fbpx
Wikipedia

Chitral Expedition

The Chitral Expedition (Urdu:چترال فوجی مہم) was a military expedition in 1895 sent by the British authorities to relieve the fort at Chitral, which was under siege after a local coup following the death of the old ruler. An intervening British force of about 400 men was besieged in the fort until it was relieved by two expeditions, a small one from Gilgit and a larger one from Peshawar.

Chitral Expedition

A skirmish during the Chitral expedition
Date1895
Location
Result British victory
Belligerents
British Empire and Pro-British Chitralis Bagouryan
Chitrali
Shwatyan
Dirwal
Commanders and leaders
Maj. Gen. Sir Robert Low, K.C.B
Colonel James Graves Kelly
Charles Vere Ferrers Townshend
Shuja ul-Mulk of Chitral
Umra Khan of Bajour
Sher Afzul Khan of Chitral
Amir ul-Mulk of Chitral
Strength
15,249 (Low Force)
1,400 (Fort & Gilgit force)
unknown
Casualties and losses
21 killed, 101 wounded (Low force)
165 killed, 88 wounded (Fort & Kelly force)
unknown but heavy

Background to the conflict

In the last phase of the Great Game attention turned to the unclaimed mountainous area north of British India along the later Sino-Soviet border. Chitral was thought to be a possible route for a Russian invasion of India, but neither side knew much about the local geography. The British sent people like George W. Hayward, Robert Shaw and probably some Pundits north to explore. The ruler of Chitral may have had some involvement in Hayward's murder. From 1871 there were Russian explorers in the Pamir Mountains to the north. Around 1889 some Russians entered Chitral territory as well as Hunza to the east and Gabriel Bonvalot reached Chitral from Russian territory. From around 1876 Chitral was under the protection of the Maharaja of Kashmir to the southeast and therefore in the British sphere of influence but there was no British Resident. At this time Chitrali power extended east to the Yasin Valley about half way to Hunza. The British established the Gilgit Agency about 175 miles east in 1877. In 1891 the British occupied Hunza north of Gilgit.

From 1857 to 1892 the ruler (Mehtar) was Aman ul-Mulk of the Katoor Dynasty. When the old ruler died in 1892 one of his sons, Afzal ul-Mulk, seized the throne, consolidating his rule by killing as many of his half-brothers as he could.[1] The old ruler's brother, Sher Afzal Khan, who had been in exile at Kabul in Afghanistan about 150 miles southwest, secretly entered Chitral with a few supporters and murdered Afzal ul-Mulk. Another of the old ruler's sons, Nizam ul-Mulk, who had fled to the British at Gilgit, advanced westward from Gilgit, accumulating troops as he went, including 1200 men Sher had sent against him. Seeing the situation was hopeless, Sher fled back to Afghanistan and Nizam took the throne with British blessing and a British political resident called Lieutenant B.E.M Gurdon. Within a year Nizam ul-Mulk was murdered on the orders of his brother, Amir ul-Mulk,[2] while the two were out hunting. Umra Khan, a tribal leader from Bajour to the south marched north with 3,000 Pathans either to assist Amir ul-Mulk or replace him. Surgeon Major George Scott Robertson, the senior British officer at Gilgit, gathered 400 troops and marched west to Chitral and threatened Umra Khan with an invasion from Peshawar if he did not turn back.[1] Amir ul-Mulk began negotiating with Umra Khan so Robertson replaced him with his 12-year-old brother Shuja ul-Mulk. At this point Sher Afzul Khan re-entered the contest. The plan seems to have been that Sher would take the throne and Umra Khan would get part of the Chitral territory. Robertson moved into the fortress for protection which increased local hostility. Since Umra Khan and Sher Afzul continued their march secret messengers were sent out requesting help.

Siege of Chitral

The Chitral Fort was 80 yards square and built of mud, stone and timber. The walls were 25 feet high and eight feet thick. There was a short covered way to the river, the only water source. The fort held 543 people of whom 343 were combatants including five British officers. The units were the 14th Sikhs and a larger detachment of Kashmiri Infantry. Artillery support was 2 RML 7 pounder Mountain Gun without sights and 80 rounds of ammunition. There were only 300 cartridges per man and enough food for a month. There were trees and buildings near the walls and nearby hills from which sniping was possible with modern rifles. Captain Charles Townshend, later of Mesopotamia fame, commanded the fort.[3]

 
The British attack the Chitrali mine (illustration from a British book)

On 3 March a party was sent out to determine the enemy strength. Its loss was 23 killed and 33 wounded. Harry Frederick Whitchurch was awarded a Victoria Cross for aiding the wounded. At about the same time a small relief force from Gilgit was defeated and the ammunition and explosives they were carrying captured. By 5 April the Chitralis were 50 yards from the walls. On 7 April they set fire to the south-east tower which burned for 5 hours but did not collapse. Four days later the Chitralis began digging a tunnel in order to blow open the fort. The tunnel started from a house where the Chitralis held noisy parties to hide the sounds of digging. By the time sounds of digging were heard it was too late to dig a counter mine. One hundred men rushed out of the eastern gate, found the mouth of the tunnel, bayoneted the miners, blew up the tunnel with explosives[4] and returned with a loss of eight men. On the night of 18 April someone shouted over the wall that the besiegers had fled. The next morning a heavily armed party found that this was true. Kelly's relief force entered Chitral on 20 April and found the besieged "walking skeletons". The siege had lasted a month and a half and cost the defenders 41 lives.

Relief

 
The routes of the British relief expeditions

When the British heard of Robertson's situation they began assembling troops around Peshawar, but they were not in a hurry since they assumed that Umra Khan would back down. When reports became more serious they ordered Colonel James Graves Kelly at Gilgit to act. He gathered what troops he could: 400 Sikh Pioneers - mostly road-builders, 40 Kasmiri sappers with 2 Mountain Guns, 900 Hunza Irregulars, all hearty mountain men, and a number of hired coolies to carry the baggage. Although his force was small he had the advantage that the Chitralis did not think that anyone would be fool enough to cross 150 miles of mountains in late winter. He left Gilgit on 23 March, probably up the valley of the Gilgit River, and by 30 March had crossed the snowline at 10,000 feet. Seeing what they were in for, the coolies deserted with their laden ponies but were soon rounded up and kept under guard. The main problem was the 12,000 foot Shandur Pass at the head of the Gilgit River which was crossed in the waist-deep snow dragging mountain guns on sledges (1 to 5 April). Fighting began the next day when the Chitralis became aware of them. By 13 April they had driven the enemy from two main positions and by 18 April the enemy seemed to have disappeared.

Meanwhile, the British had assembled 15,000 men at Peshawar under Major-General Sir Robert Low,[5] with Brigadier General Bindon Blood serving as his Chief of the Staff.[6][7][8][9] They set off about a week after Kelly left Gilgit. Accompanying Low was Francis Younghusband who was officially on leave and serving as a special correspondent for the London Times. On 3 April they stormed the Malakand Pass which was defended by 12,000 local warriors. There were significant engagements 2 and 10 days later. On 17 April Umra Khan's men prepared to defend his palace at Munda, but finding themselves greatly outnumbered, they slipped away. Inside the fortress the British found a letter from a Scottish firm offering Maxim guns at 3,700 rupees and revolvers at 34 rupees each. The firm was ordered to leave India. Low was still crossing the Lowari Pass on the day Kelly entered Chitral. Although Kelly got to Chitral first, it was the massive size of Low's force that forced the enemy to withdraw. The first person from Low's force to reach Chitral was Younghusband who, without permission, rode out ahead of the troops. (Max Hastings performed the same stunt in 1982.) That night Younghusband, Robertson, and Kelly shared the garrison's last bottle of brandy.

Aftermath

 
India Medal with Relief of Chitral clasp

Umra Khan fled with eleven mule-loads of treasure and reached safety in Afghanistan. Sher Afzul ran into one of his foes and was sent into exile in India. Robertson was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the Star of India.[10] Kelly was made a Personal aide-de-camp to the Queen and made a Companion of the Order of the Bath. Eleven Distinguished Service Orders (DSOs) were awarded, along with Whitchurch's VC, and all ranks who took part in the siege were given six months extra pay and three months leave.[10] Townshend later became a Major General and at least nine participants became Generals. There was talk of building a road from Peshawar, but this was rejected because of the expense and the fear that the Russians could use the road too. Two battalions were stationed at Chitral and two at the Malakand Pass. In the spring of 1898 Captain Ralph Cobbold was on "hunting leave" in the Pamirs and learned that the Russians had planned to occupy Chitral if the British abandoned it.[11]

British and Indian Army forces who took part received the India Medal with either the clasp Defence of Chitral 1895 or Relief of Chitral 1895.[12]

Chitral remained at peace after 1895 and Shuja ul-Mulk, the 12 year old installed as Mehtar by Robertson, ruled Chitral for the next 41 years until his death in 1936.[13]

Appraisal

The Chitral Expedition is a much celebrated event, remembered in British history as a chapter in gallantry and valour, which has drawn wide appraisal[clarification needed].[14][15][16]

The valour and endurance displayed by all the ranks in the defence of the fort at Chitral, have added greatly to the prestige of the British arms, and will elicit the admiration of all those who read this account of the gallant defence made by a small party of Her Majesty’s forces, and combined with the troops of His Highness the Maharaja of Kashmir, against heavy odds when shut up in a fort in the heart of an enemy’s country, many miles from succour and support.

The military skill displayed in the conducting of the defence, the cheerful endurance of all the hardship of the siege, the gallant demeanour of the troops and the conspicuous example of heroism and intrepidity recorded, will ever be remembered as forming a glorious episode in the history of the Indian Empire and its army.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b "British Intervention in Chitral 1895". Retrieved 15 November 2014.
  2. ^ Harris, John (1975). Much Sounding of Bugles: The Siege of Chitral. Hutchinson. p. 26.
  3. ^ Younghusband, George John; Younghusband, Sir Francis Edward (1 January 1895). The Relief of Chitral. Macmillan and Company. p. 110.
  4. ^ Harris, John (1975). Much Sounding of Bugles: The Siege of Chitral. Hutchinson. pp. 211–216.
  5. ^ Official dispatch of the affair London Gazette
  6. ^ Fincastle, The Viscount; Eliott-Lockhart, P. C. (2 February 2012). A Frontier Campaign: A Narrative of the Operations of the Malakand and Buner Field Forces, 1897–1898. Andrews UK Limited. p. 55. ISBN 9781781515518.
  7. ^ Churchill, Winston (1 January 2010). The Story of the Malakand Field Force. Courier Corporation. p. 61. ISBN 9780486474748.
  8. ^ Raugh, Harold E. (1 January 2004). The Victorians at War, 1815-1914: An Encyclopedia of British Military History. ABC-CLIO. p. 48. ISBN 9781576079256.
  9. ^ Churchill, Winston (1 January 1902). The River War: An Account of the Reconquest of the Sudan. Courier Corporation. p. 213. ISBN 9780486447858.
  10. ^ a b Younghusband, George John; Younghusband, Sir Francis Edward (1 January 1895). The Relief of Chitral. Macmillan and Company. p. 132.
  11. ^ Harris, John (1975). Much Sounding of Bugles: The Siege of Chitral. Hutchinson. pp. 226–231.
  12. ^ Joslin, Litherland and Simpkin. British Battles and Medals. pp. 177–178. Published Spink, London. 1988.
  13. ^ Harris, John (1975). Much Sounding of Bugles: The Siege of Chitral. Hutchinson. p. 231.
  14. ^ The London Gazette. T. Neuman. 1 January 1895. p. 4006.
  15. ^ Younghusband, George John; Younghusband, Sir Francis Edward (1 January 1895). The Relief of Chitral. Macmillan and Company. p. 131.
  16. ^ Barker, A. J. (1 January 1967). Townshend of Kut: a biography of Major-General Sir Charles Townshend. Cassell. p. 80.

Sources

External links

  • Illustrated London News
  • Northwest Frontier Expeditions 1847 to 1908

Further reading

  • Henty, George A (1904). Through Three Campaigns A Story of Chitral, Tirah and Ashanti. - historical fiction

Coordinates: 35°53′N 71°48′E / 35.883°N 71.800°E / 35.883; 71.800

chitral, expedition, urdu, چترال, فوجی, مہم, military, expedition, 1895, sent, british, authorities, relieve, fort, chitral, which, under, siege, after, local, coup, following, death, ruler, intervening, british, force, about, besieged, fort, until, relieved, . The Chitral Expedition Urdu چترال فوجی مہم was a military expedition in 1895 sent by the British authorities to relieve the fort at Chitral which was under siege after a local coup following the death of the old ruler An intervening British force of about 400 men was besieged in the fort until it was relieved by two expeditions a small one from Gilgit and a larger one from Peshawar Chitral ExpeditionA skirmish during the Chitral expeditionDate1895LocationChitral British IndiaResultBritish victoryBelligerentsBritish Empire and Pro British ChitralisBagouryanChitraliShwatyanDirwalCommanders and leadersMaj Gen Sir Robert Low K C BColonel James Graves KellyCharles Vere Ferrers Townshend Shuja ul Mulk of ChitralUmra Khan of Bajour Sher Afzul Khan of ChitralAmir ul Mulk of ChitralStrength15 249 Low Force 1 400 Fort amp Gilgit force unknownCasualties and losses21 killed 101 wounded Low force 165 killed 88 wounded Fort amp Kelly force unknown but heavy Contents 1 Background to the conflict 2 Siege of Chitral 3 Relief 4 Aftermath 5 Appraisal 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Sources 9 External links 10 Further readingBackground to the conflict EditIn the last phase of the Great Game attention turned to the unclaimed mountainous area north of British India along the later Sino Soviet border Chitral was thought to be a possible route for a Russian invasion of India but neither side knew much about the local geography The British sent people like George W Hayward Robert Shaw and probably some Pundits north to explore The ruler of Chitral may have had some involvement in Hayward s murder From 1871 there were Russian explorers in the Pamir Mountains to the north Around 1889 some Russians entered Chitral territory as well as Hunza to the east and Gabriel Bonvalot reached Chitral from Russian territory From around 1876 Chitral was under the protection of the Maharaja of Kashmir to the southeast and therefore in the British sphere of influence but there was no British Resident At this time Chitrali power extended east to the Yasin Valley about half way to Hunza The British established the Gilgit Agency about 175 miles east in 1877 In 1891 the British occupied Hunza north of Gilgit From 1857 to 1892 the ruler Mehtar was Aman ul Mulk of the Katoor Dynasty When the old ruler died in 1892 one of his sons Afzal ul Mulk seized the throne consolidating his rule by killing as many of his half brothers as he could 1 The old ruler s brother Sher Afzal Khan who had been in exile at Kabul in Afghanistan about 150 miles southwest secretly entered Chitral with a few supporters and murdered Afzal ul Mulk Another of the old ruler s sons Nizam ul Mulk who had fled to the British at Gilgit advanced westward from Gilgit accumulating troops as he went including 1200 men Sher had sent against him Seeing the situation was hopeless Sher fled back to Afghanistan and Nizam took the throne with British blessing and a British political resident called Lieutenant B E M Gurdon Within a year Nizam ul Mulk was murdered on the orders of his brother Amir ul Mulk 2 while the two were out hunting Umra Khan a tribal leader from Bajour to the south marched north with 3 000 Pathans either to assist Amir ul Mulk or replace him Surgeon Major George Scott Robertson the senior British officer at Gilgit gathered 400 troops and marched west to Chitral and threatened Umra Khan with an invasion from Peshawar if he did not turn back 1 Amir ul Mulk began negotiating with Umra Khan so Robertson replaced him with his 12 year old brother Shuja ul Mulk At this point Sher Afzul Khan re entered the contest The plan seems to have been that Sher would take the throne and Umra Khan would get part of the Chitral territory Robertson moved into the fortress for protection which increased local hostility Since Umra Khan and Sher Afzul continued their march secret messengers were sent out requesting help Siege of Chitral EditThe Chitral Fort was 80 yards square and built of mud stone and timber The walls were 25 feet high and eight feet thick There was a short covered way to the river the only water source The fort held 543 people of whom 343 were combatants including five British officers The units were the 14th Sikhs and a larger detachment of Kashmiri Infantry Artillery support was 2 RML 7 pounder Mountain Gun without sights and 80 rounds of ammunition There were only 300 cartridges per man and enough food for a month There were trees and buildings near the walls and nearby hills from which sniping was possible with modern rifles Captain Charles Townshend later of Mesopotamia fame commanded the fort 3 The British attack the Chitrali mine illustration from a British book On 3 March a party was sent out to determine the enemy strength Its loss was 23 killed and 33 wounded Harry Frederick Whitchurch was awarded a Victoria Cross for aiding the wounded At about the same time a small relief force from Gilgit was defeated and the ammunition and explosives they were carrying captured By 5 April the Chitralis were 50 yards from the walls On 7 April they set fire to the south east tower which burned for 5 hours but did not collapse Four days later the Chitralis began digging a tunnel in order to blow open the fort The tunnel started from a house where the Chitralis held noisy parties to hide the sounds of digging By the time sounds of digging were heard it was too late to dig a counter mine One hundred men rushed out of the eastern gate found the mouth of the tunnel bayoneted the miners blew up the tunnel with explosives 4 and returned with a loss of eight men On the night of 18 April someone shouted over the wall that the besiegers had fled The next morning a heavily armed party found that this was true Kelly s relief force entered Chitral on 20 April and found the besieged walking skeletons The siege had lasted a month and a half and cost the defenders 41 lives Relief Edit The routes of the British relief expeditions When the British heard of Robertson s situation they began assembling troops around Peshawar but they were not in a hurry since they assumed that Umra Khan would back down When reports became more serious they ordered Colonel James Graves Kelly at Gilgit to act He gathered what troops he could 400 Sikh Pioneers mostly road builders 40 Kasmiri sappers with 2 Mountain Guns 900 Hunza Irregulars all hearty mountain men and a number of hired coolies to carry the baggage Although his force was small he had the advantage that the Chitralis did not think that anyone would be fool enough to cross 150 miles of mountains in late winter He left Gilgit on 23 March probably up the valley of the Gilgit River and by 30 March had crossed the snowline at 10 000 feet Seeing what they were in for the coolies deserted with their laden ponies but were soon rounded up and kept under guard The main problem was the 12 000 foot Shandur Pass at the head of the Gilgit River which was crossed in the waist deep snow dragging mountain guns on sledges 1 to 5 April Fighting began the next day when the Chitralis became aware of them By 13 April they had driven the enemy from two main positions and by 18 April the enemy seemed to have disappeared Meanwhile the British had assembled 15 000 men at Peshawar under Major General Sir Robert Low 5 with Brigadier General Bindon Blood serving as his Chief of the Staff 6 7 8 9 They set off about a week after Kelly left Gilgit Accompanying Low was Francis Younghusband who was officially on leave and serving as a special correspondent for the London Times On 3 April they stormed the Malakand Pass which was defended by 12 000 local warriors There were significant engagements 2 and 10 days later On 17 April Umra Khan s men prepared to defend his palace at Munda but finding themselves greatly outnumbered they slipped away Inside the fortress the British found a letter from a Scottish firm offering Maxim guns at 3 700 rupees and revolvers at 34 rupees each The firm was ordered to leave India Low was still crossing the Lowari Pass on the day Kelly entered Chitral Although Kelly got to Chitral first it was the massive size of Low s force that forced the enemy to withdraw The first person from Low s force to reach Chitral was Younghusband who without permission rode out ahead of the troops Max Hastings performed the same stunt in 1982 That night Younghusband Robertson and Kelly shared the garrison s last bottle of brandy Aftermath Edit India Medal with Relief of Chitral clasp Umra Khan fled with eleven mule loads of treasure and reached safety in Afghanistan Sher Afzul ran into one of his foes and was sent into exile in India Robertson was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the Star of India 10 Kelly was made a Personal aide de camp to the Queen and made a Companion of the Order of the Bath Eleven Distinguished Service Orders DSOs were awarded along with Whitchurch s VC and all ranks who took part in the siege were given six months extra pay and three months leave 10 Townshend later became a Major General and at least nine participants became Generals There was talk of building a road from Peshawar but this was rejected because of the expense and the fear that the Russians could use the road too Two battalions were stationed at Chitral and two at the Malakand Pass In the spring of 1898 Captain Ralph Cobbold was on hunting leave in the Pamirs and learned that the Russians had planned to occupy Chitral if the British abandoned it 11 British and Indian Army forces who took part received the India Medal with either the clasp Defence of Chitral 1895 or Relief of Chitral 1895 12 Chitral remained at peace after 1895 and Shuja ul Mulk the 12 year old installed as Mehtar by Robertson ruled Chitral for the next 41 years until his death in 1936 13 Appraisal EditThe Chitral Expedition is a much celebrated event remembered in British history as a chapter in gallantry and valour which has drawn wide appraisal clarification needed 14 15 16 The valour and endurance displayed by all the ranks in the defence of the fort at Chitral have added greatly to the prestige of the British arms and will elicit the admiration of all those who read this account of the gallant defence made by a small party of Her Majesty s forces and combined with the troops of His Highness the Maharaja of Kashmir against heavy odds when shut up in a fort in the heart of an enemy s country many miles from succour and support Commander in Chief of India Sir George White The military skill displayed in the conducting of the defence the cheerful endurance of all the hardship of the siege the gallant demeanour of the troops and the conspicuous example of heroism and intrepidity recorded will ever be remembered as forming a glorious episode in the history of the Indian Empire and its army Viceroy of India Lord CurzonSee also EditChitral Fort Category British military personnel of the Chitral ExpeditionNotes Edit a b British Intervention in Chitral 1895 Retrieved 15 November 2014 Harris John 1975 Much Sounding of Bugles The Siege of Chitral Hutchinson p 26 Younghusband George John Younghusband Sir Francis Edward 1 January 1895 The Relief of Chitral Macmillan and Company p 110 Harris John 1975 Much Sounding of Bugles The Siege of Chitral Hutchinson pp 211 216 Official dispatch of the affair London Gazette Fincastle The Viscount Eliott Lockhart P C 2 February 2012 A Frontier Campaign A Narrative of the Operations of the Malakand and Buner Field Forces 1897 1898 Andrews UK Limited p 55 ISBN 9781781515518 Churchill Winston 1 January 2010 The Story of the Malakand Field Force Courier Corporation p 61 ISBN 9780486474748 Raugh Harold E 1 January 2004 The Victorians at War 1815 1914 An Encyclopedia of British Military History ABC CLIO p 48 ISBN 9781576079256 Churchill Winston 1 January 1902 The River War An Account of the Reconquest of the Sudan Courier Corporation p 213 ISBN 9780486447858 a b Younghusband George John Younghusband Sir Francis Edward 1 January 1895 The Relief of Chitral Macmillan and Company p 132 Harris John 1975 Much Sounding of Bugles The Siege of Chitral Hutchinson pp 226 231 Joslin Litherland and Simpkin British Battles and Medals pp 177 178 Published Spink London 1988 Harris John 1975 Much Sounding of Bugles The Siege of Chitral Hutchinson p 231 The London Gazette T Neuman 1 January 1895 p 4006 Younghusband George John Younghusband Sir Francis Edward 1 January 1895 The Relief of Chitral Macmillan and Company p 131 Barker A J 1 January 1967 Townshend of Kut a biography of Major General Sir Charles Townshend Cassell p 80 Sources EditThe Great Game by Peter Hopkirk John Murray Ltd 1990 The Relief of Chitral by Major General Sir George J Younghusband and Sir Francis E Younghusband Macmillan amp Co 1896 With Kelly to Chitral by Major General Sir William G L Beynon Arnold Publishers 1896 Campaigns on the North West Frontier by Captain H L Nevill Naval amp Military Press 1912 Chitral the Story of a Minor Siege by Sir George Scott Robertson KCSI Methuen Publishing 1898 Townshend of Chitral and Kut by Erroll Sherson John 1928 Much Sounding of Bugles The Siege of Chitral 1895 John Harris Hutchinson 1975 The Chitral Campaign A Narrative of Events in Chitral Swat and Bajour by Harry Craufuird Thomson Heinemann Publishers 1895 Huttenback Robert A The Siege of Chitral and the Breach of Faith Controversy The Imperial Factor in Late Victorian Party Politics Journal of British Studies 10 1 1970 126 144 External links EditIllustrated London News Northwest Frontier Expeditions 1847 to 1908Further reading EditHenty George A 1904 Through Three Campaigns A Story of Chitral Tirah and Ashanti historical fictionCoordinates 35 53 N 71 48 E 35 883 N 71 800 E 35 883 71 800 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chitral Expedition amp oldid 1118900678, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.