Siege of Mangalore

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The siege of Mangalore was conducted during the Second Anglo-Mysore War by Tipu Sultan and forces of the Kingdom of Mysore against a British East India Company garrison led by Colonel Campbell. The port city of Mangalore on the west coast of India was besieged from 20 May 1783 until the garrison capitulated on 30 January 1784 after being reduced to starvation; of the original garrison of 700 British soldiers and 2000 Indian troops there were only 850 survivors. The siege was one of the last major actions of the war; Mangalore was where the treaty ending the war was signed in March 1784.

Siege of Mangalore
Part of the Second Anglo-Mysore War
Date20 May 1783 – 30 January 1784
Location
Result Mysore victory
Belligerents

Union flag 1606 (Kings Colors).svg  Great Britain

Flag of Mysore.svg Sultanate of Mysore
Commanders and leaders
Union flag 1606 (Kings Colors).svg colonel CampbellFlag of Mysore.svg Tipu Sultan
Strength
700 British and 2,000 Indian troops Unknown
Casualties and losses
1950 Unknown

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Siege of Bednore

The siege of Bednore was a battle of the Second Anglo-Mysore War. The British had captured Bednore and other strongholds in the Malabar coast from Mysore in early 1783, while the Mysore leader, Tipu Sultan, was leading his army on campaign in the Carnatic. The British commander, Brigadier-General Richard Matthews, formed a small garrison of 1,600 men at Bednore and split the remainder of the force into detachments to plunder the surrounding region. Tipu Sultan brought his army of more than 100,000 men west and managed to approach within 6 kilometres (4 mi) of Bednore undetected by 9 April. Matthews deployed his troops in the field outside of Bednore and was swiftly defeated. Matthews abandoned the town and retreated to the fort which was quickly besieged by the Mysore army.

References

Coordinates: 12°54′07″N74°49′31″E / 12.90205°N 74.8253166°E / 12.90205; 74.8253166