruel, perfidious, coarse, without pity,
badly brought up, exceedingly inclined to theft and pillage. In the
latter they differ from their neighbours the Persians, who are, how-
ever, as great scoundrels as themselves, for they endeavour by every
means in their power to conceal their knavery under the appear-
ance of law or rhetoric, while the Afghans do the very r e v e m
they at once place the knife on your throat, and say, Give, or I
take." Force is their only argument, and it justifies everything;
an individual who ia merely plundered considers himself extremely
fortunate, as, generally speaking, they act inversely to the cut-
throats of Europe, who demand "your purse or your life;" the
Afghans take life first and then the purse. I n religion they are
more tolerant and well disposed towards those who profess a did-
ferent Faith than any other sect of Mussulmans. Like the people of
most Eastern nations, they are also addicted to a crime which it is
not necessary to name ; but this remark applies rathcr to the rich
than to the people in general. An injury is never forgotten, &id
vengeance is a passion which they love ; even at the cost of their
lives they will satisfy it should an opportunity present itself, and
this in the moat cruel manner.
There is no nation in the world more turbulent and less under
subjection ; the difficulties in rendering them submissive to a code
of just laws would be almost insunnountable. To make them
observe the rules of good breeding, or even common civility, would
perhaps be still more difficult ; the people are as gross and c o r n
as savages. The chiefs and upper classes are more civilized ; but
CHAP. XXI. CHARACTER OF THE AFGHANS. 286
their politeness is always tinctured by a rudeness of manner very
offensive to Europeans. No matter what the condition or rank
of an Afghan may be, he considers that he has a right to seat
himself in the presence of his superiors ; to this privilege he attaches
the greatest importance, and enters into conversation with them
perfectly at his ease and without the least hesitation, giving his
opinion on every subject; in short, forcing himself and his views
upon them as he thinks fit, eating with them uninvited, and all
this as if they were upon a footing of the most perfect equality.
These habits do not wound the pride of the rich and powerful
Afghans ; on the contrary, they encourage this independent spirit,
and admit their right to make their requests and volunteer their
opinions in this way. These are prerogatives which in their eyes
constitute liberty.
The Afghans do not attach the same importance to some words
as Europeans do ; country " and " honour " are to them as
empty sounds, a11d they sell them to the highest bidder without
scruple. This is so true, that they will almost always submit to and
obey a conqueror ; and if they have been pretty nearly independent
since the time of Ahmed Shah, Suddozye, it has been owing quite
as much to the weakness of the neighbouring states as because there
was no one who thought it worth his while to purchase them. I t
cannot be denied that the conquest of Persia, under Mir Mahmood
in 1721, is a very remarkable page in their history; but if we take
into consideration the feeble state in which that unfortunate country
was at the time, we shall be the less astonished ; a similar invasion,
and composed of the same elements, would now have every chance
of success, though the means of defence on the part of Persia are
much more considerable than they were then. After all, the Af-
ghans were not long in losing their conquest and their liberty, and
being in their turn subdued by those whom they had vanquished
and humiliated.
In mentioning this circumstance, Heaven forbid it should be s u p
posed that I desire to undervalue the courage of a people who
have given so many proofs of i t ; but I wish to establish the fact
that the Afghans are as incapable of a continuous course of action
as of ideas. they do everything on the s p i i i 3 the moment, from a
r o . e o f r d e r , or fur no rcason at all: it matters little to them
who gives them laws ; they obey the first comer directly they find it
is to their advantage to do so, and allow him to play the tyrant and
286 CHARACTER OF THE AFGHAKS. CRAP. XXI.
govern them if he pays them well and does not interfere with their
passion for rapine and devastation. P i e , fighting, and dik
turbances are at times necessary to their very existence, and are
followed by long days of repose and idleness, during which they
live on the fruits of their depredations.
Their cupidity and avarice are extreme; there is no tie they
would not break, no duty they would not desert, to gratify their
avidity for wealth. This surpasses all that can be imagined ; it is
insatiable, and to satisfy it they are capable of committing the
greatest crimes. For it they will sacrifice all-their native and
independent pride ; even prostitute the honour of their wives and
daughters, whom they frequently put to death after they have
received the price of their dishonour. Gold in Afghanistan is,
more than anywhere else, the god of the human race ; it stifles the
still small cry of every man's conscience, if, indeed, it can be ad-
mitted that an Afghan has a conscience at all : it is impossible to
rely on their promises, their friendship, or their fidelity.
They enter into engagements, and bind themselves by the most
solemn oaths to respect them, and, in order to give them a sacred
character, transcribe them on a Koran, to which they af6x their
seal, but nevertheless perjure themselves with an impudence
perfectly inconceivable. Towns and villagea by hundreds hare
surrendered on t l ~e faith of such obligations, stipulating that the
lives of the inhabitants should be spared, and yet the examples are
rare, that, once in the victors' power, they have not been extet-
minated. I t is extraordinary that, knowing their own bad fsith,
they allow themselves to fall into these snares. The majority of
t he wars which they wage against one another generally terminate
by one or more of these massacres. Murder is a game, and they
evince a feeling of vanity when they commit one, and glory in the
perfidy and cruelty which they show in their acts of devastation ;
when they can cite an example of a town which they have depo-
pulated and razed to the ground, they imagine they have given
the grandest idea of their power and valour : they are, in short,
real Huns, and Attilas are never wanting amongst them.
They submit to the laws only after they have tried every means
to evade them ; they consider it perfectly lawful in those who are
stronger or more powerful than themselves to plunder them, and
consequently they have no scruple in despoiling those who am
weaker. Accustomed from their childhood to see human blood
CHAP. XXI. CHARACTER OF THE AFGHANS. 287
spilt, to hear murder not only excused but gloried in, they are
soon familiar with the idea of death, which they confront with the
greatest coolness. I t is rare to see them make war for the simple
purpose of defending their nationality, for this sentiment does not
exist, and can be considered applicable only to the tribe, its
district, or encampment. Their ideas are of a totally different
character ; the hope of enriching himself by booty, of Lathing him-
self in blood-these are what from his earliest youth an Afghan
proposes to indulge in, and these are the principles in which he is
brought up. They hate all governments which introduce law and
order into a country, or enter into treaties of peace with their
neighbours ; to do so is in their eyes an attack upon their righta,
which deprives them of pillage, and consequently the best part of
their revenues
If an Afghan is put to death by his sovereign for marauding, his
countrymen look upon him as a victim ; but they establish between
him who exposes his life in combat and the obscure domestic thief
who does not an immenae difference ; the first is in their estima-
tion a brave man, whereas the other is treated with contempt,
banished from the tribe, and sometimes put to death. At first
sight an Afghan pleases, and this in spite of his rough and savage
physiognomy and exterior: the fact is, that, when he has an object
in view, and he has something to gain, he knows how to play, and
with great suppleness, the part which policy dictates ; but if he loses
the hope of obtaining anything out of you, it is easy to see into
the details of his character, and he will stand without scruple
unmasked, and in all the aridity of his evil nature.
Excitement, the clash of arms, and the tumult of the combat are
to him life ; repose is for an Afghan only a transitory state of
being, during which he leads a monotonous existence ; the sweets
of domestic life, mental quietude, the endearments of his family,
have no charms for him, and a life without commotion and agita-
tion loses all its poetry. He is only really a man when he is
fighting and plundering; then his eye is full of fire, his hand
grasps convulsively the hilt of his sabre, and he presses hi sinewy
legs against his horse's sides until the animal can scarcely draw
his breath : man and horse are one, each understands the ardour
of the other, and it is difficult to distinguish which of the two is
then the most vicious. As there is nothing in the world of which
an Sfghan makes so light as life, he hastens to live, but in his own
288 CHARACTER OF THE AFGHANS. CHAP. XXI.
way, a slave to his passions, for who knows whether he will not fall
to-momow by his neighbour's sword, as others have fallen to-day
by his ?
There is no shade of difference between the character of the
citizen or the nomade ; a town life does not soften their habits;
they live there as they live in a tent, always armed to the teeth,
and ready for the onslaught, devoid of a right-minded feeling, and
always animated by the most ferocious instincts. Though they
are full of duplicity, one is nevertheless frequently liable to be
taken in by their apparent frankness ; but a traveller is not long
the victim of their clumsy cheating, which can succeed only amongst
themselves, for their minds are rather heavy than acute. Strangers,
and particularly Europeans, easily see through them ; their kind
attentions, or an appearance of politeness to an individual, are
rarely the result of a natural and sincere feeling on their part,
for they are sure to have an interested object in view ; and if
they are so liberal as to present you with an egg, it is because
they expect to have an ox in return : if they are of any service to
you, and they ask for nothing in exchange, you will find that the
gift, or whatever the service may. be, has cost then1 nothing,
whether trouble or money. They are hospitable to travellers, but
only because this is an ancient custom, which has the force of law,
and is not a virtue which springs from the heart; those who are
not in good circumstances consider it a burden which they would
willingly cast aside, were it not that they fear public opinion ; in all
cases they take every means in their power to evade it ; the rich
practise it only from ostentation, and always parsimoniously.
Idleness being the dominant vice of this people, they rarely
ever work; and when the amount of pluiider is insufficient for
their requirements, they are alivays thinking of some expedient by
which they can procure money ; their greatest anxiety, however,
is to ascertain how they can get their daily bread without having
to pay for i t This is their one only thought all their lives ; after
having provided for their wives and children the barest pittance,
they will go from door to door in the hope of getting a dinner:
hangers-on are indeed so numerous that the chiefs, and even the
sovereign himself, are obliged to enter into the most minute
details of their housekeeping, and give instructions to their servants
as to the character and quantity of the food they are to place
before their voracious visitors. If with some bread they give a
CRAP. XXI. THEIR FOOD. 289
little soup, they have the reputation of being exceedingly hospit-
able ; but if to these they add a ration of rice or meat, no praise,
however expressed, mould be sufficiently strong to mark the estima-
tion in which their generosity is held. The common people are
not alone in this love of putting their hands into other people's
plates, the highest personages do not object to refresh themselves
a t their neighbour's expense; and I have more than once seen
the Vizier Yar Mohamed Khan, and other chiefs, after having
finished their own repast, present the remains to some of their
guests, many of them generals, governors of towns, &c., who
pounced upon and cleared them off in the twinkling of an eye,
seizing the bones with as much alacrity as would have done
the most famished poodle. I t is rare indeed that an Afghan's
appetite fails him, at any rate it is a fact that .never came within
my knowledge ; and when they have the good fortune to meet with
a table well furnished, and an easy host, they put all reserve aside,
and, as they themselves express it (kharabi singuin), make an
enormous feed.
This habit of living at the expense of other people forces the
Afghans to practise sobriety and frugality. They live on fruit
nearly half the year, rice forming the best and most appetising part
of their food ; but. notwithstanding the low price at which it is sold,
it is only peersons in easy circumstances who can afford- to eat it
every day. They season it in their pilaus, like the Turks and Per-
sians ; like them also they take their meals sitting on the ground,
with their heels tucked under them, and convey their food to their
mouths with their fingers. Meat is not much liked unless it is
swimming in grease ; then it is delicious. They throw away the
lean, as they say it produces diarrhoea. The principal food of
the villagers and nomades is hooroot, a kind of pudding made of
boiled Indian corn, bruised between two stones, or simply bread,
on which they pour rancid grease, mixed with a substance which
in the East is known under the name of Reckh.* The flesh of the
sheep or goat is what the Afghans prefer ; but, as with the rice,
the rich only can afford to purchase i t : the ox, the camel, and
the horse, that age or infirmities hare rendered unfit for further
service, is the animal food of the people.
They will not eat meat unless it is Aalal (lawful), that is, the
The settlement in whey.- Fcnier.
U
290 THE AFGHANS : THEIR IGNORhNCE. CUP. SXI.
animal must have its face turned towards Meccs, and its throat cut
in a particular part of the neck, the following sacrificial words being
pronounced during the operation, in accordance with their law and
rule of faith-BismiZlalr rahman rahim (In the name of the most
merciful God). In eating, they mix one dish with another, knead
them together with their fingers, and then stuff it into their mouths
The highest personages not only permit the lowest to eat with
them out of the same plate, but the dirtiest and the most disgusting :
it is sufficient that they are 3Iussulnians for them not to feel tbe
least annoyance, and yet they will be scrupulously careful not to eat
with a person who is not of their religion, no matter how clean he
may be. They make two meals, one a t noon, the other at nine
o'clock at night ; they frequently smoke the tclrilim, a kind of
water-pipe, but very inferior to the narglrile of the Turks, or the
Ralioon of the Persians.
I t would be difficult to conceive the ignorance of the Afghans,
which does not, however, prevent them from being excessively pre-
sumptuous ; they are brutes, not, however, unintelligent, but they
like to be within a circle of ideas of the narrowest kind. They
have neither the genius of creation nor the faculty of imitation, and
arc: satisfied with the bigoted and confined views which have been
handed down to them by their ancestors. They refuse to take the
least trouble to learn anything which would open their minds and
add to their well-being, convinced that science is a uselese burden,
which only fatigues and enervates those who pursue it, without
making them at all happier. "Are not these Europeans fools,"
say they, "t o give themselves so much concern in acquiring all
these things here below, while they are prcparii~g for themselves
the most dreadful punishmenb which they must suffer for ever in
another world, for refusing to believe the unity of God * and the
power of our revered prophet Mahornet, on whom be praise? "
Their wise men are the mollahs and astronomers; the last,
especially, are in great reputation amongst tlieni, for they cannot,
will not, undertake anything without consulting the stars and the
auguries. They believe also in magic, and hang a number of
amulets about themselves and their horses.
The Persian language ie met with all over Afghanistan ; the
great families speak it, and their correspondence is carried on in
* They cannot in the least imagine in whnt way we comprehend the Trinity.-
Fmier.
CHAP. XXI. THEIR CLOTHING. 291
that tongue: the people are acquainted with it, but they prefer
speaking the Pushtoo, the language of their nation, which is
a mixture of ancient Persian, Arabic, and Hindostanee. They
have a few works in this language, but they read Persian authors
by preference, and have through them formed imperfect ideas of
geography, astronomy, medicine, and history; but these works,
full of fictions and deficiencies, have not materially assisted in
developing their faculties.
The Afghans wear their clothes long. They C Q ~ S ~ S ~ of two large
robes, very ample, and are either of cotton or a cloth made of
camel's hair, called bareh : this is the dress of the people. The
ollly difference in the garments of the rich is in the material, which
is silk, cloth, or cachemire. I n summer they are made without any
lining, but in the winter they are wadded with cotton or lined with
fur. The under garment is confined by a piece of muslin, or long
cloth, which is wound round the body ; the outside one and some-
times a third robe is used as a cloak, and a person would be con-
sidered wanting in politeness if in visiting a superior he did not
put it on. The shirt is very full, and the sleeves, which reach below
the hands, particularly so. The former is open at the side from the
neck to the waist, and falls over the trowsers: these, which are
excessively large, open at the foot, and are drawn in at the waist
with a string. The head is covered by an enormous blue or white
turban, and the feet with slippers without quarters. The upper
classes are, for the most part, simply dressed, and consider luxury in
this respect as enervating ; but some young chiefs have their robes
ornamented with gold lace or embroidered with gold thread. This is
done in the harems by the women, who excel in this kind of work,
particularly in Kandahar. The Afghans are not careful of their
clothes, and soil them the very first day they are put on, for they
squat on the ground without taking the least thought whether the
spot on which they sit is clean or dirty. They never change their
garments, not even the shirt, until they are completely worn out ;
and rn they very rarely wash themselves, they are constantly covered
with vermin, great and small.
w
The Afghans are Mussul~nans of the sect of Soonee, with the
exception of the tribe of Beritchees, who belong to that of Shiah.
The Yarsivans and Eimaks, who are subject to the Afghans, cqually
profess the faith of Islam, but besides the two sects just mentioned
some of them are of a third, called Ali-illahee, who worship Ali as
n 2
292 ADMINISTRATIOS OF THE LAWS. CRAP. XXI.
God. The Afghans did not embrace Idamism till very late, and
after their conquerors the Moguls : this assertion is in contradiction
to their own, but is nevertheless true. They are religious more
from habit than conviction, though they are not on that account
guilty of hypocrisy. While the English occupied their counby
they relaxed considerably the practice of their worship, and the
influence of the mollahs was much reduced ; but when the Anglo-
Indians withdrew from Afghanistan, they recovered it with a
powerful hand, and from that moment have endeavoured to excite
a spirit of fanaticism in the people, and inspire them with a
hatred of Europeans.
It is probable that the Afghans are not more persuaded than
formerly of the infallibility of Islam, but, as the mollahs are sup
ported by their chiefs, they have resumed their previous habik
They make the five prayers every day, observe t he fast of Ramazan,
and everything is comprised in the most rigorous observance of
external forms Let the English return, and they would again
relapse into indifference on this subject.
Justice is adminiatered amongst the Afghans according to the
commands of the Koran, though in some cases they use their
traditional laws, which have, they say, descended to them from the
remotest antiquity. The Kazi is the head of the religious tribunal;
the sovereign, and, under him, the Kalehbeghi and the Daroga,
administer the ordinary law. The Afghans of Herat and Kabul
may congratulate themselves on the equity and justice with which
they are governed, but it is not the same in Kandahar, where the
laws are construed to the benefit of the judges in an unjust and
violent manner : they are always anxious to find the accused guilty,
and, as the sovereign inflicts heavy fines, this system much augments
his revenues.
The l a talionis is rigorously observed amongst the Afghans, and
the murderer is put to death by the nearest relation of his vidim
I t sometimes happens that the person on whom this duty devolves
is a child, when the punishmel~t remains in abeyance till he is
strong enough to hold the dagger which is placed in his hands, ad
with which he performs the office of executioner. He possesses the
right to grant the murderer his life, but there is no instance of this
ever having been exercised, excepting for a compensation, which
the criminal is obliged to make in a sum of money or in land;
sometimes he gives one of his daughters in marriage to the son or
CHAP. =I. PUNISHMENTS-DISEASES. 293
the brother of the murdered man, without the father being obliged
t o give her any dower.
Thieves are treated with great leniency : for the first theft the
offender is obliged to restore the stolen property to its owner, and
receives from him a paternal admonition ; the second is treated in
a similar manner, but with the addition of a fine ; the third is
followed by the bastinado ; and a further repetition of the offence by
torture or death. I n a country where the population is so fond of
laying halids upon other people's property, it is not surprising to find
the judges exercise so much forbearance, for the generality of them
might with more propriety be placed at the bar than on the seat of
justice. It must be added that torture, or any other punishment,
may be remitted, with the consent of the injured party ; and as
he has ever before him the probability that he will one day need
pardon himself, it is seldom that he is too severe.
The p~inishments inflicted for political crimes, and others which
in France would be brought before our courts of assize, are fine,
bastinado, cutting off the nose, ears, or hand ; opening the body of
the criminal, and then hanging him up till death releases him from
his sufferings ; cutting the throat, stabbing, impaling, strangling,
skinning alive, scalping, quartering, hanging (generally with the
head downwards), crucifying, stoning, boiling in a caldron, and a
thousand other barbarities of the kind. No extenuating circum-
st ance~ are admitted ; no di5erence is made between a crime which
is the result of passion and premeditated guilt, between man-
slaughter and murder : from a sentence there is no appeal, and the
punishment is pitiless.
The Afghans are afflicted with dreadful diseases, which, from
their ignorance of medicine, they cannot mitigate ; these maladies
are owing to their bilious habit, the badness of their food, their
extreme dirt, and the little care they take to prevent their develop
ment. The nomades are generally of a sickly complexion; this
is to be attributed to the pernicious quality of the water, which is
almost. all alkaline. The diseases to which they are most subject
are fevers, cutaneous and nervous disorders, and especially blind-
ness. The last they attribute to the waters of the rice-fields, which
they drink ; but if this has any effect upon the eye, it is no doubt
less injurious to that organ than the incredible treatment it often
receives a t the hands of their empirics: in fact, there is no country
in the world in which diseases of the eye and loss of sight are more
294 SURGERY. CHAP. XU.
frequent than in Afghanistan. When the Afghans are bled they
generally avoid drinking for twenty -four hours after ; but if
they do not do so, they keep the arm elevated as much as
possible during absorption, in order that, as they say, the water
may not fill up and mix with the remainder of the blood in the
vein. They pretend also that, according to the quarter in whkh
the wind sets, or this or that conjunction of the stars, they ought
not to be bled in the same vein. They are very careful not to eat
sweet food after sour, dressed after raw, or vice vwsii. Rancid
grease three or four years old is in their eyes more easy of d i p
tion and more beneficial than fresh ; the latter, which they obtain
from the enormous tails of their sheep, they use only as aperient
medicine, and, when melted, swallow four or six pounds of it at a
time.
For the cure of wounds and abscesses they have but one receipt,
but that they say is infallible-it is, to apply a piece of an old
waterskin, resoftened by soaking, which they place on the part
affected, either to heal or to draw it. There is, however, a schism
amongst their doctors as to the treatment of wounds, some of them
affirming that it is dangerous to wash them, and that the blood, or
the matter, ought to be left to coagulate on the surface to reform
the flesh.
The dressing of a broken bone they remove every three or four
days; it consists of flour heaten up with the yolks of egp, which
they consider a specific for setting a dislocated or fractured limb.
For fever they recommend cold baths, and, if possible, of iced
water; they administer mercury internally, but in such quan-
tities as generally to bring the most serious consequences upon
the patient.
Every European is a doctor in the eyes of the Afgbans, and
they have a blind confidence in them : even when in perfect health
they will ask for a medicine of some kind, and, be it what it may,
will swallow it on the spot. " I am not ill," an Afghan will say,
"but I may become so." They have no idea that there is an?
difference between one medicine and another ; in their opinion they
all ought to produce the same results.
TO carry a Koran in procession, or to place it under their heads
when they go to sleep ; to repeat one thousand times the name of
God or the Prophet Mahomet, are infallible means of curing any
malady whatever. As they have a great dread of the Evil Eye,
CtUP. XXI. PUBLIC BUILDIKGS-RODS. 295
they cover themselves and their domestic animals with amulet&
Some of the charlatans whom they look upon as doctors procure
different European medicines from India, of the properties of
which they are utterly ignorant, and give them without discri-
mination as to their nature or dose, whatever may be the disease
they are prescribing for ; in this manner they will kill fifty patients
before they cure one. They win the confidence of these unfortu-
nab by assuring them they have seen their disease in a dream,
and that they are thoroughly acquainted with it and the remedy
that will cure them. The wretched patients trust these liars
implicitly ; and instead of depending on the efforts of nature, which
in many cases would triumph over the malady, they allow them-
elves to be killed with a resignation worthy of a better fate.
The munificence of the Persian, Tartar, and Indian monarchs
has enriched Afghanistan with many fine buildings and works of
public utility-mosques, caravanserais, reservoirs of water, &c.,
but they have long since been in ruins. The Afghans know not
how ta build, and destroy everything ; one may travel whole
months in their country without finding any other shelter than the
tent of the nomade. At every step may be seen traces of edificea
that must have been magnificent, but none have ever been
repaired. Here or there the ground is strewed with rubbish;
farther in the distance an aqueduct has fallen down, or a river,
owing to the dilapidation of the dykes, has overflowed, and
the waters, which, well-directed, would have been of immense
advantage to the agriculturist, remain perfectly useless; but the
people whose interests are most concerned are quite indifferent to
the subject.
The mads, if the name can be given to paths made only by the
continual passage of caravans, are traced at random over the
country, and frequently turn miles out of the way to avoid some
alight obstacle that might have been removed at very little cost of
money or time ; and often, simply owing to the want of a bridge,
w even a ferry-boat, all traffic is interrupted for weeks.
The first families who establish themselves in a fertile spot for
the purpose of cultivating it find their way to it by taking as
direct a course as they can, but entirely by conjecture; their
footsteps guide the next traveller, and the next, and there ia soon
a path. \#'hen the snow begins to melt, thirty or forty camels
tied one aAer the other are led over it to trample it well, and the
296 PRIVATE HOII'SES. CUP. XXI.
traces of their large feet never disappear. Such is the organi-
sation of the p n f 8 et chaussCes, or roadmaking, in central Asia
The same system seems to have been followed for a, - in the
construction of their houses ; sun-dried bricks are the material
ordinarily used, the rich have them burnt; up to the present
period but little use has been made of hewn stone. The great
scarcity of wood in this country has obliged the Afghns to build
vaulted roofs, and, like the Persians, they excel in this art;
nothing can be bolder or more graceful than the form of some of
their cupolas.
They roughcast the wall with mud and chopped straw mixed;
as there is little rain, this s d c e s to consolidate them, and, being
neatly smoothed with a trowel, the effect is not unpleasant to
the eye. The rich use plaster ; and the Kandaharians especially
decorate their rooms with great taste and talent. Their houses
are generally low, rarely consisting of more than one floor, but
they occupy a great space of ground; the inside is concealed
from the gaze of the passer by, by a high wall which encircles
the whole, and in which there is very rarely more than one
entrance. An Afghan house is usually divided into several parts,
each having its own rooms, kitchen, court, reservoir, garden, &c
They perfectly understand the distribution of the apartments,
with regard to preserving them from the intense heat of the
,
sun ; but they are quite ignorant of any precautions against
the cold, which is, however, never severe at Herat or Kandahar.
Even a royal residence in these countries looks mean externally
compared with an European house, and one is surprised to find
in the interior every Asiatic comfort combined with much that is
luxurious.
All over the East they make an exceedingly hard cewent,
which they use as mortar, and to form the lining of baths and
reservoirs : it is made by some persons with equal parts of wood-
ashes, thoroughly sifted, and powdered lime ; and by some with
two parta of lime to one of ashes ; but in either case these materiala
are well mixed. Water is then poured upon them and they are
well kneaded, after which the mass is beaten for six days by two men
with large sticks, and uninterruptedly, except at night: when it
becomes a little solid on one side, it is turned over and beaten on
the other, care being taken to moisten it occasionally lest it should
become too dry. When thus well mixed, it is folded and turned
CHAP. XXI. ZOOLOGY. 297
and beaten again and again till the sixth day, when it is ready for
use. In building, this cement is laid between the bricks, which
are tightly pressed upon each other ; for lining it is laid upon the
surface that is to be covered, and spread with a flat and polished
flint, for it must not be touched with the hand, as it would burn.
Three layers are put on successively, and the third is washed over
with oil, but of what kind is in~material ; when it is dry nothing
can equal the beauty and solidity of this cement, which is called
saroodj. There is another description called sarwnj mayhreti, but
it is not so much used : this is composed of one third of hot lime,
one of sifted sand, and one of pounded brick.
The domestic animals of Afghanistan are the camel, the ox-
with-a-hump, the horse, the ass, and a few fine mules, goats
and sheep, pigeons and fowls. The camels are of two sorts;
those from Turkestan and the country of the Hazarahs are exceed-
ingly large and strong, but not very active. Those from the
Seiatan are slenderly formed and wiry, but, though small, are
as hardy an animal as can be found, and iucredibly swift; they
will travel five-and-twenty leagues in a day without feeling fatigue,
and are never affected by the great heat of the sun; these are
generally used for riding, and those of Turkestan as beasts of
burden.
The ox is used in the plough, in the transport of goods, and, as
a last resource, for food. The horses of Kandahar and Kabul are
not particularly good, but at Herat, and amongst the Hnzarahs,
there are splendid animals, probably the finest and most capable of
enduring fatigue in Central Asia. The Afghans take many of
them to Shikapoor, where they are bought by the English for
remounts for their cavalry, and particularly for the artillery.
Amongst the wild animals of Afghanistan are the royal tiger,
the panther, bear, hyaena, wolf, wild boar, jackal, fox, polecat, and
various kinds of rats ; myriads of scorpions and reptiles swarm in
the plains and mountains. Deer, the wild goat, and wild ass are
seen in numbers of which it is difficult to form an idea; the
gazelle is found only on the south bank of the Helmund. Hares,
partridges, pheasants, bustards, indeed every variety of game
and waterfowl are in abundance.
The soil of Afghanistan resembles that of the rest of the great
table-land of Central Asia. Within the principality of Kabul and
the northern part of that of Herat are high mountains covered with
298 SOIL BKD PRODUCTIONS. CUP. XXI.
forests, having between them vast argillaceous plains well supplied
with water, covered with fields, and susceptible of every species of
cultivation ; the portion south of Herat and Kandahar also consistsof
immense plains, but generally arid, running from East to West, and
bordered by a chain of sterile mountains. The soil of theae plains
is sandy, and absorbs so much water as to create a great scarcity
of that necessary of life within their limits, and the inhabitants are
obliged to obtain by long and toilsome labour that which nature
has denied them at tho surface. They dig a deep hole at the foot
of a mountain where they expect to find water, and, having suc-
ceeded, lead it to their villages by a subterranean canal connecting
a series of wells. Experience is generally their only guide in
performing these works, for very few of them understand anything
of the art of taking levels; nevertheless, they rarely make a
mistake.
Before a population resolve to undertake such a work, they
must have found it impossible to select a spot near a natural
atream which they could turn to purposes of cultivation. It
requires much time and trouble to make these wells, or kariz,
as they are called ; and if the country unhappily becomes the
theatre of war, the first operation of the invading army is to
destroy them, and deprive the people they come to attack of their
supply of water. I t is to this unhappy mania of destrucdveness,
especially in this particular form, that the depopulation of Afghan-
istan is principally to be ascribed : immense tracts of country have
in consequence been abandoned and become arid ; they belong to
no one-the land is valueless and cannot he sold ; water only bas
a value, whether in a well or from a river led by conduits to the
spot that it is required to fertilize. I t is always part of a bargain
that, whenever land can be irrigated by this water, the water &all
belong to the purchaser.
Notwithstanding the bad quality of the soil in hda ha r ,
vegetable productions are extremely good and cheap. The
Afghan plough is simply a piece of wood sharpened and hardened
in the fire. The Afghans cultivate wheat, barley, maize, tobaec~,
cotton, and rice, sesamum, and palma-christi. The rice from
Jellalabad is esteemed the best; and from the sesamum and
palma-christi oil is expressed. Asafmtida is exported, but of the
other crops they raise only enough for their consumption They
rear also a few silkworms.
C w . XXI. GEOGRAPHICAL POSITIO?rT-CLlMATE. 299
All the fruits of Europe, excepting the gooseberry and straw-
berry, are found in Afghanistan, but the absence of these is amply
compensated by the water-melon and the pomegranate. I n Kan-
dahar the latter are superior to those grown in any other part of
Asia
In the mountains of Afghanistan are found vast quantities of
iron, lead, and sulphur ; quicksilver abounds ; also asbestas, which
is called singui pembe. Gold and silver are washed down in many
of the little streams; the mountains, therefore, contain much of
the precious metals-but all this mineral wealth is useless, for
the Afghans will not take the trouble to turn it to account.
Afghanistan lies between 32" and 36' of north latitude, and 60'
and 6 8 O of east Ibngitude, and within this confined space the
climate varies amazingly according to the locality-the heat or
the cold is felt in different spots in the same latitude with very
different degrees of intensity, according to the configuration of the
country. By the side of plains, on which the sun darts his burning
rays, are table-lands at a very high elevation, and gigantic moun-
tains where summer and winter seem to stand side by side. At
Herat, in the July of 1845, the Centigrade thermometer never
h o d higher than 37" in the shade, and that rarely ; it more fre-
quently ranged between 32" and 34". From the commencement
of May to t he middle of September the wind Mows constantly from
the N.\V. over this province, and often with such violence as to
prostrate houees, uproot trees, and cause much devastation. The
winter is tolerably mild ; on the plain the snow melts as it falls,
and d m not lie long even on the summits of the mountaina
Three years out of four it does not freeze hard enough for the
inhabitants to store up any ice for the summer; in general the
temperature is moderate, and the climate one of the most agreeable
in Asia
The province of Kandahar is everywhere subject to intense heat.
In the fortress of Girishk, on the banks of the Helmund, in the
month of August, the Centigrade thermometer stood at 48' or 49O
in the shade. This principality is bounded on the S. by the deserta
of moving sand of the Seistan, and is on this side open to violent
winds, surcharged with exceedingly fine sand, which is very in-
jurious to animal life.
For nine months the sun shines with the greatest possible splen-
dour on Afghanistan, and the nights are even more beautiful than
300 DIFFICULTIES OF COMMUNICATION. CUP. XXI.
the days ; travellers can journey in perfect safety by the brilliant
starlight only. The atmosphere is, during the night, much charged
with electricity, and the least friction will draw sparks from almost
any object whatever, with a slight noise like the breaking of an
osier twig.
The N.W. wind of the spring and summer is as violent in Kan-
dahar as in Herat, but tlie winter is still milder; the mountains
which bound it on the north attract much rain, but snow is rarely
seen there, and then only in mal l quantities
I n Kabul the climate is very ternperate in the summer, and it
is delightful to reside there in that season ; but during half the
autumn, the winter, and half the spring, the ground is covered
with snow three feet deep. The frost is constant and intense, and
the roads are impassable for five months in the year.
That which has contributed more than the turbulence of the
serdars and the rivalry of the tribes to break up the Afghan king-
dom, and keep the three principalities separate, is the difficulty
that has been always experienced by the Suddozye monarchs of
marching from Kabul with sufficient promptitude upon any part
that might be in a state of revolt. The extent of the Paropa-
misus, which is occupied by independent tribes, and is at any time
difficult to pass through, always obliged them to make a long
circuit with their armies to reach Herat. This occasioned a loss
of time which the insurgents turned to their advantage by strength-
ening their psition. I t is difficult to determine the boundaries of
the three Afghan principalities from each other in those parts
where there is neither river nor mountain to fix them definitely:
in such case the frontier of each is defined by an imaginary line
power has planted its tents.
I
which shall just include the ground on which a tribe subject to its
'
The population of Afghanistan is not in proportion to the
extent of its territory, and the conditions which govern this
question contribute powerfully to arrest its development, and even i
cause a sensible diminution of its numbers. The inhabitants
withdraw more and more from the agitation and instability that
reign there; a fourth pa$ of its fighting men have either been
killed or taken service in Persia or in India iu consequence of
the intestine or foreign warsfwith which Afghaniatan has been
afflicted.
There are two causes which make it very diicult to estimate
CHAP. XSI. YOPULATION. SO1
the population of Afghanistan : first, the itinerant character of the
nomi~dic portion of it, for the passion for change of place is
pushed to the greatest extreme-a remark which sometimes applies
even to the inhabitants of towns; secondly, the mountanioua
country of the Paropamisus is very imperfectly known, and this
ie specially inhabited by nomade tribe4 of which it is impossible,
even approximately, to ascertain the number.
The population of Afghanistan is divided into two very distinct
parts: first, the Afghans, properly so called ; secondly, the Tajiks,
the descendants of the ancient conquerors of the country, and who
may be subdivided into two classes-the Parsivans,* or inhabitanta
of the towns, and the Eimaks or nomades. The Afghans are at
the present time the dominant race, and the Tajiks are subject to
them both in Herat and Kandahar; nevertheless Yar Mohamed
Khan has in the former city shown them great consideration, and
permitted them to obtain an influence which may at some future
time become fatal to the Afghans. At Kabul their superior
numbers, their warlike instincts, and the fortified position which
they occupy in that city, have obtained for them the same pri-
vileges as the Afghans ; they share with them the appointments
of the public service, and in the political troubles which often arise
the party to which they give their support is very frequently tri-
umphant.
The Kuzzilbashes or Persians established in Kabul by Nadir
Shah, and numbering 12,000 families, hold to the Tajiks, to whom
they assimilate in religion, both races being of the same sect, that
is to say, Shiahs.
The following may be considered, but approximately only, as
the amount of the population in Afghanistan.
I
In the province of Herat 300,000 Afghans, and 600,000 Panivans or Eimakn.
,, Kandahar 600,000 ,, 300,000 ,, Beloocheo.
,, ILabul 1,600,000 ,, 800,000 ,, and Kuzzilbarher.
--
Totd 2,500,000 1,700,000
General Total, 4,200,000 inhabitantr.
The meaning of which is, " speaking Pe1aian."-Frrrlsr.
GOVERNMENT OF AFGHAN PROVINCES Cau. XXlI
(Iovernment of the Afghan provinces -Power of the Emira - Intlnence of the
prieeta - Turbulence of the serdva - Ideas of government - Conduct of
public &aim -Stability of power unlikely to laat - Mode of obtaining it
- Character of the serdara - The producing classes - They cannot l are
Kandahar - Clannish feelings - Mercenary qualities of the - d m - Fidelity
of the troops never certain - The result of their numerous warn -The
sovereign and the sel-dara - Superiority of the Mohamedzyee -The power of
the Barukzyes - Probabilities of their retaining i t - English marriages in
Afghanistan -The Afghan army - Manner in which i t ts composed -The
contingente eaaily assembled - Ignorant of military discipline. and ineanaible
to ita advantages - War a necessity - Cavalry numerous - Mode of fighting
-Rights of individuals unknown - Construction of their towns- Tribsa of
the south - Strength of the Afghan army in each priucipality - Par Mohnmed'~
t r oop - Money - Prim of provisions - Wine-Weighb and meanurea -The
Paraivans - Mechanioal arts - European manufactures -Taxation.
THE government of the Afghan provinces has somewhat of a
monarchical character about it, nevertheless it is rather a military,
aristocratic, and despotic republic, the dictator of which is esta-
blished for life. The sovereign is absolute, and makes any and
every change which may appear to him necessary or proper in the
government or the administration ; he can dispose of the lives and
property of hie subjects, and is kept within certain limits in
these respects only by the calculations which prudence dictata.
Religion is the counterpoise to his authority ; this gives the clergy
great influence, one that he might try in vain to subject to his wi l l
and pleasure ; and vainer still would be the attempt to infringe
and invade the rights and privileges of the serdars or chiefs of
tribes, who would never consent to resign a certain influence in
the affairs of government. I t may be said that in Afghanistan
there are as many sovereigns as serdars, for each of them governs
after his own fashion ; they are jealous, turbulent, and ambi-
tious, and the sovereign can restrain and keep them in some
order only by taking advantage of their rivalry and feuds and
opposing one to the other. There is no unity, nothing is
permanent, everything depends on thc pleasure or caprice of a
number of despots, always at variance with each other, making
their tribes espouse their personal quarrels ; a constant feeling of
irascibility is the result, which finally leads to sanguinary civil
CEAP. =IT. CONDUCT OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS. 303
wars, and throws the country into a state of anarchy and perpetual
confusion.
I n Europe civilization has regulated everything ; the majority
of her citizens are devoted to science, the arts, industry, and
commerce, which enrich and conduce to the well-being of the
nations, and ameliorate the habits and condition of the people:
when war bursts forth only a very small portion of the population
arm for the defence of the country, and this supplies all the wants
of the army, which is an element of order and security-the
government, in short, is the guardian and watches over the
interests of the nation for the general good. But in Afghanistan
the ideas and object of the government and the governed are
wholly different ; there each man thinks only of destruction and
disorganization ; it is who shall labour least, or who shall enrich
himself the most, and by the most culpable means. The deposi-
taries of power, instead of leading those under them in the right
path, instead of giving them, by their own conduct, a good
example, and ameliorating the condition of the people, load
them with exactions and enrich themselves at their cost.
This system of spoliation and embezzlement is practised by
functionaries of every class, and has a sad effect upon the minds
of the mmsea, who follow the example of their superiors : seeing
that the great, instead of occupying themselves with their welfare,
only think of enjoying themselves at their expense, they become
egotistical and avaricious in their turn, and prefer idleness to
an industry, which serves only to benefit their opprrjsors, and
draws upon themselves additional persecution. To seize without
ceremony upon the property of other people\is an example which
the Afghans receive daily from their chiefs, and it appears to
them a practice both cnnvenient and just ; the effect of this is
a permanent state of dlquietude and trouble. They are, as I
have already remarked, the moat turbulent nation in Asia, and
the niost difficult to govern : they always welcome, and with
enthusiasm, the arrival of a new sovereign, but a reign too long,
or a peace too prolonged with their neighbours, L to them i nsup
portable; and when no opportunity presents itself of getting rid
of their over-excitement on their foes without, they make war
upon one another.
If courage is to them the first of rirtues, it may be said also
that agitation is for them a first necessity ; thus scenes of
304 ' INSTABILITY OF POR-ER. CHAP. XIIT.
violence arise which produce a change of government, and with it
a change of sovereigns, with inconceivable -rapidity. He who
possesses a little money and can scatter it amongst the crowd will
soon have a sufficient number of partizans to assist in raising him
to power; and though this power is hereditary in Afghanistan,
the regular succession to the throne is by no means liked and
is the most uncertain thing possible. The legitimate heir ia
always obliged to submit the question of sovereignty to an election
and the chances of war ; the result is rarely doubtful, and ha
always favoured the candidate who paid the soldiers best that
adhered to his fortunes ; hence it is that one sees so many obscure
adventurers, enriched by razzias, suddenly elevated to the supreme
authority. These have, for the most part, been little better than
avaricious and sanguinary tyrants, who are overthrown almost as
soon as they are set up. I n Afghaniatan everything that succeeda
is legitimate, and in this way success favours the greatest r i d ;
his crimes or his virtues are of little importance to the people ; if
he pays well he is their idol ; but let his purse get empty, let a
reverse of fortune overtake him, he at once becomes an object of
contempt and aversion, and is obliged either to expatriate
himself or retire into a greater obscurity than that from which
he sprung.
Afghanistan is of all countries in the world that in whifh a
man's position is the most uncertain ; a serdar to-day wealthy and
powerful will to-morrow be despoiled of everything he is p o s e d
of, and be reduced to serve, and in a subordinate rank, those who,
till then, had obeyed his smallest wish. The members of hi
family will be dispersed and reduced to the greatest privations, and
hence it is that in this country are seen so many nobles in rags.
There are hundreds of khans who take service as private mldierg
and even servants of the lowest grade ; but no matter what may
be the misery, degradation, or adversity to which they are reduced,
they are always wonderfully vain of their birth, and their aristo-
cratic pride is sure to pierce through their plebeian garb.
The sovereigns of Afghanistan bestow every kind of title with a
.
prodigal hand, and that of khan so much so, and upon sud
perfect nobodies, that it . has completely lost the consideration
properly due to i t The chance which every energetic man
has of rising to power, even the highest, and the facility
which he attains it, has established between the people, the
Carp. XYIl. THE SERDARSTHE PRODUCING CLASSES. 306
nerd- and the sovereign, a species of familiarity which is seen
in no other country. Individuals of the lowest birth and cl ~ss,
clad in raga and covered with vennin, take whatever complaints
they may have in person to the king ; they approach and seat
themselves before him without ceremony, enter at once and with-
out preamble into their story, and with that easy nonchalant
aL which is so characteristic of Afghan human nature. The
mvereign sees, receives, and discusses every petition even on
the most insignificant subjects, and his minister, when he has
one, generally speaking, merely gives effect to the decisions of his
master.
As the Afghan chiefs are never sure of holding for a length-
ened period any great appointment in the state, their first thought
is always how they can fill their own coffers and mill the country;
however great and politic, and of future advantage, any measure
may appear, they will always sacrifice i t to the most trifling
present benefit, no matter how small. Another mode of enriching
themselves is putting up the public offices for sale to the highest
bidder, and the purchasers then consider that they are justified
in committing every kind of fraud to reimburse themselves the
ms they have paid. Individual liberty exists nowhere in the
k t so perfect as in Afghanistan ; every Afghan can go where
he thinks fit; he can leave the kingdom with his family if he
risbea, neither authority nor passport is required to enable him
to do so, no one has a right to interfere with or restrain him ;
tbe sovereign certainly would not, for an Afghan is a very unpro-
ductive article, which consumes much and produces nothing : but
this is not t he case either with the Pal.oivans or the IIindoos,
settled in the country, who form the industrial and producing class.
They, especially those in Iiandahar, are retained in the principality
against their wishes, and are wverely punished when they attempt
to leave it. It cannot be said that there is, as we understand i t
in Europe, any national ~pi r i t amongst the Afghans ; they fight
much more for their own interests than for their independence;
there is, nevertheless, something which resembles it, though not
commonly felt: this is a sentiment of affection for, or a jealous
pride in, his own tribe, ahich makesa man detest the neighbouring
one, though of the same race : it may be affirmed, therefbre, that
every tribe of Afghans has its own clannish feeling, and it is that
ahich protects the nation ; interest alone effects a passing unity
X
306 THE SERDARS-THE TROOPS. CHAP. XX1T.
of purpose, and when that is satisfied the rivalriee of different
castes and clans re-assume their sway.
The serdars are at one and the same time the strength and the
curse of the monarch ; prompt to take a m and defend him when
a good understanding exists between them, they are as ready
to revolt against him when they find, or think, they have the
smallest interest in doing so ; in anything, however, t o which they
are disinclined, they would not obey even the sovereign of their
choice but with reluctance ; moreover, they are always impatient
to see him replaced by another, from whom they hqpe to obtaio
greater advantages. Each subdivision of a tribe is, according to
its numerical force and extent of territory, commanded by one or
more serdars. These chiefs, though of a different country and
religion, may be compared to the dukes and barons of the middle
ages in France-the more powerful to the knights bannerets, and
those having authority over only a few families to the esquires-who
in time of war enrol themselves and their men under the orders
of the chief that iuspires them with the greatest confidence, and
can pay them the best. They have also the characteristic which
was common to the old Italian condottieri, namely, t hat they rill
sell their services to the highest bidder. In war, as in peace, they
are ready to pass from the ranks of the Emir of Kabul into the
service of the Vizier of Herat, the chief of Kandahar, the Englkb,
the Persians, Sikhs, Tartars, or Beloocheq and vice v e d , without
the slightest scruple ; it is indifferent to them whether their friend
of to-day is their enemy to-morrow, or whether they have even to
take arms against their relations or not ; the love of money enables
them to overlook a11 these considerations. The soldiers imitate
on a small scale that which their chiefs do on a large one, that is
to say, they will desert one party and attach themselves to another,
without feeling any compunction or incurring the least disgrace;
the question is simply one of speculation, an dmi t t ed custom,
and there is no shame in conforming to it.
The consequence of this is that a sovereign is never sure of his
troops, and, if any one else will give them higher pay or trest
them better than he can, they will pass over to his camp. The
authority of the chiefs of tribes is niuch more effectual over tbeir
subordinates, whom they sometimes rule with a rod of iron ; t h e
consider the chief as their father, and are accustomed to obey and
respect him from their infancy ; he is of the same clan as them-
Cerr. XXII. RESULT OF THEIR WARS. 307
aelree, he has received his power and authority through a long line
of ancestors ; but these reasons nevertheless cannot always save
him from ruin ; it requires very little to excite discontent ; then he
ia attacked, followed, and driven forth, and his right to govern,
mch ar, it is, pa- to a brother, an uncle, or some collateral
branch, to any one, in short, so that the feudal rights remain in
the family.
The wars that have reddened the soil of Afghanistan for the last
seventy yean have no completely decimated the old families that
many' of them have become extinct, and several tribes have re-
mained without a head. On some occasions, when the sovereign
has tried to give them a chief of his choice, instead of one of their
om, some dreadful and bloody conflict has ensued, which has
dwaye ended in the triumph of the chief elected by the tribe.
This resistance is natural enough. To accept a leader who was
i m p 4 upon them would be to abdicate their rights, to deliver
themselves up to the tender mercies of the prince ; whereas, he
who holds the command by right of election defends his position
and privileges with greater tenacity, no matter who may be the
individual who attacks him.
The visits of the serdars at the court of the sovereign are rare,
for they are generally apprehensive of falling into some trap
which is often laid for them, and they dislike the prolonged stay
they are obliged to make when once they are there. They prefer
residing amongst their tribe, in their fortified villages, generally
occupying some eminence, where in case of attack they can the
more.readily and continuously resist the efforta of their enemies.
The most powerful amongst them are caressed by the sovereign,
who attaches them to his interests much more by the concessions
he makes than by the fear which he inspires ; ordinarily, and with
a view to preserve a nominal authority over them, he remits the
whole of the taxes, and imposes in their stead the obligation to
furnish a contingent of troops in the event of war being declared
against him by his neighbours. This wretched system gives too
much power to the serdars; the sovereign is at their mercy, and
it is the ambition of these men that gives birth to the numerous
civil wars in Afghanistan, for they are constantly in revolt.
I t has been shown in the course of their history to what an
extent they carried their excesses under the dynasty of the Sud-
dozyes ; if they have not aa often deposed and recalled the
x 2
Sfiq THE MOHAMEDZYES ASD BARUKZYES. CUAP. =11.
Mohamedzyes, it is because that family is as it were an exception
to the Afghans in general, and those who compose it are men of
superior intelligence and energy of character. They have also an
ascendancy over the other chiefs, and know how to control them
by the divisions which they so adroitly excite and maintain amongst
them, and by settling or encamping the tribe of the Barukzyes,
to which the Mo1:amedzyes belong, in the plains and valleys that,
lying south of Kandahar, reach as far as Ghuznee. This central
position enables them to move their forces rapidly to any particular
spot, and suppress all revolts with alacrity and vigour, and being
numerically stronger they control the other tribes. Many of t hee
they have broken up into sections or dispersetl, in order to make it
almost impossible that they should render mutual assistance to
each other, and they thus hold them in check with greater facility.
The clan of which the sovereign is a member always enjoys the
greatest privileges and advantages over the rest, and this is one of
the reasons why each tribe is continually agitating and endeavour-
ing to raise its chief to power.
The princes actually reigning in Afghanistan have up to this
time repressed with as much good fortune as severity the revolts
that have taken place in their states ; but though this has enabled
them to hold the reins of government for many years, we must
not imagine that the Mohamedzyes have stifled the spirit of
rebellion, which is as much a necessity in the Afghan character as
the effect of a vicious social organization ; the Barukzyes may be
overthrown to-morrow, they live on from day to day in a precarious
position, and their fate is dependent on the caprices of fortune and
the good pleasure of their enemies Burnes has affirmed that Dost
Mohamed is held in veneration by the Afghans, and that he is the
first sovereign who made them understand the sweets of peace,
and introduced abundance and security amongst them ; but how
did they treat him when the hour arrived for them to show their
gratitude? this chief was abandoned for Shah Shooja, for whom
they had still less consideration. The English took possession of
Kabul without meeting with any serious resistance on their march ;
and in spite of what has been said, and what might still be wid,
I affirm and assert that they were then received with acclamations
and protestations of frieildship and devotion without the least
solicitation on their part, and this from chiefs who subsequently
declared them to be their enemies.
Then, as now, the serdars
CHAP. XXII. T m ARMY. 309
were men of bad faith : they expected and hoped for gold ; as long
as they were given any they accepted it and said nothing ; their
consciences were dead within them, even the bigoted feeling of
fanaticism was hushed in their breasts; the husband sold the
honour of his wife, the father that of his daughter, the brother that
of his sister, and one saw a circumstance till then unheard of, a
number of Englishmen, Christians, become the legitimate husbands
of Afghan women who professed the faith of Islam. Money had
made these savage Afghans as tame and submissive as sheep, but
directly the order was given by the East India Company to reduce
the subsidies which had been paid to them, turbulence and
fanaticism returned at once ; the salaries and donations which they
received after this reduction were even then much higher than
those they obtained from their own sovereigns, but in this, as in all
other circumstances, their avarice, their unstable, restless, and
fickle character, brought about the insurrection which re-established
the power of the Emir Dost Mohamed in Kabul and that of
Kohendil Khan in Kandahar. Their return was celebrated with
every circumstance of pomp by their subjects, and yet how often
eince that period have they not revolted against these chiefs ! They
will, as they have already done before, turn their backs on them
on the first occasion ; and if these princes have the good fortune
to terminate their troubled lives in power, it is all that in common
reason they can expect. I t will be impossible either for them,
or Yar Mohamed Khan of Herat to establish a dynasty, the
foundations of which shall be sufficiently solid to enable them
to transmit it with any degrce of certainty to their legitimate
heirs ; the sovereignty in this country exists only on considerations
purely individual,-it is frequently brought to a close with the life
of the possessor, and becomes afterwards the appanage of some
bold adventurer or soldier of fortune.
The Afghan army might in case of necesssity consist of the
I.
whole male population, for every man is born a soldier, and
attaches himself to some chief as soon as he can hold a musket.
As the troops have no regular pay, and duriug their period of
service generally speaking live on plunder, it is difficult to say
which is the most disastrous to the people, its own army or that of
a foreign enemy, for both one and the other abandon themselves
to all kinds of excesses, devastate the country, and leave behind
the most fearful traces of their passage ; ordinarily speaking,
310 THE ARMY. CXAP. XXI.
the strength of the army of each principality is dependent on the
probabilities that exist of maintaining it in the district .to which
it is going.
At the first news of war the serdars hasten with their several
contingents to the camp of the sovereign, each bringing with him
the number of men in proportion to the nature and importam of
his command. These contingents united form the m y , properly
so called; but in addition to it is another class of combatants,
which, though not the best, are often the most numerous ; sueh, for
instance, as the inhabitants of towns, who are not attached to any
chief, individuals who make war on their own account and at their
own expense, solely for the pleasure of making it, and in the hope
of obtaining large booty. I t sometimes happens that these
irregulars unite in parties, or all together, and elect a chief, or
chiefs, under whose command they place themselves; but more
often they are broken up into small detachments of friends or
acquaintances coming from the same locality, associated together,
and intending to share in the profits of the enterpriee ; they march
after their own fashion, and without order, regulating their pm-
ceedings according to the movementa of the army, or leaving it
when it suits their views and convenience. These elements united,
or sometimes disunited, form an Afghan army, if one can give
such a name to a collection of men, animals, and followcn
marching pell-mell, and in the greatest confusion. It requirer
only a few days for the serdars to mmb l e their contingents, for
every man of the tribe is always ready to mount hi horse, and
each of them carries his provisions with him in a kind of h a m e ,
which is slung behind the saddle. The Afghans, such parasites
and spongea when at home, are exceedingly frugal and temperate
when they are on a journey ; their powers of abstinence and en-
durance are great, and they can live almost upon anything and
for tr long time ; the chiefs, and those whose means enable them
to do so, are accompanied by so many servants for their personal
requirements, or to look after the baggage, that dlviug tbe whole
of the operations they generally exceed in number those of the
fighting men. All these form a mixed and noisy rabble, u d i
ciplincd and impracticable, badly equipped, and taking no prc
cautions necessary to their own security, whether on the m a d or
in camp, even when in presence of the enemy.
Nevertheless,
though in thio miserable and confused state, the army moves with
CHAP. YXII. THE ARMY. 311
great rapidity and over immense distances : the inhabitants of the
villages fly at their approach, for they destroy and pillage every-
thing that lies on their road. Sometimes a dearth of provisions
is felt in the camp, when the majority of the volunteers quit the
army and return to their homes ; the serdars, who carry with thcm
only food enough for their personal wants, are also obliged to
disband successive portions of their contingents to obtain sup-
plies, so that it often happens that only a fourth, and even a
less number, are all that remain with their colours. lt'hen
war takes place between the Afghans themselves, it generally
ends in a combat in which a very small force is engaged on either
side.
In the field, the Afghans never think of ascertaining what
is going on in their front on the line of march ; they form neither
advanced nor rear guards, but move straight on without the
least uneasiness or apprehension until they meet the enemy ; it
matters little to them whether or not their communications are
left open ; the spot on which they find their subsistence is for them
the line of operations ; they pitch their camp by haphazard, with-
out system or order, at the first place they come to, but by pre-
ference near villages, which they can plunder, and where they are
also sure to find water. As this is in some parts very scarce, and
to be found only at certain points well known to all, it often
occurs that the various contingents marching in several columns,
finding the springs or wells near which they intended to encamp
exhausted, retire upon the adjoiuing ones, but the ground is often
occupied, and a bloody conflict is the result, when the strongest
party remains in possession of the springs, and the other hai to
continue its search elsewhere. I n the camp each contingent forms
an irregular circle, the baggage and the chiefs tent being in the
crntre. The mass of the Afghan army is composed of cavalry,
i ~nd the national character, and the nature of the climate and
soil, are the principal reasons that lead them to prefer this arm
to infantry, which, excepting in the mountains north of Kabul,
is held in little estimation amongst them: there the cauntry is
difficult and the climate temperate, but in the other parts of
Afghanistan the people do not fancy traversing on foot miles and
miles of desert plains, under a burning sun, and where water is
Ecnrce. With a little forethought and arrangement these obstacles
would readily and promptly be overcome, but this is not the
31 2 MODE OF FIGHTING. CIIAP. SS!;
enunt,ry in which pzople care to overcome difficulties : an) tlilll?
that is eaay of execution and can be effected in a brief space of
time is much more to their taste.
The love of war is felt much more amongst Afghans than all
other Eastern nations; nevertheless, in no one instance has ru,
little desire been shown to augment the means of resistance and
ag,greusion. War to them is a trade, for it would be impossible
to give the name of science to the thousand absurd proceedings
which they employ, and which prove that their chiefs are completely
ignorant of the first elements of the art. The reason of their succes
against the other Asiatic hordes up to this day has been their &an
in the attack, their courage, but not any clever dispositions or
a knowledge of military operations ; their neigbboun the Sikhs,
previously subject to them, defeated the Afghans and seized some
of the most valuable provinces in their territory, directly they
had obtained even a partial knowledge of European tactics. It
cannot be denied that the Afghans are excellent ekirmishers and
experienced foragers, for they possess the necessary qualificatione
in a much greater degree than Europeana They are perfectly
independent in their manaeuvres, each detachment fighting after
it3 own devices, unrestrained by any subordination and discipline,
those who command them not being any wiser than themselva
Their instinct tells them what movement will ensure their safety
under defeat, or will tend to their advantage in victory. European
soldiers would certainly effect as much as they could under the
same circumstances ; but then they are subject to regular discipline,
directed by one impulse, the majority of them confiding in the
talents of their chiefs, so that their courage is limited within
proper bounds, out of which they cannot step without compromie
ing their discipline, or sometimes endangering the lives of their
comrades.
For the theatre of combat between their armies the Afghans
always select large plains, in order that their numerous cavalrg,
on which they place a blind reliance, may be able to deploy
freely; if they could charge regularly and in line it would be
perhaps the finest cavalry in the world. The sword is theiu
favourite arm, and when they say of any one "chemchiri adam
est" (that man is a swordsman) they have paid him the most
flattering compliment. They have no idea of the advantages of
position, or estimating in a military sense the feature3 of the
srr. SYif. MODE OF FIGHTING. 3t 3
ground ; in their e>es the shortest road is the best; they never
eeek to turn a position or to make a diversion; they always attack
in line parallel to tLat of' the enemy and on all points at once,
taking, in the words of the proverb, " the bull by the horns."
Before they encounter their adversary, however, they endeavour
to wenken him by ruining the country in his front, so that he
cannot maintain himself; tiler burn the villages, expel the inha-
bitants, destroy the aqueducts ; and after he has wandered for days
in the desert they have made, panting with thirst and extenuated
by hunger, they pounce upon their enemy like a tiger and make a
horrible massacre. Strategy and .tactics are unknown to them,
md not even by compulsion could they be initiated in these power-
ful agents in obtaining victory. They will have independence of
action, opportunities of displaying their addreas and their physical
strength ; they place the triumph of individual courage far above
that of science, and reject every idea of cotnbination and unity in
their movements. But this impulsive ardour, this daring bravery,
of which they were so proud, slackened when they had to meet the
Briiih, whose artillery cleverly served, and infantry squares solid
aa walls, made fearful havoc in their squadrons. The artillery
especially, that terrible arm in the hands of Europeans, inspires
them with no less, aversion than it did formerly Montluc or the
Chevalier Bayard, the first of whom looked upon it as an invention
of the devil, and the second said it was a shame that a brave man
Bhould be exposed to die by such a miserable device.
Against cannon the Afghans feel that they cannot trust to the
prowess which they value so highly. Their valour is incontestable,
but their presumption is greater ; they never cease to boasl, and
are constantly repeating thdt, if other nations were, like them-
elves, armed only with the sword, they could give laws to the
world. When they attack they utter loud cries, and the most
courageous place themselves in front ; the rest form a second or
third line, more or less distant from the first, according to the
degree of ardour they may possess. These are ready to rush
forward arid plunder if their comrades in advance are victorious,
or to run away if they are beaten. The chiefs are far more
intent upon signalizing their personal courage than upon directing
their troops, who are not under any control when they have
been a short time in action. The Afghans never disband until
they have failed in three chargee successively, but after that it
becornea impossible to rally them, because they believe that talleh,
f
314 THE TOWNS. CHAP. =I.
fate, is against them, and that they would offend God by longer
opposing-hi decrees.
But if they gain the day, woe indeed to the conquered! for an
Afghan ceases not from slaughter till his arm is wearied with
striking; till then there is no quarter from him, and a hundred
times better is it to die on the field than survive to be his slave,
certain of the hardest possible toil and the most inhuman treat-
ment : a large ransom is the only, chance of liberty. In time of
war the Afghans carry on their communications by signal fires on
the mountains, the information they are to afford being intimated
by their numbers and position, and the length of time they byn.
They have no idea of the rights of individuals, nor any regard
for public opinion, or fear of reprisals. To express any humane
or generous sentiments after a victory is in their eyes the greatest
weakness ; and if they have lost the ideas they first formed of the
power of the British, it is not because they evacuated the country,
but because they did not, before they left it, convert it into a vast
desert, deluged with the blood of the inhabitants.
I n the Afghans enthusiasm and impulse are not the result of
noble sentiments, and but rarely of fanaticism ; they are excited
by the hope of pillage, or even, like the tiger, for the plain and
simple purpose of satisfying their ferocious instincts Nothing is
more natural, in their eyes, than to seize upon a neighbouring state,
even upon that of an ally, without having received the slightest
provocation; force, the last argument of a nation who respects
itself, is with them the first and only one, and justifies all their
actions.
Though they are entirely ignorant of the art of attack and de-
fence of towns and fortresses, the Afghans are remarkable for the
obstinacy of their resistance and the correctness of their aim when
they are behind walls. FYhen they are the assailants they always
attack, suddenly, by escalade, surprise, or stratagem, but very
seldom succeed. I t is by long blockade or treachery, or more
often by lying and false oaths, that they possess themselves of a
fortified place.
The majority of their towns are square, but more or less perfect
in their form, enclosed by one very thick and high wall of earth,
embattled and loopholed, and having a banquette within, on which
two men, at most, can walk side by side : at intervals are placed
small hollow towers ; those at the angles being larger, eolid, and
constructed for artillery. The ditch which surrounds the enceinte
C H ~ P . XSII. SOUTHERN TRIBES--ARMS. 315
is flooded in time of war whenever water can be obtained. The
gates are strengthened with large nails and bands of iron, and to
give them greater security there is a portcullis with loopholes
above it to defend the approach. A great proportion of the
villages in Kandahar and Herat are, like the towns, enclosed with
mud walls of about 12 or 15 feet in height, and 4 in thickness
at the base, but narrower at the top; they are seldom protected by
a ditch, and in some instances there are no turrets except at the
angles. These defences would be inefficient against artillery well
served, but they are all that is required to sustain the mode of
attack customary in the country ; however, the climate being so
very hot and rain so very infrequent, the walls are of considerable
solidity, and are difficult to destroy with artillery only,-the mine
is indispensable for effecting a practicable breach.
These remarks apply to the towns and villages situated in the
plains of Kabul, but not to those in the mountains, which are con-
structed in positions defended by nature.
The inaptitude of this nation for discipline and military organi-
sation arises from their spirit of impatience under the slightest
idea of restraint; and to this feeling their religion contributes, for
tbey are taught to believe that, having proclaimed Djehad, Holy
War, the numerous battalions of the Infidels are powerless against
a handful of the Ghazees, or soldiers of the Faith. The climate
and nature of the soil have also a great irlfluence on the warlike
habits of the Afghans. The tribes of the south are l e ~ s quarrel-
some and less able to support the fatigues of warfare than those
of the north ; and those who inhabit the southern banks of the
IIelmund are considered by all the others aa an effeminate race.
There is more than oue instance of this pernicious influence of
climate upon the human character, and not the least remarkable
one is, that the Roman legions gradually lost their manly
courage as they carried their conquests eastward.
The arms of the Afghans are the firelock, the carbine, the
swivel-gun, or a pair of bad pistols ; sometimes a bow, or a lance
with a bamboo handle. The fire-arms are coarse and heavy, the
hammers of the locks being very defective; most of the barrels
are Turkish, and rifled. They also carry a shield, a foot and a
half in diameter, covered with copper, or the hide of either the
elephant or the horse, which is very hard.
The whole Afghan army consists of the three divisions of
314 STRESGTH OF THE ARMY. CHAP. XXlL
Kal)ul, Kandahar, and Herat ; of these, the troops called DeAeris,'
present the following effective force :-
KABUL 15,000 Afghan Horse.
6,000 Parsivan or Kuzzilbash Horse.
G,000 Afghan Mountaineers, Infantry.
4,000 Pnnrivans, Haz ads , or Usheks, Infantry.
-
Total 31,000
Mohamed Akbar Khan, son of the Emir, Dost Mohamed, per-
ceived the great advantages which order and discifline gave @
the British army, and, as soon as he had in some degree established
his power, he attempted to train the Afghan cavalry to move in
squadrons-but all his efforts failed against the power of habit
He was more successful with two battalions of Parsivans, who were
not so intractable as the Afghans undcr the discipline that be
introduced. These battalions, as it is said, ma n a e u d badly
enough; they were drilled by an Englishman of the name of
Kernel, who, having been wounded and made prisoner at the time
of the disasters in Kabul in 1841, became a Mussulman, and
entered the service of Dost Mohamed.
In KASDAHAR there are 10,000 Afgl nr, 11g,t.-.
3,000 I\ I~II,LIL III[XII:TJ..
3,0(h? L)vlwch Illfantry.
-
Total l8,cusc)
In 1833 Kohendil Khan, sovereign oEtiiiv priilcipality, obt;i:oc>
the assistance of a few Europeans to instruct and or ~i ni n- ,I.
army, and after five years of continued exertion the? sncrerctct.
7 ,t \xcv, in bringing into some slight degree of discipline, SIN-h a- :
about 2000 Afghan infantry. In 1838, when Moha~i~rtl S#vi's
Khan advanced to Subzawar with the intention of tiking Br:tf
these battalions met the enemy for the first time, but a f t Pr o~~
volley was given their natural instinct of self-dependence aaa sr
once in the ascendant ; every man left the ranks, forgetting all
he had learnt, and fought independently, the orders of the officers
being drowned in tumult and confusion.
~ a b u l and Kandahar have also a few pieces of artillery, served
by Afghans, who learned, to a certain extent, how to serve tbem
during the occupation of Afghanistan by the British.
Which receive pay.-Ferrk.
CHAP. SXII. YAR MOHAMED'S TROOPS. 317
In HERAT the army consists of 8,000 Afghan Horse.
4,000 Hazarah Horse.
t 10,000 Parsivan Iufantry.
-
r Tote1 22,000
-
Of the three Afghan princes the Vizier Yar Mohamed Khan
$s the one who has placed the most confidence in his infantry, a d
he persists in keeping up this arm; notwithstanding the little favour
with which it is viewed by the ~eopl e, he has succeeded in forming
eight battalions of 1000 men each. He accomplished this with the
mistance of a Hindoo Ilussulman, who had been a sergeant in the
East India Company's servite ; this man arrived at Elerat in 1829,
and was killed in the last campaign which the Vizier undertook
against the Hazarahs in 1847. In the organization and drill
of these battalions there was much room for improvement, but
they have done pretty good service. The Vizier, finding the
Afghans ill adapted for making disciplined soldiers, recruited
these corps from the Panivans exclusively, and this released him
from the exactions of the serdars of his principality, whom he
managed with so much tact that he made it impossible for them
to injure or even to disobey him. But if this plan had its advan-
tages it had also its evils, for by it Yar Mohamed committed the
same fault that Marius did when he received slaves and freedmen
into the Roman army, and he prepared the way for much future
ernbarrssgment in Herat. The Parsivans are the conquered race,
and their number is double that of the Afghans ; by putting arms
their hands, which they know how to use, Yar Motlamed Khan
has restored to them their prestige and power. Any other chief
but him would have already paid dearly for this imprudence, but
his policy has been so clever that he attached to himself hy the
ties of gratitude a race that till then had never borne, but with
impatience, the yoke of their cruel oppressors. I t is probable that
80 long as he lives these battalions of Parsivan infantry will always
be faithful to him, and give him their staunch support; but his
vigilance is unequalled, and he always foresees, and with rare
talent provides again&, eventualities that might be fatal to him.
The ordnance of the Vizier is coniposed of sixteen pieces of
artillery, 6, 8, and 12-pounders, which are served by the infantry,
who make but poor artillerymen.
In the three Afghan principalities the chiefs are too numerous
in proportion to the number of the troops they command, and that
31 8 PAY OF TROOPS-MOSEY. Cur. XXII.
ia particularly the case in Herat. The Vizier is aware of this, but
could not avoid recompensing the brave soldiers.who so valiantly
fought the army of Mohamed Shah, and afterwards supported him
against Shah Kamran. Hence the superabundance of officers, even
then but poorly rewarded, and having no permanent command.
The pay of the contingents is given to the serdars by the sove
reign and is never fixed : it varies according to the influence these
chiefs possess, and the number of men tbey can bring into the
field. The tax due to the state is deducted from- the pay when
the serdar receives it, but it is rarely they distribute the whole to
their soldiers-more than half remains in their own hands, and
they indemnify the men by small grants of land, right of pastursge,
permission to work at a trade, et cetera, and no notice is taken.
Each Afghan is obliged to furnish his arms and horse at hi ow
expense, for which reason they always take great care of them.
The princes of Afghanistan have not coined gold pieces ; those
which are current in that country are t.he ducat of ~ u s d a and the
tellah of Bokhara. The gold tomaun and the silver kran of
Persia are also in.circulation, but at a depreciation of a tenth of
their value, whereas that of the ducat and tellah is augmented in
the same proportion. Small silver coiils called %in&k are
struck at Herat, in value about fourpence ; ind at b d a h a r
rupees, also of silver, and of the value of a shilling. At Kabul tht
rupee ia worth two shillinp.
There are two fictitious light coins current in the three principal
cities, called chahee and abhaeee; two chahees make one abbaaee, d
two abbasees a djindek or fourpence ; there are three Herat djindeh
in the Kandahar rupee, and two rupees of Kandahar to one d
Kabul. Fractions of the chahee and abbasee are represented by a
copper coin called pout or paiselr : its value is never bed, and
varier, according to the abundance or scarcity that exists in
market 'at the time. This value is determined every three mont h
by the sovereign on the report made to him by the chief agent of
police and the five principal merchants, who previous to the audi-
ence consult their fellow merchants of the locality on the subject
There are from three to five pouls in a chahee according to cirrum
stances, but this copper coin has no currency except in the to-,
where it is compulsory to receive it. The country-people dl
take it, or sell their pmvisiori to the caravans and travellers, u n l ~
they obtain in exchange a piece of coaree cotton cloth manufrctured
CHAP. XXiT. PRICES-WEIGHTS AND MEASURES. 319
in the country, called kerhae, with which they make their clothes.
They will not even receive silver money ; and if the purchaser
has no cloth he must present them with some article that will be
useful to them ; in the way of food there are only two thinge which
they inquire for, viz. tea and sugar.
In a country where the inhabitants are so idle and ponr, every
article naturally sells at a very low price ; a man may live for two
pence a day. The following is the current value of the under-
mentioned articles of first necessity in Afghanistan in the year 1845.
1. d.
Brad .. thetnenofHerat* 0 1)
Mutton 8 , 0 41
Butter and fat >I 1 1
Milk of ruiolu kind. ,, 0 1
Fruit $ 1 0 1
Rice 31 0 21
Salt .. .. the men ;i $
Tobacco 1 0
wheat .. . . 200'ibe. 2 1
Barley I S 1 8
Indian corn ,. 1 0
Wine .. .. a battemen 0 5
I t is strictly forbidden to make or drink wine at Kabul and
Kandahar ; at Herat the contrary is the case, where Yar Mohamed
has monopolizetl the right to make it, and this has brought him in
a considerable profit by farming that right at a very high price to
others. As to the consumption of it, he is one of the greatest wine-
bibbers in that city or the principality.
Everything, whether solid or liquid, is sold by weight in
Afghanistan; the one which is generally used is the men or
battemen of Herat, which, as I have just stated, is of the weight of
seven pounda This is divided into 40 hr8, the sir into 20 mb-
calk, and the miscale into 24 nwkooh.
Cloth and manufactured articles are measured by the guez,
which is 3 ft. 33 in. I t is divided into 16 guirelr or knota, and
one of these is subdivided into 4 noktek or pointa.
Though
this is the only measure sanctioned by the government, it is
rare that an Afghan will purchase cloth in the bazaar unless i t
is measured from the hand to the elbow, and more especially by
his own, that is to say, from the elbow to the very extremity of the
middle finger.
The Afghans who take any part in commercial affairs are very
few in number ; they are principally the Babeee, who live to the
south of Kandahar ; the rest never occupy themselves in this way
The men of Hemt is seven pounda of Afghaniatan ; but the sir u l w, and
Engliah-that of Persia is only air, and weigha only sixteen nookoodr.-Fernier.
divided in the name manner as the mn
320 PARSIVASS AND HINDOOS. CHAP. 3XII.
or in any branch of industry ; they have in fact the greatest
repugnance to every kind of occupation, and are only qualified
either to make war or to plunder.
Those who inhabit the towns are habitually in the employ of
their wealthy countrymen, and the nomades or country people
who have pasture or arable land never farm this themselves.
Directly an Afghan receives a concession of land from his chief,
he places it and a few oxen in the charge of a Parsivan, who
tills, sows, and reaps it for him, and when the crops are housed
he has a third of the produce for hi trouble ; if they have flocks,
the Parsivan is in like manner the shepherd ; and if the Afghan
is overtaken by poverty, he procures as best he can a horse and
arms, and sets out to plunder his neighbours. Th e Parsivans in
the towna as well as in the villages are, as we have already stated,
the industrial class ; all commercial affairs are in their hands, all
manufactures ; in a word, it is their activity and intelligence thal
support the country and those who govern it. Th e Afghans are
incapable of imitating them ; they know only how to fight, and
live from hand to mouth, rarely making a competency when they
have no public appointment ; but once invested with the least
power, they enrich themselves by every species of exaction.
To the Ptrrsivans must be added some few Hindoos, as forminp
part of the commercial and industrious class, who are attracted to
the Afghan towns by the hope of gain ; they are here what the
Jews are elsewhere, always ready to enter into commercial transac-
tions, and evincing like the Israelites the same intelligence and
activity in all their operations, displaying the same poverty-stricken
appearance, and affecting great simplicity in their dress. Every-
thing about them denotes the greatest humility, which does not
however protect them from the contempt of the Afghans h'erer-
theless, that does not give them much concern, a ~ ~ d they console
themselves if it does by filling their strong box with Russian ducats
or Bokhara tellahs. and some of them are immensely rich. They
are considered extremely honest in all business transactions, exact
in fulfilling their engagements, and devoted to those to whom they
have once attached themselves. The very few Afghan merchants
that are met with are, generally speaking, Syuds or descendants
of the Prophct, who will not profane their holy origin by sel~ing
any master. These are especially employed in the somewhat
unsaintly occupation of horse-dealing with the Hazarahs and
Turkomans. They take these horses to Shikapoor, and return
from that town with English goods to Afghanistan. Their title of
Syud smooths all the difficulties of their journeys, for they are
venerated By the tribes, eve11 those most addicted to pillage. I t
would be hazardous for Parsivans and Hindoos to undertake similar
expedtiions and embark in an import and export trade, for they
would be stripped before they had traversed half the road between
Kandahar and the Induq they employ therefore these Syuds as
their agents.
The mech~nical arts of indispensable utility are but impcrfectly
known in Afghanistan : they manufacture inferior sabres, glass,
dclf, coarse cloths of goats' hair, called kourh, and others of camels'
hair, called barek, of which they make their robes and cloaks, and
export a pretty large quantity to Turkestan and Persia The
kerbas, or coarse cotton cloth, is their principal article of manu-
facture, and with it they make their shirts and trousers. At
Herat, and there only, they raise and weave a little silk of a light
texture, and dye it of a red colour : the women's chemises are made
of this. A thick cloth,manufactured from the long coarse hair of
the camel and goat, is used by the nomades for their tents.
Masonry, and carpenters' or joiners' work are pretty generally
understood in this country; they also work tolerably well in
leather ; and sheepskins, with the wool on, are beautifully dressed
at Kabul. This is done with considerable art, and the cloaks
made with these skins, which are very handsome, have a great
reputation all over Central Asia. I t appears that their superior
quality is to be attributed to the fact of their being prepared with
the rind of the pomegranate, a fruit which grows with peculiar
luxuriance near that city : workmen, who have established them-
selves at Kandahar, and at Heret, have not been able to obtain
the same results with the pomegranates gown in those provinces
as they did wit11 the h i t of their native city.
The Afghans purchase in Persia, Turkestan, and more especially
in India, a number of articles of European manufacture, which
they cannot do without, and which are not produced even in small
quantities in their own country. Amongst these the following may
be mentioned-metals, silk goods, cloth, muslins, woollen and
cotton goods, particularly the latter, which they purchase in very
large quantities, the lower and middle classes ~e a r i ng smrcely
anything else. Fowling-pieces and watches would find a ready
Y
312 FOREIGN TRADE-REVEXUF:. CIIAP. XSII.
sale in Afghanistan ; those that I saw there were generally speaking
of French manufacture, and more in demand than the same articles
of English make. Delf, cutlery, spectacles, rich and heavy silk
goods, woollen or cotton, for turbans and sashes for the waist,
pnper, and sugar might be imported with advantage.
Afghanistan, Turkestan, and Persia are excellent marketa for
England and Russia, who have nearly monopolized the trade
of those countries; if France had a commercial treat. with
Persia, she might hope to introduce several millions of francs of
merchandize into Central Asia annually. The Emir Dost Me
hamed and Yar Mohamed have endeavoured by every means in
their power to encourage their subjects in manufacturing some of
the nrticles which they require from European countries, and thus
avoid the high prices at which they are obliged to purchase them,
but on such subjecta to speak to an Afghan or a deaf man is a h -
li~tely the same thing ; the Parsivans responded more readily to this
appeal, but they were very soon disgusted with the knowledge the!
acquired, for it was only a source of misery to them : under one
pretence or another the wealthy and powerful classes made them
work for their benefit and without sufficient remuneration The
best gunmaker in Kandahar was incarcerated in the fo- of
Girishk by the Serdar Alohamed Sedik Khan, on the absurd
pretext that he was born at a village within his juriediction;
khan gave this unfortunate artizan scarcely bread enough to eat,
and the man eventually expired under the harsh treatment be
received for having attempted to make s visit to his wife and
children, who were living only ten hours' journey from Girishk.
Foreign merchandize arrives in Afghanistan by five different
routes: the first is that from the west, which traverses Persia by
Teheran, and Meshed to Herat ; the second is from Turkestan
on the north, by Bokhara, Merv, Moorghab to Herat ; the third,
also from Turkestan, by Rokhara, Karchy, Balkh, and Kbulm, to
Kabul ; the fourth is the eastern one, from the Yunjab by
and Peshawur to Kabul ; and the fifth is that of the south from
India by the Indua, Shikapoor, and Bolan, to Kandahar.
The revenue in Afghanistan varies according to the abundance
of water which irrigates a locality, or the race of persons by whom
,
it ia inhabited. An Afghan, who thinks that any debt he ore
I
hie country is repaid by the fact of his arm being at her service,
always finds some way of avoiding the payment of a portion of
CII.IP. XXII. TAXES. 323
tax he owes his sovereign : but the Eimaks and Parsivans, who
are regarded as a conquered people, think themselves fortunate if
the collector takes only double of what they should legally pay ;
although Mussulmans (the greater part it is true are of the sect of
Shiahs) they are obliged to pay the khradj , or capitation tax,
called also eer kAanM, or house tax, from which the Afghans
are exempt.
The following is a statement of the tax, not as it is collected,
hut as it is fixed in the principalities of Herat and Kandahar.
Though the Afghans are exempt from the humiliating tribute
of the ser khankh, they pay under another name a contribution of
two shillings for each tent or house.
The Eimaks, or the nomade Beloocliees, pay the contribution of
the ser khankh, which amounts to forty-four djindekq or fourteen
shillings and eightpence for each family : orphans and widows are
free of this impost.
The ser khan6h is not paid under this name by the Parsivans
and Hindoos living in towns, who are exempt by placing them-
selves under the protection of some Afghan chief; but the eove-
reign repays himself by the tax levied on their shops.
At Herat Afghans and Parsivans, &, pay an anuual tax for
the horns or other animals which they keep. For a camel and a
mare, sixteen djindeks (five shillings and fourpence) ; for a cow,
three djindeks and a half (one shilling) ; for an ewe or a she-goat,
twenty abassees (or two pence) ; a he-goat or a sheep is free of tax.
For all animals without distinction, whether male or female, a tenth
of their value is paid when they are sold in the public market.
In Kandahar the tax upon animals is only paid upon sheep at
sixpence a head ; the tax of meidmte* is levied on all the other
animals at the rate of five per cent.
I n Kandahar and in Herat it is only on cultivated land that
taxes are levied ; the sovereign takes as much of the crop as
there was seed sown, and also eight djindeks (two shillings and
eight pex~cej on the produce of ten battemens of seed sown.
Fruit gardens are taxed by the tnlef, or cord, at ten shillings
each ; this measure compriscs a space sixty paces long on
every side. Kitchen gardens pay twelve shillings and sixpence
per cord. When an Afghan proprietor or farmer lets his land to
The duty upou m1ea.-Fcrrb.
Y 2
324 TAXES. CHAP. XSII.
a Parsivan, and furnishes seed, and oxen t o work it, the former
claims four-fifths of the produce, and leaves one-fifth for his tenant.
But when the Parsivan takes the land only, he takes three-fifths,
and gives two-fifths to the landlord.
Having merely passed through the principality of Kabul, i t was
impossible for me to know positively how the taxes are levied there,
but the information I obtained by careful inquiry justifies me in
supposing that it is nearly in the same manner as in Kandahar.
I n the eyes of an European these taxes appear trifling, but i t
must be remembered that the smallest payment seems onerous to
an Afghan; they work so little, and are therefore so poor, that
they feel the want of the least thing that is taken from them, and
every time they pay a tax they exclaim against what they call
violence and tyranny. They might perhaps become reconciled t o
the impost if, after they had paid it, they were left in peace and
idleness to enjoy the fruits of their speculations or thcir misdeeds,
but they are subject t o the exactions of subordinate agents, and
that provokes them, though they pay less than the Parsivans and
others. The inhabitants of the country pay also anothcr indirect
tax, which, in proportion to their resources, is rather heavy, but i t
does not seem oppressive to them, because i t is engrafted on t he
manners of the nation: it is the hospitality they are bound to
exercise towards travellers, of whom a great number are servants
of the government,
When the travellers are men of rank they have a long train
of attendants, all of whom the villages are obligcd to feed, and
also their horses; i t is true they sometimes avoid extortion by
concealing themselves if they have timely notice, but they cannot
often elude the vigilance of the head of the village, nl:o al mmt
always extracts something from them; this is violence aiid not
hospitality as they like to practise it.
A t~ general rule, if an Afghn11 is obliged to work one m o ~ ~ t h
in twelve he considers himself most unfortunate. The re-
pression of crime and levying a tax he designates as zalm,
tyranny. T o live in perfect licence and never to be asked f or
anything is what he would call the proofs of a paternal govern-
ment Nevertheless, the heaviest demands are not made upon
him ; the Parsivans, who ar e attached to the soil, obtain for t hei r
labour in cultivating it, only just so much as is necessary for t he
maintenance of tllemselves and their families. There is no
CHAP. Sr;II. TAXES. 325
security for them unless they put themselves under the protection
of an Afghan, and this protection costs them dear. Those who
live in the towns are less oppressed than those in the country, but
as they are the working part of the population, they are subject to
a host of taxes direct and indirect which they have mucb difficulty
in meeting tlie payment of, even when they are always in work.
Tradesmen pay five pounds twelve shillings per annum, for
permission to open their shops. Those who expose their goods in
front of their houses, such as attar, bdal, halva-furoucl~,* pay.
upon each shelf a ,sum fixed by the tax-gatherer, which varies
according to the presumed profits of the merchant. Artificers
like hiefch-dooz, zine-dooz, zerguer, or khnyat,t are obliged when
they sell an article, and before they deliver it to the purchaser, to
submit it to one of the inspectors, who perambulate the bazars, to
receive the mark of the dagh,S for which they pay a duty equal to
one third of the value of the article sold. \~'orkrnen, that is,
Gemla, nahal-bend, or nadjar are obliged to give to tlie government
gratis, two days' work out of seven. In fact, every profewion,
every species of trade or commerce, is subject to taxation. At
Herat in particular, the meat-markets, soap-manufactories, copper-
ware, and ironmongery trade, carpentry, the repairing of old furni-
ture and even shoes, and the carriage of water, are all monopolies.
At Kabul, previously to 1839, the Parsivans were much better
treated ; they did not pay more than two per cent. on their flocke,
and four per cent. ou the harvest, like the Afghana ; but since the
power of the Emir, Llost Mohamed Khan, has been hampered by
the conduct of his sons, avaricious demands have greatly increased
in that principality.
I n Kandahar extortion is yet more rampant than in Kabul or
Herat. The people live in utter misery, and within the last ten yeare
Inore than 100,000 of Kohendil Khan's subjects have emigrated.
A11 merchandise entering Afghanistan pays duty as under :-
At Herat 5 per cent., but with other exactions it mny be calculated at 9 per cent
At Kanddiar 24 ,, , $ 9 13 10 ,,
At Kabul 21 ,, >I 9 I > I 4 11
Goods are exported from the three principalities free of
customs duties, but they are subject to the badj,,ll viz. :-
Dru?+t. Grocer. Spice shop. $ Stamp.
t Shoemnker. Saddler. Goldsmith.. 5 A m u . Blnckamith. Carpenter;
Tnilor. I( Tax on trnn.zport.-Ferrier.
326 REVENUE-YINERALS. CHAP. SHII.
r. d
A camel load, whether entering or Ieuving the country, p p a . . . .
12 2
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . A h u m or mule l o d
r) 10
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A n . s a l d . . 2 0
Every horse sent to India for sale pays 11. 4s. 4d. to the chief of
Kandahar when he leaves his territory.
The revenues of Afghanistan are :-
In Herst f >ti,O00 and E24,000 in corn.
In Kandahar 49,000 ,, . 92,000 ,,
In Kabul 140,000 ,, ti0,OOO ,,
Whoever looks only at the amount of this revenue will neyer
be able to form a correct opinion of its importance ; he must a h
understand the price of labour, of materials, of cereai und other
products, of the requirements of the people, et cetera, he will then
have an idea of the rcal value of sums which appear so small
Under the system followed by the Afghan chiefs, these revenoa
covered all their expenses, and left them a very pretty profit
The English, instead of following the same system, paying the
officials regularly and on the same footing, and thus haw
satisfied every one, thought it n e c e s s to increase the expenses
which such a revenue was not able to meet; this was one of
the principal reasons that led to their disasters in that country,
because every one had enjoyed the augmentation, and revolted
when the tinre came for retrenchment.
\Ye have said that the minerals in the mountainous parts of
Kabul and Kandahar are not worked. Yar Mohamd, of IIerat,
paw better than either of his neighburs, the advantages which he
possessed in this source of wealth, and has for some years past
worked an iron and a lead mine near his capital. The results,
however, have been but moderate as to profit, owing to tbe
ignorance of the workmen, who are unacquainted with metallur-
gical operations ; the silver is not properly extracted from the lead ;
the iron can be broken, and is as brittle as glass even wlieu hot.
r -
1 he Vizier is most anxious to increase his revenue by these mina;
lle would like to establish cotton and woollen factories, also
spinning machinery for cotton, silk, and wool ; to erect cannon
foundries and small-am manufactories, but in the Afghan stj-le.
Yar Mohamed would like to have all this without spending any
money, and with the assistance of one man, who must be ao
quainted with every department, and who would find by enchant-
ment, in a country devoid of everything, all the machinery ad
tools requisite to carry out such projects.
CHAP. SXIII. BRITISH LEAVE SHIKAPOOR.
CHAPTER XXIII.
EDglkh umy 1uav.m Shitapoor - March through the Bo1.n ~ M E - Kohmdil
ghvl adwncca to meet it - Defection of the Afghan chiefs - Kohendil
retim into Penis- Kandahar capitulates - Assault nnd fall of Ghumee -
Dat Mohmed endeavours to negotiate, but without success -The Emir leaves
Kabul-The English enter the city - Restoration of Shah Shooja- First
dissgrwnnent between him and the Brituh - The latter interfere in the
dministnrtion of the kingdom - Reaulta of this- The prieata are hostile to
the invaders - Avaricious view8 of the Englinli disappointed - Revenues of
Afghanistao moderate in amount - M a s employed to raise them - Slmh
Bbooja demands the fulfilment of the treaty - Re f u ~ l of the English - Hatred
wt them augmented - Religious proselytism - Faglinh connelionr with
Afghan women - Revolta in the kingdom -The Doat at Bokhara- Persecu-
tiona to which he is subjeat -Combat at Karchy - Mohamed Shah threatem
the Uabek Emir- The Dost ia r e l e a d - Hia perilous position near the Ox u
-He flies to Char Sebz and Khulm - Returna to the province of Kabul - Con-
&& between the Dost and the English - Dessrted by h b oountrymen - Sur-
renders to the English- He in sent to India.
\YE must now return to the History which was interrupted at the
close of the 20th chapter, the last incident mentioned being
the concentration of a British force at Shikapoor. This army
left that place early in March, and aRer p i n g Dadur, entered
the mountains through which the rwd winds as far aa Bolan,
a distance of fifty-two miles, and thence leads to the great table-
land of Central Asia, more than 5000 feet above the level of the
ea Notwithstanding the advantages which this defile afforded
the Afghans scarcely defended it. The English advanced without
serious opposition, though two hundred men well posted might have
annihilated them, distressed as they were by a painful march
amidst the natural obstacles with which the pass is thickly beset at
every step. At Dadur, on this side the mountains, the thermometer
stood at 102' of Fahrenheit, while violent snowstorms fell heavily
on the way-worn soldiers ae they advanced along the Bolan Pass.
On the 24th of March, after eight days of a most harming march
from Shikapoor, the m y having cleared the mountains, moved on
towards Kandahar. Kohendil Khan had ceased to intrigue against
Dost Mohamed, and became on friendly terms with him, as he
always did when threatened by serious danger. He had deter-
mined upon shutting himself up in his capital till his brother of
32.3 NARCH THROUGH THE BOLAX PASS. Caar. XXIII.
Kabul should arrive with reinforcementa to his assistance, but the
Ilost having been detained by a movement which tlie Sikhs had
made in favour of the English on this side of Peshawur, Kohendil
Khan decided upon assembling all his contingents and marching t o
meet the enemy. However, he had scarcely reached the valley of
Pisheen when the ranks of his army were thinned by numerous
desertions. The Serdar Hadji Khan, Kaukeree, was the first to
p m over to Shah Shooja with five hundred picked horscmcn ; this
was the signal for the disorganisation of the Kandaharian army, and
Kohendil Khan, and his brothers, despairing of then defending
t!lemselvca and their families with success, determined upon flight.
'I'hey gained the IIelmund, followed its course to lake Roustem, and
entered Persia, where the Shah received them most kindly ; he
bestowed upon them as a fief the little town of Sher-babek, situated
between the provinces of Fars and Kerman, and gave them the reve-
nues of the whole of that district, amounting to 12,000 tomauns
annually. The flight of the Prince of Kandahar was followed by
the immediate submission of the Serdars lIadji Dost Nohamd
Ichan, Isakzye, Habib Ullah Khan, Surkanee, Peistaltrb Khan,
Noorzye, Kamazan Khan, Ghildjzye, Akhter Khan Alizye, Ser
Firaz Khan Isakzye, &c. &c., who brought with them a detach-
merit of horse to Shah Shooja, and his cause might from that hour
be looked up011 as triumphant in Afgbanistan.
The British Army thus took possession of Kandahar. without
opposition, and the Icing and General Sir John Keane made
their public entry into that city on the 20th of April. Shah Shooja,
as if conscious that his claiin to the throne was not very legitimate,
was crowned in the mosque of Ahmed Shah on the 8th of Ma?,
1839, hoping by that ceremony to render his claim more important
in the eyes of the Afghans. After naming his son Timoor Jfirm
governor of the city, the King and the Army marched on tlie 27th
of June, in the direction of Ghuznee.
b b This town,'' says Nr. Sumner, b . is about one hundred and sixty
miles from Kandahar, and sixty-eight from Kabul: although ten
days ought to have been sufficient to reach Ghuznee it was not till
the 21st of July that Sir John Keane arrived before that fortress
The march of the troops had been much impeded by the difficulties
of the road, the great number of camels, and the crowd of camp
followers, more numerous even than the soldiers, but no resistam
worthy of remark opposed the progress of the army.
CHAP. YSIIT. DEFEClTOX OF AFGHAN CHIEFS. 309
" I t had been s u p p e d that the town of Ghuznee was not fortified,,
it is, however, surrounded by a wall and a ditch. To attack it with
the few light field-guns that the Anglo-Indian army had with it w-as
impossible, but one of the gates was destroyed with gunpowder in
the course of the second night, and on the 23rd of July a fierce
combat took place in the streets of the town, in which the English lost
two hundred men The Afghan garrison, numbering 2500, fought
with unexpected energy,-it is stated that almost all the dead
were pierced by the bayonet, and very few received gun-shot
wounds. Nevertheless, the Afghans were vanquished, and Gholam
Haidar Khan, one of the sons of Dost RIohamed, who commanded,
was taken prisoner ; Shah Shooja wished to put him to death, and
the English had the greatest difficulty in making him renounce his
intention."
Notwithstanding the defection which had so seriously weakened
the army of Kabul, Dost Mohamed would not abandon his kingdom
without trying the fortune of war, and he marched at the head of
the few followers who remained faithful to him, about 6000 men,
with his artillery, to meet the British Army ; but having at the
second halt heard of the fall of Ghumee, he sent his brother the
Nawab Djabbar Khan, as ambassador to Sir William M'Naghten,
the British Commissioner, to negotiate with Shah Shooja The
Afghans reproached the Nawab with being too warm a partizan of
the English, with whom he had for some time kept up a continuous
intercourse ; but as he was of a conciliatory disposition and generally
appealed to as peace-maker in the quarrels between his brotllers, as
well as those between the serdars of the different tribes, this partiality
was overlooked. The Dost could not have made a better choice of a
negotiator with his adversaries, to whom he proposed that he should
accept a post under Shah Shooja, analogous to that which his brother
Fethi Khan had held under the Shah Mahmood, thnt is to gay
Prime Minister. He also demanded the restoration of his third son
Haidar Khan and his wives, who had been made prisoners at Ghuz-
nee, and consented to submit on these two conditions ; but they
were rejected. The Nawab met with an icy reception in the
English camp, almost insulting, and returned full of hatred for
those who, but a few days before, held the first place in his esteem.
The Emir retraced his steps when he heard the result of his last
conciliatory offer, and gave up the idea of making head against
the invading army with so small a force as his own, the greater
330 RESTORATION OF SHAH SHOOJA. CHAP. XXIlI.
part of which were demoralized,-moreover, he could only expect
fresh defections. He made, therefore, but a short stay in Kabul,
and abandoning that city retired beyond the Hindoo K d
into the dominions of the Emir of Bokhara, accompanied by his
family and three hundred and fifty devoted adherents. As sooa
as he was gone, Abdullah Khan, Etchekzye, Aziz Kban, Ghildjzye,
Emin Ullah Khan, Logheree, and Khan Shireen Khan, Kuzzil-
bash, who might still have created fresh difficulties for the Englii,
aud caused them considerable loss in their attack upon Kabul, now
openly espoused the party of the invadem and made their submission.
The Anglo-Indian army entered that city without opposition on
the 7th of Au,pt, 1839, and proclaimed the definitive re-establish-
ment in power of Shah Shooja-ool-Moolk. The General-in-Chief
had hoped to take Dost Mohamed prisoner, but finding that
he had escaped he sent Colonel Outram with one hundred and
fifty British cavalry, and seven hundred Afghan horse, commanded
by Hedji Khan, Kaukeree, in pursuit. On the 21st of August
they had nearly attained their object, for they were but fourteen
miles from the fugitive Emir, but having received aecret intelligence
of this by a messenger from Hadji Khan, he made a forced march,
and escaped the danger that threatened him. &fore he could reach
Khulm he had to repulse several attacks of the Hazarah Deh
Zinguie, who had already felt the power of English influence, and
his little escort was reduced to half its number by the time he
arrived at Balkh. His first intention had been to gain Per& but
the Emir Nasser Ullah Khan Bahadoor having despatched a mes-
senger to offer him shelter in his dominions, he delayed his journey
to Teheran, and went direct to the court of the Usbek Emir.
Shah ghooja, replaced on the throne of his fathem, was soon
surrounded by the greater part of the Afghan serdars, and with the
exception of some partial outbreaks of little importance, had m s o n
to consider himself firmly seated on the musnud. This result aas
due to the conciliatory conduct that he at first manifested, and
his good understanding with the English; but he only acted
thus from an apprehension that Dost Mohamed might be near
at hand, for as soon as he knew that that chief had arrived at
Bokhara, he wished to exercise the sovereign authority to the
exclusion of his protectors. They, on the contrary, had determined
to leave him nothing but the semblance of it--and Sir IV.
RI'Naghten directed everything. He gave all his orders through
CHAP. 1;SIII. BRITISH INTERFERENCE. 33 1
the Sbh, who every morning repeated, a t his durbar, the lesson he
bad received on the previous evening from the British Commissioner.
The serdars were too clear-sighted not to perceive this, and they
e x p d their disgust in strong terms at all times, and in all
plam The English, though affronted a t this freedom of speech,
dared not openly repress it, lest their own interference in the
Government should become too manifest, but they revenged them-
uhes by noting the chiefs that were rebellious in their eyes, and in
this way created a great deal of discontent.
Notwihtanding the smothered displeasure that prevailed, the
Englii fancied themselves firmly established in the country, and
sent back part of their army to Indi a They determined also at
once, and without the least consideration for the Afghans, to
introduce those administrative reforms which they had established
in their Indian possessions, where all had been done progres-
sively and without wounding the prejudices of a population, far
more timid and more easy to manage than the Afghans. I t is true
that in Afghanistan they put native officere at the head of the
different departments, but they were there like puppets, having no
liberty of action and only following blindly the directions of a
British officer, who was associated with them. In doing this, Sir W.
WXaghten appeared to be guided by the remembrance of what
Nir hiahmood the Ghildjzye had done when he established hie
government in Persia ; but Sir IVilliam forgot, or overlooked, the
point that the Mir in placing with his officials others more enlightened
than themselves, selected the former from among the Persians, a
servile people always accustomed to bend to a conqueror, while the
English officers on the contrary thrust their own will upon the Afghan
functionaries, which was a very different condition of affaira The
plan failed and brought into general contempt with their cou~lltry-
men thoee natives who accepted office under such circumstances
This system gradually disturbed the good understanding existing
between Shah Shooja and the English ; they wished to be masters,
but wanted the courage to act openly, and yet they would not
leave the King to his own ideas of Government : they were
apparently neutral, and still had the presumption to mix themselves
up in everything. This bastard system alienated from them both
the people and the court ; the Shah testified his great displeasure at
it, and at last counteracted every measure that originated with the
English. For example, Sir Alexander Burnes, who had been
appointed Lieutenant-Governor of the citj. of Kal~ul, had established
a new and rcduced tariff for the merchandize importcrl into Lvghan-
is~an, but Shah Shooja seeing that this was done simply with a view
of encouraging the interests of British commerce, secretly aut hor M
his agents to lcvy higher duties than those which had been deter-
mined on. The injured merchants complained to the English, by
whom they wcre referred to the Minister of the Shah, and this of6cer
gave them thc bastinado for appealing for justice to strangers before
they had applied to the Royal Government. At length an alm&
open rupture took place between Mollah Chekkar, the Shah's Prime
Minister, and Sir \IT. M'Naghten. A party had been formed by
the Vizier with the hope of withdrawing the Shah from the influence
of the British, and this party cared not iu the least to con& or
dissimulate its intentions. Sir IfT. MLNaghten and Sir -4. B m
were made aware of its existence, but they despiid the information
they received on all sides, and when their partisans endeavoured to
make them see the extremities to which impunity would encourage
the Afghans, they answered in the famous words of the Duc de
Guise, "they dare not." The result proved that these gentlemen
were no nearer right than was the Duc de Guise.
The Afghans, little initiated in the intricacies of politics, and not
as yet completely experienced in the duplicity of the gorernment of
Calcutta, remembered the article in the treaty that Lord Auckland
had concluded with their king, which stipulated that as soon as
Shah Shooja wasj rml y established on his throne, the Anglo-Indian
army should r e pa s the Indus. Thi word "jnnly" gave him, it is
true, a great latitude, but it was not thus that the Afghans bad
interpreted i t ; and they were impatient for the hour that should rid
them of their protectors.
The uneasiness at length became general, and confidence exlsed
amongst the English only. The Afghans anticipated a catastrophe,
and the agitation, at first confined to the towns, soon spread into the
country. The Mollahs would no longer recite the " Khoutbe" (or
prayer for the King) in the Mosques, alleging that they could onlj
do so for an independent sovereign, and that Shah Shooja wm not
independent. On the other hand, the maintenance of the British
army had nearly exhausted the provinces, all the necessaries of life
had quadrupled in price, and a cry of diitnw was raised every-
where. In vain did the Vizier publish an order placing the sale of
provisions on the old footing and forbid monopoly ; no one paid any
attention to his injunctione. The Shah therefore found himself
CHIP. XXIII. RESUI.TS OF BRITISH 1NTERFEI:ESCE. 333
obliged to arrest the monopolists, whose corn was re-sold at the
tariff price, and by public auction The English were ill-judged
enough to interfere in their favor, which increased the irritation
amongst the people, and they were accused of wishing to create a
fami'ne. I t was in vain that they distributed food gratis to the
necessitous, the populace valued not this concession as proceeding
from charity ; that virtue is practised in a different manner by the
Afghans, and the English lost more than they gained by granting
benefits to one class only, and with an appearance of such
method and calculation so totally foreign to Afghan habits. The
deplorable mania which the English have for scattering gold by
handfuls in Asiatic countries, without any reason for doing so other
than to gratify an useless pride, and for valuing things only because
they are expensive, created for them in this instance one of the
most formidable difficulties they have ever had to encounter. Thc
officers were prodigal in their personal expenditure, and that depre-
ciated the value of money ; the British Commissioner had obliged
the King to give his officers, civil and military, as much pay for
a month as they had hitherto received for a year ; and that without
having previously ascertained that the revenues of the country
would admit of his so doing. I t is true the English had calculated
on an excess of receipts consequent upon the regularity of their
administration, and an amount of revenue founded upon the informa-
tion given by Shah Shooja when he was at Loodiana. But in that
as on many other occasions they were wrong in not remembering
the maxim of Machiavelli, " that it is dangerous and iniprudent
to undertake an expedition upon the representations and hopes
of exiles." The English also paid for every species of labour,
tenfold what the Afghans had ever received before, so that all the
workmen were glad to be employed on the fortifications, or other-
wise occupied by the English, and hands were therefore soon
wanting to till the ground. Shah Shooja, even, could not obtain
the men that he required, because he could not pay them on this
footing, and he was therefore obliged to overwork the labourers
who were engaged in the repairs of his own palace, and to pay
them the ordinary wages of the country. But here the English
meddled again, and signified to the Vizier, that if those who com-
plained were not satisfied, and paid according to the English tariff,
they should pay them themselves, and place the sum to the Shah's
account. This new axid insulting injunction irritated the Shah to
334 IiELIGIOUS PROSELYTISM. CHAP. S S I I I .
the last degree, and from that moment he seemed to be indifferent
whether or not he was on good terms with his protectors ; he even
earnestly required of them the promised evacuation of his do-
minions. But Sir W. hi6Naghten refused to comply with this
demand, objecting, that he could not be L ' firmly " seated on his
throne while Dost Mohamed remained at liberty, and that the
English could not leave him without support as long as there was
a chance of the return of that chief. Shah Shooja, forced rather
than convinced, resigned himself to their tutelage ; but his reite-
rated complaintr created in his subjects the most hostile feelings
against the English, and their exasperation broke through all
bounds when the people saw that the invaders conaidered the
Afghans incapable of serving them, and found themselves super-
seded by Hazarahs and l'arsivans who up to t hat time h ~ d
been looked upon as a conquered people. Perhaps the English
were not wrong in having a better opinion of these descendants
of the Persian colonists, but such a step should only have been
taken with the greatest prudence, gradually, and after they had
become perfectly established in the country. Another error
was their constant habit of threatening to send some of the
restless chiefs to India, and not carrying out the menace. This
might possibly have prevented the development of the revolt in
which they were overwlielmed a t a later period. The Afghans
have little or none of tliat feeling which we understand by the
word patriotism, for they are quite indifferent as to which or how
many of their tribes may be subdued, provided their own is in the
enjoyment of personal freedom; but this indifference aj to who
governs them, is accompanied in each individual by a deep
attachment to his own tribe. The repeated threats, therefore, of
separation from them created serious alarm, and these fears king
worked upon by the partisans of Dost Mohamed, inspired a &ill
greater distrust and hatred of the English : who never looked with
the least anxiety a t these various indications of approaching
trouble, but slept on in perfect tranquillity.
While they were reforming the administration, their missionaries
attempted to meddle in religion also, and distributed everywhere
the Bible translated into Persian-a proselytism that ww more
injurious than profitable to them. Previously to the time at which
the English entered Afghanistan, the inhabitants might have been
considered as the least fanatical of any people professing Jslamian
CJUP. XXIJI. REVOLTS. 3.5
-but as a set-ofF, they are the most covetous upon earth, and the
result was that the women soon gave themselves up to the English
for money, even with the knowledge of their husbands; fathers
and brothers sold their daughters and sisters, and it was a novel
spectacle to see Christians become the legitimate husbands of Ma-
hornedan wives, for many officers were legally married to Afghan
women. The Mollahs did not omit to rouse the anger of the
faithful, against this tendency to encroach upon their religion, and
they excited on all sides a fanaticism which manifested itaelf in the
provinces by assassination and ~ar t i al revolt. Colonel Herring was
murdered at Ghuznee, and it was only with great difficulty that
colonel Orchard and Major Mac Gregor quelled a seditious move-
ment excited by a certain Syud Kassem. The fortress of Kelat-i-
Ghildjzye also rose against the authority of Shah Shooja, or rather
the English, and the circumstance that led to this was one of
the unnecessary acts of rigour, of which they are so often guilty
in Asia.
Lieutenant Lynch, one of the political agents in Afghanistan,
made a military reconnaissance on the side of Kelat-i-Ghildjzye
and summoned the inhabitants to open the gates of their fort to him.
The commandant was one of those men who were tired of the ascend-
ancy so arrogantly maintained over their sovereign by his foreign
dy, and replied that he should do as Lieutenant Lynch demanded
as soon as he showed him an order from Shah Shooja, or his son
Timoor Mirza, and that in the mean time he would visit him the
next morning a friend. Lieutenant Lynch was not satisfied with
this answer, and without further negotiation demolished his fortress
with hi artillery, and the chief and many of the garrison lost their
lives. The survivors, who were of the Ghildjzye tribe, bent for a
time to the storm, but as soon as the opportunity presented itself,
they took their revenge by massacring all the English that fell
into their hands. A detachment under Major Clibborne was cut up
in the south, and that officer lost his life. The Serdar Akter Khan,
Nie, who had raised a small body of troops of his tribe in the
district of Zemindavar, held the English in check in that quarter,
and Yar Mohamed Khan secretly sent him reinforcementa, for
though the English paid him large sums of money the discontented
At&ma always found help and shelter in his dominions.
In the midst of theae .serious difficulties the British were surprised
by fresh troubles, the Emir Doet Mohamed re-appeared in arms
.; :G THE DOST AT ROKHBRA. CHAP. SSIII.
on the northern frontier, and there was not a moment to be lost in
p i q ~ r i n g to meet the storm.
'I'he Emir of Bokhara had received the fugitive Prince and his
family in a suitable manner when he arrived in his capital, and
allotted a daily sum for their maintenance, but from that conduct
five or six days after, i t became evident that his offer of an asylum
was intended to draw them into a mare, for their allowance was
stopped and the Dost was left to his own resources. This indiffer-
ence to misfortune, so foreign to the Mussulman ideas of hmpitali5,
was followcd by aggravated insults.
The greater number of Dost Mohamed's sons accnmpanied h i
to Bokhara, and the youngest, Sultan Djan, who was remarkable
for his personal beauty and graceful and distinguished mannm,
attracted the attention of the Emir Nasser Ullah. Thi s monster
was addicted to the most horrible of Easter11 propensities, and one
day sent an officer to the Dost's house to bring Sultan Djan to the
palace. His father, however, well acquainted with tlie Czbek
Emir's character, refused to let him go, and immediately ordered the
lad, accompanied by his second eon Akbar Khan and one hundml
Afghan horse, to leave Bokhara. They did so, but were soon pur-
sued, and after a desperate encounter near Larchy, in which the
Afghans lost two-thirds of their party, the remainder were obhged
to lay down their arms. The two brothers were then brought back
prisone. ~ to Bokhara, and it is unnecessary to my what was the
fate of the youngest at the hands of Nasser Ullah.
The position of the Emir Dost Moliamed had now become m d
distressing ; he had every day to repulse some new demand 3kun
his tyrant ; his life even was in danger, for Nasser Ullah Khan,
beaidea his hereditary hatred to the Afghans, wished to make
himself popular in the eyes of tlie English by showing hostility
to the Emir of Kabul, as they might some day enter his OW
doniinions. His messengers were frequently crossing t h m of
Shah Shooja, and the two monarchs had concerted together one
of those vile plots by means of which Asiatics so frequently
endeavour to effect tlieir ol~jects, when the Shah of Persia wrote to
Nasser Ullah Khan and informed him that lie should hold him
responsible for any evil tliat might befall the Dost, wliom hedcclarrd
he had taken under his own special protection. The Shah also
enjoined him to set tliat chief and his family at liberty, in order
that he might make a pilgrimage to Mecca, as he had expr es4 his
CHAP. X-XIII. ESCAPE OF THE DOST. 337
intention of doing, and concluded by signifying to the Emir of
Bokhara his royal determination of making war upon him if he
did not comply with his injunctions.
Nasser Ullah, afraid openly to manifest his indignation against
the Shah of Persia, allowed the Dost to leave Bokhara; but
he was even then actually planning the death of this unfortunate
chief, and taking measures to make it appear the result of acci-
dent. Before the departure of the Dost he sent a man to the
banks of the Oxus who, in concert with the ferryman, was ordered
to upset the boat, and take care that the Emir should never
reach the shore alive.
Happily, an indiscreet remark of the wretch intrusted with this
detestable commission made the Dost, when he reached the banks
of the river, suspicious of some lurking danger; and a caravan
from the south travelling to Samarcand coming 11p at the time, he
succeeded in escaping with it, disguised and in a litter, and thus
eluded the vigilance of the authorities of Bokhara. His wives
had left that city after him, and, having sent a messenger to
desire them to alter their route, they rejoi~ied him seven miles from
Samarcand, which place he did not think it prudent to enter. Here,
however, he took off the female attire in which he lad escaped,
mounted a horse, and proceeded to ask hospitality of the Khan of
C'her Sebz, who generously granted it, but for a brief space only, for,
though this Khan detested the Emir of Bokhara, he dreaded his
power. Alarmed therefore at his threats, and command to put
Dost Mohamed and his sons to death, on pain of being deprived
of his Khanat, he secretly sent away his guest, furnishing him
with the means of reaching Khulm. Mir Walee, the chief of this
province, was by no means easy at the approach of the English, who
had already reached Bamian, and he had made warlike preparations
to receive them. The moment of the Dost's arrival could not
have been more propitious, for the partisans of the Emir had suc-
ceeded in agitating Kohistan, of which the populabion refused to
obey the orders, emanating in appearance from Shah Shooja, but
really from the English. Discontent was general in the other
Afghan provinw, arid if the orders of the latter were still acted
upon it was feebly and with repugnance on the part of the offi-
cials, though they were active enough when they saw a chance of
committing some extortion that might prove a benefit to themselves.
Sir W. M'Naghten knew not what to do, nor whom to trust-for
z
a '!s RETIREMENT OF THE USBEKS. CHAP. X2UII.
those Afghans who did not betray him were indifferent to the
disaffection that existed and the progrm of revolt: he gave
orders, and revoked them almost as soon as given ; and at last
determined on rigorous measures, hoping thereby to eradicate the
evil. In doing this he made several arresta of very doubtful
legality, and missed the real culprits, who were most of them
about the person of Shah Shooja
Hadji Khan, Kaukeree, the first of the Afghan chiefs who
joined the English, was arrested and sent to India, for showing too
much independence, and being suspected of having pursued the
Do& too leisurely in order to give him time to escape. Two other
Ghildjzye serdars, Abd el Rahman Khan and Mahme, who had
taken refuge with the Sikhs, were, contrary to all the laws of
hospitality, given up to the English, and alao sent to India In
Kandahar severity was pushed to its utmost limits ; Akrem Khan,
Noorzye, convicted of having taken up arms against the invadm
of his country, was arrested, and blown h m a gun. Hadji Dost
Mohamed Khan, Izakzye, died almost at the same time in the
1
prison of Kandahar, and the people, ever suspicious, believed, though
I
it was never proved, that he had been poisoned. Such was the
position of affairs when the Walee of Khulm and Dost Mohamed
took the field. On the 30th of August, Mir Efkel Khan, eldest
son of the Emir and commander of the advanced guard of Usbek
Afghans, attacked the British post at Badjguiah, but did not
succeed, and he fell back upon the main body of the army. I)ost
Mohamed waited a few days longer, and on the 18th of September
accepted the offer of battle given him by Colonel Denny, and he
likewise was unsuccessful ; after which the Usbeks retired al b
gether. This check, however, did not daunt the Emir, who withdrew
into Kohistan, where the majority of the chiefs declared for him, and
their men, added to those who joined him at Khulm, still presented
an effective force of 6000 troops ; other reinforcements h m various
districts also came and ranged themselves under hi standard, but
Sir W. M'Naghten cooled their ardour for the cause of their ancient
chief by lavishly distributing gold amongst the hostile tribes. The
Dost and his companions, who well knew the power of this touch:
stone of honesty over the i i n d of an Afghan, were alarmed at the
probable result of such prodigality, ,and it was almost with hesita-
tion that on November 2nd, 1639, he engaged General Sale and
Prince Fethi Djing, second son of Shah Shooja, at Pervaneh Derreh,
CHAP. XXIII. SURRENDER OF THE DOST. 339
The Dost's soldiere performed prodigies of valour, and the 2nd
Regiment of Bengal Regular Cavalry wavered and fled before
a charge of eighty Afghans, led by the Emir himself, who broke
them at the onset, and then engaged the infa*, upon whom he
inflicted considerable loss, especially in officera The advantage
of the day remained with the Dost, and the Anglo-Indian army
would have been completely beaten had they renewed the combat
on the morrow, but success being doubtful they determined to
conquer with gold ; their agents entered the camp of the Emir,
and man~uvred so well and so quickly, that he only escaped death at
the hands of his own mutinous troops by a rapid flight, in which he
was accompanied by a few brave men who remained faithful to him.
Doet Mohamed now retired to the mountains, and wandered
amongst them for some time ; his partisans, who were gradually
detached from his falling fortunes by English bribes, and being
also little inclined to Eace the hard winter in the h i , returned to
their homes. Their noble chief was at length utterly abandoned,
and had much to suffer from privation and the rigour of the season ;
but this was not all,-he found himself hunted by parties of
Afghans, who hoped to receive a large recompence for betraying
him to his enemies, and this led to the resolution which he finally
took of placing himself in their hands.
On the 4th of November, 1840, he went almost alone under the
walls of Kabul, and, taking advantage of an accidental meeting
with Sir W. M'Naghten to make his submission, he gave up his
sword to the envoy, declaring at the same time who he was.
The English diplomatist immediately returned it, which mark of
respect gratified t.he Emir exceedingly, and they rode into Kabul
together. Dost Mohamed was honourably treated while he remained
in his own capital, and was afterwards sent to India with his
wives, where he was pensioned, and carefully guarded by the
political agents of the East India Company; his sons, whom he
had left in Afghanistan, soon joined him in his exile, with the
exception of Akbar Khan.
We have wen that this chief was taken prisoner by the Bokha-
rims after having sustained a bloody combat with them at Karchy.
On his return to Bokhara he was imprisoned by order of Nasser
Ullah Khan, and was consequently prevented from leaving it
with his father. But a short t.ime aRer the flight of the latter
the surveillance to which he was subjected was relaxed,
and
z 2
340 THE DOST SETTLES IN THE MOUNTAINS. CHAP. XXIII.
having succeeded in making his escape he reached Cher Sebz : but
the Khan of that place, afraid to grant him an asylum for the same
reasons that prevented him from sheltering hi father, gave h i
an escort of two horsemen as far as Khulm, where the Walee
received the fugitive, and several of his dependents who joined
him there.
Notwithstanding the strict watch that was kept over him, Dost
Mohamed was treated with great consideration and respect by
Lord Auckland, who, wishing to give him a clear idea of the
British power in India, took h i over all the arsenals, magazines,
dockyards, &c., at Calcutta. The Emir was completely amazed
at all he saw, and expressed the conviction that afterwards he
o h n repeated to his sons when they wished him to make war
with the English, that they were " invincible, and would aome
day be the mastem of the world." A h r several months' residence
at Calcutta the Dost fell ill from the effects of the climate of
Bengal, when he sought and obtained permission to join hie family
at Loodiana.-Sutmequently he was allowed to settle in the moun-
tains, the air of which was more favourable to hi health.
CHIP. XXIV. DEMANDS OF SHAH SHOOJA.
CHAPTER XXIV.
Shah Shooja demanda the evacuation of hia country by the English-Their
refusal - Forgery of letters - The invadere impose a vizier on Shah Shooja-
Unjuntihble acts of thia functionary - Complaints of the Afghan chiefs to
Shah Shooja-The King coupires with them againat the English - Abdullah
Khan at the head of the conspirators - Careleasnesa of the English - Subeidiea
to chiefs reduced - Revolt of the Qhildjzyes - &nerd Sale marches against
them - In obliged to retire into Jellalabad -Feeling of eecurity in the Englinh
- Inswection in the provinces - Revolt at Kabul - Attack on Sk A. Bnrneds
house- bsaassi t i on of that ol3cer - The Engliah are driven from the city
-Bad defeneive position taken by them -Commissariat stores pillaged
- Dpt h of Abdullah Khan - Zeman Khan proclaimed King -Continual
fighting - Weebnesa of Qeneral Elphinstone - Conduct of the 44th Regiment
- Suspension of arms - A k k Khan retnrns to Kabul- Indecision of the
English - Eventa in the provinoes - Plan of retreat abandoned - EmbuaM-
ment of Sir W. MINaghten- Sunpiciom of the Afghans-Meeting between the
resident and Akbar Khan - Aesssaition of the former -Major Pottinger -
Treaty with Akbar Khan - The English retreat - A k k Khan m k r d -
The Engliah deliver up hostages t o him - English army anddated - Akbar
Khan besieges Jellalahd-Tranaactiona between Shah Shooja and Zemm
Khan -The King is aesaminated- Character of that sovereign.
AFTER the submission of the Emir, Shah Shooja, thinking the
English had no further plausible motive for refusing to evacuate
Afghauistan, inasmuch as the tranquillity of the country could not
be disturbed by any pretender to the throne, demanded for the
second time the fulfilment of the treaty; but, on various pre-
tences, they again rejected this demand, and continued to carry
out those injudicious reforms which had already alienated so many
from their &. I t might have been sup@sed that they we&
striving to destroy their o m influence by adopting measures so
false and ill adapted to the objects they had in view; every day
they in some manner wounded the self-love and disappointed the
avarice of the Afghans, and expected them to change abruptly the
habits, customs, and ideas that had existed amongst them for ages
past-indeed, they endeavoured to make them d o so.
-
I n a country so recently conquered, and on which a new
sovereign had been forced, the opposition must, of necessity, be
FORGERY OF LETTERS.
obstinate ; the wisest policy would, therefore, have been to attach
the people to them by kindness, to throw, if possible, a veil over
the past, and, above all, to be indulgent to minor offencea The
British did just the reverse in Afghanistan.
After his flight to Bokhara, Dost Mohamed continued to cor-
respond with the Afghan serdars that surrounded Shah Shooja, and
he kept all their letters ; these were found in a little bag on the
field after the battle' of Pervaneh and given to the English, who
talked of thii discovery, and threatened to make use of them egaid
the chiefs whom they compromised and who were far from docile
under their rule. Rut this indiscreet conduct brought about a Fesult
very different from what they intended, for the serdars who were
hostile to them, and who were afraid of being sent to join Hadji
Khan, hukeree, in India, held aloof, and, to prevent any surprk
on the part of their conquerom, surrounded themselves with tbeir
followers, always appearing in public attended by an escort r d y to
fight ; thii warlike attitude was almost a challenge to their adver-
saries, who ~csrcely dared to accept it. The English, moreover,
drew upon themselves the resentment of those who up to that
time had been devoted to their cause, by recompensing the indi-
viduals that delivered this packet of pretended letters, the con-
tents of which were, in truth, the fabrications of some artful and
avaricious intrigue- fact that was proved in the sequel.
Shah Shooja profited by the errors of the English to alienate tbe
minds of the Afghans from them, and to strengthen his own party;
hi vizier, Mollah Cbekker, was the soul of all his intrigues, and
cared so little to spare the protectors of his sovereiga, that in
several instances they were able to prove his hostile intentions, and
eventually demanded his dismissal.
The king resisted to the utmost of his power, but was at
obliged to accept a vizier of their choice ; and the Ni i m ed Doould
the new minister, who consulted his master simply as a matter of
form, entirely followed the instructions he received from the
English. This miserable wretch, finding himself supported by them,
committed spoliations and exactions of every kind, and was guilty
of many acts of tyranny; those whom he plundered sometimes
found the means of bringing their complaints before the king ; but
Shah Shooja informed them that he could do nothing, beiig him-
self a slave. Sir W. M'Naghten was far from approving of tbe
vizier's conduct ; but having himself made him minister, be could
CUP. SXTV. COMPLAINTS OF AFGHAN CHIEFS.
not immediately degrade him. To these causes of discontent and
anxiety wee soon added a still greater one.
The Direct~rs of the East India Company, who have a habit of
j~dgng of the value of a conqueat only by the revenue it produces,
mere more disappointed than can be described at the deficit which
the e x e t i o n of Afghanistan had occasioned in their treasury.
They, therefore, ordered a rigid economy to be practised in the
Sbsh's army, and these instructions were carried out by the British
~flcera with more or less intelligence. Chiefs, whom it would
have been wise in the government to conciliate, found themselves
deprived of their subsidies ; those of others were considerably
mhml, and, at the same time that the pecuniary interests of the
Akhans were attacked, several Hazarah and Kuzzilbash chiefs
e v e d b h roofs of favour, which irritated the Afghans to the
highest degree.
Towards the end of September the serdars met in Kabul and
laid their grievances before Shah Shooja, who could only reply that
hiis power as a king was a fiction, that it was impoeaible for him to
do them justice, and added-" I t is your own fault that I have
fallen thue low ; you have abandoned me to the good pleasure
of the English ; had there been one man of spirit amongst you, he
would aoon have delivered me from this shameful state of depen-
dence." These words were not uttered in vain. Amongst the
eerdars present at the durbar was Abdullah Khan, Etchekzye
( b d of t he Barukzyee), a chief of energy and resolution, who
stood fornard and offered to be that man. In the afternoon
of the same day he met the Shah in secret conference in the
garden of his place, and there a revolt, which was to be post-
poned till a favourable opportunity should render success certain,
planned.
However, it was resolved that the death of Sir
A. &ma should take place immediately ; for the king, who well
knew the infinite trouble that officer had taken to support Dost
Bfohamed, detested him, and was very anxious to prevent his
being made the Resident at his co& if Sir W. McNaghten,
whose departure had been talked of for some time, should be
removed.
On leaving the Shah, Abdullah K h ~ called together at his own
h o w the serdars Mohamed Attah Khan, Sikander Khan, Mir
Efzel Khan, Abdul Samut Khan, and Abdul Selam Khan, all of
the royal tribe of Popolzye ; also Seidal Khan, Alikioozye, Emin
344 CARELESSNESS OF THE ENGLISH. CHAP. XXIV.
[Jllah Khan, Logheree, and Mohamed Hoosein Khan, Ere Beghi,*
and communicated to them the intentions of Shah Shooja : to which
they agreed to conform in every particular, and swore to over-
throw the British power in Afghanistan. This oath was written
on the leaves of a Koran, and the seal of each of the serdars pre-
sent was affixed to it. The secret was ill kept, and soon came to the
knowledge of Sir CV. M'Naghten, who was not in the least alarmed
by it, being fully impressed with the idea that it was impossible
the chiefs should undertake any serious measures. He would not
even allow the Koran to be seized for the purpose of learning tbe
names of the conspirators, lest that act should be construed into
evidence of timidity on his part : an appearance of perfect iudif-
ference was, in his opinion, the best mode of proving to the k n -
tented that the British were not afraid of them ; but Burnes took
quite an opposite view of the case. Thus the two officers, invested
with special power, were never agreed upon the most judicious
plan to be adopted for the general interests, and this want of good
understanding between the Resident and the political Envoy was,
perhaps, of all the causes that contributed to the British fall in
Afghanistan, the one that hastened it the most. I t is impossible
to doubt that, if three or four of the conspirators had been arrested
and sent to India, it would have been sufficient to put a stop to
these intrigues ; but instead of adopting this vigorous course, Sir
W. M'Naghten gave them ample time to bring them to maturity,
and exasperated the serdars by the most ill-timed measurea of
economy. Though he did not see tbat the storm was so cloee
at hand, he was fully aware of the difficulties that were to be
surmounted, and modified in a degree the reduction in the
pay of the Afghan soldiers ordered by Lord Auckland ; but h m
the moment he received notice of hi nomination to the post
.
of Governor of Bombay, he made no further objection to the
instructions that the Directors had given, and imhesitatingly
reduced all the subsidies which had been painted out as super-
fluous.
The Ghildjzye serdars, who occupied the defiles of the Khyber
9 This aerdar wns the brother of that
day hau influence in Afghanistan. The
wife of Doat Mohamed who had been chiefe of Kabul and Kandahsr am both
~ u e . 1 ~ married to Mohamed Azim
equally anxiom to attach him to their
By this marriqe shu h&l a eon
cause.-Fa+.
cnllei Sulten Djm Khan, who to this
Cau. XSIV. REVOLT OF THE GHILDJZYES. 345
mountains between Kabul and Jellalabad, and held them open or
shut at their pleasure, were informed at the commencement of
b b e r , 1841, that they must submit to a reduction of 40,000
rnpees = 40001., when they at once hastened to Kabul to ascer-
bin the motive for thii alteration. They made their represen-
tations in the first instance to Sir W. MLNaghten, and he referred
them to Shah Shooja, by whom they were haughtily dismissed,
which greatly wounded their self-love and disappointed their cupi-
dity; but a few amongst them he secretly received, initiated them
into the conspiracy against his protectors, and assured them that
for the future their interests would be cared for.
Sir Alexander Burnes, without actually foreseeing the conse-
quences that would result from these retrenchmenta, nevertheless
oppased them with all hi power, though he did not succeed in pre-
mting them ; the consequence was, that when the Ghildjzye
* returned t o their homes, they raised their countrymen and
mt off the communications in the mountains.
On the other hand, the conspirators at Kabul had sent emis-
to all the Afghan provinces to prepare the tribes for revolt ;
already discontented, they alarmed them still more by persuading
them that their chiefs were to be banished to India, that Shah
Shook was a mere puppet who would soon be upset, and that the
&ti& yoke, so heavy only in a protective character, would be far
more so when it became absolute. The nomades responded imme-
diately to this appeal, rushed to arms, and the communications
between Kabul and Kandahar were closed without delay, as those
had already been between Kabul and Jellalabad. General Sale
ma sent with a brigade to reopen the latter and force the passage
of the Hiidoo Koosh ; this small force quitted Kabul on tbe 1 lth of
October, entired the mountains the same day, and was very far from
expecting to meet with the terrible resistance it found there. Once
in this infernal region, however, the Indo-British troops could not
retrace their steps, and during eighteen days they were, if the
a p d o n may be used, choked in these defiles, where every step of
their way was disputed foot by foot. On the first day General Sale
was wounded and obliged to abandon hi command, and a fourth
of his brigade was exterminated. From the 12th of October the
tmops could advance only three miles and a half aday, and arrived
exhausted on the 2nd November at Gundamuck, on the other side
of the gorge of the Khoord Kabul; here they rested a few days,
346 REVOLT AT KABUL. CHAP. XSIV.
and then left for Jellalabad, still harassed by the tribes in revolt,
and after having reached that town tooh refuge within its walls
with only three days' provisions. Never were troop in such a
precarious position ; but a most happy incident came to their assist
ance, for caravans brought them supplies for three months from
Peshawur, which enabled them resolutely to oppose an energetic
resistance to the insurrection in which the rest of the army perished.
The news of these conflicts of themountaineere with General
Sale's brigade arrived at Kabul on the 1st of November, and was
the signal for a nerious disturbance which broke out in that ciq.
The unconquered tribes of Afghanistan waited only for the +id
to be given them by the Khyberees to r k simultaneously and
commence a war for their faith-- religious war, the moat bloody
of all wars. They watched attentively the Indo-British troop,
who were imprudently dispersed in the several garrisons of Kabul,
Ghuznee, Kelat-i-Ghildjzye, Charikar, Kandahar, Jellalabad, and
other places ; they knew that these detachments could e d y be
cut off, and also that it was impossible that reinforcements should
reach them from India until the month of Apri l the mountain
paesee being obetructed by the snow. Of the thirty-two political
agents scattered over the country, not one perceived the least
symptom of the excited state of the public mind ; the unfortunate
Burnes himself, blinded by his excessive confidence in the natives,
was the first to report to the Indian Government that the Afsan
chiefs were sincerely attached to Shah Shooja, and that the Britieb
army might be withdrawn from their garrisons. Sir W. M6Ni@ten
wrote more confidently in the same strain : all had fallen into a
fatal slumber, from which they were aroused only by surrounding
masacre. The British Commissioner had, in the first instance,
attempted to parley with the Ghildjzyes and induce them to return
to their duty, offering as one of the most persuasive arguments
100,000 rupees = 10,0001. ; but they rejected every specks of
temptation, and continued to make war upon the invaders, their
attacks being generally made at night.
As won as the signal of revolt had been given in the country,
Abdullah Khan, the head of the conspiracy in Kabul, t . d no
further trouble to conceal hi intentions, and said openly that be
would kill Burnes before eight days were over. This of i ~l i
though warned, paid no attention to these threats, consid*
them as simple boasting, but, seeing that the serdar's insolem
C w . XXIV. ATTACK ON SIB A. BURNES' HOUSE. 347
increased daily, he at last became very uneasy, and obtained
information which left no doubt as to the serious p i t i o n
they were in ; moreover, he saw that the conduct of Abdullah
Khan was connected with the revolt in the hills. This enlightened
him as to the snare which had been woven round them, and he
exclaimed, "There is nothing for it now but to quit this country."
The next day, November 2, 1841, early in the morning, he sent
one of his servants to the house of Abdullah Khan to request that
chief to come to him, but the serdar, suspecting that Burnes
intended to seize him and send him to India, conceived that the
moment had arrived to execute the project of open revolt, for which
he was so well prepared ; his first act was therefore to kill Burnes's
messenger, and, without lose of time, he proceeded to his residence,
accompanied by Seidal Khan, Sikander Khan, Mohamed Attah
Khan, Abdul Selam Khan, Emin Ullah Khan, &c. &c., and their
followers and servants, in all nearly one hundred and thirty persons,
the nucleus of the insurrection
On the way there they killed the British officers and soldiere
whom they met in the streeta ; the delay this occasioned enabled
Burnes, who had been informed of these massacres, to barricade
the large outer gate of his house, and the insurgents were
therefore a long time before they could force a passage. He
had thought of retiring to the cantonments situated three miles
from the city, but while putting on an Afghan dress to effect
his retreat undiscovered, he changed his mind, and said, "No,
I cannot play the coward, and, for the life of one man, com-
promise the honour of the British name. Were I to escape thus,
the Afghans would believe that I was frightened ; no, a hundred
times worse than death, the prestige of my authority would be
lost." With these words he put on hie uniform again and remained
at his post, but sent messenger after messenger to 8i r W.
M6Naghten, requesting that a battalion of infantry and two pieces
of artillery might be sent to him without delay, for with these he
considered he should be able to put down the insurgents. And he
was right, for had the British t roop appeared in the streets of Kabul
10,000 Kuzzilbashes, Hazaraha, and Parsivans, would have rallied
round Burnes and supported him; but seeing that the English
did not take the initiative, they feared to commit themselves
in the eyes of the Afghans, who might have made them pay
dearly for their interference, and thus remained passive spectators of
the struggle. To crown his misfortune, thc artillery sent for by the
348 ASSASSINATION OF SIR A. BURNES. CHAP. XSIV.
beleaguered officer never amved, and the mob, emboldened
by the simply defensive attitude assumed by his countrymen,
hesitated no longer; the inhabitants r w in all parts of the
city, and to them were soon pined the suburban population.
From that moment the impulse given to the revolt wae im-
placable and irresistible, and the nation rose as one man againat
their foreign invaders But to continue my narrative; the
shopkeepera and workmen, as well as the dregs of the people,
now m u n d e d the residence of Burn- to take it by assault, ad
showed themselves exceedingly vindictive in this conflict, a circum-
stance which might have arisen from his having been governor
of the city, and frequently obliged to punish them with severity.
The mob showed great perseverance in their endeavours to break
their way into the house, but the besieged, twenty-three in num-
ber, consisting of a few officers and servants, and ten sepoys, b~
applying their ears to the ground, learnt from the hollow gound of
the blows that were struck against the walls, on which side to
expect the attack, and when a hole was made, they shot the f i man
who presented himself at the opening ; this damped the murage of
the others, who retired to recommence operations at some dber
spot. The defence was thus prolonged from eight in the rno*
till two in the afternoon, and the Afghans having lost many men
in their attempts to force an entrance, at last had recourse to other
means ; combustibles were piled against the great gate, and ahen
it was entirely consumed they rushed in a mass through the passage
and gained the interior of the house. The inmates had by 16i-
time exhausted all their ammunition, and Burnea received a pod
blank shot from a pistol ; the ball struck hi in the right eye, and
he died instantly: his body was then hacked to pieces with
repeated sabre cuts, and, horribly mutilated, thrown into the garden
of his own house.
Three-and-twenty persons perished with Burnea, amongst
were his brother Lieut. Charles Burnes and Lieut. Broa
Captain Johnson, in charge of the Treasury, escaped by a
Captain Trevor, with hi family, and a few other officers, w
fortunate enough to reach the cantonments Hi house an
of Burnea were burned to the ground, and the military
magazines, and commissariat stores of proviaions pillaged.'
* These details of the death of sole survivor of the mPssacrein Burner
Burnea were given me by Mohamed h o w . He received sir-d-tmnt
Hooaein Khan, Kachee, who wan the wounda-Fmicr.
I
CHAP. XXIV. WEAKNESS OF GENERAL LLPHINSTONE. 349
On hearing of the outbreak Sir W. M'Naghten detached two
regiments under Brigadier Shelton, and some irregulars under
Captain Nicholl, to occupy the citadel of the Bala Hissar, in
which was the residence of Shah Shooja. This movement was the
only measure the envoy adopted, totally regardless of the state of
the city and the earnest demands of Burnes, whose repeated mes-
ssges announced his critical position. I t was the greater error,
because provisions were short in barracks, and the principal maga-
zine was in Kabul ; the Resident considered the small party in
charge of it as suficient for its defence, but the indecision of the
officer in command led to its evacuation. Another dep6t, gallantly
defended, was carried by assault, and it was with great difficulty
and loss of life that they subsequently retook two small redoubts
tolerably well provisioned, which enabled them to subsist &me
time longer.
These disasters, the result of want of foresight, were the cause
of all the calamities which overtook the British army. Greater
success would, without doubt, have followed if bolder measures had
been adopted, but General Elphinstone, borne down by age and
infirmity, had long lost the qualifications neoessary for so responsible
a command; he appeared to have fallen into a state of lethargy,
and remained complacently satisfied with hia defensive attitude,
while it was absolutely necessary to proceed by the most opposite
means. The staff of the General-in-Chief did not prove itself more
competent than their commander, and Sir W. M'Naghten, taking
himself to task rather late for the numerous faults he had com-
mitted, and which had laced some thousands of his countrymen in
peril, strove to repair his error by the energy and vigour with which
he conducted the defence. But his efforts were vain, all seemed
psralysed around him ; hie orders, like his requests, were eluded, or
timidly and inefficiently executed, and this occasioned fresh disasters,
instead of procuring the slightest amelioration of their position.
On the 4th of November Zeman Khan, Mohamedzye,. who
possessed immense wealth and had attached the people to his
party by his largesses, succeeded, with the help of his uncle Nawab
Qabbar Khan, and his cousin Chems Eddin Khan,t both influ-
ential personages, in inducing the Afghans to proclaim him king,
Son of Nawab Assad Ullah Khan, t Son of Emin Rhan, half-brother
one of tha'deceased brothers of Dost of Dost Mohamed Khan.-Femmcr.
Mohamed.- Ftrrirr.
330 WEAKVESS Or GENERAL ELPHINSTONE. CHAP. W.
and he surrounded himself with all the pomp of royalty. This
chief, at the head of hi partitam, daily exchanged a few bob
with the English, who were shut up in their cantonments; but
though he captured and murdered a few o5cers and soldiers who
imprudently risked their lives outside the camp, the Mohamedrye
chief experienced only reverses in his repeated at t ach In one
of these Abdullah Khan, Etchekeye, the originator and promoter
of the conspiracy, received a ball in the forehead and died within
two days.
After each defeat Zeman Khan retired into the city aitbont
being disturbed, for the English never followed him, which they
could have done without di5culty ; and as they had committed the
serious fault of establishing their magazines of provisions at a
considerable d i i n c e from the cantonments, they should at tbe
outset have displayed a little more energy in endeavouring to dip
lodge the Afghans from the houses in which they were regaling
themselves upon them. At the sight of one battalion and tao
or three piece% of cannon, they would have fled : they admit it
now, and it was the step they most dreaded the enemy would take.
Many times did the officera suggest it, but General Elphinhne
would not give his consent, and the army saw itself reduced to
procure provisions with gold and presents from the insurgents
-the conduct of the general was indeed incomprehensible After
Shah Shooja had concerted with Abdullah Khan the r d t
against the English, he fell into a far more dependent am-
dition than that from which the latter had intended to withdraw
him. The Etchekeye serdar and other conspirators had shorn
themeelves exceedingly overbearing towards him, sharp d h ~
sions took place, and there was very nearly a rupture; mer-
theless Shah Shooja was not sufliciently clearsighted to dhv e r
that they only looked upon him as a tool to be set aside as sooa
the annihilation of his protecton was accomplished, and the rising
of the Khybereea induced the king to throw himself into the arm
of the national party, and conspire actively himself. He 6d
permitted the unhappy Burn- to be murdered, though he could
have saved him with the greatest ease, for he occupied the citadel
with a devoted garrison of a thousand men ; but it seems tbat be
lost confidence in his accomplices while that act was being per-
petrated, the cause of which was probably secret information that
he received from the Serdar Mohamed Attah Khan. He then
Carp. XXIV. CONDUCT OF 44~a REGIMENT. 36 1
thought it prudent to close the gates of the Bala Hissar before the
mob could reach it, and, in his blindness, believed that when
order was restored 'the Afghans would hail him again as their
hng without the concurrence of the British being necessary ; he
therefore abstained from helping them, hoping by this means to
iwcure the support of his own subjecta He even thoughtit very
wrong when some of the English troops, shut up in the fortress with
him, 6red upon the townspeople, and turned their artillery upon the
city ; but it was quite a different matter when the insurgents cut down
the trees in his garden under the guns of the place, or when the
parthm of Zeman Khan came within range: then the Shah
exi t r t ed that the sharpest and beat sustained fire possible might
be kept up. Several British officers, to whom the treachery of
Shah Shooja was now evident, proposed that the army should occupy
the citadel in which hc still resided, as they woiild then have the
town in their power, and could, by threatening its destruction,
obtain supplies and provisions. Thi plan was warmly supported
by Sir W. M'Naghten, but rejected by General Elphinstone,
who gave as his reaeon that the discouragement amongst the troop0
rendered the execution of it impoesible ; indeed he acted in direct
opposition to this sound advice by ordering a regiment, that had
been sent to the Bala Hissar when the rebellion broke out, to return
to camp AEter this, though thus reinforced, the General lost all
confidence in himaelf for any useful purpose ; he had despaired of
snccese from the commencement, and waited to the last with the
inertness and cold apathy that are the result of a fixed opinion, the
annihilatiou of the doomed army under his command : the t roop
t b e d v e s , cast down by the example of their chief, lost all energy.
The British soldier has proved in all times that in bravery he is
second to none in Europe ; but this is under certain conditions:
he must have full rations, his arrack, his beer, and a thousand
other stimulants, the privation of which induces discouragement
and indecision.
There is no doubt such was the condition of the force at Kabul,
and to this must be attributed the feeble and pusillanimous conduct
of H.H.'s 44th and the 37th N.I. when attacked by the insurgents
in a small entrenched camp on an eminence which protected the
citadel ; they scarcely made any resistance, the efforts of Brigadier
Shelton to animate them were useless, and cavalry and infantry gave
way and fled in great disorder to.the cantonments, lrotly pursued
35" AKRAR KHAN RETURNS TO KABUL. CUP. XXIV.
by the -4fghans, who would perhaps have forced their enemy's
position that day, but for the intervention of the insurgent Serdar
Osman Khan, Isakzye, who madea special treaty with Sir \Ir.
M'Naghten, in virtue of which a few days of comparative tran-
quillity were secured to the Anglo-Indian troops. After this check
the 54th regiment of N. I., which occupied the Bala Hissar, was
withdrawn, and Shah Shooja abandoned to his own resources.
I t has been mentioned that Mohamed Akbar Khan, a son of
Dost Mohamed, had retired to Khulm after his flight from Bok-
ham. Not having been able to procure from Mir JYalee the
assistance he required to maintain the old soldiers of his father who
had joined him in his exile, he resolved to go to Persia, where his
uncles, the senlars of Kandahar, had been well received by Mo-
hamed Shah, hoping that that monarch would not do less for him than
for them ; indeed he was on his road there, and near Balkh, when,
hearing of the insurrection in Kabul, he changed his course, and
arrived on the 25th of November in that city,* where he found every-
thing in the greatest confusion, and his cousin Zeman Khan declared
king. Though smarting under this vexation, Akbar was obliged to
recognise the election, but only with the secret determination t o
reverse it on the first opportunity, and such was the diversity of
opinions and interests at this time amongst the Afghans, that he
'
had little difficulty in creating for himself, and in a few days,
a powerful party, which soon overcame that of all the other
chiefs.
q Many British officers, alive to the mournful turn that the military
operations had taken, and foreseeing the result which the weakness
and incapacity of General Elphinatone must produce, were of opinion
that negotiations, based upon the evacuation of the country, ought
to be opened with all the influential chiefs in Kabul, without regard
to the superiority that some chose to arrogate to themselves over the
rest. For several days Sir W. M'Naghten repelled this advice,
which he received from all sides ; but the disastrous intelligence
that was brought in from outlying garrisons inclined him to enter-
* The ne w apers and some other vernmeut, but the sssertion ie nttarly
publications tgat have touched upon incorrect. He .srrived with twelve
thk revolt have stated, on what au- badly equipped Afghan cavalry, and
thority I know not, that Akbar Khan never received assistance from the
returned to Kabul accompanied by one Rossiann, who amfully abstained from
thousand Tartar horsemen who had any material iutervention in favour of
been sent to him by the Russian Qo- the conquered.-Fcrrirr.
Carp. SXIV. EMBARRASSMEKT OF SIR iV. M'NAGHTEN. 353
tain pacific measures more favourably, for the English had loses
to deplore in every direction. The troops at Ghuznee, com-
manded hy Colonel Palmer, had been ordered to Kabul, but
could not leave, and, subsequently, being obliged to abandon the
town, they retired into the citadel : however, they were pretty well
provisioned. The brigade of Lieutenant-Colonel MLLaren, which
Sir W. M'Naghten recalled from Kandahar to the assistance of the
diviaion in Kabul, had been arrested in ita march by the great depth
of mow which had fallen and the insurrection that developed itself
everywhere with a ferocity and ,excitement difficult to imagine.
This column had pushed forward au far as Ghuznee ; but there it
was forced to return, and a h r having thrown'a garrison into Ke-
lat-i-Ghildjzye, with a year's provisions, it made its way back to
Keodahar. On the other hand Captain Woodburn, who left
Ghuznee with one hundred and thirty men, was harassed on the
road by the insurgents, and took refuge in some ruins, surrounded
by a broken wall. Here, besieged by four or five thousand Afghans,
he made a sortie in two divisions, one led by himself the other
by a native officer, and, throwing himself into the m81&, he fell
gdhtly with all his men ; the second division endeavoured to 1-eturn,
but only five Sepoys escaped to tell the tale. Another Englieh
o&m, Captain Ferris, was besieged with two bundred and fifty
,
men in a miserable fort, which he defended many days against
three or four thousand Afghans, and having only twenty-five cart
rid,= a man left, also resolved to try and rut his way through the
enemy. This was no easy matter, for he had with him his wife and
her sister, but the ladies were tied behind two native horsemen and
placed in tbe centre of the square, and after a frightful conflict
tbe little party reached another fort, whence, with the help of
guides, they made their way to Peshawur.
The first idea of Sir W. M'Naghten, on hearing of these dis-
asters, was to force his way through the Khyber Pass and join
General Sale in Jellalabad, which he had fortified; but wiser
counsels prevailed, and tliie impracticable project was given up.
It was impracticable quite as much from the nature of the ground
from the ill feeling of the tribes, who were in arms all along
the p a q and the deep snow presented aggravated difficulties of
every kind, which Sale's brigade, if it had been ordered to meet
tbem, must have encountered also. The plans for the retreat
therefore were for the moment abandoned by Sir Wm. M6Naghten,
2 A
f
334 SUSPICIOXS OF THE AFGHASS. CHAP. LYl'?.
and not without reopt. Subsequently, and in conformity with tEe
almost universal opinion, he sent Captains Lawrence and Trevor,
.and a fcw other officers, to make overtures of peace to the Afghans,
by whom the propositions were favourably received; this induced
Sir W. M'Naghten to place himself in direct communication with
the chiefs, particularly with Mohamed Akbar Khan, with whom
the English Commissioner proposed to conclude a treaty, consistifig
of twenty articles. These were all accepted by him and them, and
in several conferences that followed, many of the aerdars, who were
desirous that tranquillity should be re-established in the country,
insisted that the terms of the evacuation should be definitively and
promptly decreed. Sir W. M'Naghten, seeing that Mohamed
Akbar Khan appeared the most powerful amongst them, and the
most inclined to negotiate, preferred treating with him, although
he well knew that this chief every day joined the insurgents who
fired on the soldiers in the cantonmelilt. But Akbar, having
assured him that he acted thus only to pacify the other serdars
his rivals, who sought to degrade him in the eyes of his country-
men by representing him as a traitor to the national cause, he
succeeded in gaining the confidence of the Commissioner, and -
an almost friendly understanding was established between them.
Was Mohamed Akbar in good faith when he promised entire
devotion to the English, and when he promised even to de-
liver up the murderers of Burnes? This is doubtful, for it ia
very improbable he should have forgotten that the ruin of
his house had been brought about by those to whom he had
offered to devote himself. And then his father, the head of his
family, the Emir Dost Mohamed, was he not still a prisoner in
India? I t is impossible to deny that the position of Akbar Khan
wae most embarrassing, for, obliged to conciliate the invaders
of his country to preserve a hope of delivering his father, he could
only do so at the risk of exciting the suspicions of his countrymen,
who were but too well inclined to mistrust him. Zeman Khan, his
cousin, knew that the return of Dost Mohamed would bring down
the crazy scaffolding on which his own dawning royalty 'depended,
and therefore he neglected no means of alienating the Afghans from
Mohamed Akbar Khan ; he would, perhape, have completely suc-
ceeded if the latter had not, to save his life, adopted an energetic
line of conduct, the loyalty of which has been diversely appreciated
by those who have considered the subject. Many chiefs had openly
CHAP. LXIV. MEETING OF THE RESIDENT AND AKBAR KHAN. 355
quarrelled with the son of the Emir, and on the 22nd of December
they reproached him with having treated with the English unknown
to them, and sacrificed them his own ambition. He defended
himself with energy from these accusations, but he could not con-
vince his antagonists, and they would certainly have cut him to
pieces on the spot if he had not sworn upon the Koran that on
the morrow he would bring the British Commissiorler into Kabul
either as a hostage or a corpee.
The Afghans who took part in the melancholy episodes which
coocltfded the British occupation of Kabul, are generally convinced
that in one of his interviews with Mohamed Akbar Khan, Sir W.
31'Naghten had solemnly promised to restore his father to him
aithin the space of a month ; but the period had nearly expired, and
the Emir was still a prisoner in India. This fact greatly exasperated
Akbar Khan, and made him more exacting in the terms of the eva-
cuation ; several conferences had ended without a successful result,
and the negotiations had already become embittered, when on the
night of the 23rd to 24th of December, Captain Skinner who was in
the Afghan camp, arrived in that of the English, the bearer of Fresh
conditions from Akbar Khan, who demanded another interview with
Sir W. M'Naghten, for the purpose of concluding a definitive treaty.
This was acceded to, and the envoy arrived at the appointed rendez-
vous on Christmas-Day, 1841, accompanied by Captains Lawrence,
Trevor, and MKenzie ; the meeting took place near a bridge, in
the neighhurhood of which sixteen Afghan horsemen had been pre-
Piously posted in ambush. Akbar Khan received the Commissioner
with violent reproaches at his having so long delayed setting his
father at liberty and evacuating Kabul ; he also declared that the
arms, ammunition, and hostages had never been given up to him,
while on his side he held in readiness and at Sir W. M6Naghten's
diisposal the cattle necessary to transport the baggage of the army.
"In exchange for my promptitude," he said, " I find only delay
and duplicity; General Sale, instcad of evacuating Jellalabad
as agreed between us, has provisioned and fortified himself
nith more energy than ever." The British Commissioner in
vain protested his good and loyal intentions; Mohamed Akbar
would listen to nothing: Sir W. M'Naghten had, he said, delayed
up to that day to fulfil his promim, and he should therefore con-
sider him and his suite aa prisoners, till all the conditions pre-
viouely determined upon were executed. He then seized Sir M'illiam
2 a 2
356 ASSASSINATION OF SIR W. N'SAGHTEN. CBAP. XSIV.
by the arm to take him into .Kabul, but the envoy resisted and ex-
claimed, " Better die than follow you." . Akbar Khan instantly put
his pistol to his breast. and fired,-it flashed in the pan ; the second
laid the Resident dead at his feet.
The pistols which the chief
used had been presented to him only a few days before by Sir \fT.
M'Naghten himself. Captain Trevor, who was at a little distance,
having seen the first hostile movement of the assassin, instantly d i
mounted to go to the assistance of his chief, but was killed on tbe
spot by an Afghan bullet. As to Captains Lawrence and MbKenzie
they were seized, stripped, and tied on horseback behind two
chiefs, who had infinite difficulty in saving them from their in-
furiated followers; they were subquently impriwned in a fort,
but after some days recovered their liberty. The head of Sir \V.
M6Naghten wlie carried through the bazaars an the point of a
spear, with the green epxtacles on that he was in the habit of
wearing ; it was subsequently fixed on the roof of the Round Point
of the bazaar, called the Tchar-sook, as well as his corpse, and that
of Captain Trevor: the bodies were leR there three days, and
afterwards thrown into a dry well.
ARer the death of Sir Mr. M6Naghten, the direction of afFairs
was placed in the hands of Major Pottinger, who had defended
Herat the preceding year. On leaving that city he came to Kabul
and was appointed governor of Charikar and Istalif, two small towns
situated in the mountains, one-and-twenty miles north of Kabul,
and about t.hree from each other. The garrisons which held them
were after a gallant defence overpowered about the same time that
the revolt broke out in the capital, but Major Pottinger, though
wounded by a ball in the thigh, was enabled, almost by a mi-
racle, to escape and reach the house of Burnes, which had been
sacked and pillaged shortly before. Of this event he was igno-
rant, but on his arrival there the t raca of the disaster were
still fresh ; he found himself alone in the smoking ruins and in
the midst of the insurgents, from whom his lucky star and ex-
cellent horse saved him once more, and he arrived, completely
exhausted, in the British cantonment. Major Pottinger had bnt
very imperfectly recovered from his wound, when the heavy
task of directing the political affairs of Kabul fell upon his
shoulders. Sad as had been the result of the confidence which Sir
William M6Naghteu placed in Mohamed Akbar, such wes tbe
desperate position of things, that Major Pottinger could eee no
CUP. XXIV. 'I'm ENGLISH RETREAT. 357
better course than to renew the negotiations with that serdar;
but the other Afghan chiefs who wished to prevent the con-
centration of authority in the hands of the son of the Emir,
insisted on taking part in the treaty, that was to drive the
English out of their country. They all ratified it, and the articles
were nearly a repetition of those which had been imposed on Sir
W. M'Naghten, namely, the evacuation of Jellalabad by Sale's
brigade, and the liberation of Dost Mohamed; but this time it
was agreed that the English should keep their arms, and be accom-
panied across the Khyber by an Afghan escort, commanded by
Akbar Khan himself, who was to protect them as far as Peshawur.
Wounded, however, as had been hi self-love, and foiled in his
ambitious views in not having been permitted to treat singly with
the invaders, he did not care to assemble the escort immediately.
The Indo-British had lost up to this period twenty-elght officers killed
in action or assassinated ; 10,000 bodies of men and animals infected
the air and aggravated the sufferings of the 5000 unhappy sur-
vivors, that now formed the army, and who were worn out by the
resistance they had maintained for two months against 40,000
insurgents. The cold had become intendely severe ; fuel, provisions,
and ammunition failed, and the troops being completely discouraged
Major Pottinger did not think it advisable to wait any longer for
the promi~ed escort, and decided upon making a desperate rush
through the midst of the enemy; accordingly, on the 5th of
January, 1842, he gave the order for departure.
On Thursday the 6th, aher having sustained a ~ e g e of sixty-
seven days, and endured the most cruel privations, General
Elphinstone and the army he commanded quitted, under a humi-
liating capitulation, the intrenched camp of Kabul, and moved
off on a road a foot deep in snow. The force had, however,
scarcely cleared the cantonment, when the rear guard was attacked
by the Afghans ; an officer of the 5th regiment of native cavalry
named Hardyman, and some of his men, were killed in this
affair, and the army marched only five miles that day. The sky
was clear, but the cold intense, and when they arrived on the en-
camping ground the soldiers had to clear away the snow, before
they could rest their w a y limbs on the frozen earth; to this
was added the want of provisions, and before morning dawned
several hundred men and women had died from cold and hunger.
On the 7th the division marched upon Barikhar, and the
358 ENGLISH HOSTAGES. CIIAP. XXIV.
Afghan escort which Akbar Khan had promised should protect the
retreat appeared in larger numbers and hostile ; the rear guard
was harassed that day by several bloody engagements, and the
enemy carried off three mountain guns. From this moment
the English, who had indeed placed but little confidence in the
promises of the Afghans, felt convinced they should never reach
Jellalabad but by fighting every inch of the way, and, encamping
at the entrance of the deue, they there p d a more terrible
night than the first. Those who survived till day-break, found
the ground covered with corpses; the bewildered Sepoys burnt
their clothes to warm themselves, and the British soldiers sinking
under cold and hunger had scarcely strength to carry their arms :
the most frightful disorder reigned throughout the frozen and
famished multitude, and those who had saved anything valuable
were here obliged to abandon it.
On the morning of the 8th, the division could not advance one
single step. The heights around swarmed with their enemies,
who having suspended their fire during the night, recommenced
their deadly work at sunrise. In this extremity the English were
obliged to enter into a parley with Mohamed Akbar Khan, who
was seen encamped on an eminence near, and who, while affecting
a great sympathy for them, was not so ignorant of the misforc
tunes that befell the& as he wished to make them believe. He
blamed Major Pottinger for hi precipitation in quitting Kabul,
without waiting for the escort which was to protect the army,
adding that he alone a~~lon,ost the Afghan chiefs had the power
to prevent the attacks made upon it, and he offered to control
the insurgents, provided the English consented to give hosfages
that they would not go beyond Tezeen, until Sale's brigade
had evacuated Jellalabad. I t is evident that the serdar feared
the junction of the two divisions in a place that was for-
tified and provisioned, and in which they could pass the winter
in safety, and wait for the spring to resume the offensive. To
assure himself therefore tbat the engagement would be faith-
fully kept, he demanded at first six hostages, but was subsequently
satisfied with. Major Pottinger, and Captains Lawrence and
M'Eenzie. As soon as they were placed in his hands, the. troops
moved forward towards the famous defile of Khoord Kabul, but
attacked on all sides, notwithstanding the treaty just concluded,
this day brought with it the climax of their misfortunes ; scenes
CRAP. YYIV. ENGLISH ARMY ANNIHILATED. 859
of carnage and pitiless cruelty were renewed at every step, and
the column, crushed by the rolling fire of its invisible foes, at
length abandoned the guns to the Afghana Reduced to twenty
cartridges per man, they were obliged to charge with the bayonet
enemies sheltered by rocks and well provided with ammunition,
while women and children pierced with cold were seen wan-
dering distracted and at random through the fire, amongst the
disorganised troop. Mohamed Akbar Khan had no command
over his men, for they had proclaimed the Djehad or Holy War,
had become Ghazees or soldiers of the Faith, and their fanaticism
knew no bounds ; the feeling of revenge, that of doing a good
work in the eyes of God, and above all the hope of booty, rendered
them utterly deaf to entreaty or command ; destitute of pity, and
reckless of order or discipline, they gorged themselves with blood
and plunder.
On the 9th Akbar Khan acknowledged that he was perfectly
powerlem to reatrain these Ghazees, who renewed the scenes of the
previous day with increased fury, and the storm which had raged
over the wretched troops for three consecutive days ended in one of
the most terrible military catastrophes on record. The remnant of
the Indo-British army, exhausted by forced marches, by cold, by
want of food and fuel, and agonizing sufferings of every description,
had no longer the strength to defend itself, and was massacred-
annihilated, by overwhelming numbers of merciless enemies. Three
natives ollly and one single European, Dr. Brydon, reached Jellala-
bad out of a body of five thousand men and a much greater number
of camp-followers, who lost their lives in this butchery. Akbar Khan
seemed to deplore the conduct of his soldiers and his own want of
command over them, and in the height of this bloody tragedy
offered shelter to the English ladies, promising to protect them at
the peril of his own life; the offer was accepted by several,
amongst whom were Lady Sale, Lady M6Naghten, Mre. Anderson,
Mrs. Reid, and Mrs. Mainwaring, and they were perfectly well
treated by him.
Akbar Khan having in his camp the hostages that were deli-
vered to him, also General Elphinstone, Brigadier Shelton, Captain
Johnson, and a few other officers, remained two days on this fatal
ground, waiting for the evacuation of Jellalabad by General Sale,
t o whom he had sent a copy of the treaty concluded between
himself and Major Eldred Pottinger. But that General formally
360 SIEGE OF JELLALABAD. CHAP. XXIV.
refused to abandon the place without an order from the Governor-
General of India in Council ; and fortunate was i t for him that he
came to this determination, for the Afghans had laid a plan for
exterminating his corps to the very last man.
ARer the disaster in the Khoord Kabul, Mohamed Akbar
Khan marched his prisoners to Tezeen and Jugdulluk, and then
to Thigri, a fortified town situated in the rich valley of Lug-
man, where, afier much hmitation, he determined not to forward
them to Jellalabad, but sent them to Buddiabad, a large fortreas
recently built at the upper end of the valley. On the 11th they
were moved to Zindeh and placed in charge of the chief, Mohamed
Shah Khan. The death of General Elphinstone from natural
causes occurred on the 23rd of April following, and Akbar Khan
sent the corpse under escort to Jellalabad ; but the G hazees met
it on the road, attacked and dispersed the guard, tore the body from
the coffin, and stripped and stoned it.
The massacres in the Khoord Kabul greatly increased the power
and influence of Mohamed Akbar and hi party became daily more
numerous ; the Ghazees on all sides responded to his appeal, and
the irregular cavalry of the country in the service of the English
deserted to join his standard. His army then amounted to even
or eight thousand men, and with these he laid siege to Jellalabad,
being fully convinced that General Sale would never evacuate it in
virtue of the treaty. This brave officer had entrenched himself in
the place with the two battalions under his command, and for more
than two months had been living on half rations, determined to
hold out to the last man. Jellalabad (Glory inhabited) is situated
west of Peshawur, at the opening of the Kl~yber Pass. In the
summer it contains but 2000 inhabitants, but in the winter nearly
20,000, for the severity of that season in these mountains obliges
the inhabitants to take refuge in the towns ; General Sale arrived
at the period of this augmentation, and was necessitated, for the
security of his brigade, to take steps to prevent this increase in
the population. All Akbar Khan's efforts to dislodge the gallant
General proved ineffectual, and instead of succeeding, as he hoped,
he was very nearly losing his life here either by miechance or
treachery. The rifle of the Isakzye chief, Mohamed Osman Khan,
the first of the insurgent serdars who made a treaty with Sir IYm.
M6Naghten, went off accidentally-such, at least, was the statement
of that chief-and the ball lodged in Akbar Khan's arm, who pre-
CHAP. XXIV. SHAH SHOOJA AND ZEMAN KI I AS. 361
tended that the injury was premeditated, and that Osmail Khan .
had been bribed by the English to ~ssassinate him : he, therefore,
put him to death.
While Akbar Khan was thus harassiilg General Sale at Jellala-
bad, Zeman Khan, the newly elected king of the Afghans, occu-
pied the town of Kabul and besieged Shah Shooja, who from the
citadel kept up a cannonade upon the city ; several thousand lives
were sacrificed in this struggle, for each day brought with it its own
combat. The cause of Zeman Khan, however, prospered not ; he
became anxious and disappointed at this useless waste of his fortune,
on which he depended for a u c q and by which alone he had
secured partisans; he, therefore, deemed it prudent to accept the
propositions made to him by the Shah, laid down the royalty with
which the nation had invested him, and consented to become the
prime minister of the Suddozye prince. In acting thus he thought
he should be able to prevent the re-establishment of Dost Mohamed
if he should return, and also to reduce Akbar Khan to obe-
dience, being well determined, however, to take the first favourable
opportunity of overthrowing Shah Shooja and seizing the crown
once more ; but the events which followed completely neutralized
his deep-laid schemea The Shah, on the other hand, was not
more sincere than his vizier, and promised him what he never
intended to perform; he made these concessions to his adver-
saries for no other purpose than to extricate himself from his
present embarrassing position, intending to get rid of them all if
ever he should find himself firmly established in power. To
co~nplete this apparent reconciliation, he named Akbar Khan,
Serdar Serdarhne: and sent his appointment to him at Jellalabad ;
but that, chief would not accept it or snnction the treaty con-
cluded with his cousin, unless Shah Shooja agreed to support him
in besieging that town. I t waa hardly possible that any proposal
should have better coincided with the Shah's own views, for he
ardently longed for some opportunity of leaving Kabul till he could
return in force, supported by the English, whose assistance he saw,
when too late, was indispensable to him. The conditions offered by
Akbar Khan were by no means favourable to the intrigues of Zeman
Khan, and the vizier, therefore, advised the king not to accept them,
or at any rate if he did to leave him, during his absence, in com-
&nerd of the &nemlr.-Fe~.~.irr.
362 THE KING ASSASSINATED. Caar. XXl V.
mand at Kabul ; but the king, who perceived the drift of his advice,
simply sent him orders to accompany him to Jellalabad, and to
prove that he was in earnest in this decision, he appointed the
son of the Serdar Emin Ullah Khan governor of Kabul while he
was away. Zeman Khan, uneasy at the Shah's persisting in his
determination, resolved to ascertain the cause, and found that
he had been deceived by his sovereign, whom he had himself
intended to betray : he, therefore, to nip the evil in the bud,
detennined upon his destruction.
Shah Shooja, in pursuance of his intentiom, l ee the citadel to
join his small army, encamped about a mile and a half from the
Bala Hisear, with the declared object of leadiig it against. the
English, but in reality to use it as an escort on his way to place
himself under their protection; he had, however, scarcely started
when the Serdar Shooja ed Dooulet, a son of Zeman Khan, accom-
panied by four servants, overtook him, and fired point blank into
his palanquin. The unfortunate monarch was wounded by several
balls, and still breathed when the amasins took him out of the
litter and threw his body into a stream that was near the road,
finishing their atrocious crime with their sworda This event took
place in February, 1842.
The character of Shah Shooja has generally been too severely
criticized. Even his adversaries, the Mohamedzyes, who now govern
Afghanistan, admit that he was a very remarkable man, and the
only one of Shah Timoor's sons who was capable of reigning. He
had both ability and courage, and redeemed more than one vice
by the qualities which the Afghans delight to see in their princes.
He was after the manner of that country a good administrator, and
understood how to conduct a war as well as an Afghan can ; he only
wanted a little better luck ; such is the opinion of all A f g h ~ ~
Several times beaten and driven out of the country, he never con-
sidered himself vanquished, and took the field twelve times in his
endeavours to regain the crown. I t is impossible to look upon
this perseverance as mere obstinacy ; it denotes great energy of
character, and if he always failed it was becauae he never would
permit the smallest entrenchment upon his absolute rights. When
we Europeans form an opinion of the acts of the barbarous nations
of Asia we always do so according to our own standard of morals,
and political passions, without making the least allowance for the
difference that exists between our habits and feelings, and theirs.
Cur. SZII\= HIS CHARACTER. 3G3
There is no question that Shah Shooja, like every other Afghan,
was cruel and also despotic, but let us review the position in which
he was placed, and it will appear that having to govern a race
for whom force is the only law, it would have been difficult
for him to a d otherwise thau as he did. The Mohamedzyes,
whw influence in the government was ao great, were always
conspiring against him during his first reign. After the death of
Ahmed Sbah, the descendants of that great prince had always been
subject to the caprices engendered by the ambition of the wrdare
rho left them only the slladow of regal power. Shah Shooja
resisted their intrigues with greater tenacity than him predecessors
had done, and was therefore more especially the object of their
'
machinations ; he would have been foolish indeed to allow himself to
be beaten without making an effort to foil them, and coercion was the
only means by which he could succeed in concentrating the power
in hi own hands : he believed he ~~hould secure this object if he
did sq and therein was his error. Had he reflected that the
tribes, attached to their chieh by so many ties, would give him but
a feeble and uncertain support, he would certainly have abstained
from using force for the pu- of attaining it ; but weakness on
hi part would have been worse, for then he must have succumbed
at once. Hi s conduct during his second reign is a proof of that
independence of character which was ever liis misfortune: indig-
nant under the yoke impoeed upon him by the English, all
the vices of his Afghan nature broke forth ; he betrayed hi14
benefactors, resisted his liberators, and died by the hands of
-ins-for an Afghan he could have no more glorious close to
such a career.
AKBAR KHAN RETURKS TO KABUL.
CHAP. XXV.
CHAPTER XXV.
Fethi Djing Mima succeeda Shah Shwja-Combat between that prince andZeman
Khan-Tho former is beaten - Akbar Khan returna to Kabul and f o m
Fethi Djing to retire to the citadel -The former becomes hin Vizier and
recognizes him aa King - Akbar plunders Fethi Djing- Flight of the F'rinca
- Akbtu remaina master of Kabul - The English in spite of the insurrection
maintain themselves at Kandahar - Foresight of Mi or Rawiinson - Occur-
rencaa in the neighbourhood of that city - Persian account of them - Akt sl
Khan, Alive, beaten by the Englbh - Plan of the Afghans to seim Ban-
They are defeated - Second expedition of the English to Kabul - Akbar Xhan
in repulsed at Butkhak -Opinions of the press on this wcond expedition -
What ia true and what ia false -Miistakes of the journalist in milituy mat t en
- The English evacuate Afghanistan - They place Shapoor Mirm on the throne
of Kabul - The English give Dost Mohamed his liberty - Akbar Khan return6
to Kabul and s e i m the sovereign power - Restoration of Dost M o h e d at
Kubul - Seif der Djing is driven from Kandahar by Kohendil Ehan.
SHAH SHOOJA left several sons, of whom four took part in the
political events that occurred in Afghanistan during the English
occupation ; these were Timoor Mirza, Fethi Djing Mirza, Seif der
Djing Mirza, and Shapoor Mirza
Although the Shah had appointed a Governor of Kabul pre-
viously to his violent death, he had also for further security placed
his ~econd son Fethi Djing i n the Bala Hissar. If'hen this prince
heard of his father's assassination he shut himself up in the citadel
with one thousand men of Arab origin who were devoted to him,
and sent money to his partizan Emin Ullah Khan, Logheree,
who occupied the suburbs with three thousand men, to distribute
among the people in his name, and induce them to rise against
Zeman Khan : this he did, and a bloody combat was maintained
for two days and two ni ght , after which Emin Ullah Khan was
obliged to retire to the Bala Hissar.
Moh~nled Akbar had scarcely recovered from his wound when he
heard of these events, which determined him immediately to retire
from the siege of Jellalabad (an u~idertaking that had hitherto
proved to him only a source of disappointment), and return in haste
to Kabul, which he reached twenty days after the death of Shah
Shooja. Whether it was because he did not consider himaelf iu
CHAP. XXV. FLIGHT OF PRINCE FETHI DJING. 366
sufficient force, or that he thought the moment unpropitious, the
serdar did not assume the sovereign power, but resolved in the
first instance to beguile his enemies into destroying each other, and
for that purpose allied himself with Zeman Khan, and prevailed
on him to &st in seizing the person of the Prince Fethi Djing.
With their united forces they made four unsuccessful attacks upon
the Bala Hisear, but at last succeeded in blowing up one of the
towers of the enceinte, when they rushed in and either killed or
made prisoners all who were within its walls.
Zeman Khan wished to put Fethi Djing to death, but to this
proposal Mohamed Akbar refused to consent, and not only took
that prince under hi special protection, but made the liveliat
protestations of devotion to his cause, declaring that he would
never recognize any other Afghan as his sovereign. The object
of this apparent generosity was simply to crush more decidedly
the power of Zeman Khan, who, divining his intention, for-
tified himself in the suburbs of the town, but in vain, for Mo-
hamen Akbar attacked and drove him back at every point,
and he owed his safety to his fo1111al renunciation of his claims
to royalty and the poet of vizier. After this succese Akbar
Khan married the daughter of the Serdar Emin Ullah Khan, au
alliance which greatly strengthened his party ; he was also a p
poiuted vizier by Fethi Djing, and maintained in the general
command of the army. But these concessions did not affect his
original project, and he prepared to bring about the downfall
of this prince, who, warned of his danger, once more retired to
the citadel, from which, however, he was forced to retire after a
siege of forty-eight hours. Akbar immediately seized the treasure
that Shah Shooja had left his son, but suspecting that Fethi Djing
had secreted a part of it, he ordered his guards not to lose sight of
him for a moment, nor to allow him to sleep until he had given
up all the diamonds which he acknowledged were in his possession.
For three days and nighta had the unhappy Fethi Dj ng Mirza
been thus tormented, when Khan Shireen Khan, a Kuuzilbash
serdar, who was secretly of his party, and supported the English,
found an opportunity of coilveying to him two hundred ducats
with which he bribed his janitors to facilitate his escap. His
prison was one of the large towers in an angle of the citadel, and
happily for him a window in it overlooked the town ; from this
he was lowered by a rope at night, and took refuge in the quarter
366 MAJOR RAWLIXSON. CHAP. XS\'.
inhabited by the Kuzzilbashes of qevanchir, a gun-shot from
the place, where Khan Shireen Khan secreted him in his OWII
house.
When his escape became known, Akbar Khan sent in pur-
suit of him in all directions; the strictest search was instituted
for about twelve days, but without success, and when all hope of
discovering him was lost, and the search given up, Fethi Djing
left his retreat, and under the escort of one hundred Kuzzilbash
horsemen, reached Jellalabad. I t was not known till mme time
after that Khan Shireen Khan had assisted the prince in his
escape, and though Mobamed Akbar's resentment bvas great, he
concealed it, as it was necessary for him to keep on terms with this
serdar. Are not nll these intrigues and counter-intrigues the best
evidence of the instability of the Afghan character, and of the
turbulence, constant craving for change, and uncontrollable love
of bloodshed innate in it ?
The flight of Fethi Djing Mirza was the last episode connected
with the occupation of Kabul by the British More fortunate
or better prepared at Kandahar, they succeeded in holding that
city ; a result which was due to the firmiless of General Nott,
and, above all, to the indefatigable activity of Major Rawlin-
son, who administered the affairs of that Residency with great
ability..
The war in this province was the more difficult to conduct be-
cause the principality had never been entirely subdued. The Serdar
Akter Khan, Alizye, who had retired to the district of Zemindavar,
kept up an unceasing conflict against the English, and though con-
stantly beaten, he, in the moat undaunted manner, as constantly
0 Major Rawlinson is one of those
rare charactera who are equally csplrble
of everything - honourable, firm, en-
lightened, md conciliatory-he is 11ni-
versally beloved. The remembrance
of his government, which even in 1845
the author found fresh in the memo
of the Kandaharians, and could w x
appreciate, tells far more in favour of
the learned and celebrated decipherer
of the Cuneiform inscriptions than any-
thing that can be mid incommendation
of that o5cer's talents. The manner
in which he defended KandPhar Rgainst
the insurgent8 will give the reader only
a poor idea of the merit md c o q of
this brilliant officer. He rimy justly be
clssacd amongst the gnat men thrt
have been distinguished in the service
of the Eaet India Company, and i t is
impossible not to feel Pstonishment,
that after such a splendid defence of
the post entrusted to his care, his
talents and fidelity should remnin m
ill-remunerated by his government.
But, however that may be, such men
are always elevated above their fellow
men, and whether they are or are not
the objecta of Government patronage,
the esteem and admuation of the world
rue thein. - Fnrt'w.
CHAP. YXV. FORESIGHT OF MAJOR IIAJVLINSON. 3(i7
rztui-ned to the charge. When the insurrection broke out in
Kabul the number of his adherents was considerably augmented,
and the serdars Seidal Khan, Mohamed Attah Khan, Saloo Khan,
Mir Efzel Khan, and others, with large contingents, then joined
him.
Seif der Djing, the third son of Shah Shooja, who lived at Kan-
dahar, fled from the city to join the insurgents; both father and
son thus repaying their benefactors the English, to whom they
owed everything, with the blackest ingratitude.
Immediately the news of the rising at Kabul reached Major
Rawlinson, he secretly despatched messengem in every direction
to call in the scattered troops under the guns of the place.
He likewise ordered the removal of all the provisions from the
different magazines to the citadel, in which he resided, and
these wise dispositions were completed before the report of the
revolt was known in the city. There were at this time in Kan-
dahar and the suburbs, 4000 Afghan horse, in the pay of the state ;
these troops were the cause of the greatest uneasineas to Major
Rawlinson, and, in consequence, he sent for Wiza Mohamed
Khan, Popolzye, the Vizier of Timoor Mirza,* and desired him
to say whether he was or was not true to the British cause? To
this question he replied in the affirmative, when Major Rawlin-
son desired him to give instant proof of his devotion by leaving
Kandahar with his cavalry, and attacking the Serdar Mohamed
Attah Khan, who was advancing on the city from Kabul at the
head of the greater part of the insurgent horse. Mirza Mohamed,
having first received a large sum of money, at once wt out
with his division, but, instead of fighting, joined his force to that
of the rebel chief. On hearing of this piece of treachery, the
Resident adopted a measure most imperatively necessary to pre-
eerve the corps under General Nott from certain destruction, and
ordered the greater part of the inhabitants who were of Afghan
origin to leave the city iu the shortest possible space of time,
permitting only a few to remain besides the Parsees and Hindooa.
At Kandahar the English had nine incomplete battalions, two
batteries of artillery, and a few hundred Indian cavalry, but the
atter were outside the town and held the country under the com-
* The eldest son of Shah Shonja and nally so, f ~ ~ r the English had mon
Governor of Kandahnr; but only nomi- power here than at Kabul.-Fmirr.
368 MR. PATTIKSON AND 11 It. GOLDISG. CHAP. X\\.
mand of Mr. Pattinson. During my reaidence at Kandahar, 1
read a Persian account of the mournful event which led to the
death of that officer and one of his comrades named Golding.
'She simplicity of the document tempted me to translate it in the
most literal manner, and I give the Persian text in order that
those readen who are able may judge of the correctness of my
translation.
Dou fooudj Dj anhz ez menlum
Afghan-brsi-Kabouli der Kandshar
boudend. Douta llaheb meuseb in-
glich aerkenli? emin dou fooudj
djanbaz bond. Yeki ismech, Golding
boud yeki Wilwn. IJattinson mheb
serkerdi Kull, der tchader Gelding
saheb bud. Biroun dervaze Herat
tchader zedb boudend. Emon cheb
kd mi khsstend subguial~ beurevend
der Guirichk, foouclj Golding d e b
rikhtend h l n tchader. Er dou aaheb
Khabidb. Boudend der tcllader. Dest
bb chemchir bala inha rikhtcnd,
Golding saheb kuchtend, Pattinson
eahebez tchader biroun arned. Yozdeh
zakhln chemchir dacht. Yek noouker
ouchiar dacht ; ssp hazer mi kouned,
ve khodech puc ht aaheb aavar
micheved. Kmon cheb oura avourd
tler Kandal~ar. B6 on d e b di-ger,
kd Wilwn aaheb hched, khaberdar
micheved ; Khodech~a bB tchader
saheb misresoned-mi b i n d khoun
busior rikhtest vB aaheban em nis-
tend-muatereb biroun mi ayed ; mi
Vi ed yek fooudj djanbaz Emmh
reftend. Mi ayed miyan fooudj kho-
dech, miqouyet : her gr~iah chouma
em nemek beharam estid, mera beu
. kuched, V B khod-tu benmvid ouha
der cljavab mi gouyend : Khouda nB
kouned ! ma nemek be hnram nistim
- migouyed herguiah nemek M
haram nistid ba nien bi ayid, kd
hurevi m khoun Underan mara
biguirim. In aavnr ez emin fooudj
aspha khodra zin mikound, bd kadr
sed suvar emera on mi revend, dou
aed pindja savar ez mmli?h. Hindi,
alidja mejor Hawlinson, be Komak
on mi funlated, ve gafeul mi rizend
h l a emon fooudj gurikhtd. Fursed
tutfen indakd nB b u d , dest bB
chemctir ;;oti mi cheved, alidja \Vil-
Two squadrons of Afgllan horn,
Djanbaz, composed of Parsivans of
Kabul, were a t Kandahar with t w
English officers, Me~ers. Golding and
Wilson. Mr. Pattinson, who had
the chief command, was in the
tent of Mr. Gol di ~~g, and tbe
squadmns were encamped outside tile
Herat gate. 011 the night pr di n: :
the day on which they were to march
to Gi h h k the troopers of Mr. Gold-
ing's squadron rushed illto the tent
in which these officera were asleep,
fell u p n them sword in hand and
killed Mr. Golding. Mr. Pattimn,
r h o waa wounded in eleven places,
having subsequently left the tent,
found hie servant a n intelligent, and
faithful man, with his home ready;
this man assisted to mount, and
getting upbehind him, he brought him
in to Kandahar the same night. l ' bo
n e w reaching Mr. Wilson he imme-
diately rode to the tent of these gentle-
men, but found only the proof of the
murderous onslaught in tbeir blood
on the ground. He withdrew from
the tent deeply moved, and findhg
that their squadron of djanbaz had de-
aerted, he a t once returned to his o m
men and aaid, "I f you are traitom
kill me and be off ;" but the troopre
replied, " God preserve 11s from bein::
any such thing." " \IVell then," soid
their officer, " if you are not traitors
follow me and let us take revenge for
the blood of our comrades which h a
heen shed." The men, abont one
hundred in number, immedlatel~
saddled their horses, nnd lafore I w -
in:: the ground two h u n d d and
fifty Indian cavalry, which bad
beeu sent to his wi s t mce hy Major
Rarlinwn, joined Mr. Wilmn, wben
they at once set off in pureuit of
CHAP. XXV. . AFGHAN FANATICISM. 369
eon saheb chir del ewe1 s a w boud,
mi ressed. Seta ez serkerdhh-bu-
zurk-ra ba chemchir mi zened, kuchth
chudh ez ssp mi indazed eukm mi
deed, eer yeki-ra mi burend:-
Kalender Khan ismech boud eniin
fessad-ra ou Kerdbboud Bagi savar,
chikest khourdd, muh W guriz mi
qzarend, aigaib ichan mi revend ta
busior ez ichan Kaltl Kerdb vB euldjh
busior mi averend, bermiguerdend ser
buri dk Kalender Khan-ra avour-
dend der Kandahar ; eukm Kerdend
ki? s& oh rouz der bazar avizou Ker-
dend. Djartchi Djar kChid der ba-
mrha kd sezaye k&i k6 nemek he
harami mi kounend.
deserters. I t wan no affair for fire-
arms, they came upon the rebels sword
in hand ; the very exalted Mr. \\'ilson,
the lion-hearted, was the first to close
with them, and killed three of the
principal chiefs with his own hand,
striking them off their horses. He
then ordered the head of one of them,
Kalender Khan, who had excited the
men to mutiny, to he cut off, and fol-
lowed the rebel squadron, which had
fled in disorder. He pursued them
until a great number were killed, and
they returned to Kandahar laden with
their spoils, bringing back with them
the head of Kalender Khan ; this was
by order placed on a hqok in the
bszaar to remain there three day^,
and a crier stood nenr, who continually
announced to the passers by, " This
is the punisllment of tmitors."
Treachery was indeed the order of the day with the Afghans;
and fanaticism, till then almost unknown to that people, was added
to it. Aroused by the mollahs, it excited every mind, for these
san,guhary ministers of Allah unceasingly repeated to the people
in their sermons and on all other occasions, the verse of the
Koran which says that to kill an infidel is an act pleasing to God,
and that every Ghazee will, after his death, go to the Garden of
Paradise, and live in the midst of houris always young and
beautiful. I s it astonishing that such teaching should instigate
t h i barbarous people to indulge in the most deplorable excesses?
One example, from amangst a thousand, will give an idea of the
state of public feeling at this time. An officer of the English
commissariat was making some purchases in the bazaar, when one
of these fanatics came up to him, and stabbed him in the abdomen
with his knife. He was immediately arrested, bound, and brought
before Major Rawlinson, who asked him why he had committed
so vile an act ? 6c He is mad," exclaimed a certain Mirza Jan,
a servant of the English, who wished to save hi life. "No,
no," replied the Afghan, eagerly, "I have all my senses about
me;" and, having heaped upon the Resident every opprobrious
epithet he could think of, added, " far from repenting of what
I have done, if I had my knife now, and my hands were free,
I would do as much for you." The villain was subsequently
blown from a gun.
2 B
370 ATTACK ON KANDAHAR. . C w . XXV.
But to return to my narrative. The Prince Seii der Djing,
Akter Khan, Mohamed Attah Khan, and other insurgent chiefs,
after having united their forces, advanced to within a short distance
of Kandahar on the 9th of January, 1842, just in time to give a
small body of six hundred men, commanded by General Nott, the
opportunity of beating them. They, however, were not demoralized
by this check, and persevered in trying to carry out their design of
taking the city ; but wisely judging that their numbers were
quite unequal to accomplish this object by force, they had recourse
to an artifice in which they very nearly succeeded. A body of
from eighteen to twenty thousand Ghazees attempted to ravage the
environs of Kandahar, when General Nott immediately took the
field to drive them back. He had only eight incomplete battalions
with him, and a few horsemen; amongst these were a hundred
Beloochees, commanded by the same Aga Khan whom the English
sent into the south of Persia in 1841, and who, having failed in his
enterprise, undertaken for the purpose of raising an insurrection
-
there, joined them again The Ghazees retired slowly on the
approach of General Nott, s k i h i n g all the way, to the moun-
tainous district of Zemindavar, three days' journey from Kandahar,
whither the British troops had the imprudence to follow them.
When the insurgent commanders saw that they had succeeded in
drawing the enemy thus far fiom the city, they left a few cavalry
in his front to occupy their attention, and rapidly returned dth the
bulk of their troops to Kandahar, the garrison of which then con-
sisted of only seven hundred sepoys and one hundred English
soldiers, with a single officer. On this occasion Major Rawlimn
showed as much intelligence as coolness and decision. He placed
his men most judiciously, the Hi doos on the walls, the few British
a t the gates; and with these dispositions once made waited the
arrival of the enemy in stern tranquillity.
Towards evening some Afghans, appeared at the Herat gate
with mules laden with firewood, brought, they asserted, for the
use of the town, and declaring themselves friends of the Eng-
lish. The sepoy sentry on the rampart, foolishly believing their
story, gave them permission to lie down within cannon-shot of
the place, which most imprudent conduct, as will be seen, nearly
led to the capture of the city. At two o'clock in the dark winter
morning, the faggots, which they had secretly piled against
the gates, were fired, and a detachment of the insurgent army
CHAP. XXV. DEFEAT OF THE AFGH'ARS. 3i l
rushed forward at a concerted signal and threw themselves into
the opening made by the flames. They were received with a
sharp volley, which did not, however, prevent a few from pene-
trating to the centre of the city, where they were soon disposed' of.
The combat, nevertheless, still raged with fury round the gate ; the
British artillery, ably served, mowkd down whole ranks of Ghazees :
and so many Afghans fell there that, entirely obstructing the
entrance, the bodies formed a rampart for the besieged. Several
attacks which they made at other pi nt s were perfectly unsuc-
cessful ; and after six hours' hard fighting they retired, leaving
more than twelve hundred dead under the ramparts. Intelligence
of what was taking place was immediately sent to General Nott,
the rapidity of whose movements soon brought him back to Kaii-
dahr , near which the Afghans dared no longer remain, and
therefore turned their efforts against the little fortress of Girishk.
Thii had been confided to the charge of Mohamed Kooli Khan, a
son of the famous Vizier Fethi Khan, Mohamedzye, who had
attached himself to the British cause ; the young serdar was not to
be intimidated either by the threats or by the greatly superior force
which held him in a state of siege for many months, during which
he made a heroic mistance, and at the close remained master of
the place
That the English maintained themselve; in Kandahar through
the whole period of the troubles in Kabul was due, as I have already
remarked, to the talent and courage of Major Rawlinson, whose
measurea enabled him to surmount the most serious ditficulties, and
wait till the relieving army from India arrived to re-establish the
prestige of the Indo-British arms in that principality. This expe-
dition obtained pernlission to pass through the dominions of the
Bfaharadjah of the Punjab, and crossed the Indus about the middle
of the summa of 1842. As soon as information of this fact arrived
at Kandahar, four battalions of the garrison and the Belooch
cavalry, commanded by the brother of Aga Khan, escorted the
heavy baggage and guns td Shikapoor, whence they proceeded to
India The five remaining battalions of General Nott's division also
quitted the city on the 8th of August, 1842, but marched towards
Knbul, where they effected their junction with the corps d'arme'e
which had advanced from Peshawur at the end of the same
month.
The Afghans, commanded by Mohamed Akbar Khan, left the
2 3 2
372 ENGLISH PRISOX'ERS. CHAP. XXV.
capital to meet the English, and fell in with them at the village of
Bootkak, a distance of fourteen miles from Kabul. Khan Shireen
Khan, the Kuzzilbash Serdar, had joined him, but after the ex-
change of a few shots he passed over to the English with the five
thousand horsemen who were under his ordera.'
The battle of Bootkak, the brunt of which fell entirely upon the
light troops, lasted nearly five hours, when Mohamed Akbar Khan,
completely beaten, retired to the mountains and thence to Khulm.
He had with him at this time a British officer, whom he had taken
prisoner in the beginning of the year, and he at first thought of
putting him to death, but the fear of reprisals which might be
taken on his family, still in India and in the power of the English,
suggested to him a nobler line of conduct, and after his flight to
Khulm he sent this officer to the British camp, escorted by two
Afghan horsemen ; those who had been made prisoners on the
same occasion, both men, women, and children, having already
arrived there. AIobamed Akbar had removed them from Zindeh
on the 28th of Nay, in order that they might be the more closely
watched, for two chiefs had, it was said, offered the English to
raise two thousand men and deliver the prisoners. They were,
therefore, dispersed in various fortresses at about an hour's distance
from Kabul, near the river Logur, and at this time they were
better lodged and better fed But when the British force ap-
proached, Akbar Khan; dreading that they might be carried off,
and that he should then lose the best ground for any stipulation
he could hope to make for his exiled family, sent them away on
the 29th of August towards Bamian, where they arrived on the
3rd of Geptember, and met with far worse treatment than they bad
ever experienced.
After the battle of Bootkak, however, Khan Shireen Khan c ~ d
eearch to be made for them by the Kuzzilbashes, who brought them
safely into camp at Kabul on the 21st September. He had pro-
cured their liberty by his interposition with Mohamed Shah Khan,
to whom 20,000 rupees in cash and an annual pension of 2000
more were promised, but never paid.
* Khan Sbireen Khan, the Serdnr
lies of this tribe are distributed moWjt
Serdarane of the Kuezilbashes, has four different serdars, of whom O h o b
thousand farnilieg under his command, Hoosein Khan, Atchar, renowned for
and is much looked up to and feared by his courage, ia one, and suthoritl
the Afghans. Six thouennd more fami- over one thousand families.-FmiC'
CUP. XXV. LADY SALE'S NARRATIVE. 373
The Indo-British army remained some days under the walls of
Kabul before they entered the city, and it was not till the 9th
October that Sir R. Shakespear received orders to take in a com-
pany of sappers, five companies of Her Majesty's 26th and 33rd,
and five companies of the 31st, the Bengal light cavalry and the
3rd Irregular cavalry. As the inhabitants had fled at the approach
of the British troops, there was no one to fight: but this officer's
instructions were to destroy several prts of this fine city. On the
11th the destruction of the magnificent and glorious edifice of Ali
Murdane Khan, the great emporium of this part of Central Asia,
was effected, and soon after that of a mosque near the bazaars ;
the bazaars themselves and every quarter of the city, with the ex-
ception of the Bala Hissar and the houses of the Kuzzilbashes,
were treated in the same manner, and nothing was left but a mass
of ruins. After having destroyed the city, the anny retired upon
Gundamuck, where they arrived almost without resistance on the
18th, having desolated the country, burnt the residences of the
native chiefs and the villages on their line of march. On the 21st
the 1st division, under General Pollock, arrived at Jellalabad, and
was followed by that of General Nott, which reached it on the
24th. On the 25th October the engineers blew up the bastions
of Jellalabad, and all the houses were reduced to ashes-this was
the concluding operation of the retributary expedition, and the
force mmmenced its return to India immediately after.
I shall close this episode of the war in Kabul by a quotation
from the work of Lady Sale, who was herself one of the prisoners,
and who thus speaks of their captivity while sojourning in the
mountain fastnesses of the Khyber :-u A woman's vengeance is
said to be fearful; but nothing can satisfy mine against Akbar,
Sultan Jan, and Mohamed Shah Khan. Still I say that Akbar,
having for his own political purposes done as he said he would do
-that is, destroyed our army-letting only one man escape to tell
the tale, as Dr. Brydon did, and having got the families into his
possession-I say, having done this, he has ever since we have
been in his hands treated us well-that is, honour has been
respected. I t is true that we have not common comforts ; but
what we denominate such are unknowil to Afghan females-they
always sleep on the floor, sit on the floor, &c. The wuzeer gives
us rations of meat, rice, ottah, ghee, and oil, and lately fruit.
At first our food was dressed for us, but it was so greasy and
374 EXAGGERATIONS OF 1'HE PRESS. CHAP. XXV.
disgusting, that we asked leave to cook for ourselves. I t is
true we have been taken about the country, exposed to heat,
cold, rain, &c. ; but so were their own women He has given us
common coarse chintz and coarse long cloth, too, wherewith to
clothe ourselves ; but I do not hesitate to repeat that we have
always been as well treated aa captives could have been in such a
country. But while rendering to Akbar Khan the justice that is
due to him, I shall never forget the injury he has done to England.
Had our army been cut to pieces by an avowed enemy, whether in the
field or the passes, let them have used what stratagems they pleased,
all had been fair. Akbar had shone as another William Tell : he had
been the deliverer of his country from a hateful yoke imposed upon
them by Ka*; but here he stands by his own avowal, freely
made, the assassin of the envoy, not by proxy, but by his own hand.
He treated with his enemies and betrayed them; he massacred
under his own eyes thousands of men and women dying of cold and
hunger, whom he had promised to feed and to defend; therefore
his name will be devoted to eternal opprobrium."
I have examined most of the journals and reviews of the time,
in which the British occupation of Afghanistan was discussed,
and found that all loudly declaimed against the second expedition
to Kabul-those of London as well as Paris, and especially the
English opposition press. But why so much heat ? so much party
spirit ? why distort facts or exaggerate them ? It is certain that
faults were committed, and that bloody catastrophes, even ex-
according to our ideas, were the consequences of that expedition ;
but such invectives will not repair them. Let us state them with
the calmness and dignity of civilized people, instead of becoming
barbarous ourselves in defending barbarians. In the course of this
narrative blame has been awarded wherever it was justly due, and
impartiality renders it equally a duty to correct the overcharged
statements of the evente and circumstances that are said to have
occurred in the second invasion of Kabul. The article in the
Journal &s Dhbats of January 8, 1843, though written with a
certain degree of asperity, is on the whole the most moderate that
up to that time had appeared on the subject in France, and this
induces me to insert it here, adding a few remarks of my own :-
" The principal fact that we find in the Monthly Mail from India,
which brings us intelligence fiom Bombay up to the 1st December,
1842, is the final evacuation of Afghanistan.
CHAP. XXV. JOURNAL DES D~BATS. 876
" Early in November the Indo-British army of the Indus was con-
centrated at Peshawur, in the kingdom of Lahore, prepared to return
within the boundaries of British India, where it was expected the
last brigade would arrive between the 20th and 25th December.
"The events by which thii evacuation will ever be remembered
are deplorable. In truth, if we wished to take our revenge for the
declamations of Lord Palmerston-if we wished to fling back upon
England all the accusations unceasingly made by her press against
our generals and the system of warfare which they have been forced
to adopt in Algiers-the task would be easy, indeed more than
easy. The retreat of General Pollock's force was marked by bar-
barities as odious as useless : every man who fell into the hands of
the troop was put to death ; and it was not the Afghans who set
the example of this cruelty, for they had returued safe and sound
the prisoners of 1841.'
" Three towns, one of which contains, or did contain, 60,000 in-
habitants, have been reduced to ashes, and why? for what end ?
For the fruitless pleasure of satisfying the least honourable passion
of our nature, the passion of revenge.
" I t was not thus that our soldiers and generals behaved in
Africa If the barbarism of our enemies, who knew not, like the
Afghans, what it is to make prisoners-if the hard necessities of
war forced our generals to adopt measures of extreme severity-
they are, at least, in pursuit of a definitive object-positive, honour-
able, glorious. In those severities the ministers of France may, at
least, find consolation in the hopes of a brighter future ; they have
the right to believe that they will some day rescue that colony from
its barbarous condition. The ever increasing sacrifices made by
France stand as proofs to the world that it is a real and serious
undertaking, in which the country looks for better things than the
gratification of brutal passions ; but in ordering these burnings and
massacres, what object could that general possibly have who was
immediately to evacuate Afghanistan for ever ?
'' 'Istalif,' says the letter of an English officer, 'is a pretty little
But were the not the same Af- lish prisoners were returned, it is tme;
g h m who, in deimce of a capitula- but would that have been the arse if
tion, agreed to by themselves and their Dost Mohamed hod not been the pri-
chiefe, to allow the British army to soner of the East India Company I-
make good its retreat. massacred that Ferricr.
army to the very last man? The Eng-
town of 15,000 inhabitants, against whom we had nothing to my
unless that their town stood half way between Kabul and Charikar,
where one of our Goorkha regiments (iegular cava1ry)t was
destroyed the year before by the Afghanas As, then, they were
pressed for time and could not push on to Charikar, Istalif was
punished. A brigade, under the orders of Ge n e d MCaskill,
entered it early in September, after a trif ng engagement, and
proceeded to put to the sword every one who had not succeeded in
making hi escape. I t appears that even the dead and wounded were
not reepected. The sepoy soldicm, in the ex- of their unmiti-
@;able cruelty, set fire to the cotton clothing of their victims, and
thus burned the dead and dying, which would, according to their
superstitious notions, call down a curse on the descendants of those
whose remains were thus disposed of without the honours of sepul-
ture. ARer the slaughter six hundred women remained in the
hands of the victors, who set them at liberty. Were they respected,
as had been the Eumpean ladies who fell into the power of the
Afghans after the disasters at Kabul the winter before? It does
not seem that the soldiers saw their prisoners taken from them
with much satisfaction.
"Two soldiers of the 9th infantry of the Royal army had at the
same moment seized a pretty girl of fourteen years of age, and, not
wishing to 6ght for the possession of the prize, they agreed to d e
cide it with the dice,-with this condition, that the winner should
make her an honest woman and marry her the first time he should
meet with a priest to bless their union. The dice thrown, the suc-
cessful player was walking off with the bride elect on his arm, when
he received an order to set her at liberty. In vain he entreated
and asserted his good intentions ; he was obliged to give her up,
and it was not without regret.
" A captain of the 26th, having selected one from amongst a
group of distracted beauties, for his sultana a magnifi-
cent t rowau of the embroidered vests and trousers worn by
Afghan women of rank, which aRer the sack of the town were sold
for next to nothing ; but scarcely had he time to present them to
the lady, when the order arrived to set her free : she did not require
to be told twice, but fled as fast as her legs would carry her.
At the outaide 4000.-Fmisr.
mi tad in the hill country at the hre
t Infantry - admirable troop, re- of the Himalaya-TrlcMkrtw.
CHAP. XXV. ACCOUNT OF BRITISH PROCEEDIX'GS. 377
' Ah,' said the captain, as she disappeared ; ' if I had known all
the ingratitude of the female heart, they would never have caught
me buying these garments.'
" ARer being regularly pillaged, Istalif was given up to the
flames, and the brigade of General M'Caskill returned to Kabul,
where another tragedy was to be performed.
-,. "The work of destruction there was accomplished with a re-
finement of systematic barbarity and cunning which it is di5cult
to believe. Arriving under the walls of the capital on the 15th of
September, the English found it deserted ; for-the examples they
had already made put the whole population to flight. Occupied
entirely with the recovery of the English prisoners, General
Pollock had never manifested any evil intention against the city ;
the army wae encamped outside, guards were placed at the gates,
and the soldiers forbidden to pass them : it might have been sup-
posed that it was a friendly army, an army of pious devotees, for
the Rev. Mr. Allen took advantage of the inactivity of the troops
during these few days of rest to preach kveral sermons upon the
mercy of God, who had permitted the return of their captive
conirades. The event was celebrated by a solemn service, at which
all the troop attended, and men selected h m the 13th light
infantry sang the Psalma The strict discipline of the army, and
these religious exercises, restored in some degree the confidence of
the wretched inhabitants, and a great many ventured to return to
their houses. I t was then, that is to say on the 9th of October,
that General Pollock ordered Colonel Richmond Shakespear to
enter Kabul with his brigade, and, with the exception of the Bala
Hissar, and the quarter inhabited by the Kuzzilbashes,* who had
always been friendly to the English, to destroy the city and give it
up to the %ames.
" At. Jellalabad the same scenes were enacted, and it is perhaps
still more difficult to understand why that place was treated with
such severity. When, in the November of 1841, General Sale,
harassed by the Ghildjz~es, and almost ,overcome by numbers, pre-
sented himelf at the gates, the inhabitants opened them to him
without resistance. He had brought with him only two days' pro-
visions, but they supplied him as well as they were able-moreover,
Theae Kuz$lbashes are the same favouring whom he conaidered Dost
people that Lord Auckland accuse? of Mohamed guilty of a crime. See his
being hostile to the Britiah, and in
Lordship'p M a mapifeato.-Fmb.
on credit When he afterwards snw that he could not be relieved
before the spring and must therefore pass the winter in the tom,
and found that, to avoid being destroyed 'with hi small garrison
by famine, he was compelled to drive out the inhabitants, they left
their homes without a murmur, and their provisions in them. Why
then was thii town so completely destroyed and burnt?*
" Here then are 100,000 people whose houses have been burnt
just at the commencement of winter, t kd in a country too where that
-&ason is almost as severe as in Russia Frightful & all thii is, the
most odious feature in these cruel transactions is that, in conducting
the war as they have done upon the inhabitants of the towns only,
the English have punished the inoffensive part of the population,
and not the tribes who in 1841 destroyed the army of General
Elphinstone. I n Afghanistan, as in ~ k r i a , the &like tribes
wander about with their flocks; the towns are inhabited only by
Jews, Armenians, Hindoos, Cashmeerians, Tajiks, slaves, medumb,
workpeople, handicraftsmen, that is to aay, by strangem, who by
nature and interest are peaceable, and who have never been known
to have a musket in the& hands.t
" In all the wars of which this unhappy country has been ao long
the theatre, these are the people who have to bear the brunt of
British vengeance : it is unworthy of the nation As they had de-
termined that revenge they would have, those who should hive
been pursued were the ~hi l dj z~es , the Afreedees, the Chinnareea,
the Mohmunds, the 0thma.u-Kaiis-all those, in fact, whom General
Pollock took care not to seek in their mountain fastnesses, and
instead wreaked his vengeance upon the citizens I n a word,
General Pollock has done that which a French General would
do, ,who, having to punish a revolt of the Flittas or Beniamers, in
Algeria, should burn Mostaganem or Mascara ; he has committed
barbarities without excuse.$
" Nevertheleas it should be said that public opinion in India baa
The necassitiee of war nre inex-
orable ; and with his knowledge of the
Af han character, General Me only
difi what the dictates of prudence com-
manded for the safety of the troo
under hi orders. After all, it was onPdp
what Davouat did in defending Ham-
burg, and what any other general in
the m e position would have done.-
E'errier.
t Utterly mneous : the inhabitants
of Kabul were an warlike M the no-
mades, and in the whole piin+&
there are not sir Jews or Anmmuu -
Femk.
$ The case in quita otheraisq for
the townspeople in Afgh.nistul ye, u
we have already said, quite M warliie
M tho= of the countq, and are mom
dangerous and fer~cioua in a molt.-
Fmisr.
CHAP. XXV. ACCOUNT OF BRITISH PROCEEDINGS. 379
already raised its voice against these ignoble and atrocious excesses,
neither do we doubt that in England indignation will be felt by
every generous heart. However, the Governoffieneral, Lord
Ellenborough, is preparing a magnificent reception at Ferozepore
for the victorious army of Afghanistan. Invitations have been sent
to all the native princes to attend the military @tea, which will, it
is said, eclipse the splendour of the courts of the ancient Mogul
Emperors ; a magnificent triumphal arch is now in course of con-
&uction, through which the army of the Indus is to defile, followed
by, as trophies of its victories, the gates of the tomb of Mahmood
the Ghaznevide, that were captured at Gliuznee, and the twenty-
four pieces of cannon taken in 1839 from Dost Moharned. This
last detail is not the least curious part of the ceremony, for it is
well known that the Engliih army returned from Afghanistan
having lost its own artillery there ; the guns were either taken by
the A&hans or destroyed by order of the British Generals, who
had no means of transport for them.'
" Dast Mohamed and his Eamily, and all the Afghans now -
prisoners in India, will be present at these Etes, after which the
Governor-General will allow them to return as they may think fit
to their own country.
"The government of British India will then believe itself free
of all obligation to Afghanistan : it introduced disorder and made
war there for three years, and IeR anarchy which may last for
wl ' t
The Afghans, from whom I sought to procure evidence by
which to test the truth of all the facta that have been related
reapxting the Engliih occupation of Afghanistan, unfortunately
con6rmed them, but with various modifications, which considerably
lessen the gravity of some of them. They affirm that, in spite of
the cruelties and excmaea of which, in 1841, they were guilty to
the Englii, the latter showed themselves more humane than could
have been expected, and that it was just, because they knew they
deserved the utmoet puniehment that could be inflicted upon them ;
All this &play wan indeed mie- aion on the Sikb, the natives of India,
aced ; it wan sufEcieutly painful to and doubtful allies, and that muat have
reduced to the hard necsasity of M, been quite as much Lord Ellenborough'e
aevarely punishing the Afghana, without object aa the gratification of a puerile
adding the mockery of a triumph which vanit .-Furrier.
could not exist, es there had been + % i ~ in true, perfectly true. -
little or no fighting. But the proces- Ferrisr.
uon wan intended to make an impres-
380' THE AUTHOR'S APOLOGY CHAP. S V .
that they abandoned the capital, where the h o r n were not burnt
any more than at Istalif, for the simple reaaon that, being built
of earth, they are not combustible. But it is true that the bazsare
a t Kabul, which were considered the finest in Afghanistan, were
mined and destroyed, as well as some of the adjacent houses It
is therefore untrue, as stated by the Journal des Dbbats, that
100,000 persons were left without shelter.
I t is also untrue that the Afghan towns are inhabited by inoffen-
sive people ; at Kabul the Jews am not tolerated, and at the outaide
there are not more than two or three Armenian families there
The mass of the population is of Afghan origin ; and whatever be
the occupation of an individual of that nation, he is above all
things warlike, turbulent, a lover of pillage, murder, and devasta-
tion. Proof of this might be found in a thousand instances, but
I name but one, the death of the unfortunate Bur ng who was
attacked in his house by these same shopkeepers who are depicted
as such peaceable people. As I have said before, it was these
ebopkeeper or merchant soldiers* and other Ghazees, who especially
outraged the English, and who therefore, on their second arrival
deserted their homes to take shelter in Istalif, a small fortress
which they thought was impregnable, but from which they were
driven after only six hours' fighting. The population of that tow
is 3000 or 3500 souls; and if it held 15,000 when the English
attacked it, it is to the emigration from Kabul that the augmenta-
tion must be ascribed. The fugitives proceeded to this little tom
with their families and baggage, believing they would be safe from
any hostile attempt ; the English sootl undeceived them, and msny
suffered the fortune of war ; but the Afghans do not estimate
their loss, both at Istalif and Kabul, higher than four hundred ad
fifty men.
As to the sack of Jellalabad, the history of that episode has ah
been exaggerated. The fortifications that General Sale threw up
for hi own defence were demolished in order that the Afghans m$t
not benefit by them, and the adjacent houses fell with them. But
the greatest misconception that exists on the subject is to attribute
generosity of feeling to Akbar Khan, because he took the Englid
ladies under his protection and preserved them from outrage.
* In Afghanistan the soldiem are not his family, and there are son*
fom~ed into regiments, they are an eaveral thousands of them in a
undisciplined militia; each man lives in Ferrier.
W. XXV. FOR THE ENGLISH. 38 1
It has been ascertained by the author, in a manner which admits
of no doubt, that, although they were respected, that fact in no way
redounds to the credit of Dost Mohamed's son, for he had more
than once in his own mind divided them amongst the harems of
some young wrdars, his debauched companion& For himself he
had resewed the daughter of General Sale, and his confidential
conversations with others were frequently enlivened by the prospect
of this distribution. One night in particular, aRer a series of
orgies, these ladies were in the most imminent danger, and it was
averted only by a riot in Kabul which suddenly called Mohamed
Akbar to the scene of action. When, however, this chief was not
excited by wine, he allowed but little to be said on the eubject,
because he remembered that his father was in the power of the
British, and he dreaded how far the Dost and the females of his
family would be made to suffer if he carried out his brutal inten-
tions. The English might have been reassured as to the fate of the
captives in Afghanistan, for the same reasons that caused Akbar
to respect them ; and when they undertook the second expedition
to that country, it was not because it was impossible to deliver
them otherwise, for they could have exchanged the Dost and his
wives and children for them, but they were determined to prove to
the Afghans that the disasters they had suffered in 1841 were not
of a nature to damage their power, and that they were perfectly
able to take and occupy their country whenever it might please
them to do so. So convinced of that fact were the Afghans them-
selves, that they laid down their arms immediately after the battle
of Bootkak, and the British might again have held Kabul by
adopting wiser and more politic measures than they did after the
first invasion.
But they did not hold it, and were certainly right ; for if this
PoPsession had not proved a dead weight upon their treasury, it
certainly would not have enriched it. I t could be of no use to
them, excepting as an advanced post against the ambitious schemes
of Russia ; but until the Caucasus is completely subjugated, it is
unlikely that power should undertake any enterprise in earnest in
Central Asia, and from this time till then Kabul may be left to
itself.* After having sought, and with great care, every species of
information connected with the second expedition to Kabul, I am
* Sice the English conquered the right bank of that river etlst of Kabul,
upper part of tho Indus they have and could take Afghanistan in lees than
Wmmanded all the countries on the I& month.-Ferrisr.
6
382 THE AUTHOR'S APOLOGY Cmr. XSV.
convinced that I have obtained proof that the actions attributed to
the English, and which are to be regretted, took place, but have
been grossly exaggerated in their consequences. For the rest,
having stated the pro and con, each reader must form hi own
judgment. I t will be most difficult to bring t h m who know the
character and policy of the Afghans to believe that an Indo-Britjsh
army could follow the one that had been exterminated in that
country, and be indifferent or forgetful of the cruelties that the
victims who preceded them had suffered. One would have a rela-
tion, another a friend, to avenge ; and then the Indian soldiem
with their religious ideas, view these things so differently fmm
Europeans, that I believe it would be impossible for their com-
max~ders to stop the fearful deeds suggested by their love of revenge,
or rather that feeling which they believe to be their duty.
I am far from constituting myeelf the apologist of these severities ;
but I have seen war in Asia and in Africa, and know, unhappily
by experience, that it is impossible to conduct it as in Europe, where,
in the majority of states, the rights of individuals are respected.
In vain may we declaim against bloodshed ; we shall never be able
to convert the battle-field into a drawing-room, where all parties
are bent upon the interchange of civilities. When I hear it said,
"how many thousands of Circassians the Russian soldiers have
slain," or " the French have bathed in the blood of the Arabs!" or
" the English have sacrificed myriads of Hindooa to their cupidity ;"
when I hear it said that the troops of these nations " are the scum
of the earth-wretches who have outraged all laws, human a d
divine," I cannot refrain from cursing the people who say ao-
men, or rather not men, who posses the miserable courage to speak
in favour of barbarians, while they can find only an accusing voice
when they speak of the soldiers of their country. Unhappy mad-
men that ye are ! do ye not know that such enemies take your
clemency for weakness, your forbearance for fear ?-that they have
no gratitude but to the God of Islam, who withholds the infidel
arm that would have killed them-that their relipon enjoins them
to massacre without pity or remorse?
'fie remedy lies precisely in that in which you see the evil. War
has its severities, and they are great, therefore it ought not to be
undertaken but for sound and legitimate reasons ; that is saying
enough, and I have not failed to admit that I never approved tbe
one nndertaken by the English against the Afghans. But the acts
of a government are not to be confounded with those of its soldien:
Cw. XXV. FOR THE ENGLISH. 888
to the former all reprobation-to the latter, for their many suffer-
ings and hardships, a few encouraging words is no more than their
due. It is easy to forget them in the lazy tranquillity of the cloeet
-it is easy to judge of fads, and in a very humane point of view,
when sitting by the fire in a well-stuffed easy chair ; but those who
endure the misery-who, aa the reward of mercy shown in the heat
of battle, receive a sword-thrust or a bullet in the breast-who have
submitted to tortures woree a hundred times than death, and who
then see themselves calumniated and slandered by those who ought,
on the contrary, to have exalted their deeds--ask them what they
think of your system ? Ask the many English, French, and
Rw&n generals, wearied to death with waning against Mussul-
mane, or consult the writings of others, and they will tell you what
is the fruit of your imprudent comments. You destroy the energy
of national spirit, and set bounds to nothing but the prosperity
of your country ; had I any authority over you, you wretched
scribblers, I would order you no other punishment than to practise
the generosity that you preach with so much volubility. Go, bear
tbe musket for a couple of years only in Algeria, a t Tiflis, or Cal-
cutta, and when you return let us resume the conversation.
I n assigning to the English expedition of 1842 the probable
object of re-establishing the reputation of the Indo-British anus in
Atghanistan, I have not pretended to justify it ; but if the govern-
ment of Calcutta had other and more positive reasons for launching
into such an increase of expenditure, the public had on its side a
right to be surprised at the precipitate return of that m y without
having more than the death of a few hundred men, and the
destruction of a bazaar and a few houses. This leaves ground for
the supposition that they never knew too well why they went to
Kabul, or why they came back, and induced one writer to ssy that
"the English retired from Kabul with a precipitation resembling
the retreat of a beaten army as much as the march of a victorious
one." Neither can it be believed that they went simply with the
intention of re-establishing the legitimate dynasty ; but, if such was
theii intention, then it can only be said that they were not more
fottunate in the second expedition than in the first.
Before the English left Kabul they pressed Fethi Djing Mirza to
m u m e the regal authority, hoping that, with his own troope and
their moral support, he might maintain himself in power aRer their
return to Indi a But that prince was not dazzled by the splendid
384 RELEASE OF DOST MOHAMED. CHAP. SXV
illusion ;, he knew full well that, as soon as his nominal protectors
had departed, he should have Akbar Khan upon his hands, and,
being determined not to expose himself to the danger of a repe-
tition of the treatment that he had received from that Serdar, he
declined the offer. I t was, however, accepted by his young brother,
Shapoor Mirza, who was very soon destined to see the entire
destruction of the ambitious hopes in which his inexperienced mittd
had indulged. His elder brother's anticipations were realised ; for
scarcely was the last detachment of the British army out of sight
and across the Indus, when Mohamed Akbar reappeared at Kabul,
attacked and beat the Mirza, carried off his riches, and obliged
him to take to flight. To the English it was now indifferent
whether he held his ground or not; they had found out though
late that Burnes was right in rejecting the idea of restoring the
Suddozyes tn the prejudice of the Mohamedzyes; and the proof
of this assertion is that Dost Mohamed arrived on the 19th
December at Shikapoor, accompanied by Captain Nicholson, who
was attached to his escort, and was some days after formally set at
liberty. Free to go where he liked or tr, do what he pleased,
the Emir hesitated not a moment, but instantly took the road to
Afghanistan. On his arrival at Lahore he was re&ived with great
state by Shere Sing, then Maharadjah of the Punjab, and the
English conjectured that these princes made a secret treaty ;
but this was only one of the grievances of which they always
assume the exietence when they wish to obtain possession of a
county. The fact was, the Directors were so astounded at the
deficit in their treasury caused by the Afghan war, that they did
not know what to be about, and were highly indignant at the
brilliant receptioh given to the Emir of Kabul by the sovereign of
the Sikhs.
During the time that the Dost was whiling away precious hours
in the enjoyment of the pleasures of the court of Lahore, his son
Mohamed Akbar Khan had infinite trouble in managing the
various parties that had been formed in Kabul, which, though a t
first subdued, were now becoming rampant.
Shooju ed Dooulet (the murderer of Shah Shooja), son of Zeman
Khan, and Chems Eddin his cousin, both nephews of Dost Mo-
hamed, succeeded in reconstituting the party of Zeman Khan, and
forced Akbar Khan to retire into the citadel, where they besieged
him for seventy-three days. Intelligence of this fact and his cri-
CHAP. XXV. SEIF DER DJING. 385
tical position reached the Dost at Lahore, who, being unable him-
self to go with sdci ent rapidity to- Kabul, sent his four sons,
Mohamed Efzel Khan, Mohamed Akrem &an, Mohamed Azim
Khan, and Goulam Haidar Khan, to the assistance of their be-
leaguered brother. Furnished with a firman from the Maharadjah,
and with one attendant only, the serdara set out immediately,
changed their horses at every village, and, pursuing their anxious
journey night and day, scarce drew bridle till they reached
Kabul, accomplishing the distance in ten days from Lahore. The
great exertions of the princes were indeed all important to the
cause, for when they arrived Mohamed Akbarwm at bay in the
citadel with only two days' provisions. These four young men had
been brought up in Kabul, and were beloved by the inhabitants,
who had had many opportunities of witnessing their youthful
courage, and their appearance at once caused a diversion in
favour of their brother, who eventually triumphed over his ene-
mies. The return of the Emir himself, which took place very
shortly after, put an end to all further contest; and on re-
mounting the throne, from which he had been three years
banished, he at once applied himself to the task of effacing the
sad traces of the anarchy brought into his dominions by the Eng-
lish invasion.
At Kandahar, which was also abandoned, General Nott and
Major Rawlinson tried to induce Timoor Mirza, the eldest son of
Shah Shooja, to remain at tlie head of affairs in that principality.
But the prince coveted not the cares of a throne. Satisfied that tlie
royal honours of Afghanistan were lost fur ever to the Suddozyep,
he thought that dynasty ought to give way to the Moliamedzyes,
and refused the offer, preferring to return to India, where he hoped
to live a life of tranquillity, much more in accordance with his own
tastes. Upon his declining, the English proposed to his brother
Seif der Qing that he should assume the government. The
reader will remember that thii prince had formerly betrayed
them, and made common cawwith the insurgents, but his union
with the latter waa not of long duration ; the death of hi father
completely destroyed it, and he made his submiasion to and rejoined
those whom he had previously abandoned. The Serdar Mohamed
Kooli Khan, son of the vizier Fethi Khan, was given him for a
minister, and by thus dividing the power between a Mohamedzye
who had always been faithful to them, and a Suddozye who had
2 c
336 BATTLE OF HAOOZ SINGSAR. CHAP. XSV.
deserted them, though he became more firmly attached to them
afterwards-balancing one against the other-the English hoped
to retain their influence in this important city. But the plan
proved only one more illusion to be added to thoee by which they
had been so often misled, for, about four months after they lefk
Seif der Djing to his own resources, Kohendil Khan returned
from Persia and manifested his intention of regaining if poaaible
his principality of Kandahar. For some little time he remained
on the banks of the Helmund, where he was joined by the Serdan
Akter Khan, Ser Firaz Khan, Shah Pecend Khan, and others;
and, when he saw himself in sufficient force, he marched upon hi old
capital to d i i s s Seif der Dj i i . As to Mohamed Kooli Khan,
he at once abandoned the prince, and passed over to the camp of
his uncle. Nevertheless, Seii der Djing did not allow himself to
be discouraged by the defection of his minister, and gave battle to
Kohendil Khan at H w z Singsar, twentyeight miles weet of the
city ; but at the very first charge he saw one-half of his army run
away, and the other fraternise with hi enemy. Kohendil Khan
took immediate posseasion of the capital, amid the acclamations of
the inhabitanta, who had not, however, the happiest reminiscences
of his previous administration, and the serdar possibly mistook
the cause of these congratulations ; they were not for him, but for
the success of the principle represented in his person-the choice
of the masses, to the exclusion of divine right-the one representing
Afghan liberty, the other English domination.
Seif der Djing after his discomfiture was unable to reach and
defend Kandahar, and obliged to turn off the road : it wm not
without difficulty and danger that he gained Shikapoor. Thence
he went on to India, whither his brothers had preceded him.
The battle of Haooz Singsar was the last episode conneded
with the British occupation of A@anistan, whither the East India
Company had sent its army to die and its treasure to vanish l
" Such waa the conclusion," says an intelligent and clever author,
6b of this war, and of the policy of Lord Palmerston, vacillating at
first, violent at the close. Rather than keep the grand and
straightforward path in which states of the highest order should
proudly and gracefully tread, in which they can honourably meet
and encounter each other-rather than meet the Russians face to
face-he preferred disputing with them on dietant ground and by
paltry counte~manoeumes, a policy which could only engulf
Cm. XXV. EQUITABLE ADMINISTRATION OF THE ENGLISH. 387
political fortunes, for that was really the finale of the negotiations
of which we have given an epitome, and which terminated the sad
series of reserve, duplicity, shuffling, and circumspection towardn
Russia In this i t all ended. The first consequence of his Lord-
ship's policy in Asia was the expedition of Lord Auckland, the
eecond the maasacre of the British army by the Afghans, the third
reprisale upon the Afghans, and, lastly, the absurd triumph of
Lord Ellenborough at Ferozepore. God preserve England from
any more such ; God preserve her ! But it is not the less true
that, having ewpenrted the political animosities and roused the
religions fanaticism of Cmtral Asia under the pretence of adding
to the terror of her name, she has d u c e d it everywhere-she
has extinguished the hatred of the Russian name that formerly
existed--she has destroyed the respect for her own strength, and
8psead the fear of that power which she dared not to attack but
in an indirect manne-she has herself been the pioneer of a
M~ v i t e invasion."
Without adopting the deductions of the writer I have just
quoted, it may be stated, and without fear of contradiction, that
Housl y to their ill-starred expedition to Kabul the English
never met with anything but sympathy in Afghanistan ; opinion is
now much divided about them, and the majority of the chiefs are
k d e to them. The feeling in favour of them is rather to be
hund amongst the- people, who, with due allowance for their
haticism, have not forgotten the equitable administration of the
invaders, and still regret that it was not continued by their own
&an rulers, In any case England must now be convinced
of the soundnes of the advice given by Sir Alexander Burnea
His antaganiets were Sir C. Wade, Sir W. M'Naghten, and Sir
J. M'Neil, and their policy was accepted by Lord Auckland.
[Jpon these four individuals may England charge the responsibility
of her disasters ; and upon Burnes did their evil counsel bring the
penalty of death: unhappily the eurvivors cannot replace to their
mnty the loss it sustained in his death and in that of so many
other officers-men possessing scientific acquirement, indomitable
mtuage, aud a bapeful future.
STATE OF KABUL. CHAP. SSYI.
CHAPTER XXVI.
State of Kabul after the return of Dost Mohamed - Antsgonbtic feeling betwean
the Emir and his son Akbar Khan -Ambitious projects of the latter - War
between the Dost and the Walee of ghulm - Reasone for thin ~ p t u r e - Akbar
Khan wiahw to dispossess Kohendil Khan of ISandahar - Alao to join the Sikha
againat the Engliiah - rupture with the Dost - Marriage of Akbar with the
daughter of Yar Mohamed Khan - Inhiguea of Kohendil Khan to prevent this
union -Demonatration of Akbar Khan agrinet Kandahar - He r e q u h t he
eaeistance of the Shah of Persia - Favourable reply of that sovereign -&bar
oblige8 his father to withdraw from the direction of affairs- Death of Akbar
Khan - Revolt of Mohamed Sh& Khan - Dost Mohamed forces him to return
to his duty - Alliance between Persia and Kabul - The English are alarmed -
Emba-ment of the Emir-Sultan Mohamed Khm returna to Kabul-
Reception by the Doet - The Emir appointa his eon Haidar Khan vizier- The
Dost joina the Sikhs againlit the English- Antipathy of the Afghans to t he
Si kh, and cies oaslGDost Mohamed bkea Attock-His cavalry is defeated by
the English - Oww his escape to the fleetness of his horae.
IF absolute calm was not the immediate consequence of the return
of Dost Mohamed to his dominions, it at least produced a suspen-
sion of hostilities amongst the various parties -in the state. The
majority of hi countrymen rallied round him, but still it was found
impossible to re-establish the same governmental unity that had
existed before the English invasion; the aerdars, especially those
belonging to the Ghildjzye tribe, rendered an obedience far less
implicit than before, and, though always commanding the respect
of hi people, the Dost found that he had lost much of that
veneration of which he had formerly been the object. This was
a consequence of his residence in India: in the eyes of the
Afghans he had contracted a kind of pollution from which he
could never purify himself; they could not forgive him for
having appreciated British civilization, and looked upon his effbrts
for their improvement almost in the light of a crime.
Akbar Khan, the heir-presumptive of his power, was far from
approving of the new policy. Strongly imbued with the same
prejudices as the mass of the Afghans, he detested the English,
though he was fully sensible of their superiority in the arta of war
and govefnment. After he had entrapped and murdered Sir W.
MgNaghten he felt persuaded that the blood he had shed must be
redeemed by his own, and that his enemies could not without di g
CHAP. XXVI. AMBITIOUS PROJECTS OF AKBAR KHAN. SSB
honour abstain from taking revenge upon him for that detestable
crime; thus circumstances quite as much as his own desire threw
him into a line of conduct different from that of his father, and he
persevered in his opposition the more tenaciously inasmuch as it
was in unison with the opinions of the greater number of his
countrymen, who lavished upon him much of the affection that had
hitherto been beetowed upon the Emir.
Mohamed Akbar vowed therefore an implacable hatred against
the English, and the tenacity of his opposition to them, in despite
of all his father's remonstrancee, denoted hi firm determination
not to rest until he had given them a check sufficiently important
to disguet them for ever with the idea of attempting further con-
quests in the north of Asia He commenced his preparations by
inflaming the minds of his soldiers with the wildest and most
seductive promisea, while his father spared no pains in endeavour-
ing to calm his imprudent ardour and that of his adherents, to
extinguish the feuds of the various parties in the principality, and
to re-establish security in the hope of giving a salutary impulse to
the interests of commerce and agriculture. But Mohamed Akbar,
who saw everything through the prism of his own fanatical feelings,
and was dazzled with the enthusiasm that his success and con-
stant opposition to the English had excited in the minds of the
Afghans, mined, by the support that he gave to his own turbulent
followers, the wise and beneficial measures concerted by his father
for the improvement, independence, and prosperity of his dominions.
The post of vizier which had been conferred upon Mohamed Akbb
by Fethi Djing, and in which his father so imprudently retained
him, gavg him great influence in the affairs of government, and he
used chis in a manner very detrimental to their future proepecta
He indulged in dreams of reestablishing the Afghan kingdom in
the plenitude of its ancient glory and power, and obtaining poa-
session of the other Afghan principahties, the Usbek Khanata, the
Punjab, and Beloochistan ; even these would not satisfy his ambition,
and British India was in his eyes a prize on which he imagined
that he should be able some day to lay his hands. Little could
be urged against those day dreams if he had intended to carry
them out in the spirit of ameliorating the condition of the nations
whom lie intended to subjugate ; but as he would only have renewed
the bloody episodes that have rendered mournfully celebrated the
reigns of Ghengis Khan and Tamerlane, much cause is there fer
,390 ILL FEELINQ BETWEEN FATHER AND SOW. C w . SSVI.
rejoicing that the Emir opposed, with unshaken firmnees and a
sincere desire for peace, theae warlike and urn- manif*
tations of Akbar Khan.
The disorganization of the Sikhs and the inroads of the Brit&
on their territory were the occaaione of the first serious outbreak
between the father and son; for the latter, aeeing that Dcat Me
hamed opposed his marching to the assistance of his neighbow,
and was unalterably determined not to take the initiative in any
act of aggression which could again bring the English upon him,
was at one moment on the point of breaking with hi father com-
pletely. He was at this time about to marry the daughter of Yar
Mohamed Khan, and endeavoured to interest the vizier in hie
schemes, informing him that he had decided on withdrawing far a
time from Kabul, and requesting he would assign him a district in
his dominions where he could establii himself with those rlkham
who were attached to him and intended to follow hia fortunes But
Yar Mohamed saw many objections to complying with this d o
mand ; he interfered only so far as to induce the Dost to endea-
vour to calm the excitabiiity of his son, and the di6culq
overcome by a eoncession on the part of the Dost, who p
mised to send five hundred Afghan horse to his brother and
former enemy, Sultan Mohamed Khaa This serdar was wi ng
with the Sikhs, for he had been invested with the government of
Rotas, after Runjeet Sing seized Peshawur ; and as Nawab I)Jsbbar
Khan, also a brother of the Emir, was suspected of having pre-
served some sympathy for the En g l i , Mohamed Akbar sought
to compromise him in their eyes by intrusting to hie son, Abdul
Ghyaz Khan, the command of these five hundred cavslry. But
this demonstration against the Anglo-Indian government not
sufficient to satisfy Akbar Khan ; he wanted hie uncle Kohed
Khan to join him, and on hi refusal threatened to invade
territory. He would probably have carried this threat into executiont
but for an unforeseen event of which it is mpposed the Dost was
not altogether ignorant; his son desired war at all risks, in
thk wish he contrived to indulge him in the following manner :-
Dost Mohamed had not forgotten the ill-treatment he a d his
family had received h m the Emir of Bokhara, and manifested 8
desire of taking revenge by proclaiming war against him. He
also wished to occupy Balkh, then governed by Ichane Suddoo~
under the suzerainty of N-r Ullah, but to reach that tamit
CHAP. XXVI. WAR BETWEEN TEE DOST AND KHULM. 301
was nemsay to traverse the territory of Khulm, and the Walee
of that principahty positively refused to allow the Afghans to
paas through it, well knowing what would be the result if he
consented. "If you have any complaint against the Emir of
Bokba," he wrote to the Doet, I will espouse your quarrel and
Qht him myself, but if you violate my territory I will join him
against you."
The negotiations stood thus, and Doet Mohamed, who remem-
bered the Walee's kindneea to h i waa on the eve of withdraw-
ing his proposition, when Akbar Khan, who also ought to have
been grateful for the generous conduct of the Walee to himself,
complicated the whole &air by committing an abduction, which,
in the opinion of many Afghans, did him more honour than all -his
triumphs over the English. On leaving Khulm, Mohamed Akbar
brought with him from thence a youth belonging to the Khan of
that d i i c t for a purpoee which shall be nameless. This fact waa
af m6cient importance to induce the Walee to declare war, and
Akbar sent his brother, Akrem Khan, at the head of ten thousand
boMe against the Usbeha Three battles were fought in 1845 and
1846, but without deciding the qu&l, nevertheless the Khan of
Khulm became uneasy, for his rear was threatened by the Emir of
B o b ; he returned therefore to his capital end Akrem Khan
to Kabul, where his brother continu+ to spend large sums of
money upon the creature who had been the cause of the war.
When Akbar Khan found that he had nothing to fear from the
exasperated Walee of Khulm, he clung with more obstinacy than
ever to his project of joining the Sikhs and once more fighting the
Eqliih The five hundred cavalry he had sent towarde the end of
1845 to amiet the former under his cousin Abdul Ghyaz Khan had
wt arrived in time to be present at the battle of Sobraon, which in
1846 determined the fate of the Punjab, and enabled the British
to enter Lahore as conquerors ; but Akbar Khan believed that he
had only to present himself and his troops before that city to turn
them out, and the cession of Peshawur was promised him aa the
price of hi armed intervention. Dost Mohamed was not indifferent
to this arrangement, which afforded him the opportunity of including
in his dominions that frontier town, which he had always been so
unwilling to give up ; nevertheless he felt that it would compromise
him with the English if he received it from the Sikhs in return for
hi cooperation, so he preferred seizing it himself at a moment
392 MARRIAGE OF AKBAR. CRAP. XXVI.
when they were unable to defend it ; but Akbar persisted in hie
wish to cross the Indus. In this purpose he was foiled by the
Dost, who secretly retarded the recruiting of the army, and his
son was obliged to delay the execution of his projeds. To make
up for this disappointment, he determined upon marching against
Kandahar, alleging that hie uncle had sought the alliance of the
British and fomented discontent in Kabul, which had brought about
changes most disadvantageous to the interests of Dost 7tIobamed.
Several serdrrrs deserted the cause of the Emir on this occasion and
passed over to the service of his brother ; but none of these defec
tions was so grievous to him as that of his stepson, the Sultan
Djan Khan. This young ~er dar had proceeded to Kandahar witb
five hundred horse, and been well received by Kohendil Khan-
in Akbar's eyes a sufficient cause for declaring war against hi uncle,
and the Emir had infinite difficulty in preventing him from taking
this step. These different views on such serious subjects kept up
the'imtation between the father and son, and ended in doing more
good to their enemies than to themselves. Akbar, who had not the
experience of the Emir and was of a restless domineering spirit,
never hesitated for considerations of any kind, and, being supported
in his violent opinions by chiefs as turbulent as himself, decided
on advancing upon Kandahar, in utter dimgard of his father's
disapprobation ; not, however, to drive matters quite to extremity,
he thought he would strengthen hi policy by the alliance of which
the Dost had himself laid the foundations in the preceding year.
Yar Mohamed, after having dethroned and strangled Shab
Kamran, had become all powerful at Herat, and it was important
that the Emir should secure him in hi interest; negotiations
were, therefore, commenced between the two Esmiliea ; Akbar mar
ried in 1846 Bobodjane, the eldest daughter of Yar Mohamed,
and the Vizier's son, the Serdar Syud Mohamed Khan, espoused
Ooher, only daughter of Mohamed Khan, deceased, a half-brother
of the Emir Dost Mohamed.
Akbar Khan's mother went to Herat to bring her daughter-in-law
to Kabul ; but on her return she was detained a long time at Kan-
dahar, in consequence of an insurrection that had broken out iu the
district of Kelat-i-Ghildjzye, which prevented her from continuing
her journey. This insurrection was attributed to the intrigues of
Kohendil Khan, who dreaded the result of the alliances recently
concluded, for, as his dominions lay between Kabul and Herat, he
CHAP. XXVI. DEMONSTRATION AQAINST KANDAHAR. 393
was henceforth placed between two fires. He complained loudly
to Yar Mohamed of hi having given hi daughter to Akbar Khan,
and before the marriage took place demanded her for one of his
own sons, urging his position as a neighbour of the vizier's, which
he considered a just ground of preference. But his representations
produced no alteration in the arrangement, and the inhabitants of
Kelabi-Ghildjzye having heard that the Emir had ordered two
thousand horsemen from Ghuznee to march against them, the
matter ended by their opening the road for the aflianced bride of
Mohamed Akbar Khan. At this the indignation of the serdars of
Kandahar was great, and they revenged themselves by sending
eeveral thousand cavalry to ravage the plain of Bakooa, belonging
toHerat (adding that tbey intended to seize the town itself),
-
when they were arrested in their project by a diversion made in- - -'
favour of Mohamed Akbar by hie brother Haidar Khan, at the
head of eight thousand horse, who advanced by forced marches
on Kandahar. The moment Dost Mohamed was informed that
the Kandaharians had retreated, he, to Akbar's infinite regret,
imperatively recalled h i to Kabul. Seizing on this pretext to
free himself completely from the authority of his father, Akbar
signified to him in the haughtiest and most insolent manner that
henceforth he intended to do as he pleased in the principahty, and
requested him for the future not to interfere in its affairs. Unfortu-
nately Mohamed Akbar Khan was sufficiently powerful to hold this
language to his sovereign, and the Emir resigned himself to the
passive position in which his son's conduct placed him.
To relate all the rash and foolish undertakings projected by
Akbar Khan from this period would be impossible ; though he at
the same time originated several able measures for the consolidation
of his power. I t was with this object in view that at the close of
1846 he sent Akhood Zadeh Azim as ambagsador to the Shah of
Persia to conclude an alliance offensive and defensive with that
monarch ; his father-in-law, Yar Mohamed Khan, followed his
example, and also sent an agent to Teheran for the same purpose.
These two chiefs wrote a joint letter to Mohamed Shah in the most
pressing t e r n, showing him how the English were carrying their
conquests along the whole course of the Indus, and were ready
to enter Afghanistan ; the missive concluded in these words:
'61f your majesty hesitates to take part in the war with us
against the English, Allah will require you to account for the
394 THE DOST WITEDRAWS FROM THE CITADEL. CHAP. XXVI.
neglect with which you allow the faithful to be swept away by the
infidels."
The Shah of P e e without granting the amistance demanded
of him, was nevertheless quite inclined to join the projected alliance.
The envoys of Herat and Kabul were well received, and richly
jewelled swords and decorations were sent to Doet Mohamed, Akbar
Khan, and such of their brothem, uncles, and other serdars in the
principality as were favourable to the c a w
Aa to Kohendil Khan, he became daily more discontented witb
Yar Mohamed and Akbar Khan, and made fresh inaxmione upon
the territory of Herat, in the district of Gulistan, the reault of
which was that the vizier advanced upon Wachir and G i ,
and made fearful reprisals. Akbar Khan now became anxious
to support his father-in-law and march against Kohendi Khan,
but Doet Mohamed opposed thie, and a sharp altercation tooL
place between the father and son, during which the latter bitterly re-
proached the Emir with cowardice, and even threatened to imprisan
him. This quarrel at length opened the eyes of Dost Nohamed,
and proved to him what he had up to that time earneatly wished
to doubt, namely, the evil diipoeition of hi son ; he withdrew
therefore from the citadel and took refuge in the kaleh of
Djevanchir, where Khan Shireen Khan, the Kuzeilbssh chief,
received him with all the warmth and respect due to hi rank
and great miefortunea. Mohamed Akbar threatened, but in vain;
he could not induce the Kuzzilbash to give up his guest; and to
what extremities he might have proceded is unknown, for he wee
carried off by a sudden and wholly unexpected death, caused, as it
is mid, by taking two aphrodisiac pills, which were given him by
a Hindoo doctor. This man had them in a box with some 0th-
of which he took two himself in the presence of his victim, wbo
therefore swallowed those offered to him without suspicion, and
died three hours afterwards in horrible convulsions. The condud
of Akbar Khan had scarcely left him the chance of dying a n a d
death ; he thought that in forming a powerful party which would
obey his warlike instincts he could oppose his father and the
English also, and d i i i n e d the prudent warnings often given
hi to be careful for his personal safety.
Opinions are divided amongst the Afghans as to who was the
instigator of this deed. Some lay it to the charge of the English,
without being able to produce any proof thereof; others suppose
CHAP. XXVI. DEATH OF AKBAR KHAN. 395
it to have been committed at the instigation of Doat Mohamed and
his sons, whom Akbas delivered from the tyranny of the English
only to make them feel his own more heavily. However this may be,
the Dost obtained some liberty of action after his decease, though
not so much aa he expected to enjoy. Akbar Khan was dead,
but his party waa not; some eerdare, finding their plans de-
feated, retired in disgust to their domains, and slighted the old
Emir; others revolted against his authority, amongst whom was
Mohamed Shah Khan, Ghildjzye, a chief enjoying great influence
with the mountain tribea He had followed the fortunes of Dost
Mohamed and his family when the English mized Kabul, and
when they returned to Khulm his assistance was most valuable
in organizing an attempt against Shah Shooja, as well as during
the insurrection of 1841. To this serdar Mohamed Akbar had
bound himself by an oath of friendship and brotherhood morn
upon the Koran and legally attested by a mollah ; the Mus-
sulman law sanctions ties of this deerription, eo that the two chieh
justly considered each other as brothera During the lifetime
of Akbar, Mohamed Shah Khan received an important command
in the hill country to the north of Kabul, and such was the trust
reposed in him by his friend, and the difficulty of access to his
mountain-home, that he placed all his wealth in his hands as he
acquired it, intending thus to secure it from any covetous attack
on the part of his own brothers, or even from the English, should
they ever return to Kabul ; the good understanding between
these two chiefs continued uninterrupted till the death of Mohamed
Akbar Khan. A h r that event Dost Mohamed claimed the p r e
perty that his son had confided to Mohamed Shah Khan, hut the
latter obstinately refused to give it up, alleging that the oath
which bound him to Akbar constituted him the legitimate heir
to the deceased serdar, and that the Emir could not without injustice
refuse him the title of vizier which he had bestowed upon Akbar ;
likewise that it gave him the right to marry all his widows in prefer-
ence to the Dost's sons-Mohamed Shah Khan get up, in fact, an
infinity of the moat unreasonable pretensions, and supported them by
hostile demonstrations. The Ghildjzyes responded to his appeal
in crowds, and the Emir was obliged to send an army against
them, but it was numerically insuficient to repreee the revolt, for
it had to operate in a country full of difficulties, with an enemy
always fighting under great advantages of ground, and the
3 96 REVOLT OF MOHAMED SHAH KHAK. CHAP. XXVI.
troop6 were therefore obliged to return and wait for reinforce-
ments. Dost Mohamed, who was quite alive to the serious cha-
racter of the circumstances, redoubled his efforts to collect a
sutlicient force with the utmost rapidity, and in the month of
April, 1847, had under hi standard 25,000 men-veteran war-
riors brought up in hatred of the Ghildjzye tribe. With this large
army he moved against a comparatively feeble enemy, who had
hitherto only been able to maintail1 themselves against their foes
by the mountainous character of their country, and the Emir now
determined to strike a decisive blow; concentrating his troop,
therefore, he moved towards the point at which Mohamed Shah
Khan had encamped with the greater number of the insurgents, and
pressed him so vigorously and closely, that the latter was obliged
to surrender at di mt i on and give up the disputed treasure ta the
lawful heire of Mohamed Akbar. The Dost also obliged the Khan
to enter into and accept other conditions sufficiently humiliating;
he seized his sons as hostages, and left him only the government
of a small mountain district-measures which rendered another
revolt on his part almost impossible. The reduction to obediene
of this rebellious tribe gave peace to the principality of Kabul, and
the compromised serdars, dreading the loss of their propmty,lim,
or lives, hastened to join the camp of the Emir, who, after having
installed his son Goulam Haidar Khan at Jellalabad in the chief
command of the Ghildjzye territory, returned immediately to hie
capital ; there he applied himself earnestly to repair the injuries
that years of civil war had inflicted upon some of the finest. pro-
vinces of Afghanistan, and which originated in the just, though
dangerous, antipathy to the British alliance that always existed in
the mind of his son Mohamed Akbar.
I t was at this juncture that Akhood Zadeh Azim, who had been
on his embassy to Persia, returned to Kabul ; the Emir could
not possibly do otherwise than approve of the conduct of his late
son's envoy, and he accordingly ratified all the steps that Akhood
Zadeh Azim had taken to perfect a strict alliance between the
Afghans and the Persians.
The Anglo-Indian Government watched with Borne uneasi-
uess the increasing good feeling between these two nations. But
although the hostility of Akbar Khan had been anything but
encouraging to them, their anxiety was not extreme, for they
thought his eccentric schemes would probably commit him sooner
CHAP. SXVI. &ARM OF THE EKQLISH. 397
or later in some manner very detrimental to hi power and introduce
perpetual discord and confusion into the Afghan states. Such a
man at the head of affairs in Kabul was almost a piece of good
fortune for the Company, and it is doubtful whether his violent
death was in any way satisfactory to them-at the utmost it might
se& to avenge the murder of Sir W. M'Naghten, of which he
had been guilty. They might also hope that Dost Mohamed,
now emancipated from the thraldom of his overbearing son,
would preserve his neutrality towards them, at least for a time.
I n this, however, there lurked perhap a greater danger, for,
under the able administration of the Emir, the power of the prin-
cipality would be increased tenfold in a short time; influenced by
him the chiefs would more easily become united, while under Akbar
they biul always been quarrelling : nevertheless, Dost Mohamed
might possibly be forced by them to accede to their demands,
which, as facts subsequently proved, was the case.
The English thoroughly understood that the tranquillity of Af-
ghanistan was no advantage to their cause, and% place of Akbar
Khan provided another brand of discord.
I t has been shown in this history that before Dost Mohamed
attained the sovereignty he struggled through yeara of trouble
and ware, and fought many a battle, and, if he triumphed over every
difficulty, he was not beholden to hi family for helping him to
obtain that result; nearly all his brothers were hostile to him,
and the one .whose hatred was the most unremitting and im-
placable w a Sultan Mohamed Khan, who contended with him to
the last for the sovereignty of Kabul. I t has been stated that this
serdar was obliged to be satisfied with Peshawur, aud subsequently
amtrained to cede that province to Runjeet Sing, who made
him governor of the fortress of R o t . in the Punjab. After the
death of the Maharadjah, and Shere Sing the last of his sons,
Sultan Mohamed Khan drew upon himself the enmity of the
Sikh vizier Djovaker Sing, and was in consequence taken to Lahore
and detained a prisoner there. But the English watched over him ;
for no one could better carry out their desigm than Sultan Mo-
hamed Khan, whose constant enmity and opposition to the Emir
was well known to them, and this led them to hope that they might
be able to make use of him to counteract his plans. At their
solicitation, therefore, the Afghan serdar was set at liberty, and it
was believed that he received from them the promise of a pen-
398 RETURN. OF MOHAMED KHAN TO KABUL. CHAP. XXVI.
sion; after this he returned to Afghanistan, and having lived
several months at Peshawur retired to Kohat, a small town situ-
ated to the south of the former city.
Dost Mohamed was not blind to all t hi , but testified no resent-
mept-far from it. After Sultan Mohamed was deprived of the
government of Peshawur the Emir's heart was softened by hi
misfortunes, and he endeavoured on various occasions to effect a
reconciliation with him; but the intractable pride of his brother
was inaccessible to every attempt of the kind. When he eaw him
return from Lahore he was not too proud to take the initiative
once more with the same object in view, and he sent his eldest son
Mohamed Efzel Khan to Kohat to give his uncle every possible
guarantee for his security, and endeavour to induce him to return
to Kabul. This last step entirely succeeded : the old eerdar a t
last promised to forget his ancient hatred, and go to the Dost. He
kept this promise, and a short time after the same roof sheltered
these two chiefs of the family of the Mohamedzyes. In this recon-
ciliation the Emir%as sincere. Can the m e be said of his eldest
brother ? That is a problem which can be decided by time only.
The return of Sultan Mohamed Khan to Kabul took place at
the period at which a fresh revolt of the Ghildjzyea o c d ,
and Mohamed Shah Khan placed himself once more at their head.
Dout Mohamed now declared his military career was over, that
he should delegate his authority as a general to his third son
Goulam Haidar Khan, the defender of Ghuznee against the
English, and should reserve to himself the administration of civil
affaim only. The serdars received this semi-abdication with
favour ; Haidar was dear to them for the =me reasons as Akbar,
and was besides the son of the same mother: their bravery was
equal, and their hatred of the Engl i i had been deep and constant,
On assuming the rank of vizier, Goulam Haidar Khan espoused
some of the wives of his deceased brother, and amongst them
Bobodjane. The first act of his administration was to asaemble
the chiefs of all the tribes, and make them swear fidelity to his
family and war to the unsubdued Ghildjzyes; be won the
affections of the army by increasing the pay of the troops, and
took advantage of the popular feeling expressed in his favour by
at once pursuing Mohamed Shah Khan, whom he speedily d u c e d
to a condition that rendered it hopelem for him ever again to raise
the standard of rebellion.
CUP. XXVI. DOST MOHAMED ATTACKS AWCR. aes
The enthllninnm excited by this success, and the warlike h t e s
of their new chief, led the afghans to desire a fresh field for the
employment of their arms: they loudly called upon Goulam
Haidar Khan to lead them against the English ; and, such was
the unanimity of feeling, that it was impoesible for the Emir to
elude or delay the execution of their demands. The Sikhs had
for many years offered to restore Peshawur to him in return for
the assistance he had formerly given them, and he now decided
to accept the propoeition which he had till then steadily rejected ;
for, had he done otherwise, he would perhaps have alienated the
affedions of hi countrymen and lost the throne of Afghanistan
for hi family for ever.
When the British generals who commanded in the Punjab
learnt that Dost Mohamed had deecended into the plain of the
Indus with 15,000 men, they were anxious as to the course he
might take. Having at this time to keep in check Tchatter
Sing and hi son Shere Sing, who had raised the Sikhe against
them on all sides, they were in no position to oppose the invacdon
of the Afghans, who, having taken possession of the fertile plain
of Pmhawur, subsequently marched against Attmk, then com-
manded by Colonel Herbert. This officer, being absolutely with-
out the means of defending the fortress, was obliged to surrender,
and the Afghans occupied it immediately. However, instead of
showing the slightest disposition in favour of the Sikhe, who were
their allies, and inhabited the town, they pillaged them, forced
their way into their harems, and violated their wives and daughters,
in revenge, as they said, for the unheard-of insult of which they
accused the army of Shere Sing, namely, of having killed pigs in
all the mosques on their route.
Doet Mohamed and his son were utterly unable to restrain
tbe'u soldiers, and were obliged to excuse these excess- as well
ae they could to the allies whose cause they had been brought
to defend. But the serious nature of the poeition in which they
found themaelves led the Sikh chiefi to shut their eyes to these
enormities, and the English were thenceforth convinced that, in
consequence of their religious antipathies, no alliance could poesibly
exist between the Sikhs and the Afghans ; they were therefore far
less concerned than they had been at the advance of Dost Mohamed.
Notwithstandlug the prospect which now presented itaelf to the
Emir of seizing Cashmeer, anciently a province of the Afghan
400 FLIGHT OF DOST MOHAMED. CHAP. =TI.
kingdom, he appeared by no means anxious to proceed beyond the
limits of his re-conquered territory, and displayed no desire to sup
port the insurrectiomry movement of the Sikhs- The pcwseasion of
Attack, where he could concentrate a force sufficient to protect him
from a coup-&-main, satisfied hi ambition, but this was not the
case with hi 8oldiers ; they had not followed him simply to encamp
on the banks of the Indw, and to pacify them he sent a contin-
gent of cavalry to Shere Sing, who had just beaten the English at
Chillianwallah The latter, however, soon took their revenge, and
crushed the Afghans and Sikh together at Goojerat, February 21,
1849. The vanquished were hotly pursued, but the Sikh com-
msnders, Tchatter Sing and Shere Sing, kept the field for another
month ; they then found they had lost all their positions and the
greater part of their artillery, ahd surrendered to Sir Walter
Gilbert, who disarmed the remainder of the Sikh army. This
event having set his division at liberty, he received orders from
the General-in-Chief, Lord Gough, to march against Attock
and Peshawur, and drive the Afghans beyond the passes of
Afghanistan.
If Dost Mohamed had cherished a hope that the English would
leave him in peaceable poesession of the towns which he had just
taken, the idea was soon dispelled, for to attack and defeat him
was with them an operation equally prompt and easy. He was
even driven to seek safety by a precipitous flight, and for two
hours the Indian cavalry sent in pursuit of him kept within gunshot
of the fugitive Emir; but hi gallant horse eventually distanced
them, and saved his liberty, perhaps his life.
CHAP. XXVII. ENGLISH CONQUER THJ3 PUNJAB.
CHAPTER XXVI I .
The English conquer the Punjab - Dost Mohamed loees Peshawur and A t M -
He retires to K J u l - Polioy of Kohendil Khan at Kandahar &r hie return
from Persia - Retrcmpective view of affairs at Hesat - Yar Mohamed Khan and
the English - w o r Pottinger and Colonel Stoddart - The latter leaves for
Bokhara - lntemew between Major Pottinger and Shere Dil Khan - Serioucl
consequencee resulting from thin - Conduct of Yar Mohamed - %or Todd at
Herat - Treaty concluded with Shah Kamran - Yar Mohamed all-powerful in
the principality - A wane at Yar Mohamed'e dinner-table - Intrigues of that
chief - Hi s treatment of Shah Ramran-Minundentanding between Wo r
Todd and the vizier - Dine Mohamed Khan - Approbation of %jar Todd's
conduct by the Directors of the East India Company - OEBcial inntructiom to
that offlcer - Bad faith of Par Mohamed - Di5culties of &or Todd's position
- I'reachery of Yar Mohamed- Subaidy to Shah Kamran and his court
stopped- The vir;ier makea freeh demands upon %jar Todd - Counter pro-
positions by the latter - He leaves Herat and is eawrted out of the city.
ONCE more in possession of Peshawur and Attock, the English
installed themselves in a manner to prevent all chance of their being
easily removed therefrom; and Dost Mohamed reached Kabul,
whek he is now less secure h ever, and less satisfied as to the
ultimate views of hi neighboum. If he has to regret that he could
not preserve his conquests, he has at leaet' the satisfaction of hav-
ing proved to hL subjecta that he was right in his judgment, and
that it was imprudent in them to attack the English, who it was
now evident were more dangerous than ever. His defeat was
the justification of his past policy; and, having changed that, he
is in the worst possible position. The English detest him for
having borne arms against them in 1848 : to the Afghans he is an
object of suspicion, and they will ever suspect that he is rendy and
willing to treat with the East India Company. Indeed his prospects
on all sides are indifferent, and appear as if they were not likely to
brighten nor hi troubles arrive at any satisfactory conclusion ; the
fate of the Emir and his kingdom is a problem which time only
can solve.
The position of Kohendil Khan at Kandahar is far from being
so embarrassing as that of his elder brother. I t has been shown
how, after having beaten the Prince &if der Djing, he resumed
possession of hi principality. After this he found that, beside8 his
quarrels with Akbar Khan and Yar Mohamed, he had revolts to
2 D
402 PAR MOHAMED KHAN AND THE EXGLISH. C w . XXVII.
put down amongst the Hazarahs P mh t Kooh and the Beloocheea
who were under his jurisdiction. But the serdars of his prori~lce
are not the same turbulent characters as those of Kabul, and
therefore he has a far less difficult task in carrying on his govern-
ment than Dost Mohamed ; his political talents are not nearly m
good as those of the Emir, but they are su6cient for his position.
The Serdar Akter Khan was the only one who could give him the
least annoyance, but, notwithstanding the emvices that he had
rendered to his prince when he assisted him in re-consolidating
his power, and the family ties that existed between them, Kohendii
Khan determined to expel him from the d i c t of Zemindavar;
here he was estabI'ied in the heart of his tribe, the Alizyea, and
towards the close of 1847 was attacked by him with a very superior
force, when he was obliged to fly, and escaped to Herat. This was
a most fortunate event for Yar Mohamed Khan, who was not igno-
rant of the influence which this serdar exercised over the Afghan
tribes established in the south, and the extent to which he might
turn it to his o m account against hi adveresries, the chiefs of
Kandahar. The vizier completely neutralised the precautionary
measurea taken by Kohendil Khan by settling Akter Khan in the
district of Gour, eituated on the frontier of Kandahar and near
that of Zemindavar, which the tribe of Alizye had quitted almost
entirely to join ita chief in his new abode. This fact was not cal-
culated to re-establish the good feeling that had so long been
interrupted between Kohendil Khan and Yar Mohamed; and from
this time their intercourse was chamcterised by constantly increasing
asperity : but it is very difficult to foresee the results of this rivalry,
Afghanistan being pre-eminently the country in which nothing csn
be foreseen.
A wish to avoid the necessity of returning to the history of
Kabul and Kandahar has induced the author to cany it on without
interruption ; but, aa there is nothing further to add to if he now
propoaea to return to Herat, and deacribe the events that took
place in that city aRer the siege was raised by Mohamed Shah, the
period at which the English proclaimed the restoration of Shah
Shooja to the throne of the Suddoges in Kabul, and the inde-
pendence of Herat under Shah Kamran.
Although the retreat of the Persians and the relief of Herat
ought to have satisfied British susceptibilities, Lord Auckland did
not the less persist in a most unjust invasion of territory.
CHU. XXVII. MAJOR POWIXGER ASD COLONEL STODDART. 403
It has been related that Shah Shooja, escorted by an Anglo-
Indian army, first poeetwd himself of Kandahar ; he had at that
time, and in concert with Sir W. M6Naghten, the British resident
at his court, agreed that a few battalions, sufficient to seize Herat,
should be detached from the expeditionary army to occupT that
city. Several reasons apparently combined to induce him to give
up this project, the importance of which was thought secondary
after the departure of the Persian army ; besides Shah Shooja had
publicly expressed a hope that his nephew, Sbah Kamnm, would
Eeel grateful for the asistance that he had recaived from the
English. But thew reasons were given only to dissimulate the
real state of things, and to anticipate the annoying and di i d-
vantageous moral effect that the truth would produce upon the
Afghan allies, whose fidelity was very doubtful. The correspond-
ence of Major Pottinger, who remained at Herat &r the siege
was raised, and that of Colonel Stoddart, who joined him there
after he had carried to the Pereian monarch the ultimatum with
which he had been intrusted, contained aseurances which alone
caused the delay of thii measure. They informed Sir W.
M6Naghten that Yar Mohamed might be considered the real
mvereip of Herat, and, after having described him as a man
equally energetic and opposed to their ambitious views, finished by
stating him to be the most accomplished oilhin in Central Asia.
However they admitted the power of upsetting him eimply with
the aid of Kamran and the Herateea, and that was the real motive
which led Sir W. M6Naghten to delay and amend the plan first
conceived of a military occupation of Herat. They therefore trusted
to diplomacy to u p t the vizier ; but the council at Calcutta had
reckoned too much upon the co-operation of fortune, which up
to that time had smiled on the execution of their projecte in
Afghanistan, and the vigilance of the distrustful Yar Mohamed
Khan baffled all their ccrlculationa
After the retreat of the Sbah of Persia, in 1838, Major Pottinger
continued to pay the troops at Herat with money supplied by the
East India Company. His efforts, and those of Colonel Stoddart,
were mainly directed to saving the wretched Heratees from famine,
and preventing Yar Mohamed from selling them to the Usbeke ;
but as the revenues of the state were exhausted, and the vizier
had no means left of raising any funds except by a continuation
of thie inhuman traffic, the English were under the necessity of
2 ~ 2
404 COLONEL Sl'ODDAlXT LEAVES FOR BOKHARA. C~ AP . XXYl I.
granting a pension to Shah Kamran and the principal chiefs of
Herat, in order to put a stop to it. This measure, however,
did not attain the desired object, and the British officere soon
complained of the ill treatment they had to submit to from
Yar kohamed ; the motive for which, in their opinion, nss
the protection they gave the townspeople against their tyrant.
After having well investigated the matter and obtained informa-
tion from the best sources, I have come to the conclusion that
they were in error; t hee gentlemen hoped that gratitude for
the support the government of Herat had received from that of
Calcutta, and aleo the fear of the British army in the neighbour-
hood of Kabul, must bring Yar Mohamed Khan to submit to their
wishes. Colonel Stoddart especially would assume to himself the
position of a Mentor who expected to be obeyed ; of a violent dis-
pi t i on he frequently gave way to passion before the vizier, which
impeded rather than served his cause, and only rendered him
liable to insult. The consequence was, that an imperative order
to leave Herat was given him by the king; moreover, his im-
prudent conduct placed hi comrade Pottioger in a false position.
Stoddart, thus dismissed, went to Bokhanr, where he had a mission
to fulfil, and it was only by great good management that Pottinger
could obtain leave to remain at Herat, where he soon had serious
difficulties to contend with ; these had reference to some conces
sions that he demanded from the vizier in consideration of the
pecuniary aid that he received from the East India Company. The
concessions in qumtion were, the reform of the government at
Herat, and confiding the administration of it to British agents;
the occupation of the citadel with two regular battalions of
Heratees, well organized, and officered by Englishmen; and finally,
the recapture of the fortrew of Gorian, which the Persians had
held ever since the close of 1837.
The vizier rejected each and all of these propositions, and the
g o d understanding with him, already compromised by Stoddart,
thenceforth ceased eutirely with Major Pottinger. The latter,
finding that he had failed to obtain any one of his demands,
ceased to pay the subsidy hitherto furnished to the Afghan chiefs;
but Yar Mohamed, conceiving that the payments which had been
made gave him an acquired right to their continuance in future,
looked upon this suppression as illegal and unjust. On the 30th
of January, 1839, therefore, he sent his brother Shere Mohamed
CHAP. XSVII. CORDUCT OF PAR MOHAMED. 405
Khan to Major Pottinger to demand specific explanations of his
idterior intentions. The Afghans are not conspicuous amongst
either European or Eastern nations for their politeness, and it is
said that the chief executed his mission with such brutal rudeness
that Major Pottinger ordered one of his servants, a Heratee, to
show him the door ; a scuffle ensued, and the servants of Shere
Mobamed Khan, hearing his shouts, rushed to the assistance of
their master and rescued him from his undignified pi t i on : the
serdar returned furious into the presence of his brother, his
attendants dragging after them the luckless servant of the Major,
whose hand was immediately cut off by order of the vizier for
having dared to place it upon an Afghan chief. He then ordered
Sertip La1 Mohamed Khan, Kaleh Beghi, to ~urround the British
05cer's house with a guard of two hundred men, and never to
lose sight of him, which order was acted upon forthwith.
Yar Mohamed Khan was most perfectly informed of all the
intrigues set on foot by the British envoy to deprive him of his
power, and he therefore was not sorry to have an opportwlity of
making him feel that as yet it had not suffered the slightest
diminufion fmm his proceedings ; avarice being, however, a
dominant feature in his character, he contrived, while asserting
hii independence and resisting the demands of the English, to bend
diciently to allow of a reconciliatioll a k r this rupture. In adopt-
ingthi line of conduct he had no other end in view than to enrich
himself a t their expense, well resolved that 'he would have nothing
more to do with them from the day that they should cease to
supply hie treasury. " They wanted to despoil me, to ruin me,
perhaps worse," said Yar Mohamed to the author ; "I must have
been a great fool not to be beforehand with them."
Major Pottinger had a perfect knowledge of the character of the
Asiatic Mussulmana and the versatility and pliancy of the intellect
requisite in treating with them ; he was therefore soon relieved
from the supervision of his guards, and renewed his negotiations
at the court of Shah Kamran, but it was only by continuing the
payment of the subsidies, temporarily interrupted, that he obtained
his liberty. Although that prince, his court, and his ministers,
were absolutely maintained by the English, no one appeared to
appreciate that fact, or to esteem them for it, .for they well
knew that their generosity was exercised much more in their
own interest than in that of the Heratees. For his part, Yar
406 MAJOR TODD AT HERAT. CHAP. mVII.
Mohamed was never their dupe, and from the month of March,
1830, he had been in correspondence with the court of Pemia
endeavouring to obbain support against them. I t was at this
time that he offered Mohamed Shah to unite his army with that
of the Prince of E d a h a r and oppoee the invasion of Shah
Shooja; but the rapid march of the British on that town, and
the t a xdi m displayed by the S%ab of Persia in producing the
subaidy required to carry on the war, induced the vizier again to
attach himself to the English alliance, which he found the moet
pdt abl e of the two. Having farmed hi8 plans upon the events
of the moment, he was one of the k t to eend hie coogtatulations
to Shah Shooja upon hi success. Major Pottinger knew not
which way to turn in the midst of all these fluctuations in the
policy of the vizier, and it was with a feeling of ieexpmmii
pleasure that he heard the East India Company were about to
release him from hie fetters by sending him a succes~or.
Major d ' A q Todd, of the artillery, asaistant and military
eecretay to Sir W. M'Naghten, wae the officer cberged by the
QovernorGeneral to accompany Shah Shooja from Loodiana to
Shikapoor, and he afterwards went with the army to Kandabar,
whem the embassy of congratulation sent to the Shah by Yar
Mohamed had already arrived. This officer pomsed an intimate
knowledge of the Persian language, and the a5airs of Cenbal
Asia, which he had acquired when in the eervice of the Shah of
Persia, and he was therefore selected as envoy to the oourt of
Herat, May 15, 1839. The following were the instructiom be
received :-
1st. To mr t a i n the intentions and sentiments of Shah Kamran
and his court towards the English Government, and, if he found
that in spite of the benefits they had received from it they favoud
the Persian Government, to ascertain the cause of discontent, and
to do everything in his power to remove it.
2nd. To negotiate a treaty of alliance with Shah Kamnm.
3rd. To give Yar Mohamed a written indemnity for his past
conduct, in order to obtain his confidence for the future, but witW
securing to him and his family tAeperpetualgowmment of the cmt ry.
4th. To pay attention to the financial relations of the East India
Company with the court of Herat.
5th. Ib take with him engineer and artillery officers to restore
and repair the fortifications of the town.
Cae. XSW. TREATY WITH SHAH KAMRAN. 407
6th. To fix, if v i b l e , the frontier which separates Peraia from
the principality of Herat.
7th. To make known the objecte of the British policy to the chiefs
of Bokhara and Khiva ; and &r having carried out these instruc-
tions, to return to Kabul, leaving Major Pottinger m the repre-
eentative of England at Herat.
Such were the inetructione that were transmitted to the British
Envoy; but it eee~m probable that there were secret ones also :
at any rate, the last paragraph of the third article leaves room for
the supposition-however that might be, Major Todd reached
Herat in July, 1839. He exerted himself to the utmost to carry
out the mission confided to him, and to establish a cordial under-
standing between the Shah Kamran, hi vizier, and himself; and
his efforts were at first crowned with success, for in August, 1889,
he concluded a treaty of alliance and friendship with the Suddozye
prince. The independence of the principality of Herat was
guaranteed by England, and the moat substantial advantages stipu-
lated in favour of its chiefs, on condition that the traffic in slaves
should be abolished and that all correspondence with other courts
should cease u~ilesa carried on with the consent of the British Envoy.
A monthly sum, equal to the revenuea of the principality before the
mege, was granted for the maintenance of the government, for the
mil had remained without cultivation for eighteen months, and
labour of every kind had been interrupted from the commencement
of hoetilities.
The East India Company also made considerable advances to the
agriculturiets, merchants, and shop keep era to enable them to re-
commence business, and every deecription of tax was remitted till a h r
the harvest of 1840 ; large sums of money were likewise expended
in repairing the fortifications. The Anglo-Indian Government could
hardly have done more had Herat been a British posseaeion, and
there can be little doubt they hoped that it would mon become one
as they behaved with so milch liberality. However, the measures
they adopted produced the happiest mu1t.a for the Afghans; the
town was quickly re-peopled, the land covered with crops, commerce
resiuned its activity, caravam poured in rapidly, and security and
confidence were completely re-established. But the sacrifices made
by the Company were never compensated by any of the advantages
they had expected. Yar Mohamed made not a single conceasion,
and remained absolute maater of the principality ; he tolerated
the English in it only because they satisfied his thimt for gold.
408 LOYALTY OF MAJOR TODD. CHAP. =VII.
I t is true they constantly endeavoured to induce Shah Kammn to
displace hi despotic minister ; but that sovereign could see no other
way of disposing of his vizier than by putting him to death-+
measure which Major Todd, of course, would not sanction, and
the Shah would not commit himself to it unless the Englisb co-
operated with him, so that it w~ very difficult to come to an
understanding when the views of both were so mdicting. The
Serdar Shere Mohamed Khan, brother of the vizier, and tbe
Ichik Bgassl Feiz Mohamed, Alikioozye, both of them warm par-
tisans of the Persian alliance, were constantly originating reports
hostile to the English, rendering all hope of coming to a cordial
feeling utterly abortive. Herat, indeed, abounded in intrigues,
and, if blood WM not shed, it was due only to the loyalty of Mapr
Todd, who, constantly pressed by his partisans to consent to tbe
assassination of the vizier, as constantly rejected the idea with
indignation ; could it have been possible for that officer to wish
to terminate the question in this manner, nothing would have been
more easy, for, at one of the dinnera that he gave to Yar Mohamed
Khan, the vizier, being but a bad Mmulman, was so intosicad
as to f d senseless under the table. Here was an opportunity:
many of the guests, and amongst them Prince Mohamed Yoam~f
(grandson of Hadji Firooz Eddin), the Serdar Dine Mobiuned
Khan, and the Kazi of Herat, were hie declared enemies ; H~%an
Mohamed, another guest, suggested that the head of the unconacjous
minister ought to be cut off at once, and the Major had the gm@
possible trouble to prevent the company from adopting his pro*
tion, b e i i obliged to sit up with him the whole night to save hihie
life. I t was in vain that he represented to these chi& that such
actions were reprobated by Europeans, and contrary to their reli-
gion and the rights of men ; they looked upon his conduct as
simply pusillanimous, and for thia reason only several serdars were
subsequently much less favourably disposed towarda the English,
-that the death of the vizier in a chancemedley or an apoplectic
fit would not in any way have distressed Major Todd is bigbly
probable. The king WM exceedingly ill-disposed towards Yar
Mohamed before the arrival of the English envoy, and took no
pains to conceal his opinion ; he thought no more about the Pe*
after they had retreated, and when he found the Feringhm pid
him his pension with such perfect punctuality and supplied him so
lavishly with wine and spirits, which constituted the cham of
existence, he became their warmest partisan and granted them
CUP. XXVII. SHAH KAMRAN AND YAR MOIIAMED. 409
whatever they desired. But the English required also the ratifica-
tion of his minister, and the minister would never ratify anything.
The government of India considered it a crime in Major Todd
that he did not .give up the old king and try his powers of per-
suasion and argument upon the vizier ; but there ie no proof that
the British envoy had any chance of success with him, for Yar
Mohamed had already come to a detennination respecting the power
that the English wanted to exert over him, and the substitution of
the vizier for his sovereign would have alienated from Major Todd
the party that supported Shah Kamran Furthermore, it was to
the Shah that he was accredited by his Government ; it was, there-
fore, his duty to carry on hia negotiations in the regular course, and
if Shah Kamran had retained any of the vigour of his youth he
would at the very commencement have aettled his differences with his
minister. Every morning the vizier had an audience, at which he
made a report to his sovereign on the +tion of affaira in general ;
hie ma n t a always remained at the gate of the citadel, which was
also the residence of the king, and it would have been easy for the
Shah to have had Yar Mohamed arrested and strangled before the
least mistance could reach him : but instead of taking that step
be threatened him in the moat violent and absurd manner, and.
tuwarda the close of 1839 proceeded to such lengths that the lass
of his own liberty, and afterwards of hi life, were the consequence.
It happened thus :-
Shah Kamran, having been informed that the vizier had received
100,000 rupees, demanded that they should be delivered to him ; but
the minister replied that they were in his charge not only to keep,
but to use for the expenses of his administration. In accordance
with Eastern custom, Yar Mohamed was at the time seated on
his knees and heels before his sovereign, who, being considerably
intoxicated, seized his minister by the beard, dragged him forcibly
towards hi with one hand, drew his dagger with the other, and
prepared to strike. However, before proceeding to extremity, he
endeavoured to make him restore the sum that he thought the vizier
had extorted ; but neither menaces nor promises had any effect upon
the prime minister, who maintained the most perfect coolnm.
"Strike," he said, " my fate is in your hands. I have spent the
money for the good of the state, and I have none of it to return
to you." Kamran, shaken by that extraordinary firmness of d e
meanour which had maintained so great an influence over him for
410 DINE MOHAMED KHAN. CHAP. XXV11.
ten years, replaced the dagger in his belt, and allowed Yar Mc+
hamed to depart. After t h i ~ the vizier kept a strid watch over
hie sovereign, and never entered the presence alone to converse
upon mattere of state policy.
This incident created a further estrangement between Major
Todd and Yar Mohamed, and was quickly followed by another
event, of which the Engl i i were accused of being the instigatots
After the death of Attar Khan in 1830 h i father, the Serdar Dine
Mohamed, Boon repented that he had given up the powerful position
of vizier to hie cousin ; hi ambition hed increased with age, and
he ranged himaelf amongst the adversaries of Yar Mohamed.
Notwithstanding this rivalry the two relatives had not ceased to
meet and maintain the appearance of friendly intercourse, and
the wily vizier neglected nothing that might attach Dine Mo-
hamed to his cause, for none could promote his ambitious views
better than he. This serdar was the true type of an Asiatic warrior
- o n e of those intrepid and fiery chiefs whose s d d leap from the
scabbard ere the hand of its master reaches the hit ; his audacity
had no equal among the Afghans, cmd none knew better how
to infuse his own courage and enthusiasm into the breasts of
other% Yar Mohamed might perhaps have succeeded in securing
his mistance if the English had not attached him to their party,
but Dine Mohamed submitted to the influence of their yermu~iona
and their gold, and soon fell into their projects. Towards the
commencement of 1840 this eerdar sent a messenger to the vizier
with an invitation to a feast at his house, which was accepted, and
arrangements were made by him to seize his cousin on his arrival ;
of this the minister received warning only at the moment he was
passing the threshold of the door, when suddenly retracing his
s t ep he returned home, and despatched a body of five hundred
infantry to surround Dine Mohamed's residence, and take him
prisoner. Scenes of this description were constantly occurring,
and added greatly to the difficulties that the British envoy had
to contend with.
Much that I have stated relating to Major Todd was taken
from an article in the Bombay Times of November 14, 1847. By
incorporating that narrative with my own notes I have hoped to
make a simple and explicit statement in defence of that brave
officer, 80 unworthily treated by the ungrateful Government of
Calcutta.
CHAP. XXVK BAD FAITH OF PAR MOHAMED. 411
The Secret Committee of the Council there had approved of
the treaty concluded between their Envoy at Herat and Shah
Kamran; they wrote to Major Todd to compliment him on the
ability that he had displayed in theae negotiations ; they also s ane
tioned all the expenses incurred and promised for fortifying the
town, for the maintenance of the Heratee troops, and other pur-
poees, and added, " We continue to attach the p t e s t importance
to the security of Herat, but the sacrifices that we make for Shah
Earnran will give you the right to a powerful influence over his
councils and conduct, and we hope that he will show himself grate-
ful for all the British. Government has done for him." The Coun-
d deceived themselves wonderfully in expecting "powerful in-
fluence at Herat ;" that of Major Todd was k l y tolerated ; it
was far from commanding. The treaty approved by the Council
was concluded in August 1839, and in the Odober following the
eacrificea to whjch they alluded in their letter to their envoy
amounted to s i x h of rupees, 60,0001.
But Yar Mohamed appeared indifferent to the liberality of the
English Government, and at the very moment they supposed they
had his mjde support he made fresh propositions to the Pemian
court ; the letters which he wrote to Amf Dooulet, Governor-
General of Khorassan, bore in every word the stamp of implacable
hatred to the British, and he offered to place himself and his
country under the protection of Mohamed Shah. When Major
Todd informed the English Resident at Kabul of this freeh
treachery, he stated his opinion that to maintain friendly relatione
with the court of Shah Kamran was no longer p i b l e , and that it
was indispensable to the security of the dominion of Shah Shooja
to annez tlie principality of Herat. He' showed also the precarious
and uselea position of himself and hia miasion in that town in
comparison with and in despite of the enormous outlay that it
entailed, and specially insisted that the Company had no chance
of reaping the fruits of its expenditure nor of establishing a per-
manent and solid influence without the presence of an Anglo-
Indian army to awe the vizier. He concluded by saying that if,
contrary to his advice, they persisted in maintaining the independ-
ence of Herat, the Company would pryare dt$culties for t hem
selves wltich would attain a fearful height.
Sir W. M6Naghten supported the opinion of Major Todd with
the Court of Directors, and added that be considered the annexation
412 TREACHERY OF YAR MOHAMED. Caar. =IT.
neceesary to the complete consolidation of the British dominion in
Afghanistan. But on so serious a subject the Di redon thought
fit to take time for reflection, and after having lost some months in
deliberation determined upon placing the conduct of Yar Mohamed
before Lord Auckland, that h i Lordship might determine what
was proper to be done under the circumstances.
While Major Todd awaited his reply the difficulties became
daily greater at Herat. The vizier, knowing that his treachery
had been discovered, rendered Major Todd's residence there more
and more disagreeable by making fresh demands in a most im-
perious tone; large sums alone would satisfy him, and Major
Todd wm content to pay them to maintain his position.
In January, 1840, the payments made to the Shah Kamran, his
avaricious minister, and his starving people, amounted to 100,0001.,
and yet before that month had expired Yar Mohamed addressed
another letter to the Shah of Persia, in which he called himself hi
faithful servant, and declared that he permittedae British envoy
to remain at Herat from mere motives of courtesy. At the
same time he m t e a letter to the Russian minister at Teheran
asking him to send an agent of hi nation to Herat; and so
great was his hatred of the English that he offered to give up the
city to the Persian garrison of Cbrian. Major Todd, exasperated
on learning this ftlct, went instantly to the vizier to expostulate with
him, but he could not induce h i to forego his intentian until be
placed his pistol at his breast; this attempt was undoubtedly
imprudent, but the British envoy staked everything upon that last
throw. Yar Mohamed, awed by his courage and inflexibility,
dared no longer resist, and he would probably have behaved with
a little more humility afterwards if Lord Auckland had better
appreciated the reports of Major Todd ; but his Lardship's in-
credible weakness in his treatment of this barbarian encouraged
him to re-assume all his former arrogance. In his reply to the
British envoy the Governor-General said that he could only attribute
the treachery of Yar Mohamed to a vague idea of danger, and
recommended him by every means in his power to endeavour to
bring the minister to a cordial and friendly state of feeling with
the government of India, and make him clearly comprehend the
benefits of the British alliance, instead of proceeding with the
duplicity and suspicion which had hitherto marked his condud
towards the Company. Lord Auckland added, that, in considera-
CUAP. -\iXVII. TREACHERY OF YAR MOHAMED. 413
tion of the vizier's former good services, and his resistance to
the Persians of several months' duration, he should, extend his
pardon to every offence of which he might have been guilty before
that letter was received. But as this despatch only reached Herat
in February, 1840, and Yar Mohamed's last treacherous proceed-
ing took place in Jauuary, 1840, it was considered as included in
this act of oblivion, and Major Todd was obliged to fulfil the
painful duty imposed upon him. He gave the vizier the most
positive and solemn assurances that every p t infraction of the
treaty was forgotten, and Yar Mohamed seemed apparently sen-
sible of Lord Auckland's kindness ; but unhappily he was secretly
convinced in his own mind that, whatever might be his future
conduct to the English, he had acquired impunity for his evil
deeds, and therefore proceeded on his old plan of profiting by their
folly to fill his pockets with their rupees.
Me r his rupture with the court of Persia Sir John M4Neil
had returned towngland, leaving his Secretary, Lieut.-Colonel
Sheil, as charge d'affairea at Erzeroum, who thence kept up an
active correspondence with the Persian minister, the good under-
standing between England and Persia remaining dependent upon
the evacuation of Gorian by the Persians and its restoration to
the Prince of Herat. Demands the most urgent on this subject
were sent to Teheran by Colonel Sheil, at the same time that
Yar Mohamed's offer to give the place up to the Shah of Persia
arrived there, and with it his request to that sovereign to occupy
Herat. This coincidence had caused much altercation between
Major Todd and the vizier; but when the latter received full
pardon for his delinquencies from Lord Auckland he professed
unbounded gratitude for such generosity, and swore to prove it
by some brilliant act of devotion; he therefore requested Major
Todd to advance him some money, promising that he would em-
ploy it in an expedition against the fortress of Gorian. The Major,
in his anxious position, trusted to his sincerity, and advanced two
lacs of rupees to equip the force, but the cash once safe in the
vizier's treasury the preparations, which necessitated only a trifling
expense, proceeded slowly, and in a short time he announced on the
most frivolous grounds that the undertaking was abandoned. I t
was afterwards proved in the clearest manner that Yar Mohamed
had written to the Persian Governor of G~r i an to inform him that
he need not be alarmed at any news of a warlike character, for,
414 DIFFICULTIES OF MAJOR TODD'S POSITIOX. CHM. XXTLI.
though the English had obliged him to promise that he would
besiege the place, he might dismiss from his mind all fear and
uneasiness on the subject, for he did not intend to keep his word.
Major Todd, almost in despair at such utter faithlessness, wrote to
his Government that the expedition had been given up under ck-
cumstances of the most perfidious nature. This took place in July,
1840, by which time the sums spent in efforts to consolidate this
most unproductive alliance amouuted to 190,0001.
The British envoy, seeing the perfect inutility of this vast expen-
diture, took upon himself to reduce the monthly payment to the court
of Herat to 25001. ; and Yar Mohamed, wrathful at the reductian,
renewed in the following September his intrigues with the Persian
monarch. At his request M i Mssaood, the foreign minister of
Mohamed Shah, who was at Meshed st the time, came aa far as
Gorian to meet in person an agent from the vizier ; but Yar Me
hamed had the address to turn even this perfidious action to his
own account, by relating it to Major Todd, and pretending that it
had been done unknown to hi by hi bmther, the Serdar Sbere
Mohamed : he obtained fresh advanca for this apparent frank-
ness, but it must be added that he plucked them from the major's
hand rather than received them from him. Never was the position
of a British agent in tbe East so exasperating 8s that of this officer
at Herat. Exposed to the craR and cupidity of a man who sar
through the ambitious views of the Anglo-Indian Government upon
hi country, the envoy was entirely at his mercy, and the vizier pur-
posely embittered every hour of every day that he reitmined at Herat,
and rendered endurance scarcely possible. The larger and more
liberal were the concessions of that Government, the less did Yar
Mohamed dissemble his hatred and hostility to his improvident
protectom ; and both these increased, while every check or reverse
experienced by the British hope in Afghanistan was exaggerated
by the vizier, and represented as a triumph of Islamiem over the
Infidels: he went so far as to say publicly that he should aeize
the opportunity of the first great disaeter of the British arms to pin
their enemiea. At this period clouda hung over the political hori-
zon of Afghanistan ; Dost Mohamed had unsheathed hi sword in
the north, and threatened Kabul : in the south the d e d me n t of
Major Glibborne had been cut to pieces, and Kelabi-Ghildjeye
taken from the invadera The quarrel between the vizier and his
cousin cawed the former, it is true, some uneasiness, and prevented
C w . XXVII. TREACHERY OF YAR MOHAMED. 415
him from at once taking part against the Engl i i ; but he indem-
nified himself by attaching to his party all the discontented spirits
of Kabul and Kandahar, with whose Ast ance he could easily
disturb the tranquillity of &oee provinces and impede the establiih-
ment of the dominion of Shah Shooja I t was only by eatdying
the rapacious and exorbitant demands which Yer Mohamed daily,
nay, almost hourly, advanced on every possible pretence, that Major
Todd could retain his footing in Herat at this critical moment.
While thus continuing to draw upon the Company's exchequer,
Yar Mohamed actually discussed in council a project for attacking
Kmdahar, a scheme that he would assuredly have carried out if
Dost Mohamed had not been at hand. During all this period
saycely a week passed that he did not speak of his alliance with
P& and his intention of arresting the English officers ; in the
month of August their imprisonment wae so generally expected, that
no one would go to their houses, not even persons under great obli-
gations to them. Shah Kamran himself spoke of it, and publicly, but
added, the legation had nothiig to fear, that he was their friend,
and that not one of them would have been alive then but for his
interference in their favour. This deplorable condition of affairs
had reached such a point that a crisis became inevitable. The
money spent upon the chiefs and fortifications of Herat now
amounted to 300,0001., which, however, in no way prevented Yar
Mohamed from continuing his intercourse with the Persian court ;
and in January, 1841, he despatched a confidential agent with a
numerous suite to ABaaf Dooulet, to ask for pecuniary assistance
and six guns from the. Shah of Persia, to enable him to march
against Girishk, a small fortress in advance of Kandahar, as Gorian
is of Herat. When Major Todd was certain of the object of this
expedition, he represented to the vizier the danger to which he
exposed himself by this new infraction of the eighth article of the
treaty, and that so flagrant a violation of that eole'mn engagement
would be more than the long-suffering and patience of his Govern-
ment could submit to ; he also declared that he should not consider
himself boubd to continue the allowances he had paid up to that
t i me t h a t all the treasure of the Company could not suffice to
satisfy hie requirements--and that the vizier must provide for the
expenses of hi own government until such time as he should see
fit to act strictly up to the conditions and stipulations of friendship
existing between the two nations.
416 PROPOSITIONS AND COUNTER PROPOSITIONS. CHAP. XXVII.
Following up this declaration, Major Todd withheld the payment
of 25001. due on the 1st of February, 1841, to the court of Shah
Kanman. The vizier, case-hardened by impunity, looked upon this
suppression es merely temporary, expected he should be pardoned
his last breach of faith as he had been all former ones, and on the
8th of the same month addressed to Major Todd the following
fresh demands :-
1st. That the British envoy should pardon all his past conduct,
and leave him under no apprehension for the future.
2. That he should receive immediately 30,0001. from the East
India Company for tbk payment of his personal debts.
3. That his monthly pension should be augmented and paid a
year in advance.
4. That the British envoy should hand over a written agree-
ment not to compromise Herat in any foreign war till after the
harvest in July.
5. That the fortifications of the town should be enlarged and
finished at the expense of the East India Company, and that it
should provide the Government of Herat with the necessary
funds to enable it to reconquer several places which had thrown
off their obedience to it.
6. That the Compnny should pay and maintain the Heratee
troops while in the field.
After his recent infraction of the existing treaty these terms
appeared so exorbitant, that Major Todd replied it was impossible
to suppose hi Government would consent to make fresh sacrifices,
even in a modified form, unless it waa for some corresponding
advantages, but he offered to grant several of Yar Mohamed's
demands if he made the following concessions :-
1. That Yar Mohamed should never again deviate from the
spirit of the treaty between the two Governments.
2. That the Serdar Syud Mohamed Khan, h i eldest son, should
take a contingent of troops to Kabul to serve in the British army.
3. That as soon as this serdar had arrived at his destination
the envoy would pay half the vizier's debts and augment his
monthly allowance.
4. That the citadel of Herat should receive a British garrison,
and that the royal residence of Rooz-bagh, seven miles south of the
city, with the land belonging to it, should be made over to the
English to build barracks upon for their own troops.
CHAP. XSVII. MAJOR TODD ESCORTED OUT OF THE CI T. 417
5. That the Vizier should never again expect to receive, and
distribute himself, the funds appropriated to the maintenance of the
chiefs of the Court of Shah Kamran, and that the sums allotted for
that purpose should be paid to the individuals themselves by the
agents of the Company.
These propositions of Major Todd's were approved by Sir Wil-
liam M'Naghten, while the Governor-General of India looked
upon it as a matter of regret that they had been made. Yar
Mohamed appeared quite satisfied, provided the sums he had
demanded were paid in advance ; but Major Todd knew only too
well the character of the man he had to deal with to grant his
request, and the result was a most animated discussion. The
Vi e r pretended, certainly falsely, that Major Todd had in his
accounts charged the East India Company with much larger sums
than he had paid to him, and that he had used the difference in
to the people in order to excite them to overturn the
Government of Herat, and substitute that of the Company.
Finally-and this seems to be true-that the envoy constantly
plotted with Shah Kamran the fall of the Vizier from power,
-and the angry minister declared to Major Todd that his pre-
eence and that of his subordinates could no longer be tolerated
in Herat, and that he must depart with the least possible delay.
Thus ended the anxious and onerous intervention of the Indo-
British Government at Nerat, and its conclusion was, as might be
expected, marked by eeveral acts of rapacity on the part of Yar
Mohamed, who immediately made known his intention of marching
against Kanhhar ; and in order to leave no doubt on this occasion
of hi sincerity, he sent his own brother, the Serdar Shere M+
hamed Khan, as ambaasador to the court of Persia, with presents
for the Shah, and a request that a subsidy might be given him to
undertake the expedition he had projected. But it seems evident
that in making this demand the Vizier was really not more sincere
than he had been with the English ; hi only object Wa8 to obtain
from both as much money as he possibly could for the p u p a e of
strengthening his position in his own country.
The British envoy being driven to the alternative of making fresh
sacrifices or taking his departure, decided upon the latter, and the
Vi e r having provided him with the transport necessay for his
journey, sent with him the Serdar Fethi Khan, one of his cousins,
as his escort to the frontier. Major Todd had, with an object that
2 E
418 PILLAGE OF THE GRANARIES, CHA~ . XXVIL
is easy to understand, collected a considerable quantity of corn at
Herat ; but the granaries were pillaged by the people even behm
he had left the town, and a report having been spread that he had
carried away four boxes of treasure, the Herateea determined to
plunder him of it, and they would certainly have proceeded to do
so if the Vizier had not lined the &reeta and bazaars with troops
Hia eon, the Serdar Syud Mohamed Khan, alao accompanied Majar
Todd and his party to such a distance on their road as secured
them against any act of violence.
CRAP. XXVIII. REACTION AGAINST THE ENGLISH.
C H A P T E R XXVIII.
% rg.iast the English at Hemt - Ingratitude of the East India Company
to Major Todd -Death of that officer - Ru- expedition against Khiva -
Qened Pero5aki leaven Orenburg - Disaaters and retreat of the Russian army
-dg. Khan raines a revolt in Kerman - The K d of Herat at Khiva-
Conremation with t he Khan - Diegrace of Yacooba Mehter - Allah Kooli Khan
w p t e the English alliance - Snare laid for the Kazi - Cnptain Abbott at
Khivr- Hir &ion them - Intrigues of Yacooba Mehhr - Captain Abbott
l a v a for Rusaia - The Usbeks take him prisoner - Akhood Zadeh leaven
ghirn in neuch of him -Meeting of Akhood and the captive -The Yuss BPlhi
md Hasaan Bahadoor - Fresh complication - Captain Abbott reaches R u b
-Lieutenant Shdeapear arrives at Khiva - Obtaina the liberation of the
~ussian nlavee and bring9 them to Antrakan - Lieut. Shakeepear'n reception at
St. Petenburg - Captain Abbott not recompensed - R w i a creates difficultisr
for Bhiva - The Shah demands the Persian rlavea - Captain Conolly arrives at
ghira-He in the object of his mimion - Requirements of the Khan.
~ E R the departure of the British Envoy a grievous reaction took
place against all thoee who had participated in the liberality of the
English, or who, having served them, received pensions : they were
arreeted, imprisoned, robbed of every thing, and reduced to the
deepest distress. There were but few merchants in Nerat who
bad not transacted business with Major Todd, some of whom had
made large fortunes ; these the vizier confiscated or grossly over-
taxed to his own profit, and insults and oppres~ion continued
during several months.
-
Amongst the families who were the greatest sufferers was that
of the Kazi of Herat, H a m Mohamed, and his son Akhood
Zadeh Saleh Mohamed ; they were stripped of a fortune smount-
ing to 20,0001., and their wives, daughters, and slaves tortured
to make them dieclose where the chief judge had secreted his
wealth. Thia venerable old man was actually condemned to
death, and his life was saved only by the arrival of a ransom
of 14001. sent by Major Todd to procure his release. The
rillanous nature of Yar Mohamed resumed on this occasion all its
original cruelty ; and it was in the midst of a sea of blood that he
seized the property of so many unhappy people-spoils that he con-
aidered legitimately to belong to him only because they had &sen
2 3 2
420 INGRATITUDE TOWARDS MA.JOR TODD. CHAP. XXI I L
out of, or were reputed to have done so, the corrupt generosity of
the English.
I t is worthy of remark that nine months before the departure of
the mission from Herat, Lord Auckland proposed to the Court
of Directors that Major Todd should be recalled, if the measures
which the British Government wished to adopt in the princi-
pality should be received with suspicion by Yar Mohamed Khan;
and his Lordship observed that by such recall the vizier would be
made to feel his false position and to defend the independence of his
country. But on the arrival at Calcutta of the news that the dif-
ferences between Persia and England had been terminated by the
restitution of Gorian to Shah Kamran, this proposition was aban-
doned. Dr. Riach, attmhk to the British embassy in Penia, who
had retired to Erzeroom, was despatched to Teheran in the month
of January, 1841, and travelled post to Khorafisan, to be there at
the surrender of the place; this had been stipulated for in a
treaty concluded between Great Britain and Persia, the latter
being compensated by the restitution of the island of hmk to
Mohamed Shah.
The Court of Directors hoped that this arrangement, and the
freedom in which the new treaty with Penia would oblige the
Persian monarch to leave Yar Mohamed Khan, would put a stop
to the intrigues of the latter. But that was an erroneous anticipa-
tion ; and the departure of Major Todd from Herat a year after
wards, and just at the moment when Lord Auckland had succeeded
in obtaining an amelioration of his position, occasioned the
India Company bitter diippointment--even resentment, and the
Secretary of Government received orders to write to Sir William
MLNaghten, British Resident at Kabul, to whom Major Todd was
attached, that the ht e envoy at Herat was considered as inca$e
of $filling a political appintment, and ot~ght to rejoin his regimd
math diahowur.
Here, then, was the recompense which this officer received
for so much labour and anxiety, so much devotion to hi wuntrgt
so many dangers braved. Such are the Court of Directors men
who demand of a worthy man full of intelligence and caP";Q
an impossible result-more than impossible ; and because he
not obtain it - because he did not rid them of Yar Mohamed,
they cast upon him the imputation of dishonourable conduct, which
in fact they themselvee deserve for the notorious folly and im-
CHAP. XSVIII. DEATH OF MAJOR TODD. 421
becility they displayed, not in the a s r s of Herat 'only, but in
all the other provinces of Afghanistan in which they had a
policy to carry out. Was Major Todd, then, so guilty? Had
he not well estimated the circumstances when he advised they
thould t d e everything out of the power of Yar Mohamed and
occupy Herat with a British force? Are not those Directors inca-
pable whose avarice was in no degree less than that of Yar Mo-
hamed, who knew not how to value their envoy's advice, and
allowed the vizier to believe that he might do as he pleawd with
perfect impunity ? I t is disgraceful, scandalous, that writers should
.
have been found in the British press sufficiently stupid and base to
sanction the blame with which they sought to tarnish the name of
an intelligent and honourable man - blame which could never
conceal the black ingratitude of the Court of Directors.
Strong in the consciousness that his conduct at Herat had been
strictly irreproachable, the unfortunate Major D'Arcy Todd rejoined
in India the corps of artillery to which he belonged ; but, con-
stantly oppressed by thoughts of the infamy with which they had
so unjustly sought to blast his good name, his laborious life rolled
on filled with bitterness, and it was with real pleasure that he
received orders to take part in the war that broke out in 1845
between the English and the Sikhs. He went into the field of
Feroseshah with the impression that he should there lay down his
l$e, and was conducting himself in the most gallant manner when
the iron messenger from one of the enemy's guns realised in a mo-
ment his mournful presentiment. Before, however, he met a soldier's
death, Major Todd had long been reinstated in the esteem of his
countrymen, whose faith in him had for a moment been shaken,
and they now respect his memory and take a deep interest in the
eventa of his distinguished career-an interest which will be eternal.
I t will be remembered that when Major Todd went to Herat his
instructions were also to make known the objects of the British policy
in Central Asia to the Khans of Bokhara and Khiva. The Eng-
lish suddenly passed from a state of the most confiding peace-
fulness to that of the most exaggerated fear, and were no longer
satisfied that the possession of Afghanistan efficiently secured their
Indian dominions. Turkestan was the barrier they now wished
to raise against Russia, by completely establishing their influence
in the Usbek Khanata. Momenta even appeared precious, for, just
at the time when the Shah retired from before Herat, Count
421 RETREAT OF THE RUSSIAN AIUT. CHAP. XSVIII.
Sirnonit& boldly announced that a Russian corps ti'crrands was
leaving Orenburg and marching upon Khiva, to reduce the Khan
of that county, and the cabinet of St. Peteraburg gave a wy
reaeonable motive for thia new invasion of ,Tartary. A grid
number of Russian subjects had been carried off by the UabeLa
and sold as slaves in the marketa of Khiva, and all negotiaihm
for their deliverance had hitherto proved urn- for Albh
Kooli Khan had obstinately refused to give his consent to
their release. The Rmi an Government at first sought a remedy
by making reprisals, and had detained at Astrakan ever since
the year 1833 a Khivan caravan, consisting of 200 men and
800 camels, laden with large quantities of merchandise of great
value ; but this, instead of rendering the Khan more reaeonsble,
only irritated him, and the Fmperor therefore determined to employ
force to obtain his just demands.
I t was at the commencement of the winter of 1840 that Genad
Peroffsky leR Orenburg at the head of 6000 infantry, accompanied
by 10,000 camels and their army of drivers, to conquer the obeti.
nate resistance of the Usbek sovereign. This season wes choeen
for the expedition as being the one in which the troops would be
lesa d i s t r d than at any other by the want of water in the rrid
steppea across which they had to march ; but, by one of t b ~
strange chances which occur from time to time, this ninter ran
remarkable for its inclemency, and the difficulties that under ordi-
nary circumstance% would have been by no means serious became
terrible, oven insurmountable, in consequence. The cold wu
intense, and the mercury at 40' below zero: mow covered the
earth to a considerable depth, and the wind swept with inaedible
violence over the naked steppes. Several thousand soldiere were
frost-bitten and lost their legs and arms, and the greater number,
both of men and animals, perished even before they reached Ak
Roolak (a station on the extreme frontier of Rusk aud Khiva), whea
General Peroffsky wisely retreated, thus avoiding worse disastem
, Nothing could have served the purposes of the English better,
and their satisfaction was proportionably great when the diecolP
fiture of the Russian army became known; but, remembering
that another expedition could be sent which might meet with
fewer obstacles, and achicve what this had just Eailed in doing,
they hastened to prevent, if possible, a fresh advance of the Rus-
sians, by endeavouring to induce Allah Kooli Khan to give b
C u . XXVIIL THE Kh21I OF HERAT AT KEIVA. 428
tbe " ' '' n they demanded ; and, in order to prevent the Shah
of P& from msbg a divereion in Eovour of the Tzar south of
Khira, the British Qovernment created much embnrramment for
him in his own h i o m .
In speaking of the aB& of Kandahar, mention has been made
of an Imnaelian Syud greatly renowned for hie bravery, and much
venerated by the Beloocheea, called Aga Khh. This chief, after
having eacmted part of General Nott's baggage to Shikapoor in
1839, marched at the head of a body of cavalry into Kerman,
where he found no difficulty in establishing himself, for he had a
great many partisans in that province. Hi success was so rapid
a d decided, that the Shah of Persia found himaelf compelled to
send a body of troop against him, and a year elapsed before he
could repm the i ns mt i on and drive him from the country.
While Aga Khan was engaged in this irruption into the south of
Persia, Major Todd arrived at Herat, and, in conformity with
the inshvctions he had received, sent Mohamed Haesan on an
emhimy to the Khan of Khiva. The Major could not poasibly
have deded an envoy better qualified than the Kazi, for, in addi-
tion to the influence wi th Muesulmana which he pcwsessed in virtue
of his d c e of kazi or chief judge, he had also that which arose from
his belonging to the Djagatab of Turkestan origin,t a tribe greatly
venerated in its own county. The kazi took with him letters from
Major Todd, Shah Kamran, and his vizier Yar Mohamed, to the
Khan of the UsbeRs, and the Afghan prince requested him to con-
dude an alliance with the Engliah ; but, notwithstanding these
me n d a t i o n s , the mission was a dangerous and delicate one,
and it required real courage to accept it, for it was generally
known at the time that Yacooba Mehkr, the vizier of Allah
Kmli Khan, had hitherto brought about the death of every one
who had supported the British policy. The brave and intelli-
gent Kazi reached Khiva in safety, but met with an exceedingly
rude reception h m Yacooba Mehter, which occasioned him
a momentary regret at having involved himself in this enterprise ;
be did not low, however, either hi coolneaa or his prudence.
Having been presented to the Khan on the day after his arrival,
Thin ehiaf is thug calld on account 7 t The deacendanta of Djagatd, ran
of hL deecent from Ismael, the old of Qhengin Kh.o.-Pmria.
Man of the Mountain.-Fmria,
424 CONVERSATION WITH THE =AN. CUP. XXVUI.
Mohamed Hassan leR him to imagine in the first instance that he
was simply the bearer of a letter from Shah Kamcan, which letter
he gave him. After the customary compliments, the Uebek prince
assumed an air of severity, and questioned him cloeely as to the
object of his journey ; and the following dialogue, which then took
place, I now relate as the Kazi himself related it to me :-
- The X7un. Strengthen my belief in you, Oh gazi, by assuring
me that you are still a Mussulman. Yet, if you were so, you would
never have brought these Kia* Frenguis* into the country of
Islam.
me Ezi . It is not I who brought them, it is Allah who bas
sent them to us.
Xhn. How darest thou thus profane the name of Allah,
by connecting it with such a bad action?
The Kazi. I only tell the truth, and I can prove it to thee.
The Kircm. Prove it, then.
The Kazi. When the rafezist Kadjars: laid siege to Herat, out
illustrious sovereign, who has no equal (bi nazep), sent letters to
entreat you to come to our aseistance-to us--Sooneea like your-
self, veritable pillars of Islam : Did you come ?
2% Eh. Never did Mussulman aak my help in vain 1
My
victorious army marched immediately on my reception of the first
letter of Shah Kamran ; but, when I arrived at Pindjdeh, Mohamed
Zeman Khan, Serdar of the Djemcheedis, assured me that my
troops were not required to save the place-that the Afghans were
all-sufficient, and I then returned to my own dominiom
!Eb Kazi. And who, most mighty Khan, had need of your help,
Zeman Khan or Shah Kamran ? Why attend to the words of the
former, when the fearful extremity to which the latter was reduced
was known to all Asia? Not only did you abandon our caw?,
but you forbade your subjects to bring us provisions. This un-
happy example was followed by the Bokharians and the Moha-
medzyes, who, instead of coming to our aid, joined the rafezi
Kadjars. What did the Frenguis then, whom you call Riaffirn ?
They came to aid the true children of Allah, they procured us the
Infidel Europeans.
sovereign belongs: thus they d l the
t Heretics.
Persians, Kncljanr; the Kand.harianq
$ The Afghans, in apeaking of a na-
Mohamedeyes; the Sindiann, Ta l p o o ~ ;
tion, frequently designate it by the
the Si, Rundjeets, &c.-Fmior.
proper name of the tribe to which the
CHAP. XXVIIT. DIBGRACE OF YACOOBA MEHTER. 426
corn that you retused ; they brought ua their gold, their blood, and
their intellect, to defend our ramparts that were crumbling under
the balls of Mohamed Shah, and are now h i n g again under their
bendicent care. I t was they who lent the helping hand to the
A t e , who brought back to ua abundance and tranquillity,
who distinguished themselves by their justice and equity, and pro-
teded the true M d m a n against the heretics. Which, then, are
the intideb--the Pemians, who inflicted upon us every kind of
misery, and whoe part you take ; or those whom, deserted as we
were by our brethren, God sent to protect ua, and whose help you
may want ere long to meat the progress of the Russians ?
Tire K h . I s it really true, Oh Kazi, that these Frenguis are
such as you describe em 3 Has Islam found support in them ?
At thh point the a m , aeeing that the warmth of his discourse
had made an impreseion upon Allah Kooli Khan, drew from
hi pocket the letter of Major Todd, and handed it to him,
saying, " Doubt it not for a moment, great prince; receive this
letter that the most exalted elchee (ambassador) accredited to our
powerful sovereign addresses to thee ; its words are so many pre-
cious pearls that he has woven into the wreath of friendship, and
in connexion with which he offers his prayers with thine to the
Almighty to grant thee a long and glorious reign."
The letter was enclosed in a silken bag embroidered with gold.
The Khan took it, broke the large seal of the British arms with
animation, and, after having perused the mimive, which contained
proposals of friendship and alliance, and also of active mediation
between him and the Russians, his contracted brow gradually ex-
panded, and from that time he treated the Kazi with great respect.
Mohamed Hassan seized this favourable opportunity for com-
plaining of the insolence of the vizier, which brought upon that
functionary a severe reprimand. The audience terminated in the
delivery of the presents sent by Major Todd to the Usbek .prince
--optical instruments and splendid arms, at the sight of which
the whole court went into ecstasies; and the English cauae was
further benefited by the disgrace of Yacooba Mehter, their most
dangerous enemy, who was kept at a distance from the scene of .
negotiations.
Atter having arranged the preliminaries of a treaty, the Kazi
promptly set out on his return to Herat, to render to the British
envoy an accou~lt of the resulta of his embassy: but when he
426 CAPTAIN ABBOTT AT W A . CHAP. XXTIIL
reached Merv he fell into an ambuah, which nearly proved fatal to
hi . This had been prepared for him by the governor of the tam,
Niaz Mohamed Khan, uncle of Yacooba Mehter, the exssperated
minister. Fortunately aome persons who were near, he+ng tbe
Kazi's shouts, hastened to hie assdance, and delivered him out
of the hands of his aessssina, though with mme severe contusions
Niaz Mohamed, as if to testify his regret at hie misfortune, had
the hypocrisy to pay a visit to his victim, but no one was deceived
by that act of apparent courteay ; the injuries received by the Kazi
were intended to impress upon his mind the dkgrace he bad
brought upon Yaamba Mehter, and for Borne time they certainly
answered their purpose.
As soon as Major Todd was informed that the Kazi had mc-
ceeded in the object of his mission, he displdtched Captain Abbott
to Khiva* His instructions were, if possible, to induce Allah
Kooli Khan to release the Russian prisoners ; and, as soon as he
had attained that object, to go to Aetrakan and procure the libere
tion of the caravan, which had been detained there seven yearn
by the Russians. Captain Abbott commenced his journey very
early in 1840-and at a most auspicious moment, for the army of
General Peroffsky had just been decimated and obliged to retire,
and therefore a fair field lay open to him in which to bring hie
negotiations to a favourable conclusion.
If the English were prodigal of their gold in facilitating the
conquest of Afghanistan, they certainly were not lese m in their
endeavours to effect their object in Kurdiatan ; and Captain Abbotk
freely employed this means of persuasion. So lavish was he, that at
Merv he was obliged to dispatch Akhood Zadeh Saleh Mohamed to
Herat, to request Major Todd to send him a further supply of money
with the utmost dispatch : he did not, however, wait for this, but
continuing his journey to Khiva, was received there with distinction
by the Khan, and this in spite of the intrigues of Yamoba Mehter,
who had been reinstated in the favour of his sovereign, and who,
justly or not, was considered a warm partisan of Russia One
fact, however, appeared to indicate the contrary ; he exerted him-
* Captain Abbott published a nam- ing work. His information relating to
I ve of his journey, but, being unac- the British negotiations in Khi ni a given
uainted w~t h the English langurye, as he received it from the Kaci H-
t8e author could not avail himaelf of Y o h e d , and bin son Mo o d Zdsh
the advsntage of reading that interest- Saleh bfohamed.-Fmiw.
C w . XXVIII. HE MAVES FOR RUSSIA. 427.
aelf in every way to prevent the liberation of the Russian slaves,
which the English a h he did only to give the Russians an
excuse for marching an army to Khiva In defiance, however, of
the minister's opposition, the Khan made the concessions required
of him by Captain Abbott with a view of settling the differences
with Russia Nevertheless, and although the definitive convention
wm drawn up, the vizier did not consider himself vanquished ;
the Kazi of Herat had, it is true, escaped his toils, but such he
trusted would not be the case with Captain Abbott from those he
intended to spread for him.
ARer having obtained a positive promise that the Russian slave8
should be restored, the British officer, anxious to terminate his im-
portant mission as quickly as possible, would not wait for the return
of Akhood Zadeh with the money from Herat ; but, procuring what
he required on the spot, he set out for Astrakan, accompanied by
seven servants, s mehmendar,' and a few horsemen furnished by
the Khan of Khivq-the mehmendar being an officer of high rank,
named Hassau Bahadoor. This official conducted Captain Abbott
in the first instance to the port of Guedik, and near it was en-
camped his own tribe, of which he was the chief. Captain Abbott,
not finding any vessel here, determined to proceed to Dach
Kaleh, four days' journey farther south, occupied by the Russians.
But lIassan Bahadoor refused to accompany him, alleging as a
reason that his orders from his sovereign were not to go beyond
Guedik ; and Captain Abbott was therefore obliged to continue
his journey without any escort: as to his =manta they were like
himself, strangers in the country, and consequently ignorant of the
road.
The mehmendar was acting upon secret orders from the
treacherous vizier, who, foreseeing the difficulty in which Captain
Abbott would be placed if he could not find a ship, sent for-
ward a messenger with an order that every vessel that might be
there should leave the port The unsuspecting officer of course saw
no danger in going on, though it was on that part of his road that
those who had sworn hi destruction were lying in wait for him ; and
he was not more than ten hours' march from Dach Kaleh when he
and his servants were assailed by a party of Usbeks, against whom
An o88cer whose duty it is to pro-
travelling in some pPrtcl of the &t.-
cure food and lodging for unbascledom Fmicr. .
428 AKHOOD ZADEH GOES IN SEARCH OF ABROTT. CKAP. XVI I I .
they at fimt made a vigorous resistance ; but, being in the end
overpowered by numbers, they were seized and stripped. Captain
Abbott lost two fingers in the mel& and received a gash on the head,
and in thia miserable condition he was carried to a camp of no-
mades ten miles to the north, almost on the bordera of the Caspian
Sea. His new hosts behaved to him with great cruelty ; his em-
vants being all taken from him and dispersed in different camp,
were made the slaves of those whose hospitality they had claimed.
While Captain Abbott was thus treated at the instigation of the
villain Yacooba Mehter, Akhood Zadeh arrived at Khiva, bringing
with him a thousand ducats from Major Todd, but his utmost
diligence had not enabled him to reach that town before Captain
Abbott's departure ; and when he proposed to follow him, he was
informed by Yacooba Mehter of the report of the unfortunate
officer's death : the vizier at the same time ordered all the letters
fiom Major Todd to Captain Abbott to be taken fiom Akhood
Zadeh, though being written in English he could not under-
stand their contents. After Akhood Zadeh had been ten dap at
Khiva some information he received led hi to suppose that Cap
tain Abbott was still alive, and under the influence of this hope he
formed the generous determination of going immediately in search
of him. Allah Kooli Khan at first attempted to prevent him from
risking his life in so perilous an enterprise; but, finding him reso-
lute, he sanctioned his departure, and ordered him a guard of eight
horsemeu for his personal security. I t was a rough task that the
son of the Kazi of Herat undertook ; ignorant of the country
and the Tartar language, he was obliged to wander from tent to
-
tent over the arid steppes by tracks scarcely to be distinguished,
often led astray by false information, and having frequently to
contend with the ill-will of his escort. But he did not the less per-
severingly continue to scour the country in search of the British
officer. On tlie seventeenth day aRer he leR Khiva, at the en-
campment of Maukeglag, he first came upon traces by which he
trusted he should at last discover Captain Abbott, and he deter-
mined to press on without delay to the spot indicated as the place
of his detention, when the escort, acting upon secret orders from Ya-
cooba Mehter, refused to accompany him, asserting that this part of
the country was in such a state, that to go there was to expose them-
selves to certain death. However, the noble Akhood Zadeh
not daunted by any of the dangers that were pointed out to himi
m. XXVlII. MEETING OF AKHOOD AND THE CAPTIVE. 429
he abandoned his camels and provisions to the nomades of Mau-
keglag, and departed alone on hi uncertain way across the steppe
Hi s sufferings in consequence were terrible. Hourly in dread of being
robbed and murdered, destitute of water to quench the burning
t h i i of either himself or his horse, or food to alleviate his hunger,
he felt himself, at the close of the fourth day, perishing from inani-
tion, when a traveller on foot happily crossed his path, who gave
him a draught of water and a handful of maize. Thw slightly
supported, he continued his weary search ; for, such was hi devo-
tion, that he would have died rather than have failed in it. At length,
and on the fifth day, he reached the encampment in which Cap
tain Abbott was detained by the rascals who had plundered him.
The unfortunate officer was lying on s wretched carpet, suffering
much from his wounds, and expecting his death every moment, when
a Kowwk entered the tent, and said, " They come to deliver you ;"
:
and he had scarcely uttered these words when .Akhood Zadeh stood
before him. " Barik Allah," exclaimed liis friend, " my eyes are
gladdened, for I have found you, and my arrival is the end of your
misery." The effect of this most unhoped-for deliverance upon
Captain Abbott's feelings may be imagined. Akhood Zadeh then
-placed in his hands the thousand ducats which he had concealed in
his belt during the two-and-twenty days that had elapsed after he
left Khiva, and which he all the time dreaded would be taken from
him. This act is the more striking, in the eyes of those who know
the Asiatic character, than his devotion to the British cause and Ca p
tain Abbott, for he could so easily have said that he had been robbed,
and no one would for a moment have doubted his word. Few,
indeed, are the Afghans who would have acted as he did.t When
the fimt outpourings of the heart between Captain Abbott and his
gallant and self-denying deliverer had passed, the latter presented
to the chief of the horde the firman of which he was the bearer ;
Glory to God.
to make him restore some t h o m d s
t His conduct benefited him but
of francs which had been given him
little: others, whose servicw were not by the English for the purpose of
to be compared with his, were rewarded roceeding to Khulm to mek for some
liberally, while he obtained a-ly so fhgliah phonera who were aaid to be
ped Thia there. Akhood Zndah ~ ~ ~ 8 1 v e d the much as he had a right to ex
-titilde on the part o those he money, but remained at home, quietly
wrved so well changed his character, sending reports from time to time to
and in 1847 he was guilty of an act the British Legation, as if he had rheally
of bad faith that wea punished by the been occupied in the transaction he had
baatinado, under the ordenr of the engaged to carry o u t . - F i .
governor of Khorcresan, A d Dooulet,
430 THE YOSS BASHI. CHAP. Xwm.
in this Allah Kooli Khan enjoined hia subjeds to aid him in dim
covering Captain Abbott, who, as well as his aervante, were to be
delivered up to him if ever they were found within his dominiom
The nomades thus perceived, tboogh rather late, that in obeying
their chief and attacking the British officer, they had expoeed them-
d v e e to the anger of their sovereign, for i t was clear he had
been quite ignorant of this miserable businem, and the responti-
biiity therefore was likely to fall upon themselves Bemdq
Captain Abbott to pardon them, they overwhelmed him with
attentiom, and conducted him two days' journey on the road to
Maukeglag to another encampment; this was composed of two
portions of different tribes, one of which was commanded by a
chief named Yusa Bsshi, the other by a son of the villain lbean
Bahadoor, and it was in the tent of the former that the havellere
took up their temporary abode.
Yuse Bashi gave him guest the warmest reception, and the
of Hassan Bahadoor soon paid him a visit; but when he found
the British o5cer intended to make his father reeponaible for
the treatment he had received, he hastened to inform him
the fad, and also that their enemy Yuea Bashi was colleding
evidence against them to aggravate his crime. The m e
eenger who carried this letter made such &patch, that in tbc
short intervd of four days Hassan Bahadoor arrived at his m'a
camp, at the head of 150 horsemen, for the purpoee of p
venting Oaptain Abbott from returning to Khiva escorted by
Bashi, whu could do them the grestest posaible injury in the
estimation of their sovereign. When he had pitched hi tent be
p d Captain Abbott to be hie guest, on the ground tbat be
-
waa his mehmendar, and that it was his duty to watch over
safety of his person This officer, however, decidedly d
to avail himself of his offer, and rejected the invitation,
Bashi supporting his refusal and sharply reproaching H m
Bahadoor with his previous condud. The discussion
ewords were drawn, and blood would have been shed, but for
intervention of Akhood Zadeh, who at last prevailed u p his
friend to inhabit the tent of Hassan at night, remaining in
daytime with Yuss ' Bashi. Captain Abbott now wished to rem
to I(hiva, but Akhood Zadeh diwuaded him. Allah Koolk"
said he, " is not ignorant that the letters I brought for you were
taken from me by force ; and he ri l l not fail to be iniloenoed b
Cmr. XXYIII. LIEUTENANT SHAKESPEAR AT KHIVA. 431
tbe reports of Hasean Bahadoor, who is eo interested in exculpating
himself from his criminal proceedings against you. Yacooba
Mehter will help him, and possibly yon may lose by their fresh
intrigues the h i t s of your previous negotiations. Hold, then, to
what you settled with Allah Kooli Khan ; go on to Dach Kaleh
a d Astrakan, while I return to Khiva to watch over your interests,
and be prepared for whatever may occur."
Thii advice the Englieh officer adopted, and by so doing even-
tually lost all benefit from his clever and courageous conduct on
this anxious and dangerous embassy. He reached the Russian
hr hm, where his finger was amputated, and as soon as his wounds
were healed proceeded to Astrakan to confer with the Russian
authorities, while Akhood Zadeh returned to Khiva, with an eecort
provided by Hassan Bahadoor.
The report to which Yacooba Mehter gave currency, that Ca p
tain Abbott had been killed, soon reached Herat; and Major
Todd, greatly distressed at the misfortune which deprived him of
the co-operation of so good an assistant' and compromised the
negotiations entered into with the Khan of Khiva, immediately
dispatebd to his court Lieutenant Richmond Shakespear to com-
plete them, and to ascertain what had really been the fate of their
lamented brother-officer. Lieutenant Shakespear, accompanied by
the Kazi Hasean Mohamed, arrived at Khiva at the commence
ment of June, 1840, on the same day that Akhood Zadeh (who
the reader will remember was the mn of the kazi) reached it from
Maukeglag, and from him they heard of the dangers that had
befallen Captain Abbott, and of hi unlooked-for deliverance.
When Lieutenant Shakespear wae thoroughly satisfied of his coun-
tryman's safety, he proceeded with the business that Captain Abbott
had m well commenced. Allah Kooli Khan, who was at heart
hvourably inclined towards the English, soon gave up the prejudices
t&st his vizier had instilled into his mind against them, and he even
took pleaeure in conversing with Lieutenant Shakespear on matters
connected with their policy. " How is if" he said to him one day,
U that your nation, which is so d i i t from mine, should wish so
mnch for an alliance with me ? " "We possess India," replied that
a c e r ; "a vast garden, and, for fear of a surprise, we wish to
m u n d it by ~ a l 4 - t h 0 ~ walls are Khiva, Bokhara, Herat, and
Kabul." The Khan, satisfied by this answer, which showed him
there was a poseibility of obtaining support against the Russians,
LIBERATION OF RUSSIAN STAVES.
@ZAP. XXVIII.
remained from that moment perfectly willing to treat, whatever hi
minister might do to induce him to adopt a contrary part. Yacooba
Mehter seeing a11 his plans defeated, sought in every way to multiply
difficulties and embarrass Lieutenant Shakespear, and, a t the mo-
ment when the treaty was about to be concluded, he had the im-
mi ne nc e to say to him, " Thou who wishest to ally thywlf to a
Muasulman nation, why dost thou not become a Mussulman ? Why
dost thou remain an infidel ? " '' Which of us is the infidel ? " said
the British officer,-" you who, driven by insatiable avarice, daily
put slaves to the torture, tear the daughter from her father, the
wife from her husband, and sell them to the highest bidder in your
bazaars ; or those who, like myeelf, seek the deliverance of 80 many
unhappy beings, and wish to send them back to their county
and their families?" Allah Kooli, ashamed of the humiliating
reproof that his vizier had drawn upon himself, with some appa-
rent ill-humour, dismissed him with these words: "When will
you cease to expose our vices to strangers? this is one who will
make them known to the whole world." Ya mba Mehter, after
the close of this conference, remained in disgrace for eight daya
Up to this time the Khivan prince had always insisted that the
Tzar should return the caravan that had been detained a t Ae a -
kan before he set the slaves at liberty; hut Lieutenant Shalre-
spear triumphed even over that solution, by giving him, as a
guarantee, a bill of exchange for 44001., endorsed by the Kazi of
Herat, which was to be paid in case the caravan should not be
restored after the Russians were given up. This arrangement being
satisfactorily concluded, the Britiah envoy collected all the subj-
of the Tzar, amounting to four hundred and twenty-four, and
having hired camels and men, left Khiva, but on arriving a t
old Urghendj, he learned that a Russian woman bad been
detained in the harem of the Usbek prince. Regardless of the
consequences that might result from the demand, he imme
diately sent an express to Allah Kooli Khan, and such was hi
influence with him, that the woman was set at liberty, in ~pi t e of
the remo11atrances of Yacooba Mehter, and she had the happin=
of rejoining her countrymen. The restitution of the -van took
place immediately on Lieutenant Shakespear's arrival at As Ma n
with the rescued slaves; thence he went to Orenburg, and from
there to St. Peteraburg. At the capital he was received in the m e
courteous manner by the Emperor, and decorated with a Russian
CHAP. XXVIII. CAPTAIN ABBOTT NOT RECOMPENSED. 433
order; by his own Government he was knighted. Certainly, the
important results obtained by this officer justified the favour in which
he was held by the Tzar and hia own Sovereign.; but his good
fortune is one proof more to be added to the many exieting in the
world that seveneighths of our success in this life are the result of
accident--Sir Richmond Shakespear did but gather the fruits of
the labours of the Kazi of Herat and Captain Abbott. The
recompense of the former was complete ruin, brought upon him by
Yar Mohamed, to punish him for being so useful to the English,
and he now vegetates in poverty and misery at Meshed ; the reward
of the latter is the losa of two fingere, with other wounds--such
is the gratitude of governments. Sir Richmond Shakespear, on
the contrary, makes a journey to Khiva, the difficulties of which
have been removed; above all, he has the Kazi with him, which
is a guarantee for his success; and then, because he succeeds,
without a thought being bestowed on the exertions of his pre-
decessors, he becomes the centre of rewards, praises, and compli-
ments, while the energetic and courageous pioneers, those who
prepared the way for him, fall into the most complete oblivion.
\+'hat a sad comedy is the world !
Was it persuasion only that induced the Khan of Khiva to give
up his captives? This is a point that we have not been able to
verify ; but even if gold did assist the negotiations for the release
of the Russian prisoners, can we do otherwk than admire the nation
that obtained that result, and made such a judicious selection of its
agents to carry out eo loyal and noble an enterprise ? England, by
liberating so many unhappy beings, and restoring them to Russia,
destroyed her principal reaaon for undertaking a second expedition
to Khiva In reestablishing the good understanding between the
Tzar Nicholas and Allah Kooli Khan, the English expected to pre-
serve a powerful influence over the latter; but that expectation
was completely opposed to the one entertained by the court of
St. Petersburgh, which llad a direct interest in subjugating, sooner
or later, the people of Turkestan, and, therefore, in habituating
them never to acknowledge any supremacy but that of Russia. By
underhand means, therefore, Allah Kooli was made to comprehend
that, if there was danger for him in offending Russia, there was
equal risk in seeking support at other hands than hers ; and the
Usbek sovereign had ~carcely settled his troubles with Russia,
when he saw his relations with Persia assume a most unfavourable
2 F
434 CAPTAIN CONOLLY ARRIVES AT KHlVA. Caar. XXTIII.
aspect, for the Shah, in the most imperious manner, demanded of
him the restoration of 40,000 of his subjects held in slavery in
the Khivan dominions. I t is easy to see who instigated this
demand. Allah Kooli Khan replied that, however desirous he
might be to preserve a friendly intercourse with the Shah in Shah,'
it was impossible for him to comply with his demand. " The
greater part of the Persian slavea," he said, " have been legally
bought of .the T~vkomans eettled on my frontier, who are not
subject to my laws, and from whom it would be impossible to
obtain the sums they have received for them. Many of thew
slaves have redeemed themselves, married, and become established
in my dominions ; have raised up families and interests ; and to
authorize their return to Persia would create a disturbance amongst
my subjects that would end in a rebellion, in which I should be the
first victim. I t is not, therefore, in my power to grant the demaud
of Mohamed Shah."
The English once more offered their intervention, in the hope
of accommodating this difference, and it formed the object of
another embassy, which Sir W. MbNaghten, the Resident a t the
court of Shah Shooja, confided to Captain Conolly, an officer of
great ability, and who had already distinguished himself on several
occasions. t Moreover, to give him greater consideration and
authority, Sir William sent with him an Afghan ambassador,
Allah Dad Khan, Popolzye, who was tbe bearer of letters from his
sovereigi, Shah Shooja, to the Khan of Khiva
Escorted by the Hazarahs deh Zingui, Conolly ekirted the
mountains inhabited by them, travelling direct from Kabul to
Meimana, and from that town he wrote to Major Todd, who was
then at Herat, to forward him some money, of which he was in
need. .The major at once despatched Akhood Zadeh with two
hundred ducats; and as the latter was now so well known a t
Khiva, and could be of use to him there, Captain Conolly took
him on to the capital. Here the British officer was received with
great honour by the Khan, who gave him many proofs of his
esteem for himself and his Government, but resisted all his argu-
ments in favour of the manumission of the Persian slavea, and
positively refused to liberate them.
King of Kings, the .title of the turd Afghaniatan in 1832. His volume
Persian monarch.-F-er. of travels wpa published in London.-
f He trrrelled in Perah, Turkwta, Frrricr.
CHAP. XXVIII. REQUIREMENTS OF THE KHAN. 435
Captain Conolly had been four months at Khiva when a letter
arrived From Yar Mohamed, informing the Khan that he had
expelled Major Todd from Herat, and recommended him to imi-
tate his example and turn Captain Conolly out of his capital. But
inetead of adopting this advice, the Usbek sent him a robe of
honour, and with it the vizier's letter, assuring him that he spurned
such a proposal, and begged him to coneider Khiva as hi aountry,
and the royal palace as his own house Captain Conolly Eailed
not to endeavour to turn this evidence of good feeling towards
himself to account by urging again the cause of the poor slaves ;
but his exertions were utterly thrown away. He then took up the
idea of purchasing these unfortunate persons on account of the
Indian Government.
One of the principal causes of the dimatisfaction of Mohamed
Shah with the English was their refusal to pay a subsidy promised
to Persia by Mr. MacDonald Kinnear, then British ambassador at
the court of Feth Ali Shah, to assist that sovereign in making
war against Russia. Captain Conolly thought that, if a sum of
money were applied in the interest of Persia as a ransom for the
slaves in question, both the Shah of Persia and the Khan of
Khiva would be equally well satisfied; and he therefore sent
Akhood Zadeh to Kabul to induce Sir W. MgNaghten to sanction
the plan, and forward it to Calcutta as the best sug,oestion he
could offer for adjusting the difference that had been created by
the demands of the court of Teheran. The departure of this
intelligent and faithful friend from Khiva was the signal for a
thousand intrigues, which put an end to the influence of England
at the court of the Usbek. Sincerely devoted to those whom they
served, and united to the Turkomans by the ties of religion, none
could better forward British interests in that part of Turkeetan
than the Kazi of Herat and his son ; when they left, Yacooba
Mehter regained the ascendant, and Russian interests again
prevailed. The Khan, though he conceded nothing to Captain
Conolly, became daily more exacting and difficult to please, and
finally insisted that he should apply to the Government at Calcutta
for a subsidy for him, inasmuch as they paid one to the sovereign
of Herat : with this difference, however, that, instead of declining
the assistance of English officers, he wished for some to organise
his army and cast guns for him. The British agent endeavoured
to make him understand that at that moment his request could
2 e 2
436 REQUIREMENTS OF THE KHAN. CUP. XXVIII.
not be granted, as it would endanger the life of Colonel Stoddart,
then a captive at Bokhara, because the Emir would not fail
to be offended if support were given to one of his neighbours
whose power he most dreaded. The ma n , however, could not or
would not be convinced by Conolly's reasoning, and became less
and less favourably disposed towards him: finally be made the
English officer comprehend that be was in his way, and that he
should not be sorry to see him leave his dominions.
C w . LYIX. CAPTAIN CONOLLY LEAVES FOR KOKAN. 437
CHAPTER XXI X.
Captain Conolly leaves for Kokan - Liberality of that ofecer -War between
B o b and Kokan - Colonel Stoddart reqneata Conolly to come to Bokhara
-The Khan of K o h in aveme to his going- Nme r Ullah sends a firman to
Captain Conolly inmuring his d e t y -Conolly leavea Kokan for the Emir's
camp -Colonel Stoddart - Bad auspices under which he arrives at Bokhara-
Ant meeting between Colonel Stoddart and the Emir - Strange prooeedings of
t ha t o5cer when preaanted to Nsseer Ullah - He treats him with imolence -
Stoddart is arrested - Barbarow treatment - The Mir Cheb - Stoddart is
confined in the Siah-tchah - He turns Muasulman - Ru~sian intervention in hir
favour - Stoical courage of Stoddart - The Emir change8 his conduct towPrdll
hi m - Viciseitudes to which he is subjected - The B u l b intsrferea in hL
favour - Also the Rnasian minister at B o k h and the Khan of Khiva -
Replies of the Emir to thoae who intercede for him.
AKHOOD ZADEH had left Ichiva fourteen days when :Captain
Conolly determined to quit it also and go to Kokan. He had
instructions to explore the road to that town, leaving Bokhara on
t h e right, and passing through Altoon Kaleh, Ak-Mesdjid, and
Achkiane ; a perfect knowledge of that route was of infinite
importance to England, as the Russians were daily drawing closer
to it, and it was evidently their object to occupy the points which
command it in order to be able to act more powerfully upon
t he ,small Tartar states. The Cabinet of St. Petersburg had long
since signified to them its intention of constructing a fortress at Ak
Mesdjid, for at this spot the three roads diverge which lead from
t he north to Khiva, Bokhara, and Kokan. A careful examination
convinced Captain Conolly of the danger that would ensue to the
independence of Turkestan if this encroachment on the part of
Russia was permitted, and he advised the Usbek princes to resist
i t to the utmost. The Emperor Nicholas, however, entirely dis-
regarded their remonstrances, and imperatively informed the Khans
that he allowed them three years to make up their minds to leave
Ak-Mesdjid and its neighbourhood. This delay expired in 1844 ;
and the following year, when I passed through Meshed, the Usbeks
from the north wur ed me that the Russian fortress was rising
fast.
Captain Conolly was six weeks in going from Khiva to Kokan,
the Emir of which, Mohamed Ali Khan, gave him a brilliant
reception, and he had no great difficulty inwinning him over to
4 38 COSOLLY INVITED TO BOKHARA. CUP. XXIX.
the interests of his Government ; but it should be stated that his
presents, amongst which were expensive fire-arms, inlaid and orna-
mented, and Cashmeer shawls, which he distributed profusely as
auxiliaries in his negotiations, contributed not a little to produce
this result. He travelled with a train of eighty servants and an
immense quantity of baggage, and the principal inhabitants of the
towne he passed through shared in his liberality, as well as the
Government officials, however low or high might be their mh.
This mode of proceeding in a country in which the people are
characterised by extreme covetousnese could not do lem than create
an immense number of partisans; and during the three months
that Captain Conolly remained at Kokan the inhabitants of that
town were almoet as much under hie influence as that of Mohamed
Ali Khan.
The Emir of Bokhara presumes to impose his suzerainty over all
the Usbek Khanata which join his own ; but it often happens that
those which do not recognise his right to that supposititious
claim oblige him to place himself on the defensive. The Khan
of Kokan, now nearly fifteen yeara ago, showed the greatest
determination not to submit to his rule; but after having been
defeated in many engagements, he was obliged to bend to the
yoke of Nasser Ullah in 1839. I t would appear that the presence
of the English officer made Mohamed Ali rather audacious and
restive, for he suddenly refused to comply with the conditions of
the treaty which he had made with the Emir; and the latter,
seeing that negotiation was useless, marched against him at the
head of 12,000 men.
When this expedition was undertaken Captain Conolly was still
at Kokan, and received about this time a letter from Colonel
Charles Stoddart, then a prisoner at Bokhara, in which he p d
him to go to the camp of Nasser Ullah, who had manifested the
greatest desire to treat with him for a definitive alliance with Eng-
land. In this way the Emir hoped he should be able to get Captain
Conolly into his power, for, believing as he did that that o5cer~m
the instigator of the war which he was now obliged to undertake
against the Khan of Kokan, he had a hostile feeling towards him.
Captain Conolly was by no means blind to the danger that
lurked under this request of Naaser Ullah's, and he heeitsted at
first what course he should take ; but the hope of attaching the
Emir to the British policy, the advantages to be derived thereftom
CHAP. XXIS. COKOLLY LEAVES BOKHABA. 439
by his Government, and the honour it would reflect upon himself,
made him think lightly of hi personal safety, and he determined
to proceed to the Emir's camp, thoroughly persuaded that it would
be easy to induce him to enter into the league which the other
Usbek princes had formed against Russia. Nevertheless, before he
set out he despatched a messenger to request him to send a firman
insuring his safety on hi journey. Naaser Ullah, delighted at
the facility with which he was drawing the British oficer into the
snare prepared for him, immediately sent the document, and so
much importance did he attach to the fact of his receiving it quickly,
that he promised hi liberty to the slave who was the bearer of it,
a c r m a county covered with the enemy's troops and beset with
dangers, if he delivered it within a specified time.
The Khan of Kokan and all the nobles of his court besought
Captain Conolly to give up this expedition, and entreated him not
to place any confidence in the word of Nasser Ullah: they even de-
tained him a few days by force ; but seeing that he was obstinate
in his determination, they allowed him to depart, though not with-
out regret, and made him promise to send them an account of his
journey, and also the Emir of Bokhara's plan of his intended
campaign. I t is also worthy of remark, that the Khan of Khiva
had advised the English oficer on several occasions not to risk
his life and liberty on the territory of Bokhara, let the proposal
to go there come from whatever quarter it might, for that he
would there find nothing but danger and bad faith. I t was then
something more than imprudence that induced Captain Conolly to
throw himself into the lion's mouth; and it is impossible not to
respect sincerely such exalted ideas of duty. Which, in truth, is
the most deserving of admiration, the men who push the abnega-
tion of the principle of self-preservation to such an extreme solely
in the interests of their country, or the country which gave them
birth and produces such glorious instances of patriotism?-a
country prodigal of its wealth and the blood of its most intelligent
and bravest oficers, for the merest shadow of an advantage that
may disappear in the chances aud changes of the future. This is
not the optimism of the greater number of European states ; and
those amongst them who boast of their power and civilization,
who shine by their imagination and the wordy eloquence of their
Governments, who fence for ever in empty space, would do well to
take example from Great Britain.
440 COLONEL STODDART. CHAP. XXl X.
Ten days afier he left Kokan Captain Conolly reached the
camp of the Emir of Bokhara
The reception which he met with
from this prince at qi zak, though cold and haughty, inspired him
with some confidence, and this led him to attempt a reconciliation
between the Emir and his vassal Having succeeded, he left the
two sovereigns to discuss the conditions of their treaty, and, under
an escort furnished by the Emir, went on to Bokhara, where he
took up his residence in the house of a Persian, Abdul Samut
Khan,. Naib Top Khane,? whose abode was outside the walls.
Here for a time we must leave Captain Conolly to return to
Colonel Charles Stoddart. The reader will not have forgotten
that he was attached to the British embassy at the court of
Teheran, and was the bearer of the ultimatum sent to the Shah
by Sir John M6Neil in July, 1838, in which the British Minister
declared war, in the event of the Shah refusing to raise the siege
of Herat. After the Persians retired, Colonel Stoddart rejoined
Major Pottinger at Herat, whence he was soon obliged to depart
on account of the differences that arose between him and Yar
Mohamed. He then went to Bokhara, charged by Sir John
M'Neil with the difficult task of inducing the Emir to become the
chief of a league of the Tartar states against Russia
This officer had, and with great justice, the reputation of being
an excellent soldier-loyal, firm, full of zeal, and of the highest
courage ; but with these fine qualities there was an impetuosity of
disposition and an imperious tone about him, based upon the con-
viction that he belonged to the first nation in the world, and that
This wretch, who was of Persian
origin, commenced hia militar career
in the army yf Abbaa Yirza ( wk n that
prince was v~cero of Aeerbaidjan), end
obtained the redof lieutenant, which
he subsequently lost in consequence
of some disgraceful conduct that a
French ofecer thought it his duty to
report. As this was not the first time
he had thus offended, Abbas Mirza
ordered that one of hi ears should be
cut off, and dismissed him from the
army. After this punishment he offered
his services to the ser dm of Afghanis-
tan, and by them Ile wss well received,
but wan in the end obliged to leave that
country for various misdeeds. He after-
wards retired to Peshawur, which then
belonged to the Maharpdjnh of the Pun-
jab, but there, as everywhere else, he
indulged his intriguing disposition, and
joined a conapirac that had been set
on foot +t d e governor of the
town, General Avitabile, a Neapolitan
in the service of Runjeet Sing. Abdul
Samut and his nccomplicea were taken :
aome were hanged, end nome put to
death in other ways, but the greater
nt~mber were hamatrung. The rsamlly
Khan escaped with a aevere application
of the bastinado, and orders to leave
Peshawur without loss of time.
I t was then that he went to Bokhara,
where to a certain extent he organized
an army for the Emir, of which he
received the command.-Fmier.
t Commmder-in-chiefofthe.rtillerg.
CHAP. IIXIX. COI.OXEL STODDART. \ 441
all the others ought to bend before him. Other points in his
character also rendered him but little suited to conduct an embassy
to the Emir of Bokhara. I t was an error of Sir John M6Neil's
(who, to say the truth, resembled him in many respects) to select
such a man to manage negotiations which required the greatest
address and pliancy of disposition.
The following details concerning the captivity of Colonel Stoddart
were related to me by the Kazi of Herat, Akhood Zadeh, and
several Bokharian chiefs ; and I have seen similar information in
t he account given by Dr. Wolf of the Bokhara victims, translated
by Philar8te Charles, which I also make use of here, adding to it
whatever seems to me to have been overlooked. This courageous
traveller describes the Colonel as severe and proud, attached to the
habits and religion of his childhood and his country, and inflexible
to everything but military discipline. Stoddart, he says, found
himself in contact with beasts of prey, destitute alike of pity
and good faith, shamelessly perfidious, wedded to the minutiae of
forms, believing themselves justified in doing anything after they
have said their prayers and performed their ablutions, and de-
ceiving and killing with perfect tranquillity of conscience. I t has
been already shown that, in wounding the pride of Yar i\lohamed,
Stoddart had made him his enemy, and the vizier subsequently
wrote a letter to Nasser Ullah, in which he described the British
officer as a very dangerous spy, full of intrigue and pride, and
an obstinate man; adding that he must be defeated in his views
o r exterminated. Thii epistle he sent by one of the colonel's
suite to the Emir.
Stoddart, who had no suspicion of the excellent letter of
recommendation of which one of his wrvants was the bearer, nor
the habits and customs that he had to encounter, entered the
territory of Bokhara full of confidence, and arrived in the
capital of Nme r Ullah two days previously to the fast of
Ramazan, during which the fanaticism of Mahomedans is always
much greater than at any other time. A numerous escort of
cavalry, preceded by a mehmendar, received and accompanied him
t o the residence which had been appointed him in the house
of the vizier, Mahzoom Berdi-Reiss, who affected great indig-
nation that the letters with which Stoddart was furnished were
addressed to his predecessor instead of to him. But this was
only a pretext; for when the colonel left Persia the appoint-
4-43 COLONEL STODDART CHAP. XXIX.
ment of the new vizier at Bokhara was not known there ; however,
it was in this way that the system of intimidation commenced,
and a b r the letter of Yar Mohamed was placed in the hands
of the Emir, the latter sought every opportunity of humiliating
the stranger who came, as he believed, to meddle in his affairs.
Stoddart received these affronts haughtily ; the minister did not
return his visit, and sent him word that he must come to him;
the British agent, however, refused to go; and matters were in
this state when M a h m Berdi-Reiss entered the colonel's apart-
ment one morning with the vehement apostrophe, " D o you know I
have destroyed all the Emir's enemies?" " I rejoice to hear,"
replied Stoddart, with misplaced irony, that the Emir has no
more enemies." After this unsatisfactory commencement they
went on in the same style on both sides.
On the fie day of Ramazan the colonel received orders to go
on foot to the Registan, the great square in Bokhara, as tbe Emir
wanted to speak to him ; but Stoddart refused to walk there, and
replied that he should go on horseback, that force only should
make him dismount, and that he should do at Bokhara just the
same as he would do in London.
To N m r Ullah, who was already so ill-disposed against him,
this answer appeared most insulting ; neither a Christian nor a Jew
could show himself on horseback in Bokhara, nor any one but
the Emir himself on the Registan. However, word was sent to the
Englishman that he might do as he pleased ; and Stoddart, in full
European uniform, carawlled his horse on the forbidden g-round, to
the great scandal and surprise of the populace. But they were
astounded when the sound of the trumpets announced the appmch
of the Emir ; and the stranger, instead of dismounting, settled hi -
self in his stirrups, and received him simply with a military salute
The Emir, seeing himself thus publicly defied, fixed one long
look upon him, and passed on in perfect silence. Some minut@
afterwards a maharam was sent to Stoddart by Nasser Ullah to
ask why he had not dismounted in the presence of the sovereip?
" I t is not the custom of my country," said the colonel. "But it is
of ours," replied the officer. " I cannot act otherwise," continued
Stoddart. " I t is well ; the Emir is satisfied, and desires you to go
to hi palace :" and the chamberlain withdrew.
Chamberlain.
CHAP. SXIX. AYD NASSER ULLAH. 443
It was not thus that the intelligent Alexander Burnes prepared
for his reception by the Emir of Bokhara. He sent a letter,
in which he requested " protection and shelter for the traveller from
that ' Magnificent Sovereign, the Citadel of true Believers, the
Tower of Islam, the Pearl of the Faith, the Star of Religion, the
Dispenser of Equity, and Pillar of the Faithful.' " How did
Burnes, without any official position, manage to make friends at
Bokhara, and to escape every danger? By respecting their
bigotry, by conforming to their extravagant etiquette, their
Chinese love of forms, and amazing hypocrisy. All obstacles gave
way before him. But Stoddart, on the contrary, appears to have
taken it into his head to trample under foot every Usbek custom,
and to exhibit at the court of Bokhara that unbending pride
which in so dear to the English traveller, and at which even
Europeans so often take offence.
Before receiving the British envoy, the Emir ordered some
Jews, who had traded in Europe, and knew, or were supposed
to know, what ceremonies were observed at the courts of
Christian wvereigns when they gave audience to an ambassador,
to be brought into his presence ; and as they affirmed that the
salute which Stoddart had made was in conformity with the
usages of his country, the Emir was satisfied on the point, and
gave an order that he should be admitted at the palace. On his
arrival there the colonel was led into a passage that terminated
at the interior court of the building in which Nasser Ullah held his
durbar and received petitions. Here a chamberlain approached
him, and said that he was about to request on his (Stoddart's)
part the Emir's permission to introduce him and present hie
brr bende'guiani-u the supplication of his slave." The colonel was
offended at thii; he might as well have been offended at the
words Your Majesty," which scarcely belong to any but to God,
or have objected to the ordinary phrase "your very humble
servant," which signifies nothing. But the stiff and precise ideas
of Stoddart thought that such a form of expression was humiliating,
and he replied with vehemence, "I address my prayers to God
only ; I am not the slave of any one : tell your master that I will
communicate what I have to say when he has received me, and not
before." The same inflexibility was manifested by several other
traits of a like nature. The presence of a sovereign in these
countries is presumed to have the effect of overwhelming a stranger
444 . COLONEL STODDART CEAP. XXIX.
who comes within reach of the effulgence of his rays ; and in con-
sequence of this he is supported under the arms when he enters
the hall of audience in which the monarch is seated. Stoddart,
who was compelled to submit to this ceremony, shook off with
violence the two assistants who introduced him ; and this conduct
excited the anger of the Bokharians. The master of the cere-
monies then approached the colonel to touch his clothes, in order
to see that he had no arms secreted upon his person with which he
might attempt the Emir's life, and a vigorous blow from Stod-
dart's fist that laid him at his feet was the result of this unfortu-
nate investigation. Nasser Ullah Khan heard from the inner apart-
ment all that passed in the antechamber, and the proceedings of
the English envoy irritated him to the highest degree. At the
door of the audience-chamber is placed an officer, who, at the
mnment a stranger is admitted, repeats the words, " Pray ye all for
the sovereign," as if, amidst such a ferocious people, death and
danger were always present Stoddart, who had never made
himself acquainted with any of these details, instead of offering up
a silent invocation, began reciting in a loud voice a prayer to God
in Persian, upon which Naser Ullah, seated on the royal dais,
stroked his beard, full of hatred for this arrogant stranger, and
disgusted by hi coarse and domineering behaviour.
The Emir, having repeated the accustomed Allah 6 Akbar (God
is great), received from the colonel's hands the letter which he had
brought from Sir John M'Neil, read it, and informed Colonel
Stoddart that he could not take into consideration its contents,
because it would be derogatory in him to treat with a simple dele-
gate of the British minister. Also, that, in order to continue the
negotiations, it would be necessary the colonel should deliver to him
credentials signed by the Queen of England herself. Stoddart
replied in a dry tone that Sir John MbNeil was likewise the agent
and acted for the East India Company, and that this Compny had
made treaties with all the sovereigns of Asia ; that their power a@
great, and that he did not understand the Emir's objections on
this head, inasmuch as there was both honour and profit for him in
becoming the ally of that powerful body. Nasser Ullah was far
from being satisfied with this reply : he stated that the Emperor
Nicholas, his neighbur, a monarch whose power at least equalled
that of Queen Victoria, was not too proud to write to him with
his own hand, and that he knew of no reason which could prevent
CHAP. XXIX. AND NASSER ULLAH. 44.5
the sovereign of Colonel Stoddart from doing as much. "I can,"
said the Emir to the colonel, " treat only on the grounds of equality ;
nevertheless, while waiting for the instructions which I recom-
mend you to obtain from London, give me the letters which the
Ferman-Permar + has confided to your care for me." The colonel
was then obliged to admit that he had no letter to give him but
the one that he had presented from Sir John M6Neil, that he
was acquainted with the views of the East India Company, and
had been instructed to state vivii voce to his Highness that the
Directors would pay a subsidy in money in consideration of a
promise to be made on the part of the Emir to resist the encroach-
ments of Russia. N m r Ullah fixed for a few instants an ironical
mi l e on Stoddart, and said, " Very good ; I see that it is your
intention to make me your slave: klietmet kha Item herd-it is
well, I will serve you. In the meaitime withdraw."
This dkbut did not augur a successful termination to the nego-
tiations. Stoddart, who had done nothing to conciliate the esteem
and confidence of the Emir, arrived at Bokhara without presents,
without escort, armed only by his intrepidity; he presented him-
self as a conqueror rather than as an ally or a friend, and his
character as a political personage was equivocal-he neither repre-
sented England nor the East India Company. The Emir and his
vizier took advantage of these circumstnnces, and two days after
this interview Stoddart received an intimation to proceed imme-
diately to the house of the latter. He hastened, singularly enough
-for the hour was inappropriate-to obey the summons: more-
over, the colonel had previously refused to attend to a similar
request
I t was evening, and Stoddart on entering the house of Mahzoom
Berdi confronted twelve armed men stationed in' the antechamber
of the Reiss, who at once seized and threw him down, and, as
he lay on the ground, tied hand and foot, the vizier with a
drawn sword in hi hand, nwhed towards him. " May God
pardon your sins I" exclaimed the English oficer, who thought that
his last hour was come, when Mahzoom Berdi, with sparkling
eyes and foaming at the mouth, placed the point of his sword at
Stoddart's breast, and loaded him with every kind of invec-
tive. " Miserable spy I" he said, " infidel dog I you come here, do
- - -
Oormmor-&nerd of In&
446 ARREST OF STODDART. CHAP. XXIS.
you, from your English employers to buy Bokhara as you have
bought Kabul 7 You will not succeed-I will kill you !" and he
pressed hi sabre on the proetrate body of Stoddart ; but the
Englishman's eye remained firmly fixed on that of the furious
minister. This scene lasted a few minutes, and whether tbe
unmoved countenance of his victim arrested the arm of hi execu-
tioner, or, what is more probable, that this dieplay of force wae a
c o n e d plan between the Emir and the vizier, the latter suddenly
turned to his servants, and said, " Take him away l" The rain fell
in torrents, but the men, eome beariig torches, carried him off
like a corpse, still bound, and amidst profound silence, along the
deserted streets of the city. Sometimes they let him fall on the
ground, or drew tighter the cords that confined hi bruised limbs ;
and sometimes they stopped and insulted him with savage gestures
and laughter. "Put an end to me a t oncel" cried the unhappy
prisoner ; in pity, prolong not my sufferings !" On hearing this,
one of them stooped down, and, bringing his torch nearer to him
as he lay upon the ground, ai d, " Of a truth, you are either
a devil or a sorcerer ; you know beforehand that you are not ping
to be killed; if you were only a man, you would certainly have
been afraid." - I n this way they continued to drag him along the
streets, and at length threw him, bound as he was, into a dark
room, and barred the entrance. After the unfortunate Stoddart
had been two hours in this place, alone and stretched on the
damp floor, the door opened, lights appeared, and some servants
entered, preceded by a man enveloped from head to foot in woollen
drapery, which allowed only hi eyes to be seen. Thii personage
seated himself on a divan at the extremity of the apartment,
the lights being placed in front of him ; and Stoddart followed
with his eyes every movement of the new comer, who seemed to
be some great personage, for every one treated him with profound
respect. Rairring himself from the floor as well as hi bonds would
permit, and collecting all his strength, he said, in a firm voice,
I' I pray that the all-powerful God will pardon you! You have
done ill to throw into prison an innocent man, who ia charged
with a mission from his Government to your sovereign. If you
were not disposed to receive me, you ought not to have allowed
me to enter your city ; it was for the vizier to acquaint me with the
wishes of his master ; if you desire that I should leave Bokhara, I
am ready to attend to those wishes." After having listened with
CHAP. UI X. COLONEL STODDART TURNS MUSSULMAN. 447
great attention, the disguised person rose and said, " I will com-
municate what you have said to the Emir."
But this individual, who was the Mir Cheb,. or chief of the
police, left the prison to execute the Emir's orders; seized and
burned the envoy's papera, sold all his effects and horses by auction,
and subsequently transferred him to the Siah-tchah, or Black Well,
-a horrible abode. This dungeon, which is in the centre of the
town, is twenty-one feet in depth ; and here the greateat malefac-
tots are generally confined. The descent into it is made by
means of a rope ; and when Stoddart was let down he found there
two thieves and a murderer, the latter having been incarcerated
hem for several years. M'ith these criminals for his companions
the colonel remained two months in this loathsome and filthy hole,
covered with vermin and surrounded by reptiles, in killing which
they were constantly occupied. Their food, such rn it was, was
lowered to them by the rope with which they had themselvea
descended, and much of their time was passed in smoking.
When the ferocious caprice of Naeaer Ullah had been satisfied,
and he thought he had humbled the pride of the Englishman and
impressed him with the terror of his power, he gave an order to the
chief of the police to remove him from the Siah-tchah in which he
had been immured, and keep him a prisoner in his own house ; but
two days after this the public executioner came to Stoddart with
an order to put him to death unlem he coneented to become'a
Mussulman. To this alternative, borne down by the dreadful
sufferings he had endured, and the exhaustion of hie mental and
bodily powera, he gave a reluctant consent, repeating the Mohamedan
confession of faith, after which he was taken to the public square
and circumcised in the presence of an immense crowd who had
been attracted there by the novelty of the event. Austere and
sensitive in his religious feelings, Colonel Stoddart never forgave
himself thk act of weakness, of which he bitterly repented during
the remainder of his wretched existence.
The news of the cruelties that had been perpetrated on the person
of the envoy were noised abroad, and General Peroffiky, Governor
of Orenburg, instructed the Ruesian agent at Bokhara to request
Nasaer Ullah to liberate his prisoner. On receiving this communi-
cation the Emir sent for Stoddart, and said, " The Russians claim
Prince of the night.
44a CHANGE OF CONDUCT IN THE EMIR. CEAP. XSE
you : what will they do with you ? J17ill they treat you well, and
shall I place you in their hands ? " " I am sure," said hi cap
tive, " that the Russians will treat me well ; but if my Government
demands of your Highness what you have done with me, what
reply shall you make ? " Such was the answer of this heroic man,
after the unexampled tortures he had endured during his two
xllonths' confinement in the Siah-tchah with death so near. The
Emir, struck by his dignified and bold reply, removed from
his own person the rich fur cloak that he wore, placed it on
Stoddart, and ordered that he should be led in triumph on horse-
back through the streets of Bokhara Restored to health, the first .
act of the British officer was to proclaim everywhere that he was
a Christian, and had become a Musrmlman only from the violence
offered to him. This conduct was so imprudent, and evinced a
strength of mind so rare, that Nasser Ullah, hiahzoom Berdi, the
Mir Cheb, and the inhabitants of Bokhara felt as if vanquished;
he had been considered as a spy and dealt with as such, but he
was again permitted to present himself at the Emir's palace when
he gave audience, and received from that barbarian marks of con-
sideration.
Several motives must have led to this singular change in the
Emir's conduct to Stoddart. In the first place, the success of the
British arms in Afghanistan seemed threatening to Nasser Ullah ;
he was now desirous of making it appear that the envoy waa the
object of his munificence, though he had previously made him
suffer the weight of his tyranny. He had conceived a hope that
he should be able to attach him to his interests, as Runjeet Sing
had other Europeans. " Those Feringhees," said the Emir, "m
powerful and clever in the arts and diplomacy, so talented in
organizing an army, bring everywhere success in their train."
But though lodged in the palace and feasted and overwhelmed with
attentions at Bokhara, St dbr t was a captive within its walls, and
subjected by turns to the surveillance of Samut Khan, a wretch
of avaricious disposition, and Abd ul Haleik, the steward of the
royal residence. At this period the envoy was seized with typhm
fever, and the Emir ordered his own physician to attend him, who
saved his life ; and subsequently, when on the eve of sending an
embassy to the Tzar, Nasser Ullah offered the colonel the oppor-
tunity of sccompanying it to St. Petemburg, and undertaking a
special mission for him at that court- Once at Orenburg, or
CHAP. XXIX. ORDER TO POISON STODDART.
rather at the Russian frontier, he would have been out of the
clutches of the Emir, but Stoddart declined the proposition ; h i
government had not, he said, as yet intimated tn him their wish
t hat he should quit Bokhara Never was the feeling of devotion to
military or diplomatic duty carried to such a height ; and scruples
like these under such circumstances were perfectly astnnishing.
Stoddart ought to have known that the great distance from Cal-
cutta, the war then going on, and the state of politics in Central
Asia, rendered communication with him almost impossible; the
expected despatch might never arrive and this obstinacy renewed
the suspicions which had been current as to his motive for com-
: ing to Bokhara. One day, when dark shadows came over the
mind of Nasser Ullah, Samut Khan received an order to poison
t he Englishman, who succeeded in preserving his life only by
satisfying the cupidity of the Naib with the hope of obtaining
a large sum for his ransom ; and this the villain increased as much
as he could by exciting the suspicions of the Emir. At other
times Nasser Ullah felt better disposed tnwards his prisoner, and
sent him tobacco and other presents, requesting him in return to
replace the quicksilver on his mirrors, to make him a thermometer,
and candles which would bum without smoke ; Stoddart might
have turned all these matters to account if he had had as much
tact as he had courage and piety.
Nevertheless external events advanced towards their climax in the
disasters of the British army in 1841-the defiles of Afghanistan
were covered with the dead bodies of the troops ; and these untoward
circumstances made the position of the English agent at Bokhara
more and more alarming: moreover war was declared between
Nssser Ullah and his neighbow Mohamed Ali, the Khan of Kokan,
and at the instigation of the Anglo-Indian government, at least it
was thought so. The Sultan, acknowledged by the Soonees as
t he spiritual head of all Islam, wrote to the Emir of Bokhara to
order him to release his prisoner ; the Tzar also, through the envoy
that was about to arrive at Bokhara, demanded in accordance with
the chivalrous customs of diplomatic opponents, the restoration of
Stoddart tn his country, and when M. de Boutenieff saw him
there, be offered him hia protection; the Khan of Khiva like-
wise interceded for him ; so that worried by these various applica-
tions, and knowing scarcely what to do, the despot became furious.
To the Sultan, Nasser Ullah replied that he would obey him pro-
2 a
460 REPLIES OF THE EMIR. CHAP. XXTK.
vided the Queen of England would remain his friend, and would
do him no injury ; to the Cabbet of St. Petemburg, that his
prisoner was only a traveller, without any 05cia.l status ; and to his
neighbour of Khiva in these whimsical words : "You have an
Englishman and so have I, why do you wish to take mine?"
After which the Emir left Bokhara to make war against the
Kokaneea
Dunng this period several letters that Stoddart mte to his
friends, which were entrusted to Khorassanee Kurds, Pereians or
Jews, who sewed them in the hem of their robea, reached their
destination ; aome of them have been printed, and one is surprised
to find in them the style of the Puritana of Cramwell's daya In
these letters diplomatic interests, and the feelings of the soldier,
take their place far below the religious sentiment which governed
the mind and destiny of Stoddart, whose character they invest with
real grandeur.
C w . XXX. CHARACTER OF WNOLLY.
CHAPTER XXX.
Chvr der of Conolly - He is full of hope ar to the rerult of bin negotiations -
N- Ullah returns to Bokham-His interviewr with the English 05-
-They are both imprisoned-Allah Dad Khan, the Afghan envoy, rst-
to Kabul - He is bronght back to Bokharn - His infurnus intriguea -M. de
Boutenieff lenvm the city - Akhood Zadeh, the son of the gad of Herat,, and
his brother Mohamed Davood-Dangera to which the latter is e x p o d -
Akhood Zsdeh is at the frontier of Bokhaaa-He L imprisoned
by the Emir - Ohathate oonduct of Stoddart - The -ants of the Eng-
lish o5cem am released from priaon - Akhood Zadeh and Allah Dad Khan
rre confined in the W-tchah - They are subsequently relersed- Joseph, a
(3reek, is executed - Paper and pens am found on Stoddart - He d v e a the
butinsdo - Execution of that o5wr and Conolly - A m&tm of that mmt,
md other chnmhnw c o ~ e ~ t e d with thoae offlcem.
WE must now return to Captain Conolly, who had, as we have
already said, fulfilled at Kokan a mission analogous to that of
Btoddart, and subsequently, on the invitation of the latter, joined
him at Bokhara to share his dangera Thie officer united con-
siderable learning to a eplendid character-the qualificatione of a
distinguished eoldier and a clever diplomatist. Notwithstanding
the grievances that Nasser Ullah Khan fancied he had againat him,
he was pleased with him at their first interview; and the euc-
cedd manner in which Captain Conolly had terminated his dis-
agreement with his neighbour of Kokan, disposed him favourably
towards that officer. When, therefore, he joined Stoddart at
Bokhara he was full of hope that he &odd be able to induce the
Emir to enter i nk the views of England ; but it appears that after
he left the camp, Abdul Samut Khan succeeded in working a change
in the capricious mind of Nasser Ullah, who wrote to Bokhara and
ordered that Captain Conolly should not be permitted to hold any
communication with Colonel Stoddart. The latter was at this time
living in the house of the Russian Ambassador, and the Emir had
a suspicion that he might persist in remaining there, and that M.
de Boutenieff would protect him. Hie order, therefore, to pre-
vent Captain Conolly from seeing his countryman, was given with
no other object than that of inducing Colonel Stoddart to remove
to the house of Abdul Samut Khan : this fatal step was taken ; and
Colonel Stoddart, naturally anxiow to live with his friend, left
2 a 2
452 CONFERENCES WITH THE EMIR. CHAP. XXX.
the residence of the Russian Ambamador on the 11th of November,
1840, to take up his abode in that of the Commander-inChief of
the Artillery.
On the return of Nasser Ullah from Kokan, which took place
very aoon after the arrival of Conolly in his capital, he found
himself master of two Englishmen ; and this was what be wisbed ;
for the war in Kabul continued, and the people of Central Asia
were animated with the deepest hatred of the power and in-
fluence that were brought to bear against them. The eonduct
of the Emir towards Conolly became haughty and threatening,
and Abdul S mu t ft.sred, or rather pretended to fear, that the
prince's anger would fall upon himself; a house was therefore pre-
pared for the officers in the interior of the city-that is to say, they
were treated as prisoners, but an allowance was made them of
three tellahs * per day. Conolly had, a month previously, asked
for a private audience of the Emir, but never obtained it; however,
on the 31st of December, the o&rs were taken to the palace.
"Where are the letters from your government to me?" said
Nasser Ullah to Conolly. " You are a spy ; but remember that
Bokhara is not so easy to conquer as Afghanistan ; I shall send
you to prison, and your countrymen may come with an army if they
like and take you out" Conolly replied with as much firmness 88
Stoddart, but with more prudence, and both were dismissed.
These interviews with the Emir were repeated for three days in
succession : the last time thcy were taken to the citadel, as well
as seven of their servants (called in Persian pich hhefmei, upper
servants), and there passed a miserable night of suffering and
anxiety. Their house was .ransacked and their servants, to
the number of forty-four, arrested and thrown into the Sd-
tchah (which did not exceed thirteen feet in diameter), for
every detail of the successful insurrection agsinst the English
in Kabul was then known at Bokhara, and the Emir bad to
fear them ; the wretched captives were to expiate by the most
cruel treatment, and finally a barbarous death, the un*
that the idvasion of Afghanistan had created in the mind of the
Usbek tyrant.
I t has been said that when Captain Chnolly left Kabul on hi*
mission to the Tartar princes, he was accompanied by Allah
Forty ahillii.
CHAP. XXX. ALLAH DAD KHAN. 463
Dad Khan, the ambassador of Shah Shooja This personage fol-
lowed that officer to the Courts of Khiva, K o h , and Bokhara ;
but when he arrived in the latter city he quickly perceived the evil
intentions of the Emir towards h i master, and endeavoured to
obtain permission to retire as soon as possible.
Nasser Ullah had indeed the most profound hatred for the
Afghans, and more particularly the Suddozyes, and he would not
have been sorry to chastise the ambassador of Shah Shooja ; but
t he fact of his Wi g a Mahomeclan, as well as the interest taken in
him by the Mollahs of Bokhara who interfered in his favour,
induced him to allow Allah Dad Khan to return to Kabul, and
he had been gone only a week when the two unfortunate English
officers were cast into prison in the citadel. On his road the
Afghan was treated with every consideration due to his character
of Envoy, and had safely reached the frontier town of Karchy,
when he found that the Emir had given an order to the Governor
to arrest and send him back a prisoner to Bokhara- which
order was carried into effect ; and when he returned to the capital
he was taken to a place called the Ab-Khaneh,* where the cold
was M) severe that no person could be left in it two nights in
succession and live. Happily for Allah Dad Khm he was, at the
expiration of twenty hours, taken out only half dead, and placed
in a dungeon adjacent to that to which the British officers had been
transferred on their removal from the citadel This prison was
in the house of Mir Syud Sheriff, Kaleh-Beghi,t and from him
1 received these details. The removal of the Afghan ambassador
saved his life, which he so little deserved ; for whether he acted
by the secret instructions of Shah Shooja as he afterwards pre-
tended, or upon the suggestions of his own mind, it ia averred
that this wretch instead of assisting Captain Conolly never ceased
to embarrase his negotiations at Khi w and at Kokan, by his
intrigues and underhand practices.
Monsieur de Boutenieff had not been indifferent to the misfor-
tunes of the British officers, and had energetically protested against
the treatment to which they were subjected ; but after the disasters
of the Engliih army in Kabul the Emir, who now believed himself
perfectly secure in his Khanat, considered the intervention of the
Russian diplomatist extremely uncalled for, and behaved to him in
* The water-houee. t The commandant.
454 AKHOOD ZADEH AND MOHAMED DAVOOD. Cur. XXX.
so violent a manner as to make Monsieur de Boutenieff think he
might be treated aa the Englishmen had been : he therefore deter-
mined to quit Bokhara towarde the end of March, 1842.
In the mean time Akhood Zadeh, who was sent to Kabul
by Captain Conolly before he left Wva , had returned to the
latter town, accompanied by his brother Mohamed Davood, and
brought instmctions which it was hoped would induce Allah Kmli
Khan to liberate the Persian prisoners. Instead, however, of
finding Captain Conolly as he had expected, he rcceived a letter,
that the former had written to h i from Bokhara, requesting
him to join him there. Akhood Zadeh immediately prepared to
follow him, but considered it expedient before he aet out to send
bis brother back to Kabul to inform Sir W. M'Naghten of what
was passing at Khiva. Fate now preesed heavily and cruelly an
the family of the Kazi of Herat, despoiled and exiled by Ysr
Mahomed, the venerable chief owed his life only to the generosity of
Major Todd, who redeemed it h m the sordid Vizier at the price of
1400L, and from that moment every member of the family devoted
himself body and soul to their deliverera Mohamed Davood
travelled safely as Ear as Khulm ; but at h i a n , four days' journey
south of it, he found the whole country in insurrection and, sus-
pected of being a partisan of the English, was stopped and stripped
by the Afghans ; with a sword-cut on his head and a wound from
a ball in his thigh, it was the mereat chance that he escaped death
and succeeded in gaining Kabul. Arrived there he directed his
steps to the entrenched camp, a mile from the city, in which the
British army was then blockaded by the insurgents, and de-
livered his despatch to Sir W. M6Naghten, who, anxious to take
advantage of such rare devotion in a native, allowed him only
two days' reat, and with wounds yet unhealed, sent him on with
lettera to General Nott, at Kandahar. At Ghuznee he was a e k d
by the Ghazees, thrown into prison, and searched with great care ;
but he had concealed Sir W. M'Naghten's despatch in the tuft of
hair which Mahomedans allow to grow at the back of the head,
and although it escaped their vigilant search, and nothing was found
upon him which could establish his guilt, he was tied to the
mouth of a gun with the certainty of being blown from it, when
he cried out " Allah forgive the murderers of the ,son of the Kad
Hassan Mohamed." At the sound of that name, so venerated by
all Afghans, the Mollahs commanded that he should be set at
CEU. XXX. OBSTINATE CONDUCT OF STODDART. 466
liberty; and aRer paseing through ao many clangere he arrived at
Kandabm in safety with hie deepatchea
Lea fortunate than his brother, Ahhood Zadeh took the road to
B o h : he reached Eljikstoo, a village situated on the right bank
of tbe hue, without having heard of the detention of Captain
Conolly ; and supposing him to be receiving honourable treatment
at the Court of the Emir, he did not hesitate in stating openly, when
interrogated by the guard at the frontier, that he waa in the service
of the Englbh and on his way to join one of the oficere then at
the capital. Thi waa quite a sufficient reason for arresting and
sending him there under an escort, and when he arrived the
Emir imprisoned him in the citadel, in the house of Syud Mir
Sheriff, where Allah Dad Khan waa already incarcerated - this
ocavred ten days &er the imprisonment of Stoddart and Conolly.
In the varioue and distwming circumstances which succeeded one
another in connexion with the fate of them officers at Bokhara, as
much blame waa due to the Anglo-Indian gorernment for want of
foreeight aa to Colonel Stoddart, who, though an honest and loyal
soldier, was of an unbending disposition, and his national pride led
him beyond all masonable limits ; he was perfectly unsuited to the
task committed to him, and wanting in the tact and versatility of
mind to carry out mch a dificult undertaking. The line of conduct
he adopted could not fail to end in his ruin, and his blind confidence
in the BUCUBS of the British arma in Central Asia, grieved him to
the utmost in his last momenta, inasmuch as it cauaed the death
of one of the noblest of his countrymen. Instead of sending
word to Captain Conolly to join him, why did not Stoddart follow the
instructions of hie superiors? I n vain the authorities of Calcutta
wrote to him that he was free to leave Bokhara, and advised him to
&e the h t opportunity of flight that presented itself; retained by
an exaggerated sense of duty, and d i n g theae instructiong
he prolonged the critical circumstances in which he waa involved
till the dangerous period arrived at which the army of his country-
men perished in Afghanietan, and the massacre at Kabul en-
couraged the Emir to destroy his prisoners : they had not brought
him anything that he hoped for, and being demanded from
him on all sides, were the cause of extreme embarrassment.
Their fate had indeed excited the greatest interest e v e r y wh e r ~
neither England nor even Rusaia had forsaken them : intercessions
in their behalf arrived from Persia, Khiva, Constantinople, Kabul,
456 SERVANTS OF THE ENGLISH OFFICERS RELEASED.CEAP.XXX.
and Herat. The Grand Mollah of the latter town, requested by
Major Todd to ask for the release of Colonel StodQrt, drew
upon himeelf a violent attack from Nasser Ullah Khan, who die-
missed him rudely, and said, " I t is a disgrace to Islam that there
should exist amongst the Ulemas one so degraded as to come here
to intercede for this infidel." The perseverance with which the
liberation of the British agent had been demanded led the Emir to
suppose that his life was of great value, and that he might obtain a
considerable ransom for him ; he even hoped to turn his captivity
to good account, and asked the Queen of England to add to his
dominions a certain territory on hi frontiers, but received only a
dilatory reply. Nasser Ullah speculated, in fact, upon hi captives,
and when he saw that he was deceived in all his calculations, his
irascible nature was exasperated in proportion, and he revenged
himself in a terrible manner upon the unhappy officera who had
placed themselves in his power.
The forty-four servants of Stoddart and Conolly, who were
arrested at their lodgings on the day their masters were imprisoned
in the citadel, remained forty-four days in the Siah-tchah bound
hand and foot to each other, and having for their subsistence only
a s d l ration of bad bread. On the forty-fifth they were taken
from this dreadful hole chained by the neck, eleven to a chain,
forming four parties, and marched at daybreak to the public square,
where they remained all the next night exposed to the deep snow
and piercing cold. Two of them had died in the Siah-tchah, a
third sunk about noon on the following day from the effects of the
temperature of that night, and his corpse was left attached to the
chain till sun-down ; the feet and hands of the greater number of
his surviving comrades were frost-bitten, and they were waiting
with great anxiety the execution of the ~entence of death which
had been passed upon them, when, to their infinite amazement,
they were all set at liberty. This was owing to the intercession of
the Grand Mollahs of Bokhara who, moved with pity, when the?
heard of the atrocious order issued by the Emir, went in a body
to his palace to proteet *inst it. "They are Musulmm like
us, and our brethren," said they to Nasser Ullah Khan, " and may
the wrath of Allah descend upon thy head if thou sheddest their
blood. They have suffered sufficiently for serving the Infidels
Give them their freedom if thou wouldest avoid the vengeance of
heaven and perhaps of men !" The Emir somewhat intimi7
.CUP. XXX. AKHOOD ZADEH AND aLLAH DAD KHAN. 467
dated by the opposition of the Mollahs whose support was necessary
to the maintenance of his power, restored these unhappy beings to
liberty, but it was a ten hours struggle to get them out of his
hands.
Some Hindoo and Jewiah Shro@* who had found the means of
keeping up a communication with Colonel Studdart and Captain
Conolly, intrusted the servants of these officers with letters which
they were anxious to send to their superiors in India; they also gave
them some clothes and money, after which many of them departed
for Kabul. They arrived there in the midst of the atrife of the 22nd
of March, 1842, when Mohamed Akbar Khan, master of the capital,
was besieging Fethi Djing Mirza in the citadel, and remained
here several months in the greatest anxiety, for they dreaded being
recognized as individuals who had served the English ; but this
danger they happily escaped, and when the Anglo-Indian army
arrived at Kabul in the August following, they received their
arreara of pay, were generously recompensed for their sufferings,
and some again took service with British officers. Three of them
were for several years my servants; Mohamed, a Heratee, had
been with Captain Conolly ; another, Ali Bakhtiari, with Captain
Vikovitch; the third, HBdji Semnanee, had been cook to Dr.
Wolf, and from them I gathered many details respecting their old
masters.
Fear alone had induced the Emir to pardon these uno5ending
men, and he indemnified himself for the blood he could not shed
then by treating with still more severity the captives remaining in
his power. Four days after the servants were set at liberty he
ordered that Allah Dad Khan and A k h d Zadeh should b
removed from the prison of the Kaleh-Beghi, and lowered into the
Siah-tchah. In this there still remained a Greek from Constanti-
nople, the head servant of Captain Conolly, named Joseph (whom
the other servants used to call Yoossoof Khan), and the seven
pich-khetmets who had been imprisoned in the citadel, whither
they had been taken in company with the English officers the day
they were prevented from returning to their own house. Twenty-
seven days later the Mollahe obtained the release of these seven
pich-khetmets. From that period ninety-two days elapsed, when,
and again at the earnest intercession of the Mollahs, Nasser Ullah
Bankera.
468 JOSEPH, A GREEK, EXECUTm. CarP. XXX.
exercised once more his reluctant clemency by releasing the Afghan
Envoy, Allah Dad Khan, and also Akhood Zadeh; the former
hastened to return to Kabul, and the .son of the Kazi of Herat,
after having for a few days found shelter with a mercbsnt in
Bokhara, reached Persia on foot and joined hi father at Meshed,
where both sought an asylum from the rapacity and cruelty of Yar
Mohamed Khan who had banished them from their country.
Joseph was taken h m the Si ah- t hh at the same time as Allah
Dad Khan and Akhood Zadeh, but the close of his captivity was
to be that of hie life also. The first time he was brought before
Nasaer Ullah he said that he was a subject of the Sultan's, which
was true ; but as he had not been circumcised the Emir thought
that he told a falsehood, being persuaded, or pretending to be so,
that all the subjecta of the Sultan must be Mussulmans, and under
the impredon that he was an Englishman, he ordered him into
the Siah-tchah. Suffering horribly from the misery he endured in
this dreadful place, he thought that it might be mitigated if he turned
Mwulman ; he eat therefore a mesaage to that ef ed to the Emir,
who instantly assented to his propmition, but never took him out
of the Siah-tchah, where the operation and cure were performed. I t
was not until the 17th of June, that he saw the light again, when he
and the three malefactors, with whom Colonel Stoddart had paased
the two first months of his captivity, were brought up to be &ugh-
tered- the execution took place on a Friday, at the hour of
evening prayer. The news of the masaacm of the English in the
Khyber Pass had been sent to Nasser Ullah by the Afghan ser-
dam, who recommended him to get rid of his other prisoners or hand
them over to them ; and it was their letter which prepared the way
for the death of the ill-fated British officers, which was hastened,
however, by another cause.
Three days after the execution of Joseph, the Emir commanded
that they should be taken from the citadel to a building near the
Siah-tchah, but they were not lowered into the well. The gnard
then forced them to strip o f all their clothes, and on inspectin@r
them very closely, found in a small pocket sewn under the top of
the deeve of Colonel Stoddart's tcIroka,* a pencil, some steel pens,
a amall phial filled with ink, and some sheeta of paper, which were
taken to the Emit. Some days previously the police at the h-
Bokharian robe.
CHAP. XIUL EXECUTION OF STODDART AND CONOLLY. 469
tier had seized a letter which the Colonel had sent to Mr. Thomp
son, under-secretary to the British legation at Teheran, who was
going to Khiva to continue the negotiations commenced by Captain
Conolly ; and when this letter was taken to Nasser Ullah he
wanted Stoddart to translate it, and also to tell him the use of the
articles that had been found upon him. Nothing excites more die-
trust in Oriental nations than the habit that Europeans have of
writing down or sketching, what they see or hear, and in the ques-
tionable position in which these officers stood, the double discovery
that had been made, could not but exasperate the Emir more and
more against them ; moreover, Colonel Stoddart at once refused to
give the required translation, and he was cruelly beaten with rods on
the soles of his feet for three days in succession without overcoming his
resolution-he simply declared that the intercepted letter contained
nothing hostile to the Emir. But Nasser Ullah would not believe
him, and it being his conviction that the purport of the letter was
to induce the Khan of Khiva to make war upon him, he condemned
the two prisoners to death. No word of weakness escaped Colonel
Stoddart when he waa informed of the fate that awaited him, but
he completely gave way to the violence of his dispoeition, exhausting
the whole vocabulary of personal abuse in Persian against the
Emir and his executioner, and ceased not thus to apostrophise them
but in yielding his latest breath. He was put to death like a
sheep, in some ruins at the back of his prison, and in the presence
of a few passemby who had been attracted to the spot by his cries
and his invectives. The officer who was charged with the execu-
tion of the sentence then declared to Conolly, who had witnessed
his countryman's death, that Nasser Ullah would grant him his
life if he would become a Mussulman, but the Englishman replied
without fear, as without boasting, " Stoddart and Yoossoof turned
Mahomedans and you put them both to death; your proposal
is a snare, for you will not spare me any more than you did them.
I have no confidence in your promises ; I will be no renegade. I
die firm in my faith. Finish your work! " They did so, and
the bodies of these two heroic men were placed in a common grave
that had been dug before their eyes. It was on a Friday evening,
the 24th of June.
These sad details were communicated to me by Akhood
Zadeh, the Syud Mir Sheriff, whom I saw at Meshed in 1845,
my Heratee servant, who had also been Conolly'e, and was im-
460 REGISTER. CHAP. XXX.
prisoned forty-four days in the Si - t chah, and by many other
Bokharians, to whom the particulars of the captivity and death of
the British officers were perfectly well known. Dr. Wolf thinks that
they were executed on the 17th of June ; but, sfter much investi-
gation, I consider that the event tooL place seven days later, which
is proved by the following dates furnished by the persons above
mentioned :-
Stoddart and Conolly were imprieoned in the
citadel . . Jan. 2, 1842.
Forty-four days h r , their servants were released,
namely, on . Feb. 15, ,,
Four days later Akhood Zadeh and Allah Dad
Khan were imprisoned in the Siah-tchah . Feb. 19, ,,
Twenty-seven days after, the seven pich-kheb
met8 were released . . . Mar. 17, ,,
Ninety-two days elapsed up to the death of Yoos-
soof and the deliverance of Akhood Zadeh . June 17, ,,
Seven days later, Colonel Stoddart and Captain
Conolly were executed . . June 24, ,,
This statement is strictly correct; and was copied from t he
police register at Bokhara by the Syud Mir Sheriff.
Akhood Zadeh, without being so precise himselft acknowledges
the accuracy of these dates ; he believed the death of the British
officers to have taken place on the 2nd of Djemadee el Ewal, or
Djemadee el Sanee, some days aJer the appearance of the 3rd
apricots-such is the Asiatic mode of marking eventa
CHAP. XXXI. MOHAMED SHAH THREATENS KHIVA. 461
CHAPTER XXXI.
Y o b e d Shah of Penla threatens Khiva-Mr. Thornpeon, the Britieh min-
istsr, arri va at that city - He fa& in his negotiations - Naaeeli Flares, a
-
Neapolitan, cornea to Teheran -Travels to Bokhars, and is thrown into prison
the-The Naib, Abdul Gamut Khan-Nasseli is condemned to death-Abdul
Gamut experienom the name fate - Reasons that led to hie execution - The
watchmaker, Orlando Oiovanni - The Emir orders him to be put t.o death -
Character of Naeser Ullah Khan - Meesunrs taken in England to ancertain the
fate of Stoddart and Conolly - Dr. Wolf- Policy of Yar Mohamed aRer the
English left Herat - The Shah Kamran in arma against the Vizier - Par Mo-
hamed besieges him in the citadel -The Serdar Dine Mohamed Khan -Rpmran
is made prisoner, and plundered by Yar Mohamed- The Shah Zadeb
Mohamed Yooasoof - The diamond vest - Negotiations regarding iGMohamed
Yoosnoof h the dupe of Par Mohamed - He flies to Meahed-Revolt to
set Kamran at liberty - Yar Mohamed tuxwhatea his sovereign.
SOME months before the terrible tragedy related in the last
chapter occurred, namely in the winter of 1841, the British
Minister at Teheran made a last effort to induce the Khan of
Khiva to give up the Persian slaves; the case was urgent, for
Mohamed Shah was md a l l i n g his battalions on the borders of
the Atrak and the Gourghan, and threatened to penetrate the heart,
of Khiva if Allah Kooli Khan persisted in detaining hie subjects
any longer. The Shah had been driven to this demonstration by
the fresh inroads made upon his tenitmy by the Turcomans, who
at the instigation of the Khivans, plundered several Persian
villages and carried off their inhabitants; in one of these raids
they surprised Mohamed Walee Khan, a cousin of the Shah's,
and brought him to Khiva, where he was kept a close prisoner.
At the time that Mr. Thompson went to that city, accompanied by
the Persian envoy Mohamed Ali Khan Kidoor, a Russian agent
left Orenburg for the same destination, to combine his efforts with
theirs in the hope of bringing about a pacific solution of the affair ;
and notwithstanding the threatened invasion Allah Kooli Khan
received them all haughtily. To Mr. Thompson he said, "London
is too far off for me to have any intercourse with it, or expect any
help from there. Twenty times I have asked the English for
instructors of artillery, and they have tantalized me with promisee
which I have never seen realized ; I cannot understand why they
462 MR. THOMPSON AT MERV. Caar. XXXI.
interfere in my a5airs." He waa not so arrogant with the Ruseian,
in whose favour Yacooba Mehter had been endeavouring to pre-
pomm him ; but he addmad that ambassador thus : "Petemburg
is nearer to Khiva than London, but the bones of the aoldiem
that the Tzar sent from Orenburg laat year to subjugate this
country st i l l cover the steppea upon your frontieq and remain,
whitening in the sun, a proof that that undertaking i not easy to
carry out." Then, turning to the Persian, he said, "As to
Mohamed Shah he may be the cat's-paw of England or Russia,
whichever he pleases; Allah Kooli Khan wi l l never imitate his
example. You have all taken the trouble to come here to ask me
to release the Persian slaves, which I am resolved never to do."
And the three ambassadors left Khiva without having in the
least advanced their cause.
At Me n Mr. Thompson happily e s ~ ~ p e d the malevolence of the
Emir of Bokhara and Yacmba Mehter, who had sent masinn to
the neighbourhood of that t o m to murder him, but chance and bad
information prevented them* Wi l e he waa hen?, Mr. Thornpaon
delivered from captivity a Neapolitan named Nseseli Flares, who
had been incarcerated by the Governor Ni i Mobmed Beg. When
this young man passed through Teheran he was told by a great
many persons, that, in taking the road to Bokhara, he wm rush-
ing upon certain death ; but he would not listen to their adfie,
and fate drove him on to his destruction. For many months
Flores had enjoyed the hospitality of M. AnitchkofF, the Rueeian
Consul-General at Tauris, and when he put into executim hie
project of going to Lahore through the Usbek states, Sir John
M'Neil, who had a few months previously returned to Tehem,
conceived some mapicions against him ; he even opened a cow
spondence with Count de Medem, the Ruseian Minister,
complained of the direction Nasseli intended taking, proteded
by a paqmrt which had received the aim of the Russisn wtbo-
ritiea. He mid that he considered the journey of Zlom ~ICJUS
Tartary ooncealed intentions hostile to England, and offered toend
him safely to Lahore free of expense if he would consent to f F
there by the Persian Gulf and India, but nothing could overcome
the obstinacy of the traveller; and the Count de Mdem to
f i r thir WIW written, Mr. Thomp- order to get a
d for a*
mn i . l or n4 me that b t t b d r y life, inrr&e We.--*
ma not true. An Vsbek woman, in
t
Cmr . XXXI. NASSBLI FLORES AT TEHERBW. 468
aet at rest the suspicions of the Britiah envoy, wss obliged to e m
the Ruseian tnkad on hi passport, and date thereon in Persian
that the Neapolitan travelled unprdected by Russia Flores had not
been long enough in Asia to understand the character of Asiatics ;
he expected to fjnd on hi arrival at Bokhara a people resembling
the Turks or Pereians, and notwithstanding the impedimenta
thrown in the way of his journey, he persisted in his determination
and left Teheran with only one servant. He remained some time
at Meshed, and I received a letter from him, from this city,
probably the last that he ever wrote. The perusal of this may
be interesting to the reader. I t is dated Meshed, May 22,
1842 :-
" MY DEAB M. FEBBIER,
" When I left Teheran I promised to let you hear from me
when I reached thin city. I have been here now a fortnight, and
amved after a fortunate journey of twenty-nine daya Nature has
been very niggardly to Persia ; but in the Khoraaean there is more
vegetation than in the provinces of Azerbaidjan and I d . Should
circumstancee ever bring you to Meshed I ad& you, when you
get to Ni p o o r , to take the mountain road. You will find
villages in the rich valleys; through these water flows in abun-
dance, and a double row of treea following the course of the
stream form a pleasing shade for the traveller. Between N i i -
poor and thii are two amall lakeg which I assure you are very
picturesque.
" General Semineau, to whom I previously wrote, will have pre-
sented my eincere re~ani s to you and have given you a description
of thia country. I am forced to remain here until the caravan for
Bokhara is ready. The days seem an everlasting length ; the time
paeses M) alowly when one is obliged to wait and has an object in
view.
"Meantime I am in very good company; your countryman
M. Jacquet, surgeon of the regiment of Hamadan in garrison here,
a person of great merit, is very hospitable to me, and we pass
whole daya in conversation. He was not aware that there were any
French officers in the Persian m y ; and he will be enchanted,
after the report I have given him of your amiable di i i t i on, to
make your acquaintance. You can, and with reciprocal advantage,
exchange the news of Europe with that of Central Asia, which
461 . NASSELI FLORES. . CHAP. XxxI.
never fails to reach this frontier city. I am desired by him to say
a thousand obliging things on his part, so it now remains for you
to write to him, and I assure you that you will be very pleased to
know him.
" The Turcomans often visit the villages near the city-they are
a perfect nightmare to the Persians ; last year they surprised the
Vizier of the Governor in a garden out of the town and sold him
to the Khan of Khiva. Five months after Assaf Doowlat, the
Governor, desirous of making reprisals on a Turcoman tribe in the
mountains to the right of Nishapoor, went there with 3000 men of
all arms and seven guns to surprise them, but though he made a
rapid march the greater part of the enemy were gone, leaving
behind them only a few old clothes, swords, and still older camels,
and several hundred men within the entrenchment. The powder
was not spared ; several Turcomans were killed and wounded, also
some Persians, but the Governor on the second day fearing an
attack from a body of the enemy's cavalry, ordered an assault
without making a breach ; judge from that how war is conducted
in this country.
" The other day the Governor blew a Turcoman from the mouth
of a gun and cut off the hands of seven others in the service of
Persia who had plundered travellers in the mountaim
a My departure will, Inshallah I be after to-morrow with a nu-
merous caravan. Pray tell General Semineau that as soon as I
got here I sent him a letter by a messenger whom Ferez Ullah
Khan sent to Teheran. I would write to him again did time
permit, but I should only weary him ; I beg you to offer him my
sincere gratitude and respect. Remember me to your comrades
I do not forget our prince Malek Kassem Mirza ; present to him
my compliments and tell him that I have given his letters to the
Governor, who received me very politely. Adieu, my dear
M. Ferrier. May God grant that we meet again in another
country rich and happy.
. " Ever yours,
NA~SELI FLOBE~.
'' To the General Ferrier."
Flores lef?, as he intended, with the caravan for Merv, where he
had the good fortune to be found by Mr. Thompson, who, as we have
said, procured his release, and he then continued his journey towards
CHAP. XXXT. NASSELI IMPRISONED. 466
Bokhara His servant-the only one he had--declined to follow
him beyond Merv ; but this incident, instead of opening his eyes,
appeared only to confirm him in his resolution to meet the di5-
culties and dangers of his undertaking, and he marched on to
certain death, with the self confidence of a conqueror. I t was
twelve days after the death of Colonel Stoddart and Captain
Conolly that Akhood Zadeh had the happiness of leaving the city
of Bokhara : on hi journey fiom that scene of horrors he met at
Tchardjooee, on the left bank of the Oxus, Namli Flores, and
used every argument he could think of to turn him from his pur-
pose of going on to that capital, relating to him succinctly all that he
.
had ao lately witnessed and suffered ; but N m l i understood not
a word of any eastern language, and his efforts therefore were
utterly vain-he ought to supply the place of words by signs, but
he addressed one both deaf and blind. The thought crossed the
mind of the energetic Afghan that he would bind him and carry
him back to Meshed by force ; but he was alone and on foot, devoid
of r e s o w of every description, how then could he hope to
succeed? moreover such an act on his part might expose him to
the danger of being taken himself and sent back to Bokhara He
could therefore do nothing but pray to Allah for the safety of the
young traveller, who so confident and light-hearted, was surely going
to take his place in the Black Well, and with a heavy heart Akhood
Zadeh wended his weary way towards Khorassan. His fears were
just; the infatuated Italian continued his journey, and he had
scarcely been an hour in the city of Bokhara when he was seized,
stripped, and lowered into the Siah-tchah ; here he was kept eight
days, and fed upon a meagre pittance purchased with the money
that had been found on him. He was afterwards brought before the
Emir to be present at the investigation of his papers, and as Flores
did not understand either Turkish or Persian, an Italian renegade
named Giovanni Orlando was ordered to interpret the conversa-
tion ; the chief of the Artillery, Abdul Samut Khan,* the mortal
enemy of all Europeans who had the temerity to go to Bokhara,
was also in attendance.
" I t h i it well," remarka Dr. M. le Wn h l Court, he m em-
Wolf, " to give you a &etch of the life ployed there for a while by Mohamed
of thL Abdul Samut Khan. He wan Ali Bfi rq the oelebrated son of Feth
born at Tabreee in the year 1784, and, Ali Shah. On account of some mb-
having acquired mme smatterin conduct of Abdul Samut Khan, Mo-
dt y rience at Kermarurhah hamed Ali Li odered hb mn ta
2 H
CHaP. XXXI. NASSELI PUT TO DEATH. 467
against the unhappy traveller. The Emir was only too well
inclined to order hie execution, and on leaving this audience
Flores met with the same fate as the lamented Stoddart and his
friend.
Providence often takes upon itself to supply the deficiencies of
human justice ; of that fact the death of Abdul Samut Khan in
1847 is a proof, and this in spite of the services that he had
rendered the Emu of Bokhara. He too well knew the character
of Naseer Ullah to believe in his gratitude, and like every high
personage in an Asiatic Court, he had no lack of enemies who
daily excited his master's suspicions against hi . Aware of this, .
and being a cunning fellow, he sent to his brother, a merchant at
Meshed, all the money that he had amassed, whether honestly OE
dishonestly, at Bokhara, and in 1847 this amounted to nearly
40,0001. For many years he had wished to return to Persia, and
enjoy at his ease the fruits of his rapacity ; but though he had
been on the look out for an opportunity of leaving, it never pre-
sented itself, and hampered as he waa with heavy baggage and
several women and children, flight was difficult. To send them
away before him would be to reveal his project to the Emir, who
indeed had long suspected it, and had given an order that he
should be closely watched. Naseer Ullah felt that he was more in
the power of the Naib than he liked to be, and had o h thought
of putting him to death ; but then he was so useful-it was only
by his assistance that he had been able to impose his suzerainty
on the Khans of Cher Sebz, of Kokan, and Balkh, and to deprive
himself of his services when he had no other gene+ capable of
commanding his army, might prove exceedingly injurious to his .
interests; he waited therefore, but he was full of suppreesed fury
against the Persian heretic who had the audacity to be necessarp
to him. Abdul Samut, however, finding that temporizing did not
advance his project of flight, determined to take other meam of
~ecuring it. In 1847 the Emir marched against the Khan of Cher
Sebz, who was in arms to throw off the suzerainty that Nasser Ullah
had imposed upon him, and Abdul Samut, thinking that a good
opportunity had presented itself for attempting his escape, placed
himself in communication with the refractory Khan, and told him
that when the armies met he might charge the Bokharians without
any anxiety about the artillery, for he would have the gune loaded
with powder only, " and then," he added, " as soon ae you have
. 2 a 2
468 GIOVANNI ORLANDO PUT TO DEATH. CHAP. =I.
forced your way through our lines, I will turn the guns upon the
Emir and hie troops and we shall crush them at once." This
letter was entrusted for delivery to a Persian artilleryman, but he
carried it to Nasser Ullah Khan, when the Naib was instantly
sent for, and put to death in hi presence ; his wives and children
were given up by the Emir to the merciless soldiery, under whoee
cruelties many of them lost their livegl
One European still remained at Bokhara--Giovanni Orlando,
the Italian renegade already mentioned. This poor fellow, who
waa by trade a watchmaker, was living at Teheran in 1839, when an
ambassador arrived there from the Khan of Kokan, by whom he
waa persuaded to follow him to the wurt of his master. Giovanni
was well treated by Mohamed Ali ; but scarcely had he felt the
advantages of his new position when the Emir of Bokhara attacked
Kokan, and carried him off to his capital, where he obliged him
to mend all the broken watches of his court for nothing. This
treatment was widely different from the kindness he had received
from the Khan of Kokan ; but, as it was impossible for him to
escape, he submitted to his sad fate. When Dr. Wolff was at
Bokhara in 1844, the Emir consented to allow the watchmaker
to return to Persia with him ; but on the day appointed for his
departure Giovanni was seized with a sudden panic : an idea that
a~sassina had been placed on the road to murder h i had taken
such firm possession of his mind that he would not leave, and
he thus lost his only chance of returning to Europe. Three
years rolled on after this misfortune, and he continued to repair
the Emir's old watches: however, in the course of time his
tools wore out, and it was utterly impossible to replace them;
his work, therefore, of wurse, became inferior, but Nasser Ullah
would accept no excuses, insisting upon its being as well done
as when he firat arrived at Bokhara, and for various failurea in-
fiicted the bastinado. One day the Emir's watch stopped in the
middle of his prayers, on remarking which he dashed it against the
wall, and, furious, ordered the unfortunate I t d i n to. be brought
before him. He was obeyed. " Kill him," he thundered to the
guard ; and the third stroke of a club ended Giovanni's troubles
and his life.
The Emir of Bokhara, Nasser Ullah Khan Bahadoor, Melik el
Moumenine, is a monster of ferocity. The titles he beam are thus
translated :-Nagger Ullah, Khan, The Victory of God ; Bahadoor,
CUP. XXXI. CHARACTER OF NASSER ULLAH KHAN. 4Gb
The Victorious ; Melik el Moumenine, Prince of Believers. He
raised himself to the throne by a series of frightful murdere
amongst his kindred, and other crimes from which even Bokharians
recoiled with horror; his bad faith became proverbial amongst
them, and his name was pronounced with terror by the people.
The Bokharians, however, are now apparently indifferent to the
atrocities committed by the Emir, or the disgusting character of his
vi m, the extent of which is beyond all that can be imagined, and
they consider that be is justified by hi position in gratifying every
padon in any way that he pleases. An increase in the taxation
is the only thing upon which they are in the least sensitive ; but as
on that point Nasser Ullah keeps strictly within the commands of
the Koran, and generally speaking the duties are rarely above
2& per cent, which is fixed by the Zekiat, the Bokharians are
satisfied, and do not think the virtue of their wives or daughtere
of any importance so far as the sovereign is concerned. Besides,
the inollahs were the fht to set the example of base submission,
and the Kazi of Bokhara issued a fetw proclaiming that Naeser
Ullah was by the will of God the absolute master of all the women
in his territory, that he had a right to do what he liked with them,
and that it would be a crime to oppose his wishes; singularly
enough, the Kazi was the first person to feel the effects of the doc-
trine he preached, for his daughter fell a victim to the Emir's
brutal p i o n s . One must, therefore, conclude from all this that
the inhabitants, though so perfidious and cruel, are in regard to
their prince the most easy-going people in existence; of this. he
seems so perfectly convinced, that when he leaves hi lalace he
never has any eacort to attend him, and two or three times a-week
the Emir may be Been walking through the bazaars in the dresa of
a dervish, accompanied only by one servant The shopkeepers are
aware of the order he has given that no one shall pay him the 1-t
respect, or treat him otherwise than as one of the public, and for
this reason nobody moves away at his approach: he walks from
one shop to another inquiring the price of grain or other merchan-
dise for sale ; makes here and there a purchase ; and, if he finds
a tradesman playing tricks, he never offers a remark at the time,
but on the following day sends for the delinquent a t his public
audience, and inflicts the punishment that he thinks he merits.
I n the year 1845 be appeared to be about thirty-four years of
age. This is the man whom the English hoped to make the
470 THE FATE OF STODDART AND CONOLLY. CHAP. XXXL
docile instrument of their wishes; but their agent, as we have
already said, was illchosen to effect this object, and the sacrifice
of his life was the result. The presence of Europeans, Rusaian or
Englih, alarmed, and not without reason, Nasser Ullah Khan, but
though a moneter, his jealous terror was the result of reflection,
and learning that an English envoy was coming to Bokhara, he
ml v e d to give him the most terrible idea of his power: by this
means he hoped to neutralise for the future any desire the Eng l i
might have to meddle in his &re, and he determined to keep
their agent a prisoner, to be made use of as an hostage in c . his
countrymen should feel disposed to annoy him-this waa not bad
reaeoning for a barbarian.
The communications with Bokhars being cut off, the Indian
Government was for a lo?g time ignorant of what had befallen
Stoddut and Conolly, and it had also been absorbed in preparing
the eecond expedition to revenge the disasters of 1841 in Afghan-
istan ; when, therefore, some months after, the Governor-General,
in announcing his successes and the punishment of the Afghans,
demanded the diplomatic agents of England from the Emir of
Bokhara, he found they were no longer in this world !
ARer the murder of these two officers was ascertained, the
Indian Government was utterly at a loss how to avenge i t A
large m y would be required to attack and successfully punish
Nasaer Ullah Khan; i t must leave in its m r the Sikhs, the
Afghans, and all the banditti on the left banks of the Indus
and the Oxua Once at Bokhara, this army would find in its
front the advanced posts of Russia, the Cossacks of the Steppes ;
and Persia and Kokan, obliged to make common cause with
the sovereign of Bokhara, a country half as large as Europe with
.
its nomade atid warlike mountaineers, would have risen as one
man. Certainly there was room for reflection, and the English
press and the opposition were not asleep ; they pointed out with
force the dangers of such an expedition, and this time the Direc-
tors dared not oppose the opinion entertained ag4nst it on all
sides. Nevertheless, the uncertainty which existed as to the fate
of Stoddart and Conolly awakened the sympathies of their %ends,
and steps were taken to ascertain the truth; a Protestant mis-
sionary, Dr. Wolff, volunteered to go to Bokhara, and with
admirable courage risked his own life upon the bare hope of
saving the lives of others. ARer having exposed himself to great
.Carp. XXXI. POLICY OF YAR MOHAMED. 471
dangers, he has returned to Europe firmly convinced of the death
of thew two o&re, though many persons are still doubtful of the
fact; ss to myself, who followed closely the &pa of Dr. Wolff in
Tartary and Afghanistan, I can only confirm hi statement as one
that cannot be controverted.
The narrative of the British negotiations in Bokhara is so inti-
mately connected with the history of Afghanistan aa to have made
_ it requisite for me to give some details of i t ; but I must now
resume that of Herat, which will put the reader in posseasion of
the remaining information that I have been enabled to collect
mpecting Afghanistan.
The British mission had scarcely left Herat when Yar Mohamed,
who had been warmly solicited to expel Major Todd by A d
Dooulet, Governor of Khomman, claimed the fulfilment of his pro-
mise to pay him a subsidy in money, and gave him sii guns and
some thousands of firelocks to enable him to march on Kandahar.
A d Dooulet knew him too well to comply with his wishes;
the gifb would, he was aware, be received with the liveliest
demonstrations of gratitude, but all would end there, and, under a
host of pretences, more or less admissible, he would not take a
single step beyond the walls of Herat. The Governor of Kho-
raasan, therefore, evaded his request, but in terms by no means
hostile ; Yar Mohamed, however, would not consider himself
beaten, and renewed his demands more than once without s u c ~
The vizier never forgave this refusal, or the just estimate that
Assaf Dooulet had formed of his character; he swore eternal
hatred to him and his family, and the consequence of thii fracas to
the Governor of Khorassan will be related hereafter.
Unsuccessful with the Persian, Yar Mohamed was obliged to con-
tent himself with the money that he had extorted from the English,
and thought no more of invading Kandahar, but he determined to
pursue to its completion a scheme that the presence of Major Todd
had hitherto absolutely obliged him to delay-there was nothing
now to prevent him from compassing the death of the Shah Kam-
ran, and establishing himself on the throne of Herat. This prince
at once saw that he could not withstand the sinister projects of his
minister without the help of the English ; he therefore energetically
declared that they should remain at his court and carry out their
own views ; but as such an arrangement did not suit the vizier, he
paid not the slightest regard to his sovereign's wishes.
472 THE SHAH KAMRAN IN ARMS. CHAP. XXXI.
Shah Kamran had a presentiment that his end was approaching,
though after Major Todd's departure he roused himself to avert his
d destiny, and at length determined openly to confront his tyrant
minister. IIis supporters and advisers in this bold attempt were
hie four sons-Iskander Mirza, Nadir Mirza, Zeman M i and
Saadat Mulook Mirza, also his cousin Yooseoof Mirza, a grandson
of Hadji Firooz Eddin. These princes secretly aseembled at night
all those in whom they could place confidence, and, having with
their aid overcome the vizier's guard, took paesession of the citadel
for the king, retiring with him within i b walh I t was defended
by five hundred devoted soldiers, and as the gambn had pvi si o~l o
for a year, and munitions of war more than necessary to hold it
for a longer period, the pfincea hoped that this stroke of policy
would have brought about a reaction against the minister, and that
the population of the country would have besieged him in the
town, thus rendering them mastera of his person. But events
entirely falsified their dculations, for the vizier hearing just
before midnight that the Suddozyes had taken up arms, with-
out loss of time despatched all the cavalry that he waa able to
collect at the moment to hold the surrounding country in check,
and invested the citadel with six battalions, upon whose fidelity he
could depend. From that moment the cause of the Suddozye
dynasty became desperate at Herat: its fatal hour had come.
Nevertheless, Shah Kaman, or rather his song would not succumb ;
they repulsed the attacks of Yar Mohamed with a perseverance
and bravery worthy of a better result, and the vizier finding his
attempts were fruitless against the energy of their defence, was
obliged to commence a regular siege.
Before he retired to the citadel Shah Kamran despatched a
messenger to the English at Kandahar to apprise them of this
crisis in his afl'airs, and to beg them to send him troops, p r o m s i
to hold the fortress till their arrival, and to place it in their
hands. Unfortunately at this period, the spring of 1841, spmp
toms of agitation had already shown themselves at Kandahar, and
the Resident could not without imprudence detach any of the f o m
then stationed in that principality ; however, the Anglo-Indian
Government were not indifferent to the appeal of their ally, and
spared neither money nor promises in their endeavours to induce
the Afghans of I-Ierat to exert themselves in hi favour.
I t has been related that Dine Mohamed Khan, the cousin of the
-. XXXI. KAMRAN PLUNDERED BY YAR MOHAMED. 413
-vizier, had been arrested by his order towards the close of 1840,
but at the expiration of five months this ~erdar succeeded in
eacaping to the mountains of Gour, where he married the daughter
of Moustapha Khan, an independent chief of the tribe' of
Eimalr Taymoonis, which gave him great influence in the sur-
rounding country; this made the enmity of Dine Moharned of
some importance to Yar Mohamed, and, as that serdar had always
been a partisan of Shah Kamran, Major Rawlinson, the British
Resident at Kandahar, thought he could not do better than
requeet him to assemble such of the Afghans as were disposed
to help their sovereign, and march on Herat. He also sent
Dine Mohamed 1000 Ruasian ducats ; but whether, as the serdar
pretended, the money arrived too late, or, aa others have mid
with more probability he remained irresolute too long, when he
declared himself ready to march the opportunity of saving Shah
Kamran was lmt. The Suddozyes, however, though abandoned
to their own resources, behaved with the greatest intrepidity ; they
held the citadel for fiRy days, and gave in only when the artillery
and mines had partly destroyed the wallq and the dkbris having
Wed the ditch, the besiegers had obtained an easy access illto the
body of the place.
In the first moments of success Yar Mohamed acted with some
moderation, and sent the four sons of the Shah out of the terri-
tory of Herat without doing them any personal injury. As to his
sovereign, who entirely lost the little liberty that he had enjoyed,
the vizier thenceforth treated him as a state prihner, and, as soon
.as he felt that the king was completely in his power, he proceeded
to despoil him of his treasures, and seized some splendid diamonds,
of the value of more than 240,0001., which were known to have
been taken by Shah Mahmood from the crown of Kabul when he
reigned in that country. But the deposed prince resisted his
demands with more determination than he expected, and refused
to tell him where he had concealed his riches.
Yar Mohamed knew his old master so well as to be perfectly
sure that neither torture nor death would make him reveal the
place; he therefore employed etratagem, trusting that it wouId
succeed better than threats. The vizier acted with l ey generosity
to Mohamed Y m f , the Shah's cousin, than to the other princes,
for he retained him a prisoner at Herat, but he now determined
to make use of him in his endeavours to conquer the obstinacy of
,474 THE DIAMOND VEST. CEAP. X&Ta
&ah b r a n . He therefore sent for Mohamed Yooasoofl and, sRer
having given him his Liberty, informed him that it hah never been
his wish to usurp the royal power; that he always intended to
substitute a prince of the blood-royal in place of tbe Shah, that
his thoughta had always turned upon him, Mohanied Yoassoof;
and finally, that hie determination waa to give him his eldest
daughter in marriage, and declare him mvereign of the principality.
The only conditiou, he aaid, that he should attach to these dading
promisea waa tbat the Prince should endeavour to prevail upon Shah
Kamnto. to divulge where he had hidden his gold and jewels.
The old Shah always had a great affection for his cousin, who
po& hie entire confidence, and he, therefore, not unwillingly
entrusted him with part of the desired information. Mohamed
Yoossoof, like a wary man, took one-half of the money which had
thus been placed in hi way by his confiding sovereign, and carried
the other to the vizier, who did not conceal his gratification at this
first success. What he most coveted, however, was not yet forth-
coming : this was a woman's vest, decorated with precious stones,
the value of which was 160,0001. Before Kamran retired to the
'
citadel he thought this lady's waistcoat would be no longer Bafe with
him, and gave it into the care of one of his wives, who, uneasy at
the responsibility thus thrown upon her, handed i t over to her
steward, named Naeeer Ullah Beg. This trustworthy man had, in
the first instance, removed to the country ; but, three days aAer the
princee retired to the citadel he went to Meshed, carrying tbe
precious waistcoat with him. Mohamed Yoossoof Mirzs was
ignorant of the latter circumstance, though he knew that the gar-
ment had been given to the Shah's wife, and he told the vizier
of thb, who put the poor creature to the torture, to force her to
give it up; but she bore the agonising trial rather than reveal
the secret. He then tried the effect of domestic influen*
and signified to her that her only daughter by Shah Kamran
should the next day be married to his son, the War Syud
Mohamed Khan; 'but when the unhappy girl heard who was to
be her husband, she poisoned herself to escape the detested n u p
tials. At last Yar Mohamed discovered that the object of his
search was a t Meshed, and made every effort to get it back, but
without s u m ; he then revenged himself on the miserable wife
of his sovereign, whom he imprisoned in the citadel, and subjected
l;o daily torture, and it was not till 1846 that she was released, on
CHAP. XXXT. NEGOTIATIONS RESPECTING IT. 475
the reiterated. demanda of the Shah of Persia She then fled to
Teheran, and joined her brother, the Serdar Chems Eddin Khan,
who hsd long since been driven to take aervim in the Persian army
by the tyranny of the vizier. As for the valuable veat, it never fell
into the poseession of those who had a right to it. I n Ikcember,
1845, when I was at Meshed, the faithful depositary of the trea-
cure, Namer Ullah Beg, died of cholera ; he had been ill some
time previody, and Assaf Dooulet, seeing his end approaching,
appointed him hie steward, giving him at the same time one thou-
sand tomauns with which to purchase camels. Nasser Ullah, laid
up by aicknese, was unable to execute the commission ; and when
he died, the governor of Khorasaan, under the pretence that the
deceased had funds of his in his hands, seized everything in hie
house, and the royal vest thue became his property. It is true
that the claims of the Serdar Chema Eddin were supported by the
Shah of Peraia, and that he ordered his uncle to restore it to him ;
but Aseaf Dooulet settled the question of its restoration by the
payment of several thousand tomauns. Since that period he has
been deprived of his command in Rhoraman, and with the wealth
that he accumulated during the thirteen years that he governed
that province, hi son the Sipahi Salar, created a powerful party,
with whoae eupport he raieed the standard of revolt against the
Shah of Persia, and kept his army in check from 1847 to 1850.
At the same time that Yar Mohamed tortured the faithful wife
of Kamran, he d i i of the other wives of that sovereign-and
in the Shah's lifetime-to his own friends and partisans; and as
they were, for the most part, young and rich, their new husbands
were well satisfied with this arrangement, though it is reprobated
by the laws of Islam. I was informed of one action of the vizier's
of which I should scarcely have believed him guilty, had it not
been mentioned to me by his most intimate friends, namely, that
he sold three or four of the daughters of Shah %m, as well
ae the eldest of his wives, to the Turcomcins, who disposed of them
again in the markets of Khiva and Bokhara.
But to return to tlie Prince Mohamed Yoossoof : aRer having exe-
cuted, so far as he had the power, the behests of the vizier, he claimed
the performance of the promises which he had made him. Yar Mo-
hamed declared himself ready to fulfil them, but objected that Mo-
hamed Yoosmf had only partly carried out hi engagement, and
that much of the treasure had yet to be recovered ; he did not, he
476 Y00f3500F MIRZA FLIES TO MESHED. CEAP. XXZII.
said, intend to alter his determination on account of that disappoint
men& if the prince would give him a decisive proof of his devotion
by having his cousin, the Shah Kamran, put to death. Mohamed
Yooasoof now saw clearly the snare idto which the vizier wished to
draw him, and subquently throw upon him all the odium of the
murder of his relative, for it was in this manner that Yar Mohamed
intended to clear for himself, and at the prince's expense, the road
to the sovereign power, and thus avoid the d i i of the crime of
regicide. Mohamed Yoos%oof a t once perceived the danger of reject-
ing the p r o p o d of a man like Yar Mohamed, hardened in every
crime, and, to lull his vigilance, consented to all that he demanded ;
in the evening, however, under the pretence of enjoying the fie&
air, he went out for a ride, escorted by a few servants, and =ped
to Meshed, where the Persians received him in the kindest and
most generous manner. Before leaving Herat he took the precan-
tion to write letters to several of his friends, in which he warned
them of the vile deed meditated by the vizier; but the Herateea
had long been accustomed to submit to his tyranny, and were
indifferent to, or, at any rate, took no interest in any schemes
that he might have against the Shah Kamrau, whose conduct
had made them callous to his fate. Some few chie$ who were
in favour of a legitimate monarch, endeavoured to revive in the
people the prestige which attached to their ancient line of k i i ;
but they could only excite a partial movement, which Yar
Mohamed speedily suppressed. This manifestation, however,
U e d him in his treasonable plans, and he waited till he should
so perfect his combinations that a failure in them would be im-
possible. Hi first preparatory measure was to remove Shsh
Kamran to the citadel of Kussan, thirty-six miles west of Herat,
confiding his safe keeping to his cousin, the Serdnr Dad Khan,
and for gome months after this the miserable existence of the de-
throned monarch was passed in this fortre88 in the midst of
continual orgies ; the vizier commanded that he should be freely
supplied with wine and spirits and exciting drugs, in the hope that
they woultl conduct him more quickly to the grave, and also that,
in his fits of intoxication he would say or write something that
would lead to the discovery of the fkmous jewelled vest. But his
hopes were disappointed, for, however intoxicated the Shah might
be, he always recovered the most perfect self-possesion when-
ever his hidden wealth ass alluded to. At last Yar Mohamed
C w . XX2U. SHAH KAhfRAN PUT TO DEATH. 477
commanded that tomshould be resorted to to vanquish his
obstinacy; but this also was fruitless. " Let me go on a pil-
grimage to Mecca," said the old man, "and I will send you a
ricb ransom when I reach Meshed." The vizier was too well
versed in the value of Afghan promises to trust to this one, and
finding that his prisoner was utterly ueeleea for his principal pur-
poee, and might even create trouble fur him, he at length resolved
to put the Shah out of his way. The moment was'favourable to
his project ; the defilea of Kabul had witnessed the destruction
of one Brit* force, the division in Kandahar could think only
of its own safety, Shah Shooja had lost his life, and his death
was the forerunner of that of his nephew, the Shah Kamran.
After an unsuccessful attempt made by the inhabitants of Kusean
to deliver hi in the spring of 1842, this unhappy prince was
again tortured and cruelly beaten, and at the clow of March, Yar
Mohamed commanded that he should be suffocated. The Serdar
Dad Khan was the executioner, and when he placed the cushion
on the poor old man's face, he made no resistance ; on the contrary,
he testified a certain degree of satisfaction that the moment which
wes to terminate hi sufferings had arrived.
SONS OF SHAH KAMRAN. CEAP. XXXII.
CHAPTER XXXII.
bnn of Wah gunrrin - Hadji Firooz Eddin - Hi sad end, and that of his non
Malek b m Mirm - Afghan princea in Persia - Conduct of Rumria and Eng-
land with regard to Herat -Ynr Mohamed, now aoveraign Prince of Herat,
attenda to the welfare bf the He r a w - Strength- his power, and prepares to
attack Oour - Dine Moharned K~I UI plunders some caravans -Par Mohamed
takes posseasion of the province of Qour - Differences with Kandahar -Sub-
j u g a h the H d Zeidnata - Marches againat the Uebek Khauata - He is
d e d to the south - Privations suffered by hie army - Equilibrium between
the strtea of Central Asia- Mohamed Shah of Peraia wpporta Kohendil Khan
in his quarrel with Yar Mohamed- The latter sasiste the Shah of Persia in hie
war with Khoraasrs-Death of the Persian monarch - Al l hoe of Yar Mo-
huned with the Shah of Persia.
THE aseassination of the Shah Kamran is the vilest of the many
atrocioue crimea that stain the character of Yar Mohamed Khan.
Had he waited but a short time longer, the death of hi aged
sovereign, whose constitution waa broken up by excema and tor-
tures, must have taken naturally. To Europeans the cowardly
deed appears in the most odious coloura : not so to the Afghans.
In their eyes it was aimply the exercise of a'right-the right of the
strongest ; it was perfectly reasonable that the vizier should kill hi
enemy, if he could ; and the tone in which they would say to egch
other, Y the vizier has killed the Shah Kamran," wme d to express
an opinion that he deserved commendation for his conduct, and
had by this act added to the glory of his career rather than that
he had done anything worthy of reproach.
At hi death the Shah left ten 8ons : their names were as follows :-
Djehmguiir M i
&if ool Moolk Mirsa.
Saadet Mulook Mima
Alemguir ?dim.
Ahmed Ali Mirsa.
Djellal Eddin Mirsl
I sknder llIirn
Chahab M i i
%man Minu.
Nadir Miw
Iskander and Zeman died of cholera at Teheran in 1846.
The eldest son, Djehanguir Mirza, who ought to have succeeded
Shah Kamran, will be remembered by his revolt a,& his Wer
at the time that the latter went to quell disturbances in the pro-
vince of Fwah, and by the cruel sentence that he pronounced
against his envoy, Meuvalee Khan. He showed, however, tbat
the blood of the ~uddozyes flowed in his veins, for, like all that
family, he was brave, though restlese and debauched. Some time
after the siege of Herat by the Persians, he declared himself inde-
pendent in the district of Furrah, of which he was governor, and Yar
Mohamed was obliged to send troop to subdue him ; which having
been accomplished, he was brought to Herat, where he had oply half
hi liberty. When, however, Shah Kamran was removed to K m ,
the Mirza succeeded in escaping, and took refuge in Persia At
Teheran he lived utterly lost to all sense of hie own dignity ; and
at the time he was residing in the low quarter of the Niguariatan,
inhabited by the Berbers, he thought only of d r i i n g arrack and
smoking opium, where, completely brutalieed, he still lives on a
small pension granted him by the Shah of Persia
The other eons of Kamran are effeminate men, .more or lesa
polluted by the same vices as their elder brother. Serf ool
Moolk and Saadet Mulook, after the ruin of their houee, retired
first into the district of Gour, and then into that of Zemin-
davar, in the principahty of Kandahar. Nadir Mirza established
himself at Bagdad. Alemguir and Ahmed Ali took refuge
in hdia, and are the most intelligent princes of this family.
The remaining brothers, Djehanguir, Djellal Eddin, Iskander,
Chahab, and Zeman went to Teheran, where the three who
survive owe their daily bread to the generosity of their cousin, the
Shah of Persia Mohamed Yoossoof Mirza, also their cousin,
though much inclined to drunkenness, is superior to them in
capscity, and ia distinguished by the same qualities that won for
his grandfather, Hadji Firooz Eddin, the esteem and affection of
the Heratees. That prince, it will be remembered, reigned sixteen
yeam in Herat, to the general satiefaction of the population, whom
he treated in the most paternal manner. After having been
vanquished by Moustapha Khan, he went to Meshed, and resided
there in great retirement upon the bounty of the P e mh Govern-
ment. One morning a party of serbaz broke into his garden, and
were proceeding to pillage it, when he went to remonstrate with
them ; but the simplicity of his attire so completely deceived the
villaine as to his identity, that they supposed him to be a m a n t ;
and to prevent him from returning to the house to give the alarm,
one of them killed him on the spot with a stroke of hi handjar.
The fate of his son, Malek Kasaem Miza, was not less sad.
This prince was attached to the expeditionary wrpe which, under
480 PAR MOHA?tfED SOVEREIGN OF HEHBT. CRAP. XXXII.
the command of Abbas Mina, marched against Herat in 1833.
Being detained by businesa at Meshed, he followed the army a
few days &r it had left, accompanied by only ten servants, and
was attacked half-way between Meshed and Herat, by a party of
Turnmans; in thii murderous conflict he had the misery of
seeing one of his sons fall beside him mortally wounded, and the
next moment he was seized, bound, and dragged off to Khiva,
where he was sold in the public market-place for a slavc
Information of this fact having reached the Khan of Khiva, he
purchased him immediately, and gave him the revenues of a vil-
lage for his support, though he would never allow him to leave
hi dominions ; and he died there in 1840. Mohamed Yoossoof,
the son of Malek I(assem Mirza, obtained a grant of land from
Assaf Dooulet, and, accompanied by some Eeratees, who had
attached themselves to his fortunes, he raised the little village of
Singbest from the ruins in which it had lain for more than two
hundred years.
Mohamed Ali, Shah of Persia, sheltered and protected all the
members of the Suddozye family in the hope of one day maki i use
of them against Heat , the possession of which he had not ceased to
covet, but his successor, Nasser Eddin Shah, harassed by the intes-
tine divisions of his kingdom, was far less taken up with the idea of
extending it towards the east : but the Suddozye princes and a few
Afghan chiefs still remain on the list of state pensioners ; though
it may now be ailinned that not one amongst them has the capaciv
necessary to induce the Afghans to place him on the throne of
his ancestors. The influence that Russia or England may one
day exercise in thie part of Asia, renders anticipations of thii kind
very unimportant, for those powers will respectively attach to
their own interests such of the Afghnn chiefs as will bend with
the greateat docility to their views of dominion, without con-
aidering the qualifications of the individuals whom they'place at
the head of the principalities The cruelty of Yar Mohamed
Khan was great ; great, also, were his ambition and hi avarice,
which had been the source of a thouaand evils to the He r a w;
nevertheless they joyfully beheld him attain the sovereign power,
hoping that when they were relieved of Shah Kamran, for whom
contempt was the only feeling they entertained, the vizier would
give tliem tranquillity and security; and they were not dh-
appointed. Aa soon as he had proclaimed himeelf master of
C w . XXXTT. PBB MOHAMED, E30H)VEREIGN OF HERAT. 481
principality, under the h p l e title of Vizier Saheb Kebir,* he
exercised hi authority with a 6rm hand, and introduced a great
many reforms, which in hie intercourse with the English he had
found would be profitable to hie treseury, se well as to the people ;
the trrxes, police, cuatoms, and all that related to them, were
placed upon a h h baaii, and every one gained by these r e f o m
When he m a b l y established he ceased to be cruel, even to
those who were opposed to him, but he showed thieves and
~esaseim no mercy. He had the tact to procure the recognition of
his usurped power by his neighboura, with the grea.ter number of
whom he lived on good t e r n The eerdars of Herat, who up to
that time had sold h i their support, were reduced to complete
obedience: some of the most turbulent he put down, replacing
them by othew from the tribe of Ali Kioozye, to which he
belongs, and he eventually became absolute over the great vassals,
and the nomade population under hi^ jurisdiction. I t was more
by addre88 than by =verity that he obtained this result, and
as no one dared to dispute with h i the eovereignty he had
mq e d , his power was soon l i i t ed only by his will. The town
of Herat, destroyed by the siege of 1838, rose by degrees h m
its ruins, hanks to the gold that the English had so profusely
scattered m u d them; Yar lhhamed continued the improve-
ments they had so happily commenced, and applied prompt rt+
mediea to the evils under which the population still suffered. He
especially encouraged agriculture and commerce, placed a very
light duty upon the sale of corn and the neceasariea of life, and
further relieved the poorer classes by setting them to work at the
fortikations of the town, which were rebuilt in accordance with the
plans of the English engineers. Finally, he colnpletely checked the
pillage that had been carried on, not only in the principality, but even
up to the gates of Herat. The means that he employed to attain
this end were so terrible that to this day, when any article is by
accident dropped on the roads, or even in the fields, no one dares
b take it up; the 6rst person who finds it informs, with the
utmost speed, the nearest officer of police of the fact, whose duty
it is to seek out the owner, and return it to him, without putting
the carelees proprietor to any expense. Yar Mohamed Khan had
become wealthy at this period--excessively wealthy ; his rapacity,
482 YAR MOHAMED STREEGTHENS HIS POWER. CHAP. XXXII.
without being extinguished, was a little abated, and he wished
that the people, who now felt the advantages of his beneficial
administration, should give him all the honour and gratitude due
for it ; while by throwing the blame of the previous anarchy on
the weakness of Shah Kamran, in whose reign he pretended he
could never realise the improvements he proposed, he contrived to
render odious the memory of that unworthy though unfortunate
monarch. Yar Xlohamed was thus occupied in consolidating his
power in Herat, when the chiefs of some distant districts, who had
only nominally recognised the sovereignty of Shah R a m , raised
the standard of revolt, and he therefore resolved to strike vigokusly,
in order to annihilate any disposition of the kind for the future. After
having confided the city to his son, the Serdar Seif Mohamed Khan,
and a picked garrison, he proceeded to the district of Kaleh-
noon, inhabited by the Hazarah Zeidnats ; but the Serdar Kerim
Dad Khan, their chief, feeling that he was not strong enough to
confront the approaching danger, went to offer his submission to
the Vizier, engaged to recognise his suzerainty, also to pay him a
tribute in barek and horses, and gave him one of his brothers and
several Hearah chiefs as hostages for his fidelity. This happy
settlement of the disturbances in Kaleh-noon enabled Yar Mohamed
to turn his arms against Gour, the state of which province caused
him considerable uneasiness.
This district was governed by two independent chiefs, the
Serdars Moustapha and Ibrahim Khan, who, being open to more
than one influence adverse to the interests of the new sovereign
of Herat, now and then made a raid upon his dominions a t the
instigation of Kohendil Khan, Prince of Kandahar. They might
have been acting in support of some discontented serdars, but on
the present occasion the danger to the vizier was more imminent,
for he had to unravel the plots of SeIf ool Moolk and Saadet
Mulook, sons of Shah Kamran, who, when driven h m the citadel
of Herat, had taken refuge with Ibrahim Khan. This chief warmly
embraced their ca~lse, an alliance the more vexatious for the vizier
as the country of Gour presents at every step admirable positions
for an army on the defensive and is intersected by high and
rugged mountains, very precipitous, and covered with forests ; lying
between them are beautiful valleys, inhabited by the nomade
population, and in the villages which are also scattered on the steep
sides of these mountains, a few men in ambuscade might easily hold
Crr4p. XXXII. YAR YOEIAMED PLUNDERS THE CARAVANS. 483
a very considerable army in check. To these advantages, which
enabled the fugitive princes to harass the usurper of their rights,
and, in case of discomfiture, retire to a formidable position, there
was added another, scarcely less important ; the intrepid cousin
of the vizier, Dine Mohamed Khan (who, as we have already said,
married the daughter of Moustapha Khan, the other Taymoo~~i
Serdar), also consented to join their party. And we must here
W e s s for a moment to give a brief account of his subsequent
career.
ARer his flight from Herat, Dine Mohamed Khan soon wearied
of the life that he led in the mountaim of Gour, where he had been
found by the messenger of Major Rawlinson when he brought him
the proposal that he should march to the relief of Shah Kamran,
then besieged in the citadel of Herat. He afterwards took advan-
tage of the return of the Mohamedzyes to Kandahar to resume
his active life ; and when the English left that city, and Kohen-
dil man proceeded there to take it from Se'if der Djing, Dine
Mohamed appeared at Kandahar to offer his services to the son of
Shah Shooja, who was under the protection of the British. The
prince accepted them with gratitude; and in the battle which
took place at Haooz Singsar, in which Self der Djing was de-
feated, Dine Mohamed distinguished himself by hi accwtomed
bravery. With two hundred chosen men he for two hours
sustained the attack of the entire army of Kohendil Khan, amount-
ing to six thousand men ;- but in the end, finding himself obliged
to yield, he retired to the mountains, where no one thought of
disturbing him. His little band being soon destitute of every-
thing, he proceeded to the plain of Bakooa, near the Kach-
rood, and placed himself in ambush on the side of the Koohi
Duzd (Robber's Mountain), where he waited for a caravan of several
thousand camels and mules, which was expected to pass that way ;
When it arrived he captured the whole, and upon this plunder
maintained his troop during the winter. In the course of the two
following months he completely restored his finances by pillaging
other caravans, after which he returned to the mountains of Gour,
where he found the sons of Kamran, with whom he made common
caw.
When Yar Mohamed inarched against Gour he with his usual tact
began his operations by sowing dissension among his enemies, and
Moustapha Khan, who supported Dine Mohamed, and Ibrahim,
2 1 2
who took the part of the princes, quamtlled-nay, fougbt. h this
condit Ibmhim Khan was worsted, which led to the subjugation of
the country ; and the princes having lost the support of Moustapha
Khan, and Ibrahim having fled to the mountains, they were
obl i i d to retire to the district of the Serdar Akter Khan st
Zemidavar, in the %mitoy of Kandahar, where they were so011
surrounded.
As to Dine Mohamed Khan, he gr m tired of the hmmbg
life he had passed for two years, and willingly gave his sanction to
a reconciliatian which several chiefs wished to bring about b e e n
him and the Vi e r ; but remarking, as he thought, a coldnese in
his reception by Yar Mohamed, he feared that he might be be-
trayed, and fled from hia camp the same night. On arriving at
M&ed he was kindly welcomed by Assaf Dooulet, who imme-
diately availed himself of hi acknowledged bravery by sending
him with his Afghans to pacify the southern part of Kh&n,
then m revolt, and the ahief hea since remained in the service
of Persia.
Yar Mohamed had afterwards little trouble in reducing the
disunited serdm of Gour. Ibrahim Khan, driven Grom one psi-
tion to another, retired to a fortifid rock in the mountain of
Tchalap Dalan, which had the reputation of being impwgnable :
there, reduced by famine, he surrendered at disoretion and more
obedience to the Vizier; but a few days after, however, be
contrived to escape, and returned to the hills, where he Lived for
some time by pillage. This chief had about 7000 famidies of
Taymoonis under his rule, and Yar Mohamed, after having
completely devastated the country they occupied, removed them
to Herat, where he established some in the city and the remainder
in the suburbs ; they were afterwards organized into several bet-
taliom of serbaz, and, being very brave, are now the beat troop
in his army. Moustapha Khan having oasisted Yar Mohamed
against Ibrahim Khan, the vizier spared his life, but this was
not the only reaeon that dictated his generosity; the district
inhabited by the former chieftain is the moat impracticable m t$e
county, and .the difficulties that Yar Mohamed would have had to
surmount in any attempt to reduce it, spoke far more in Mom+
tapha's favour than the gratitude of the Vizier of Herat.
Having obtained these satisfactory resulta from his expedition,
the Vizier returned to hi capital and occupied h i i f in ex-
CHAP. XXXTT. DTFFftRENDEEl WITH KANDAEAR 486
tending him frontier tmrarils the north. In the connuencement of
1846 he marched with hi m y in the direction of the Moorgah,
on the banks of which river were encamped some Hazarah
%idnab, commanded by one of the brothere of Kerim Dad Khan,
of Kaleh-noon, the chief of the whole of that tribe, but these
nomades decamped at the approach of the vizier, and retiring into
the Persian territory, put themselves under the protection of A d
Dwnlet, who gem them the village of gsria on the frontier of
Herat. This act waa not of a nature to allay the hatred felt
by Yar -1Mohamed for the Governor of Khorcrsean: he did not
forget it, and at a later period made him pay dearly for the
vexatious opposition.
The Vizier allowed hi cavalry to graze their horses in the fine
pasturee watered by the Moorgab, and afterwards returned to
Herat to be present at the departure of hia daughter Bobojane
for Kabul, whcse marriage with Mohamed Akbar Khan ' wq' it
will be remembered, very nearly cawing a serious conflict between
the Vizier and tbe Prince of Kandahar. The latter desired nothing
better than to seize this pretext for extending hie temtoy at the
expew of Yar Mohamed, but each time that he aent hie bops
towards the frontier of Herat, Mohamed Akbar as a devoted son-
in-law, immediately made a correeponding movement towards that of
Kandahar, with the army placed in observation at Ghuznee, which
at once checked the ambitious aspirntions of his uncle, Kohendil
Khau. Nevertheless Yar Mohamed was anxiow to take revenge for
the depredations that had been committed by the Kandahariana,
in the south of hie principality, and ravaged the border villagee
of gandahar. After this, and towards the middle of 1846, he
marched into the Gour country, where disaffection had again
manifested itself, and did not leave it till order was perfectly re-
stored in the provinea. I t was about this time that the S e r b
Akter Khan, Alizye, attacked and besten by Kohendil Khan, who
feared his influence and hi power, took refuge with Yar Mohamed,
d o gave him the government of the district of Gour, where
he wae rejoined by his tribe which had been dispersed, and it
ia still established there. Siice that period Kohendil Khan has not
dtued to renew hia incursions upon the Hemtian territory.
Towards the close of the year 1846, the intrigues of the prime
minister of the Shah of Persia, having i n d u d his royal master to
deprive Amaf Doodet of the government of Khorseeao, and the
486 SUBJUGATION OF THE HAZARAH ZEIDNATS. CHD. XSXII.
consequence of that measure having been the entire ruin of his
family, one of his sone, as I have said before, raised the standard
of revolt, and all Khorasaan responded to hi appeal. The Eall of
Assaf Dooulet greatly assisted the cause of Yar Mohamed, whose
power increased considerably. For thirteen years the Vi e r had
been held in check by him ; he had never permitted him to extend
his rule over the small Usbek Khanats situated to the north
of hie dominions, and he went even so far aa to counteract openly
that which he more legitimately exercised over the Hazarah Zeid-
nats. As soon as Yar Mohamed heard that Assaf Dooulet had left
for Teheran, and that he had therefore nothing to fear from him
he marched once more against Kerim Dad Khan, whose submission
had hitherto been only nominal. This time the Hazarah chief deter-
mined upon making open war with hi suzerain ; he assembled a
chosen band of 12,000 of .his best cavalry, and Yar Mohamed led
to the attack in the open country of Kaleh-noon 8000 horse, 6000
foot, and a battery of aix guns. The combat, a most sanguinary
one, lasted nine hours ; but the Hazarahs were at length crushed,
and many chiefs lost their lives on both sides: the gallant Kerim
Dad Khan, weakened by the loss of blood that streamed from
many wounds, escaped with great difficulty, and was accom-
panied only by one single horseman of the brave men he had
commanded, when he reached the Persian territory at Toorbut
Sheikh Djam.
Yar Mohamed encamped upon the field of battle, and in the
space of eight days collected ten thousand families of the Haearah
Zeidnats whom he removed from their native soil to that part
of the district of Nerat, reaching h m Obeh to Gorian, where
he settled them on the banks of the Herirood. By these forced
immigrations of the Taymoonis and Hazarahs, the principality
became more populous than it had been previously to the siege of
Herat in 1838, and Yar Mohamed obtained the further advantage
of keeping under his eye the moat turbulent inhabitants of his
dominions. He made excellent soldiers of these Eimaks and by
their amalgamation with the Afghans it became almost impossible
for the former to betray him.
After having installed them in their new abode, and fixed the
tax they should pay at three tomaums for each tent, Yar Mohamed
again took the field, and marched upon Meimana, a small indepen-
dent Khanat lying north of Kaleh-noon, of which there were two
CHAP. XXXIT. MARCH AGAINST THE USBEK KHANATS. 487
chiefi, brothers, Eukmet Khan and Shere Khan, who admitted
his suzerainty without hesitation The Vizier then pushed on to
t he rich Khanats of Serpul, Chibberghane, Andekhooye, and
Akhtche, and their respective khans, who up to that period had
nominally been vassals of the Emir of Bokhara, also submitted.
From Akhtche Yar Mohamed sent an ambassador to that sovereign,
and also to the Caliph of Men, to inform them that they must
with the least possible delay give up all the Heratee slaves then in
their territories ; he also warned them that if there was the slightest
armed demonstration on their part, or on that of the Khanats which
he had subjugated, he would march straight upon their capitals.
Although Yar Mohamed had nothing to fear from the Shah of
Persia in thus extending his dominions, he considered it politic to
inform him of his march into the Usbek country, and mure him
that these conquests could not but contribute to augment his power
and renown, inasmuch as they were made in hi3 name by the
most humble of his vassals. Mohamed Shah having the revolt in
Khorassan on his hands, and being unable to repress it, was obliged
to put up with these lying protestations, and he endured what he
could not prevent.
Yar Mohamed subsequently marched upon Balkh, when a
courier brought him informatioxl that the gallant Kerim Dad Khan,
having placed himself at the head of some fugitives of his tribe
who had joined him in Khorassan, was ravaging the district of
Gorian from one end to the other-his letters also brought him
other news not less vexatious. Shah Pecend Khan, an independent
Afghan chieftain and lord of Laush-jowaine (a fortress on the
north of Lake Roustem), who was allied to the serdars of Kan-
dahar, had at their instigation, and with the aid of some nomade
Beloochees, pillaged the camps and villages in the district of
Furrah and Bakooa This untoward intelligence obliged the Vizier
rapidly to retrace his steps, and move with the ma s of his forces
towards the quartcr threatened. But, after the first five days'
march, the Usbeks that he had incorporated into his m y deserted,
and the Khanats, which had so recently submitted, proclaimed their
independence, at the same time massacring the garrisons that had
been left in them. To complete his misfortunes, the cold set in
with such intensity, that before he could reach Koochk a large pro-
portion of his soldiers and four-fifths of his horses had perished ;
provisions suddenly failed, and hunger was added to the other
488 BALANCE OF POWEB. IN CRNTRBC MIA. CEAP. XKXIT.
miseries hie army had to d e r . Theee difficultie, which ocxwred
eimultaneeusly, were certainly great, but Yar Mohamed was only
three days' march from his capital ; he had obtained a large sum
of mney in the countries through which he hsd pa+ so that it
waa easy for him to repair these Sieastere, and h m the momeot
of his return to Herat his activity and vigilance triumphed orer
them.
This s u m against the Uebeks naturally excited the jealousy
of Persia and all the independent chiefs, hia neighbow, who,
dreading lest hia influence and power should trench upon their
own, formed a league against him; and Kandahar, obeying
the impulse given by Penis, allied itself to the chieh of Bokhara,
Khulm, and Balkh, to oppose his projects and thase of his ally, the
Emir of Kabul. The mutual hostility of these states is the i m p
rative result of their mpective positions, and that circumstance ie
the cause which haa for so many yeam prevented the union of the
Afghan principalities in one kingdom. If Kabul or I h t attach
Kandahar, a divemion is made on the north by 3alkh and
Khulm in support of that principahty ; if it ia on Rhulm or
Balkh that the central states direct an attack, then bdahar and
Persia will make a diversion in favour of the established equi-
librium - the balance of power in Central Aaia Herat and
Kabul have for some time reciprocally k t e d each other; but
it must be added that these alliances are modified and vary e
cording to the interests that are engaged on either aide. A ahort
time before Yar Mohamed's expedition to the north, he waa
alarmed lest hi fiiendly connexion with Kabul should be broken
off by the death of his son-in-law Mohamed Akbar Khan ; but aa
his widow Bobojane then became the wife of Go ul a ~ Haidar
Khan, another son of Dost Mohamed's, and who also mccded
Mohamed Akbar in the post of vizier of Kabul, these fears were
gradually dissipated, and, when he marched towards the south to
put down the revolt of the chief of Lauah-jowaine, his new s o 5
in-law so completely overawed Kandabar that it gave him cox&
dence in his intentions. The Vizier, however, %new by long
experience that family ti- are of little value in the eyes of
Afghans, and that the smallest conflicting interest neutraliaes them
completely ; he therefore endeavoured, while preserving the friend-
ship of the chiefs of Kabul, to secure the support of Persia, htx
sovereign having till that period been hostile to him. To attain
hie object he in the first inetsnce assisted the Shah's troops that
were engaged in repressing the revolt in Khoraeean at the head of
which wem the sons of Assaf Dooulet ; and in thus acting he also
indulged the hatred that he felt for all the members of his family.
aliiance with Persia was a freeh proof of the far4ghted aha-
rader of the vizier's policy, but the friendly manihtation had
very little effect upon Mohamed Shah, who deteated him from
Bis heart's core, and an opportunity of showing this f d i
haring preceded itse& the Persian monarch did not allow it to
escape him.
On the 6th of August, 1848, a messenger from the Prince
Hammeh Mia, commander-in-chief of the Persian forces in Kho-
r a m , bought two letters to the Shah. One of these missives
came &om Kohendil Khan, who declared himself the very
humble 4 of the Shah of Persia, and as such requeated the
permiaeion of the King of Kings to march against Herat with
15,000 men, and take it. For a long time," mid the Serdar,
" the great men of that city have been constantly asking me to
mist them in putting an end to the tyranny of the Vi e r Yar
Mohamed Khan ; but I wi l l not undertake the expedition without
the authority of your majesty." The other letter was from Yar
Mohsmed, who e x p d himself in equally devoted terms, and
requeated the ambtance of the Shah against the hostile demonstra-
tions of his neighbour of Edahar. He represented, judiciously
enough, that the position taken by the English near the right bank
of the Indw at Dadur, near the Bolan Pam, was at so short a
dbtance from the former city that they n e e d y posseseed, and
could exercise whenever they pleased, a moet powerful influence
over the political conduct of Kohendil Khan, who had no means
of releasing himaelf from it ; a h , that in furthering the designs
of the Prince of Kandahar upon Herat, the Shah of Persia
would be acting in direct opposition to his own interests, for the
English would then be able by h i means to enter Persia at
auy moment they imperatively intimated a wieh to that effect.
Mo h e d S h h knew that the Vi e r told the truth, for experience
had long eince proved that in maintaining the three princi-
palities in Af+istan, and upholding the independence of some
of the smaller chi* his government could exercise a much greater
d e n c y over them than by uniting them under one sovereign ;
he could thus enter into their quarrels, and control them alter-
2 K
490 ALLIAXCE OF YAR MOHAMED CW. -1. -
nately through each other. But his antipathy to Yar Mohamed
overpowered every other consideration, and he had decided on
supporting Kohendil Khan when death put an end to his earthly
career on the 4th of the following September, and arrested the
execution of the orders he had sent to his army in favour of
the Prince of Kandahar. At the time the Shah of Peraia came
to this unwise decision the Vizier was at Meahed, assisting Prince
Hamzeh Mirza, who was besieging it. The Afghan army per-
formed prodigies of valour in many successive assaults, but what
could 8000 men do against a city the inhabitants of which had, a
century before, and for two years consecutively, resisted the efforts
of 60,000 Afghans, under Ahmed Shah, Suddozye, and finally
obliged him to raise the siege. When the news of the death of
Mohamed Shah reached Meshed, the Persian troop became demo-
ralised, and two battalions which occupied the citadel evacuated
it, and rejoined the besieging army, which, subject to daily at*
from the enemy, and starving, had very soon no other resource left
than to retire into the territory of Herat, where Yar Mohamed
received Prince Hamzeh Mirza most hospitably, maintaining his
soldiers for many months ; and when, in consequence of the recall
of their commander to Teheran at the commencement of 1849, they
quitted the principality, the ~ri nce presented four pieces of cannon
to the Vizier in testimony of his gratitude for the treatment that
he and hi troops had received.
Nasser Eddin, the auweaor of Mohamed Shah, adopted a policy
entirely different from that of hi father. Towards the middle of
1849 he sent to Yar Mohamed a sword richly set with jewel& and
his highest decoration, accompanied by a letter in which he
stated that be considered the Vizier aa his most faithful ally. The
labter was not tardy in returning these professions of friendship,
and in the spring of 1850 a c o l d elephant, that had been pre-
sented by Yar Mohamed to his werain, was ikquently seen prome-
nading the streets of Teheran : in fact, the best understanding existed
between Nasser Eddin and Yar Mohamed. Those who know the
Vizier see in these demonstrative sympathies for Persia nothing
more than an additional instance of his ability, but they remain
still convinced that he will never give her his support so completely
as to enable the Persians effectually to subdue the revolution in
Khorassan under the Salar. That revolt is a great piece of
good fortune for Yar Mohamed ; he now gives the law to all the
CUP. XIiXII. WITH THE SHAH OF PERSIA. 491
smaller chiefs around his dominions, and he is too clever not to see
that the pacification of Khorasaan would be a disadvantageous
event for him-he therefore secretly feeds the fire, though he pre-
tends he is endeavouring to quench it-but it is with a cupful of
water.
As to Kandahar, there is less chance than ever of its receiving
support from Persia; and at this time, 1850, the attention of
Kohendil Khan, as well aa that of the Emir of Kabul, is chiefly
directed to the results that have followed the extemion of terri-
tory acquired by the English at the expense of the Sikhs, and
consequently their nearer approach to Afghanistan. Their preaent
north-west frontier is the Indus, along the whole of its navigable
course ; and they have crossed it at two pointa-Peshawur on the
north, and Shikapoor on the south. These are t 6 t e d p o n t which
command the paasage of that river, and give to the Anglo-Indian
government the power of exercising the greatest influence over
the policy of the chiefs of Kandahar and Kabul-may Europe
never have cause to repent that she has permitted those conquests
which will render Great Britain and Ruasia all-powerful over this
planet.
THE END.