Sacking of Burhanpur (1681)
Part of Mughal-Maratha Wars
Date31 January 1681 - 2 February 1681
Location21°18′N 76°14′E / 21.3°N 76.23°E / 21.3; 76.23
Result

Maratha Empire Victory

  • Marathas sack Burhanpur.
  • Marathas sack Aurangabad.
  • Mughals lose more than 2 crores to marathas.
  • Maratha Army captures the city fort.
Belligerents
Maratha Empire Mughal Empire
Commanders and leaders
Sambhaji
Hambirrao Mohite
Kavi Kalash
Suryaji Jake
Bahadur Khan Kokaltash
Kakar Khan (POW)
Units involved

5,000 cavalry under Sambhaji

15,000 cavalry under Hambirrao Mohite

7,000 under Suryaji Jakhde
Strength

20,000 at Burhanpur

7,000 near Aurangabad

8,000 at Burhanpur

Estimated ~ 20,000 at Aurangabad
Casualties and losses
Negligible

500-600 killed

Many captured

The sacking of Burhanpur (31 January 1681 - 2 February 1681) refers to the looting of the wealthy city of Burhanpur in Madhya Pradesh by the Maratha ruler Sambhaji. The Maratha army commanded by Sambhaji maharaj and Sersenapati Hambirrao Mohite attacked and plundered the city for three days. The Marathas got a huge loot and returned to Raigad by evading Mughal forces.Marathas also sacked aurangabad after this sack.

Sacking of Burhanpur

Hambirrao Mohite reached the forests near Burhanpur with a 15,000 strong cavalry force. Kakar Khan gathered civilian forces and decided to attack Hambirrao at midnight. As he came out of the city gates, Sambhaji himself attacked from the old trenches with a cavalry force of 4,000. Sambhaji's force routed the ill-prepared Mughal garrison. Sambhaji then left 200-300 soldiers at the main city gate and left for Bahadurpura, the richest suburb of the city. Sambhaji started to loot the houses of the richest merchants which were shown to him by his spies. Hambirrao's force soon joined Sambhaji and the combined Maratha force started looting the city. Hambirrao, then sealed the city's entrances to ensure that the word of the attack doesn't spread out. Marathas looted the city consecutively for three days. Marathas earned a loot estimated to be around 2 crore rupees.[1]

References

  1. Bahekar, S.A. (1999). Martiyar Sambhaji. Jalgaon: Kasab Publications. p. 353.
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