1821 Maharashtra-Andhrapradesh Campaign

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1821 Maharashtra-Andhrapradesh Campaign
Part of the Sandoric Wars
MaharashtraAndhrapradeshCampaign.jpg
We shall not falter!
General Sir. Johannes Vandemeer rallying his troops while on horse back during the Battle of Bengaluru.
Date5 April 1821 - 15 December 1821
Location
Indiaen Subcontinent, Arabian Sea, Indiaen Ocean
Result

Decisive Coalition Victory

Belligerents

Great Lucis and Accordo Lucis Empire

Holy Galbadian Empire

Mughal Empire
Kingdom of Gorkhali
Hyderabad State (April 1821; October 1821 onwards)

Sikh Empire
Sandoric Aurucolia

Hyderabad State (from May to October 1821)
Commanders and leaders
Strength

1,975,000

Great Lucis and Accordo 975,000
  • 650,000
  • 250,000
  • 50,000
  • 500,000
  • 100,000
  • 250,000
  • 100,000
  • 100,000

2,150,000

1,000,000
1,150,000

The 1821 Maharashtra-Andhrapradesh Campaign (5 April 1821 - 21 January 1822) was a series of battles that took place in the Indiaen provinces of Maharashtra and Andhrapradesh. It was fought primarily between the Coalition Armies led by the Lucis Empire under the command of General Sir. Benedict Humeray against the Sandoric forces led primarily by the Aurucolian Empire under the command of Marshal Flórián Székely de Kisbátor.

Following the disasterous Battle of Narkaner, which was a massive blow to the Lucians and Galbadians; Sikh and Aurucolian commanders instigated a campaign as a way to break the land controlled by the Galbadians and the Lucians to allow Aurucolian and Sikh forces to take the Hyderabad State with the intention of capturing the vital Lucian-controlled Port of Pondecherry. The battle also directly needed the assistance of the navies in order to take the port. Once it was split, the Sikhs would be free to attack the Galbadian Colony of Goa while the Aurucolian forces would shift east to destroy remaining Lucian possessions.

The campaign had been planned in order to force the Lucians and Galbadians into a humiliating treaty to surrender all colonial possessions to the Aurucolian Empire in order to shift forces to the Scandinavian theater. Pondecherry had been the Lucian's most important port in Indiae as it had the most docks where ships could unload all various trading materials. Kisbátor believed that controlling it would be catastrophic for the Lucian hold in Indiae as a whole.

However, by the mid-months of the campaign, the Sikh and Aurucolian troops started to suffer from malnutrition and diseases bought by the native and irregular raids. Skirmishers and Raiders often lured regular troops to the forest to trap them with predators like crocodiles and mosquito-carrying diseases. Typhus, Dysentery, and Malaria contributed to the casualties inflicted on the Sandoric forces. Psychological warfare was also carried out. The campaign had been dubbed as The Aurucolian Invasion of Erebonia in Indiae due to the similar situations and scenarios that Sandor I's Imperial Aurucolian Army experienced during his invasion of Erebonia.

By October, despite being close to Pondecherry, Humeray's reorganized army halted Kisbátor's advance at Bengaluru. With Kisbátor directing nearly 1/3rds of his army to chase off Koppel and Auchinleck, he did not have enough strength to dislodge Humeray and attacks had failed. By late-October, Auchinleck and Koppel arrived to relieve Humeray and Kisbátor, after so much victories in the campaign, was forced to retreat.

The campaign would be the largest fought in the Sikh and Aurucolian War, with the Battle of Bengaluru being dubbed as the Battle of the Nations in Indiae by many historians. Ultimately, the far-stretched supply lines and continuous native raids on the Aurucolian lines would prove to be the biggest setback by the Sikhs and Aurucolians. Humeray reorganized the Allied Army by organising periodic withdrawals to allow him to save strength and slowly started to regain lost ground. The Allies eventually regained all lost land following the Battle of Nagpure. The Fall of Chindewara marked the end to the campaign, with the backbone of the Sikh Army broken and the failure to expel both Lucian and Galbadian forces in Indiae.

Background

The Campaign

April: First Engagements

May: Fall of Hyderabad, The Hyderabad State is forced to a treaty against its Allies

June: Fall of Amwarati, Coalition forces continue to be routed

July: Humeray consolidates his ground; Minor Skirmishes

August: First Battle of Hampi; Lucian and Galbadian forces split; Humeray retreats further South and initiates a scorched earth policy. Hyderabad populace revolt

September: Gen. Auchinleck successfully defends Mysore; Kisbátor shifts his focus to Pondecherry; Koppel's Galbadian Forces routed

October: Battle of Bengaluru; Sikh and Aurucolian forces mark their furthest advance in Southern Indiae. Galbadian forces rejoin the Lucians. Hyderabad forces in the battle defect. Coalition forces regain momentum

October 20: Naval Battle at Pondecherry; Royal Navy defeats the Imperial Aurucolian Navy.

November: Humeray launches a savage counteroffensive, taking Hampi and Raichure by the end of November

December: Allied forces liberate Hyderabad. Gen. Vandemeer's Colonial forces pursue Kisbátor

January: Allied forces capture Nagpure and Chindewara; Remainder of Aurucolian and Sikh forces retreat to Northern Indiae

Aftermath

Analysis