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Battle of the Indus

The Battle of the Indus was fought on the banks of the Indus River, on 24 November 1221, by two armies commanded by Shah Jalal al-Din Mingburnu of the Khwarazmian Empire, and Genghis Khan of the Mongol Empire. The battle, which resulted in an overwhelming Mongol victory, was the concluding engagement in the Mongol conquest of the Khwarazmian Empire.

Battle of the Indus
Part of the Mongol conquest of the Khwarazmian Empire

Late 16th-century depiction of Jalal al-Din fleeing the battle by crossing the Indus; Genghis Khan looks on.
Date24 November 1221
Location
Near the Indus River, located in modern-day Pakistan
33°46′N 72°11′E / 33.77°N 72.18°E / 33.77; 72.18
Result Mongol victory
Territorial
changes
Khwarazm and Khorasan annexed by Mongols
Belligerents
Mongol Empire Khwarazmian Empire
Commanders and leaders
Genghis Khan
Chagatai Khan
Ögedei Khan
Jalal al-Din Mingburnu
Amin Malik 
Temur Malik 
Strength
50,000 cavalry[1] 3,000 cavalry with 700 bodyguards [1]
with 30,000–35,000 semi-irregular men[2]
Casualties and losses
unknown Heavy
Battle of the Indus
class=notpageimage|
Location within South Asia
Battle of the Indus
Battle of the Indus (Pakistan)

After his father Muhammad II had died on an island in the Caspian Sea, Jalal al-Din assumed the title of Khwarazmshah and travelled eastwards. Escaping the Mongols several times, he reached Ghazni and started assembling a large force; he then defeated the Mongol commander Shigi Qutuqu at the Battle of Parwan. This upset victory drew the attention and ire of Genghis Khan, who gathered a force of at least 50,000 and moved towards the Shah, who had lost a large proportion of his force because of a dispute over plunder. Now unable to effectively combat the Khan, he retreated eastwards towards the Indus river; the Mongols caught up on the morning the Khwarazmians were due to cross.

The Shah's army, now numbering around 30,000, assumed a strong defensive position on the banks of the river. They acquitted themselves well in the early fighting, managing to drive back the Mongol forces despite being heavily outnumbered. However, after an elite Mongol detachment managed to outflank the Khwarazmians, the Shah realized the battle was lost; in full armour, he rode his horse off a cliff into the Indus. As a mark of respect for his enemy's bravery, the Khan ordered his archers not to fire, and so the Shah managed to gain the opposite bank; however, his family and nearly all his army were slaughtered.

Background edit

Genghis Khan had invaded Khwarazm with an army of between 75,000 and 200,000 soldiers in late 1219.[a] Shah Muhammad II, wary of Mongol skill in battle and doubtful of his commanders' loyalties, adopted a defence in depth strategy based on garrisoning his cities, especially Otrar, Samarkand and Gurganj.[3] However, the Khan demonstrated superior strategic ability, splitting the Shah's forces to take Bukhara in February 1220 and Samarkand in March; the border town of Otrar held out for six months until it fell in April.[4] Genghis sent a 30,000 to 40,000 strong Mongol army led by Jebe and Subutai to hunt down the Shah, who had begun to flee west with his eldest son Jalal al-Din.[5][6] The Mongol army sacked numerous cities during their long pursuit, including Tus, Qazvin and Ardabil;[7] however, the Shah found refuge on an island in the Caspian Sea, where he died in December 1220.[8]

Jalal al-Din reached the city of Gurganj, the former capital of the empire, after his father's death, but found that the nobility was hostile to him, preferring his half-brother Uzlaq-Shah.[9] Discovering a plot against his life, Jalal al-Din left the city and set out southwards across the Karakum Desert, emerging near Nisa where he defeated a Mongol detachment.[10] Meanwhile, two large Mongol forces, led by the Khan's two eldest sons Jochi and Chagatai, converged on Gurganj from the northeast and southeast respectively;[11] the capture of the city would take another six months and additional Mongol forces, led by Ögedei, to be accomplished.[12] At the same time, Genghis had sent his youngest son Tolui to conquer the region of Khorasan, which Tolui completed speedily and with extreme devastation — the cities of Merv, Nishapur were destroyed and their populations massacred, while Herat was betrayed to the Mongols and escaped destruction.[13] Jalal al-Din narrowly escaped being caught at Nishapur, where he had hoped to raise an army; he evaded his pursuers and managed to reach Bost, where his maternal uncle Amin Malik joined him with a reasonable force.[14] The Shah then moved to Ghazni, where many Khwarazmian loyalists, including Qurlaq, Khalaj and Turkmens, joined him and within a few weeks he had amassed a well-equipped, if not firmly united, army of around 65,000 soldiers.[15]

Battle of Parwan and prelude edit

After Jalal al-Din moved against some Mongol forces in the area, Genghis Khan sent Shigi Qutuqu with force of between thirty and fifty thousand to defeat the Shah;[16][17] however, Qutuqu was unexpectedly defeated at the Battle of Parwan in the autumn of 1221.[18][19] News of this defeat led to large rebellions in several cities, including Merv and Herat. Unfortunately for Jalal al-Din, a large proportion of his force, mostly Afghans under Saif al-Din Ighrak, deserted after the battle because of a dispute over spoils. The Shah knew that the sudden loss of nearly half his army would probably prove fatal, so he decided to seek refuge in India.[20] He returned to Ghazni and then marched east, making for the Indus River to cross into India.[21] However, his pace was slow because a large number of refugees was accompanying his army.[20]

The Mongols had conducted two month-long sieges at Rang Castle and Bamyan, but Genghis Khan marched towards Ghazni after receiving news of the defeat at Parwan.[22] The Mongols sent detachments ahead to seize several passes that led from Ghazni to Peshawar, so when the deserters under Ighrak finally decided to rejoin Jalal al-Din, he found the way barred. One Mongol detachment was defeated by Jalal al-Din at Gadriz,[23][24] but the Mongols, travelling at the fastest possible pace, managed to catch up on the banks of the Indus, defeating his rearguard.[21]

Battle deployment edit

Both armies formed up for battle at dawn. Jalal al-Din took command of the center with 5,000 troops, including 700 bodyguards in reserve. Amin Malik took command of the Turks on the right wing,[25][26] while the Afghans manned the left wing, probably commanded by Temur Malik.[27] The Shah anchored his left wing on a ridge that ran straight into the river, while the flank on the right wing was protected by the riverbank.[27][19] With this placement, the Shah had taken away the Mongol advantage of fighting a mobile battle of outflanking manoeuvres,[23] and by fighting in a confined space, their advantage of having superior numbers were reduced.[28]

Genghis deployed his forces in a crescent-shape, pinning the Khwarazmians against the river; he personally commanded the reserve to make sure the Shah wouldn't be able to break through the Mongol lines and escape.[29] The Mongol right was commanded by Chagatai and the left by his brother Ögedei. The Mongol army outnumbered Jalal al-Din's forces by a large margin,[23] but they probably were exhausted from their forced march across the mountains and Genghis Khan may have engaged the enemy before his full force had gathered.[27][28]

Battle edit

 
Mid-16th century depiction Jalal al-Din Khwarazmshah crossing the rapid Indus River, escaping Genghis Khan and his army

At dawn on 24 November, the battle began with the wings engaging each other; the Khwarazmian left held their strong defensive position despite the Khan consistently feeding in new troops, while Ögedei was driven back on the Mongol left.[19] Realizing the strength of the ridge, Genghis sent a general named Bela Noyan with an elite bahadur tumen to climb it and outflank the Khwarazmians.[25] Jalal al-Din attacked the Mongol center; although his personal biographer al-Nasawi has him reach Genghis Khan and put him to flight. Even though the Mongols could not use their arrows effectively in the crowded conditions, they managed to stop the Khwarazmian advance, killing Temur Malik in the mêlée.[27][28]

Although many men were lost during Bela Noyan's climb, the Mongol detachment successfully scaled the ridge and attacked the Shah's left wing from the flank and rear.[30] The Khwarazmian right was also retreating, and eventually broke; Amin Malik was intercepted and killed as he tried to flee to Peshawar.[26] Even though it was evident that the battle was now lost, Jalal al-Din continued to fight until noon.[30] After his maternal cousin Akhash Malik implored him to flee, he charged the now Mongol-controlled ridge, breaking through the lines.[31][30] He then rode his horse off the edge of the 30-foot cliff, but managed to reach the opposite shore. Witnessing the feat and calling his sons to witness, Genghis forbade his archers to shoot the Shah and stated "Fortunate should be the father of such a son".[24]

Although the Shah's life was spared, the lives of his men, most of whom had followed their leader's example, were not. In total, only around four thousand reached the other bank, with many being shot in the water by Mongol archers.[26] The Shah’s camp, harem and treasures were captured, and all male members of his family, including his seven year old and infant sons, were killed.[32]

Aftermath edit

Jalal al-Din managed to collect the survivors of his army; displaying his military acumen, he defeated local rulers and started establishing a small state in India. Genghis did not make any great effort to pursue his defeated foe, only sending troops when Jalal al-Din recrossed the Indus to bury his dead.[33] The Khan was mostly occupied with subjugating the Afghans near Jalalabad, and the Mongol army then wintered in the Swat valley.[34][26] Genghis Khan next sent his son Ögedei to sack Ghazni and subdue some of the Afghan mountain forts, a task which took fifteen months to fully accomplish.[35] With that done, the Khan returned to Mongolia leisurely, reaching it in 1224–25.[36]

A small force commanded by Dorbei Doqshin failed to make contact with Jalal al-Din; when he rejoined the Khan at Samarkand, he was immediately sent out once again on the same mission, with orders not to fail.[37] They besieged the Shah for forty days in spring 1224, before the summer heat forced them to retreat.[33][b] Jalal al-Din later received news from his brother Ghiyath al-Din, who had established dominion over the Khwarazmian territories in Western Iran and Iraq, inviting him to return and re-establish Khwarazmian power.[39] Leaving his lands in the Punjab in the hands of a lieutenant, the Shah then marched across Makran, leaving India after a stay of three years, to set up his rule in parts of Persia and Anatolia.[40] Before the Battle of Garni in 1225, Jalal al-Din sent a letter to Queen Rusudan demanding Georgian submission; Rusudan responded with an insulting letter, mocking how badly the Khwarazmshah had been beaten by Genghis Khan at the Indus.[41]

Notes edit

  1. ^ For details of army sizes during the invasion, see Mongol conquest of the Khwarazmian Empire: Opposing Forces.
  2. ^ Dorbei may later have converted to Islam and joined Jalal al-Din, fearful of the Khan's response were he to return unsuccessfully again.[38]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Sverdrup 2010, pp. 109–117.
  2. ^ Dupuy & Dupuy 1993, p. 366.
  3. ^ Barthold 1968, pp. 404–406.
  4. ^ Tanner 2002, pp. 89–90.
  5. ^ Buniyatov 2015, p. 119.
  6. ^ McLynn 2015, pp. 282–284.
  7. ^ Juvaini 1958, 143–146.
  8. ^ Buniyatov 2015, p. 121.
  9. ^ Buniyatov 2015, p. 123.
  10. ^ McLynn 2015, p. 295.
  11. ^ Barthold 1968, p. 433.
  12. ^ Boyle 1968, p. 319.
  13. ^ Boyle 1968, pp. 312–317.
  14. ^ Sverdrup 2017, p. 160.
  15. ^ Boyle 1968, p. 318.
  16. ^ Buniyatov 2015, p. 127.
  17. ^ Sverdrup 2017, p. 162.
  18. ^ Tanner 2002, p. 94.
  19. ^ a b c Tucker 2009, p. 273.
  20. ^ a b Fleet & Temple 1885, p. 87.
  21. ^ a b Tanner 2002, p. 95.
  22. ^ Juvaini 1958, 132.
  23. ^ a b c Sverdrup 2017, p. 163.
  24. ^ a b Buniyatov 2015, p. 128.
  25. ^ a b Barthold 1968, p. 446.
  26. ^ a b c d Boyle 1968, p. 320.
  27. ^ a b c d Tanner 2002, p. 96.
  28. ^ a b c McLynn 2015, p. 308.
  29. ^ Fleet & Temple 1885, p. 88.
  30. ^ a b c McLynn 2015, p. 309.
  31. ^ Juvaini 1958, 410.
  32. ^ Barthold 1968, p. 445.
  33. ^ a b Jackson 1990, pp. 45–54.
  34. ^ Sverdrup 2017, pp. 163–164.
  35. ^ McLynn 2015, pp. 313–314.
  36. ^ Boyle 1968, pp. 321–322.
  37. ^ Boyle 1968, p. 321.
  38. ^ Boyle 1963, pp. 235–247.
  39. ^ Juvaini 1958, 417.
  40. ^ Buniyatov 2015, p. 130.
  41. ^ McLynn 2015, p. 389.

Sources edit

  • Barthold, Vasily (1968) [1900]. Turkestan Down to the Mongol Invasion (Third ed.). Gibb Memorial Trust. OCLC 4523164.
  • Boyle, John Andrew (1963). "The Mongol Commanders in Afghanistan and India according to the Tabaqat-i Nasiri of Juzjani". Islamic Studies. 2 (2). Islamabad: International Islamic University: 235–47. JSTOR 20832685.
  • Boyle, John Andrew (1968). The Cambridge History of Iran, Volume 5. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-06936-6.
  • Buniyatov, Z. M. (2015) [1986]. A History of the Khorezmian State Under the Anushteginids, 1097–1231 Государство Хорезмшахов-Ануштегинидов: 1097–1231 [A History of the Khorezmian State under the Anushteginids, 1097–1231]. Translated by Mustafayev, Shahin; Welsford, Thomas. Moscow: Nauka. ISBN 978-9943-357-21-1.
  • Dupuy, Trevor N.; Dupuy, R. Ernest (1993). The Harper Encyclopedia of Military History. Harper Collins.
  • Fleet, John F.; Temple, Richard C., eds. (1885). The Indian Antiquary A Journal of Oriental research. Vol. XIV.
  • Jackson, Peter (1990). "Jalāl Al-Dīn, the Mongols, and the Khwarazmian Conquest of the Panjāb and Sind". Iran. 28. British Institute of Persian Studies: 45–54. doi:10.2307/4299834. JSTOR 4299834.
  • Juvaini, Ata-Malik (1958) [c. 1260]. Tarikh-i Jahangushay تاریخ جهانگشای [History of the World Conqueror] (in Persian). Vol. 2. Translated by Andrew Boyle, John.
  • McLynn, Frank (2015). Genghis Khan: His Conquests, His Empire, His Legacy. Hachette Books. OCLC 1285130526.
  • Sverdrup, Carl (2010). "Numbers in Mongol Warfare". Journal of Medieval Military History. 8. Boydell Press: 109–17 [p. 113]. doi:10.1515/9781846159022-004. ISBN 978-1-84383-596-7.
  • Sverdrup, Carl (2017). The Mongol Conquests The Military Operations of Genghis Khan and Sübe'etei. West Midlands: Helion & Company Limited. pp. 29, 163, 168. ISBN 978-1-910777-71-8.
  • Tanner, Stephen (2002). Afghanistan: A Military History from Alexander The Great to the Fall of The Taliban. Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-81233-9.
  • Tucker, Spencer (2009). A Global Chronology of Conflict: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East. Vol. I.

battle, indus, fought, banks, indus, river, november, 1221, armies, commanded, shah, jalal, mingburnu, khwarazmian, empire, genghis, khan, mongol, empire, battle, which, resulted, overwhelming, mongol, victory, concluding, engagement, mongol, conquest, khwaraz. The Battle of the Indus was fought on the banks of the Indus River on 24 November 1221 by two armies commanded by Shah Jalal al Din Mingburnu of the Khwarazmian Empire and Genghis Khan of the Mongol Empire The battle which resulted in an overwhelming Mongol victory was the concluding engagement in the Mongol conquest of the Khwarazmian Empire Battle of the IndusPart of the Mongol conquest of the Khwarazmian EmpireLate 16th century depiction of Jalal al Din fleeing the battle by crossing the Indus Genghis Khan looks on Date24 November 1221LocationNear the Indus River located in modern day Pakistan33 46 N 72 11 E 33 77 N 72 18 E 33 77 72 18ResultMongol victoryTerritorialchangesKhwarazm and Khorasan annexed by MongolsBelligerentsMongol EmpireKhwarazmian EmpireCommanders and leadersGenghis KhanChagatai KhanOgedei KhanJalal al Din MingburnuAmin Malik Temur Malik Strength50 000 cavalry 1 3 000 cavalry with 700 bodyguards 1 with 30 000 35 000 semi irregular men 2 Casualties and lossesunknownHeavyBattle of the Indusclass notpageimage Location within South AsiaShow map of South AsiaBattle of the IndusBattle of the Indus Pakistan Show map of Pakistan After his father Muhammad II had died on an island in the Caspian Sea Jalal al Din assumed the title of Khwarazmshah and travelled eastwards Escaping the Mongols several times he reached Ghazni and started assembling a large force he then defeated the Mongol commander Shigi Qutuqu at the Battle of Parwan This upset victory drew the attention and ire of Genghis Khan who gathered a force of at least 50 000 and moved towards the Shah who had lost a large proportion of his force because of a dispute over plunder Now unable to effectively combat the Khan he retreated eastwards towards the Indus river the Mongols caught up on the morning the Khwarazmians were due to cross The Shah s army now numbering around 30 000 assumed a strong defensive position on the banks of the river They acquitted themselves well in the early fighting managing to drive back the Mongol forces despite being heavily outnumbered However after an elite Mongol detachment managed to outflank the Khwarazmians the Shah realized the battle was lost in full armour he rode his horse off a cliff into the Indus As a mark of respect for his enemy s bravery the Khan ordered his archers not to fire and so the Shah managed to gain the opposite bank however his family and nearly all his army were slaughtered Contents 1 Background 2 Battle of Parwan and prelude 2 1 Battle deployment 3 Battle 4 Aftermath 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 SourcesBackground editMain article Mongol conquest of the Khwarazmian Empire Genghis Khan had invaded Khwarazm with an army of between 75 000 and 200 000 soldiers in late 1219 a Shah Muhammad II wary of Mongol skill in battle and doubtful of his commanders loyalties adopted a defence in depth strategy based on garrisoning his cities especially Otrar Samarkand and Gurganj 3 However the Khan demonstrated superior strategic ability splitting the Shah s forces to take Bukhara in February 1220 and Samarkand in March the border town of Otrar held out for six months until it fell in April 4 Genghis sent a 30 000 to 40 000 strong Mongol army led by Jebe and Subutai to hunt down the Shah who had begun to flee west with his eldest son Jalal al Din 5 6 The Mongol army sacked numerous cities during their long pursuit including Tus Qazvin and Ardabil 7 however the Shah found refuge on an island in the Caspian Sea where he died in December 1220 8 Jalal al Din reached the city of Gurganj the former capital of the empire after his father s death but found that the nobility was hostile to him preferring his half brother Uzlaq Shah 9 Discovering a plot against his life Jalal al Din left the city and set out southwards across the Karakum Desert emerging near Nisa where he defeated a Mongol detachment 10 Meanwhile two large Mongol forces led by the Khan s two eldest sons Jochi and Chagatai converged on Gurganj from the northeast and southeast respectively 11 the capture of the city would take another six months and additional Mongol forces led by Ogedei to be accomplished 12 At the same time Genghis had sent his youngest son Tolui to conquer the region of Khorasan which Tolui completed speedily and with extreme devastation the cities of Merv Nishapur were destroyed and their populations massacred while Herat was betrayed to the Mongols and escaped destruction 13 Jalal al Din narrowly escaped being caught at Nishapur where he had hoped to raise an army he evaded his pursuers and managed to reach Bost where his maternal uncle Amin Malik joined him with a reasonable force 14 The Shah then moved to Ghazni where many Khwarazmian loyalists including Qurlaq Khalaj and Turkmens joined him and within a few weeks he had amassed a well equipped if not firmly united army of around 65 000 soldiers 15 Battle of Parwan and prelude editFurther information Battle of Parwan After Jalal al Din moved against some Mongol forces in the area Genghis Khan sent Shigi Qutuqu with force of between thirty and fifty thousand to defeat the Shah 16 17 however Qutuqu was unexpectedly defeated at the Battle of Parwan in the autumn of 1221 18 19 News of this defeat led to large rebellions in several cities including Merv and Herat Unfortunately for Jalal al Din a large proportion of his force mostly Afghans under Saif al Din Ighrak deserted after the battle because of a dispute over spoils The Shah knew that the sudden loss of nearly half his army would probably prove fatal so he decided to seek refuge in India 20 He returned to Ghazni and then marched east making for the Indus River to cross into India 21 However his pace was slow because a large number of refugees was accompanying his army 20 The Mongols had conducted two month long sieges at Rang Castle and Bamyan but Genghis Khan marched towards Ghazni after receiving news of the defeat at Parwan 22 The Mongols sent detachments ahead to seize several passes that led from Ghazni to Peshawar so when the deserters under Ighrak finally decided to rejoin Jalal al Din he found the way barred One Mongol detachment was defeated by Jalal al Din at Gadriz 23 24 but the Mongols travelling at the fastest possible pace managed to catch up on the banks of the Indus defeating his rearguard 21 Battle deployment edit Both armies formed up for battle at dawn Jalal al Din took command of the center with 5 000 troops including 700 bodyguards in reserve Amin Malik took command of the Turks on the right wing 25 26 while the Afghans manned the left wing probably commanded by Temur Malik 27 The Shah anchored his left wing on a ridge that ran straight into the river while the flank on the right wing was protected by the riverbank 27 19 With this placement the Shah had taken away the Mongol advantage of fighting a mobile battle of outflanking manoeuvres 23 and by fighting in a confined space their advantage of having superior numbers were reduced 28 Genghis deployed his forces in a crescent shape pinning the Khwarazmians against the river he personally commanded the reserve to make sure the Shah wouldn t be able to break through the Mongol lines and escape 29 The Mongol right was commanded by Chagatai and the left by his brother Ogedei The Mongol army outnumbered Jalal al Din s forces by a large margin 23 but they probably were exhausted from their forced march across the mountains and Genghis Khan may have engaged the enemy before his full force had gathered 27 28 Battle edit nbsp Mid 16th century depiction Jalal al Din Khwarazmshah crossing the rapid Indus River escaping Genghis Khan and his army At dawn on 24 November the battle began with the wings engaging each other the Khwarazmian left held their strong defensive position despite the Khan consistently feeding in new troops while Ogedei was driven back on the Mongol left 19 Realizing the strength of the ridge Genghis sent a general named Bela Noyan with an elite bahadur tumen to climb it and outflank the Khwarazmians 25 Jalal al Din attacked the Mongol center although his personal biographer al Nasawi has him reach Genghis Khan and put him to flight Even though the Mongols could not use their arrows effectively in the crowded conditions they managed to stop the Khwarazmian advance killing Temur Malik in the melee 27 28 Although many men were lost during Bela Noyan s climb the Mongol detachment successfully scaled the ridge and attacked the Shah s left wing from the flank and rear 30 The Khwarazmian right was also retreating and eventually broke Amin Malik was intercepted and killed as he tried to flee to Peshawar 26 Even though it was evident that the battle was now lost Jalal al Din continued to fight until noon 30 After his maternal cousin Akhash Malik implored him to flee he charged the now Mongol controlled ridge breaking through the lines 31 30 He then rode his horse off the edge of the 30 foot cliff but managed to reach the opposite shore Witnessing the feat and calling his sons to witness Genghis forbade his archers to shoot the Shah and stated Fortunate should be the father of such a son 24 Although the Shah s life was spared the lives of his men most of whom had followed their leader s example were not In total only around four thousand reached the other bank with many being shot in the water by Mongol archers 26 The Shah s camp harem and treasures were captured and all male members of his family including his seven year old and infant sons were killed 32 Aftermath editJalal al Din managed to collect the survivors of his army displaying his military acumen he defeated local rulers and started establishing a small state in India Genghis did not make any great effort to pursue his defeated foe only sending troops when Jalal al Din recrossed the Indus to bury his dead 33 The Khan was mostly occupied with subjugating the Afghans near Jalalabad and the Mongol army then wintered in the Swat valley 34 26 Genghis Khan next sent his son Ogedei to sack Ghazni and subdue some of the Afghan mountain forts a task which took fifteen months to fully accomplish 35 With that done the Khan returned to Mongolia leisurely reaching it in 1224 25 36 A small force commanded by Dorbei Doqshin failed to make contact with Jalal al Din when he rejoined the Khan at Samarkand he was immediately sent out once again on the same mission with orders not to fail 37 They besieged the Shah for forty days in spring 1224 before the summer heat forced them to retreat 33 b Jalal al Din later received news from his brother Ghiyath al Din who had established dominion over the Khwarazmian territories in Western Iran and Iraq inviting him to return and re establish Khwarazmian power 39 Leaving his lands in the Punjab in the hands of a lieutenant the Shah then marched across Makran leaving India after a stay of three years to set up his rule in parts of Persia and Anatolia 40 Before the Battle of Garni in 1225 Jalal al Din sent a letter to Queen Rusudan demanding Georgian submission Rusudan responded with an insulting letter mocking how badly the Khwarazmshah had been beaten by Genghis Khan at the Indus 41 Notes edit For details of army sizes during the invasion see Mongol conquest of the Khwarazmian Empire Opposing Forces Dorbei may later have converted to Islam and joined Jalal al Din fearful of the Khan s response were he to return unsuccessfully again 38 References editCitations edit a b Sverdrup 2010 pp 109 117 Dupuy amp Dupuy 1993 p 366 Barthold 1968 pp 404 406 Tanner 2002 pp 89 90 Buniyatov 2015 p 119 McLynn 2015 pp 282 284 Juvaini 1958 143 146 Buniyatov 2015 p 121 Buniyatov 2015 p 123 McLynn 2015 p 295 Barthold 1968 p 433 Boyle 1968 p 319 Boyle 1968 pp 312 317 Sverdrup 2017 p 160 Boyle 1968 p 318 Buniyatov 2015 p 127 Sverdrup 2017 p 162 Tanner 2002 p 94 a b c Tucker 2009 p 273 a b Fleet amp Temple 1885 p 87 a b Tanner 2002 p 95 Juvaini 1958 132 a b c Sverdrup 2017 p 163 a b Buniyatov 2015 p 128 a b Barthold 1968 p 446 a b c d Boyle 1968 p 320 a b c d Tanner 2002 p 96 a b c McLynn 2015 p 308 Fleet amp Temple 1885 p 88 a b c McLynn 2015 p 309 Juvaini 1958 410 Barthold 1968 p 445 a b Jackson 1990 pp 45 54 Sverdrup 2017 pp 163 164 McLynn 2015 pp 313 314 Boyle 1968 pp 321 322 Boyle 1968 p 321 Boyle 1963 pp 235 247 Juvaini 1958 417 Buniyatov 2015 p 130 McLynn 2015 p 389 Sources edit Barthold Vasily 1968 1900 Turkestan Down to the Mongol Invasion Third ed Gibb Memorial Trust OCLC 4523164 Boyle John Andrew 1963 The Mongol Commanders in Afghanistan and India according to the Tabaqat i Nasiri of Juzjani Islamic Studies 2 2 Islamabad International Islamic University 235 47 JSTOR 20832685 Boyle John Andrew 1968 The Cambridge History of Iran Volume 5 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 06936 6 Buniyatov Z M 2015 1986 A History of the Khorezmian State Under the Anushteginids 1097 1231 Gosudarstvo Horezmshahov Anushteginidov 1097 1231 A History of the Khorezmian State under the Anushteginids 1097 1231 Translated by Mustafayev Shahin Welsford Thomas Moscow Nauka ISBN 978 9943 357 21 1 Dupuy Trevor N Dupuy R Ernest 1993 The Harper Encyclopedia of Military History Harper Collins Fleet John F Temple Richard C eds 1885 The Indian Antiquary A Journal of Oriental research Vol XIV Jackson Peter 1990 Jalal Al Din the Mongols and the Khwarazmian Conquest of the Panjab and Sind Iran 28 British Institute of Persian Studies 45 54 doi 10 2307 4299834 JSTOR 4299834 Juvaini Ata Malik 1958 c 1260 Tarikh i Jahangushay تاریخ جهانگشای History of the World Conqueror in Persian Vol 2 Translated by Andrew Boyle John McLynn Frank 2015 Genghis Khan His Conquests His Empire His Legacy Hachette Books OCLC 1285130526 Sverdrup Carl 2010 Numbers in Mongol Warfare Journal of Medieval Military History 8 Boydell Press 109 17 p 113 doi 10 1515 9781846159022 004 ISBN 978 1 84383 596 7 Sverdrup Carl 2017 The Mongol Conquests The Military Operations of Genghis Khan and Sube etei West Midlands Helion amp Company Limited pp 29 163 168 ISBN 978 1 910777 71 8 Tanner Stephen 2002 Afghanistan A Military History from Alexander The Great to the Fall of The Taliban Da Capo Press ISBN 0 306 81233 9 Tucker Spencer 2009 A Global Chronology of Conflict From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East Vol I nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of the Indus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of the Indus amp oldid 1219211900, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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