Battle of Narkaner

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Battle of Narkaner
Part of the Sikh and Aurucolian War of the Sandoric Wars
SikhAurucolianWar-Battle1.jpg
Date15 February - 20 March 1821
Location
Narkaner, Indiae
Result

Aurucolian and Sikh Victory

  • Galbadian and Colonial forces close to being knocked-out of the conflict, accounting for 60% of Coalition losses
  • Backbone of the Lucis Army almost broken with only 40% from its total strength remaining, rendering them depending on the Colonials and the Natives
  • Kisbátor attempts to finish both the Lucians and Galbadians at the regions of Maharashtra and Andhrapradesh
  • Despite several attempts at an offer of surrender, Humeray refuses and engages the Sikhs and Aurucolians at Maharashtra and Andhrapradesh
Belligerents

Holy Galbadian Empire

Great Lucis and Accordo Lucis Empire

Mughal Empire
Kingdom of Gorkhali
Hyderabad State

Sikh Empire
Sandoric Aurucolia

Hyderabad State (from May to October 1821)
Commanders and leaders
Strength
  • Great Lucis and Accordo 900,000
  • 75,000
  • 1,000,000
  • 200,000
  • 100,000
  • 200,000
  • 100,000
800,000
1,200,000
Casualties and losses
  • Great Lucis and Accordo 450,000
  • 750,000
  • 75,000
  • 50,000
  • 75,000
  • 55,000
150,000
250,000

The Battle of Narkaner (15 February - 20 March 1821) was an engagement that took place at the village of Narkaner. The battle would see the Coalition Forces suffer their greatest defeat, almost losing 40% of their combined strength in the war. The battle was dubbed as The Grim March because of the amount of losses that the Lucians and Galbadians suffered. It would also be Lucis' biggest defeat in history, losing almost 60% of its total strength. As opposed to the Aurucolians and Sikhs, who only lost 1/5ths of their original strength.

The reasons for the losses was in root that Kisbátor fainted a mass retreat on 5 March 1821. Galbadian General Georg Ludwig Koppel saw this as an opportunity to route the army and requested Humeray to commit his forces. However, the retreat was a trap, which saw Dobos' Aurucolian forces to cut off both the Lucians and Galbadians. A fight to escape the encirclement ensues. The grand encirclement made Humeray realize that his army was in danger of being destroyed entirely. Immediately, he sends General Johannes Vandemeer to engage Dobos' Army to open a corridor so Humeray can withdraw his forces. Meanwhile, Koppel ordered De Gama to force a corridor and fight a way out since he refused to commit the colonials to relieve the encircled Galbadian forces. For the next days, the Sikhs and Aurucolians inflicted massive casualties against the Galbadians and Lucians. But due to the timely arrival of Vandemeer's Cape Basel Colonial Army, the Sikhs and Aurucolians failed to destroy both the Lucian and Galbadian Armies in the region, which was the intended objective to allow Kisbátor to thrust towards Central Indiae.

The Battle marked the end of the Lucis rule in Central Indiae for the rest of the year. But despite it, the Sikhs and Aurucolians did not complete their intended objectives, and that 60% of the Lucian Army managed to successfully withdraw. Despite it, the battle raised the morale of the Aurucolians and Sikhs tremendously, with most of the commanders having in mind that they were winning the war, and that it would only be a matter of time before Lucis and Galbadia surrenders.

As a result, General Benedict Humeray and Koppel were forced to depend on the natives to raise their armies respectively. However, the loss at Narkaner provided General Benedict Humeray with a strategy to overturn the Aurucolians and Sikhs by the time the Aurucolians and Sikhs invaded Southern Indiae.

Prelude

The Battle

Aftermath