Hyder Ali

He left his eldest son, Tipu Sultan, an extensive kingdom bordered by the Krishna River in the north, the Eastern Ghats in the east and the Arabian Sea in the west.[13] His father, Fath Muhammad, was born in Kolar, and served as a commander of 50 men in the bamboo rocket artillery (mainly used for signalling) in the army of the Nawab of Carnatic.[13] Hyder Ali was born in Budikote, today in Kolar district, Karnataka; he was Fath Muhammad's fifth child, and the second by his third wife Razia Bibi, a sister of sufi pir Ibrahim Saheb, whose ancestors were Arab Nawayath.[26] In 1757, to resist the invasion of the Zamorin of Calicut – an East India Company ally at the time, the Palakkad Raja sought the help of Hyder Ali.Because of the ongoing conflicts with the Marathas the Mysorean treasury was virtually bankrupted, prompting the queen mother to force into exile Nanjaraj, who had assumed the position of dalwai upon his brother's death in 1758.[42] He renamed the capital Haidernagar, and began styling himself Hyder Ali Khan Bahadur, a title that had been bestowed on him by Salabat Jung as reward for his taking of Sira.[53] Hyder's army also included Catholic soldiers, and he allowed Christians to build a church at Seringapatam, where French generals used to offer prayers and priests used to visit.[59][60] After establishing control of Calicut, Hyder departed, but was forced to return several months later when the Nairs rebelled against the rule of his lieutenant, Reza Sahib.He took advantage of this opportunity to engage in a sort of house cleaning: the raja's palace was plundered, and its staff reduced to the point where virtually everyone employed there was also a spy for Hyder Ali.In 1766 Mysore began to become drawn into territorial and diplomatic disputes between the Nizam of Hyderabad and the East India Company, which had by then become the dominant European power on the Eastern Indian coast.The Nizam, seeking to deflect the company from their attempts to gain control of the Northern Circars, made overtures to Hyder Ali to launch an invasion of the Carnatic.This diplomatic manoeuvring resulted in the start of the First Anglo-Mysore War in August 1767 when a company outpost at Changama was attacked by a combined Mysore-Hyderabad army under Hyder Ali's command.Hyder Ali moved on to capture Kaveripattinam after two days of siege, while the British commander at Changama, Colonel Joseph Smith, eventually retreated to Tiruvannamalai for supplies and reinforcements.[66] With the onset of the monsoon season, Hyder Ali opted to continue campaigning rather than adopting the usual practice of suspending operations because of the difficult conditions the weather created for armies.[84] Hyder Ali was then foiled in an attempt to prevent the arrival of a second British column at the allied camp; the strength of these combined forces convinced him to retreat from Bangalore toward Gurramkonda, where he was reinforced by his brother in law.[85] He also attempted diplomatic measures to prevent a siege of Bangalore, offering to pay ten lakhs rupees and grant other land concessions in exchange for peace.[88] The severity of the conflict convinced Colonel Smith that he would be unable to effectively besiege Bangalore without first inflicting a major defeat on Hyder Ali in open battle.En route to Erode Hyder Ali overwhelmed one contingent of British, who were sent as prisoners to Seringapatam when it was established that one of its officers was serving in violation of a parole agreement.In summarising Hyder Ali's conduct of the war, biographer Lewin Bowring notes that he "evinced high qualities as a tactician and the sagacity of a born diplomatist.Beginning in 1770 he sent ambassadors to Abu Hilal Ahmad bin Said in Muscat and Karim Khan in Shiraz, then the capital of Persia, seeking military and economic alliances.Hyder further sent 20,000 of Madakari's followers to Seringapatam, where the boys among them were allegedly forcibly converted to Islam and formed into so-called chela battalions in the Mysorean army.Since Hyder was at the time still attempting alliance with the British, he informed them of this offer, noting that he thought the Marathas would gain too much power and even threaten his own position under those circumstances.When the war broke out in 1779, Azelars noted that the Brahmans and their allies made every possible effort to halt progress of the newly rebuilt navy based at Bhatkal.[116] The alliance planned to make virtually simultaneous attacks on British holdings all throughout India, while the Marathas agreed to honour Hyder's claims to territories he currently held north of the Tungabhadra River and reduced the amount of tribute he was required to pay under earlier agreements.[117] However, diplomatic actions by Governor Warren Hastings and the Company successfully convinced both the Nizam and the Marathas not to take up arms, and Hyder ended up fighting the war on his own.The movement in August of Sir Hector Munro with a force of over 5,000 from Madras to Kanchipuram (Conjeevaram) prompted Hyder to lift the siege of Arcot and move to confront him.[121] Tipu and Hyder surrounded Baillie's force, and compelled the surrender of about 3,000 men in the Battle of Pollilur on 10 September; it was the first effective use of rocket artillery and made a strong impression upon the British.[123] Shortly after the outbreak of hostilities, Governor Hastings had sent General Sir Eyre Coote south from Bengal to take charge of British forces opposing Hyder.[129] This failed, and in late August the two armies met again at Pollilur, chosen by Hyder as a place to make a stand, because it was the site of his victory over Baillie the previous year.At the 1780 Battle of Pollilur, during the second war, Colonel William Baillie's ammunition stores are thought to have been detonated by a hit from one of Hyder's rockets, contributing to the British defeat.
Hyder Ali as a young soldier ( Sepoy ).
Realistic portrait of HyderAli
The dominions of the Kingdom Of Mysore ruled by Hyder Ali, in the year 1780.
Lal Bagh Gardens of Bangalore were originally laid out by Hyder Ali and were modelled on Mughal and French gardening techniques.
Hyder Ali in 1762, incorrectly described as the head of his army in the war against the British in India . (French painting)
Map of India in 1765 showing territories loyal to the Marathas in (yellow) ; and the territories of those loyal to the Great Mogul in (green) , which includes Mysore.
Krishnagiri Fort was besieged in the first Anglo-Mysore war in 1768, and finally surrendered to the English, who held it briefly
Asaf Jah II opposed the East India Company in 1766, [ 75 ] and initially allied himself with Hyder Ali during the First Anglo-Mysore War , particularly during the Battle of Chengam , [ 63 ] [ 64 ] then Battle of Rakshasbhuvan , [ 76 ] but later abandoned (in 1768) and later intervened in favor of Mysore during the Battle of Kharda in 1795.
Hyder Ali's melee forces in battle.
Theater map for the First and the Second Anglo-Mysore Wars
Baillie surrenders to Hyder Ali.
Tomb of Hyder Ali.
French Admiral Suffren meeting with Hyder Ali in 1782, J.B. Morret engraving, 1789.
The Mysore rockets utilised effectively during the Anglo-Mysore Wars , and were later updated by the British into the Congreve rockets , which were successively employed during the Napoleonic Wars and the War of 1812 .
Hyder Ali as 'The Pretended Fakir' (1894), from The Surgeon's Daughter by Sir Walter Scott (1827).
Haider AliKrishnaraja Wodeyar IIMaharajaTipu SultanBudikoteKingdom of MysoreKarnatakaChittoorSultanate of MysoreAndhra PradeshSrirangapatnaMysoreFath MuhammadSunni IslamHyderabad StateCarnatic SultanateMysore ArmyIspahsalarSultanDindigulBangaloreMughal-Maratha WarsCarnatic WarsSeven Years' WarMysore's campaigns against the states of Malabar (1757)Mysorean invasion of KeralaMaratha–Mysore WarBattle of Jadi HanwatiFirst Anglo-Mysore WarBattle of OoscotaSecond Anglo-Mysore WarMysore invasion of ChirakkalSiege of NargundBattle of Rattihallisouthern IndiaDalavayicommander-in-chiefSarvadhikariEast India CompanySecondAnglo–Mysore Warsmilitaryan allianceFrenchIndian subcontinentKrishna RiverEastern GhatsArabian SeaNawayath ArabQurayshMuhammad Adil ShahPunjabPunjabiBritish Rajbamboorocket artilleryNawab of CarnaticWodeyarKolar districtNawayathNizam of HyderabadSepoysdalwaiQamar-ud-din Khan, Asaf Jah ISecond Carnatic WarNasir JungMuzaffar JungDevanhalliMarquis de BussyTiruchirappalliThondaimanKallarFaujdarChanda ShahibMuhammed Ali Khan WallajahNawab of the CarnaticJoseph Francois DupleixCount de LallyChanda SahibSalabat JungMarathasMysorean invasion of MalabarZamorin of CalicutPalakkadZamorinCalicutMalabar CoastKeralaMalabar regionKolathunaduKottayamKadathanaduKozhikodeValluvanadjaghirBalaji Baji RaoThird Battle of PanipatShah Alam IIAnglo-Mysore WarfirmannabobsMughalBednorecasus belliIkkeriresidentMangaloreRoman CatholicGoan CatholicAhmad Shah DurraniMughalsPeshwaNawab of SavanurDharwadTungabhadra RiverMadhavrao IRattihalliCannanoreforcibly relocatedGreat MogulNanjaraja WodeyarKrishnagiri FortBattle of BuxarHector MonroNawabsNorthern CircarsCarnaticMadras PresidencyBritish forceKaveripattinamTiruvannamalaidecisively repulsedbesieged AmburAsaf Jah IIBombay PresidencyBombayAli Raja Kunhi Amsa IIBattle of ChengamBattle of RakshasbhuvanBattle of KhardaOoscotaGurramkondaBagalurVenkatagiristatus quo ante bellumAbu Hilal Ahmad bin SaidMuscatKarim KhanShirazPersiaPersian GulfBandar AbbasOttomanMustafa IIIIstanbulMaratha-Mysore WarMerkaraBrahminChamaraja Wodeyar VIIIChamaraja Wodeyar IXMadakari NayakaChitradurgawere at warGunturtheir ruleAmerican Revolutionary WarketchescannonsBrahmansBhatkalWarren HastingsAli Raja Bibi Junumabe IIArakkal KingdomMappilaMalaysMalaccaBritishSiege of CuddaloreBattle of PollilurMysorean rocketsPierre André de SuffrenMarquis de Bussy-CastelnauEdward HughesPorto NovoSir Hector MunroKanchipuramSir Eyre CooteCuddaloreTanjoreThuljajiBattle of Porto Novomet again at PollilurVelloremet in battleSholinghurLord MacartneyBritain was at war with the DutchNegapatamthree-week siegeTripassoreTellicherrySuffrenlunar calendarJames StuartGumbaz in SeringapatamMughal EmperorAurangzebLakshadweepMaldivesSultan of the MaldivesHasan 'Izz ud-dinChinesegavilatsHMS SeahorseAnglo-Mysore WarsCongreve rocketsNapoleonic WarsWar of 1812rocketshigh-quality iron casingWilliam CongreveEconomy of the Kingdom of MysoreSir Walter ScottHusain Ali Khan BahadurMughal weaponsCambridge University PressWayback MachineDiocese of MangaloreOlson, James StuartDalrymple, WilliamGott, RichardUttara KannadaWikisource1911 Encyclopædia Britannica