American History Tellers - History Daily: The Battle of Karnal
Episode Date: February 24, 2025February 24, 1739. The Persian leader Nader Shah wins a decisive victory in India at the Battle of Karnal. The fallout from the battle shatters the Mughal Empire, leaving the sub-continent vu...lnerable to later domination by colonial powers.You can listen ad-free in the Wondery or Amazon Music app. Or for all that and more, go to IntoHistory.comHistory Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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It's the morning of August 6, 1708 in the province of Khorasan in northeast Persia.
Clutching a bow at his side, ten-year-old Nadir Kohli scurries up a hill in the footsteps
of his father.
Reaching the top first, his father holds out a hand in warning and Nadir freezes.
His father points silently down the other side of the hill. Less than a hundred feet away,
a wolf feasts on the entrails of a fat-tailed sheep. Nadir looks over at his father, and his
father nods. This is the animal they've been hunting. For days, this wolf has been picking off
the family's flock of sheep one by one. Now they've finally found the predator and Nadir's father wants him to take the shot.
It's Nadir's birthday and now that he's 10 years old,
his father thinks he's old enough for the responsibility.
With his bow and arrow in his hands, Nadir slowly and silently rises to his feet.
One wrong move and the animal could flee.
Taking a final calming breath,
Nadir takes aim and lets loose. The wolf flinches in pain before slumping to the ground. Nadir
smiles with relief as his father jumps to his feet to congratulate him. It's a clean
shot right through the heart.
Nadir Kohli's father has always been certain that his boy is special. When Nadir was young,
his father was told by a fortune teller that his son was destined for greatness,
that one day he would not just be a king, but a king of kings. Nadir's father does not live
long enough to see it, but the sews there will be proved right. Nadir will be a king and then an
emperor and almost all of Asia will be at his command
after he wins a stunning victory
at the Battle of Karnat on February 24th, 1739.
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Hey, it's a Martinez.
I work on a new show and yeah, the news can feel like a lot on any given day, but I just
can't ignore las noticias when important world-changing events are happening.
So that is where the Up First podcast comes in. Every single morning in under 15 minutes,
we take the news and boil it down to three essential stories. Listen to the Up First
podcast from NPR. and airship. I'm Lindsey Graham and this is History Daily.
History is made every day. On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world. Today is February 24, 1739, the Battle of Karnal.
It's 1722 in the province of Khorasan in northeast Persia, 14 years after Nadir Quli
killed his first wolf. Now 24 years old, Nadir perches on a high mountain bluff and peers down into the valley
below.
An army is on the march.
The shimmering column of men and metal kicks up a cloud of dust as it snakes its way through
the valley heading west.
Nadir turns to the man next to him and barks a short command.
They need to hide before they are spotted.
Nadir is now far more
than just the son of a shepherd. His doting father died when Nadir was 13 years old, leaving him with
the responsibility of caring for his mother and his siblings. To support his family, the teenage
Nadir joined a gang of bandits. But despite his young age, he was stronger and smarter than the
other thieves in the gang and it wasn't too long before he took charge.
Under his leadership, the gang has grown into an army of two thousand men and Nadir is now recognized as a powerful warlord in the region.
Persia though is in turmoil. The army Nadir watches from the hills is a group of Afghan rebels from the east
and they are marching toward the Persian capital.
Nadir watches and makes careful note of the rebels strength, but marching toward the Persian capital. Nadir watches and makes
careful note of the rebels' strength. But he does nothing to intervene. He doesn't have the men to
stop such a mighty army. Not yet. The Afghan rebels continue their march to the Persian capital
and soon overthrow the ruling Shah there to seize the throne for themselves. But this
power struggle has left Persia weakened and that vulnerability is soon exploited by the country's enemies.
Armies invade from Russia in the north and the Ottoman Empire in the west. Amid the chaos,
Tomas, the son of the deposed Shah, escapes the clutches of the Afghans and flees to Horuson.
There he begs Nadir for help. Nadir has no great love for Tomasp, but he doesn't have
much sympathy for the Afghan rebels either, and he knows that if he can help Tomasp win
back the throne, then he will be a powerful figure in the new regime. So he agrees to
join forces.
But the Afghan rebels are a formidable enemy. Predominantly fighting on horseback, they
have a highly mobile and effective army that has defeated all threats to their rule so far. But Nadir has a plan. Gunpowder has been used in combat in Asia
since at least the 11th century, but the use of muskets and cannon on the battlefield is still
rare with widespread belief that there is more honor in fighting with swords. Nadir, however,
cares more about victory than honor. He invests heavily in the latest artillery and muskets and carefully trains his soldiers
how to use the weapons properly.
So when the battle comes, it is a clash between different fighting philosophies as much as
different armies.
The Afghans are fast moving and ferocious.
In contrast, Nadir's men are cautious and controlled, firing and moving as units in
highly disciplined ranks.
Their greater organization eventually pays off with victory over the men on horseback.
Following this defeat of the Afghan rebels, Tamas takes back the Persian throne. And as
reward for his support, he appoints Nadir as governor of the eastern provinces and offers
him the hand of his sister in marriage. Just as he hoped,
Nader is now one of the most powerful men in the land. He follows up his military success
against the Afghans by leading armies to reclaim Persian lands in the west and north.
These territories were seized by Persia's enemies during the Afghan rebellion.
But now Persia wants them back and quickly Nader wins a string of victories and steadily
reclaims the land that was lost.
But his successes on the battlefield makes the new Shah, Tamasp, increasingly wary of
Nadir.
For his part, Nadir considers the new Shah a weak man and quickly grows frustrated with
his rule.
So that in 1732 he runs out of patience and rises up against Tamasp.
He installs Tamasp's infant son as the new Shah, but no one is in any doubt about where
the true power lies in Persia.
But even having to pull puppet strings is soon too much for Nadir.
Just a few years later, he sends the boy king into exile and claims the throne for himself.
As the unchallenged Shah of Persia, Nader will look beyond the borders of his kingdom for fresh conquests.
And soon his gaze will turn to India and the great wealth of the mighty Mughal Empire.
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It's February 24th, 1739 at the Parisian encampment near Karnal in northern India,
three years after Nadir Kohli became Nadir Shah, ruler of Persia.
In his tent, 41-year-old Nadir Shah looks over a table of maps and charts as he and
three of his most senior commanders make their plans for a coming battle.
Since he seized the throne, Nader Shah has
been devoted to one task, expanding the Persian Empire. He has already retaken the lands previously
lost to the Ottomans and the Russians, and he has conquered the last strongholds held
by the Afghan rebels who once threatened all of Persia. Now he has come to India.
But when Nader Shah first crossed the border, he told representatives of the Mughal Empire that rules here that he was simply pursuing
the last Afghan rebels who had fled into India. But his true objective soon became clear,
as his men ransacked and pillaged their way south. Nadir Shah had launched a war of conquest,
believing that India's vast wealth is there for the taking. But in response, the Mughal
Emperor, Mohammed Shah, raised a vast army and marched north
to face him.
But his army was so big that it couldn't move quickly, and it traveled just 70 miles
from Delhi by the time the advancing Persians intercepted it.
Now, Nadir and his generals finalize their plans for battle.
On paper, the Persians are no match for the Mughal army.
The Mughals are in a strong position.
Encamped across a river, they outnumber the invaders by as many as six to one.
But poor odds have never stopped Nadir before. He wants to divide the Mughal forces and lure
the enemy into battle at a time and place of his choosing. And luckily for Nadir, he knows that the
Mughals are already divided.
Commanders in charge of different parts of the army have little trust in each other and
Muhammad Shah is not strong enough a leader to manage his generals' differences.
Hoping to take advantage of this acrimony, Nadir first orders a few cavalry units forward.
They launch an attack on an isolated Mughal baggage train.
This prompts an immediate response from the general in charge and the Persian cavalry beats a hasty retreat, but it's all a ruse.
Nadir wants a portion of the Mughal army to cross the river and follow his cavalry and the Mughals oblige.
As one Mughal general leads his men forward, back in their camp indecision reigns.
Muhammad Shah wants to throw the bulk of his men forward in support of his generals' attack,
but the other commanders are not convinced.
Eventually, it's decided that just another 8,000 men will be pushed forward to reinforce
the attack across the river, but they fail to join up with the original thrust, which
by now has raced ahead in pursuit of the Persian cavalry luring the Mughals into a trap.
When the retreating horsemen reach the safety of their main battle lines,
the Persian infantry unleashes a volley of musket and cannon fire
that devastates the pursuing Mughal forces.
Meanwhile, Nadir dispatches some of his best troops to meet the 8,000 Mughal reinforcements
still coming up behind.
Once again, Nadir's plan is to lure them into an ambush,
and once again the Mughals fall right into the trap, marching straight into a choke point in a small village where Nadir himself waits
with artillery.
The results of the ambush are devastating.
The Mughal war elephants suffer especially badly.
Although terrifying when they're on the charge, elephants prove an easy target for
Persian artillery.
And in the face of overwhelming cannon fire, the creatures scatter in terror and their riders crash to the ground as all discipline in the Mughal
lines disintegrates. Confusion and despair spread through the ranks and thousands are killed in the
chaos. From the safety of his camp on the other side of the river, the Mughal leader Mohammed Shah
can hear the barrage of Persian gunfire and the screams of elephants.
With many of his best troops lost and morale among the survivors collapsing,
it's clear to him that the battle is lost.
Nadir Shah's triumph at Karnal will soon lead him to march on Delhi
to claim the Indian capital for the Persian Empire.
But this battle will have more than just an immediate impact on the region.
The defeat of the Mughal Empire will fragment the entire Indian subcontinent and leave it
vulnerable to invaders from much farther afield.
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It's March 20, 1739, in Delhi, capital of the Mughal Empire, almost a month after the
Battle of Karnal.
Nadir Shah rides through the palace gates at the head of his triumphant Persian army.
Among his entourage are a hundred captured war elephants, as well as a far more valuable
prize, the Mughal leader himself, Muhammad Shah.
Following his defeat at Karnal, Muhammad Shah had no choice but to negotiate
with the Persians. Nadir spared his life, but the once mighty Mughals are now just a
vassal state of the Persian Empire. Nadir Shah now rules over a domain that stretches
2,000 miles from the Black Sea to the heart of India. This latest addition to his empire
is the wealthiest yet and Nadir wastes no time in seizing its riches.
After he is installed in the palace, he immediately sends out his troops to begin the looting.
But the people of India resist their new Persian ruler.
Rioting soon breaks out in Delhi in opposition to the regime. Nadir slaughters those who rise up against him, but the violence convinces him that there is no
future for the Persians in India. He decides to leave the country and take its vast wealth with him.
So two months after arriving in Delhi, he loads up his treasure onto thousands of camels,
horses and elephants and leads his army of conquerors out of India.
But despite arriving back in his homeland a conqueror, Nadir will prove an increasingly
unpopular leader. He will grow paranoid and cruel, and in 1747,
eight years after his triumph in India, he will be assassinated by his own troops.
The Mughal Empire doesn't fare much better. They never recover from Nadir Shah's invasion.
Left humiliated and weakened, the country fractures into warring factions, and eventually,
Europeans will take advantage of this power vacuum.
The British will come and India will be subjugated under their colonial rule for more than a century.
But not even the British Empire will expand its reach over Asia as far as Nadir Shah did,
the shepherd who became a king of kings and master of a continent
after he won victory at the Battle of Carnal on February 24, 1739.
Next on History Daily, February 25, 1964, a young Muhammad Ali defeats Sonny Liston
to become heavyweight champion of the world.
From Noyzer and Airship, this is History Daily, hosted, edited and executive produced by me,
Lindsey Graham. Audio editing by Mohamed Shazi. Sound design by Molly Bond. Supervising sound
designer Matthew Filler. Music by Thrunk. This episode is written and researched by
Owen Paul Nichols. Edited by William Simpson. Managing producer Emily Byrne. Executive producers
are William Simpson for Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.