The British army engaged in the fighting…
October 1764 CE
The alliance army's numbers are estimated to be over forty thousand.
According to other sources, the combined army of the Mughals, Awadh and Mir Qasim consisting of forty thousand men was defeated by a British army comprising ten thousand men.
The lack of basic co-ordination among the three disparate allies is responsible for their decisive defeat.
Mirza Najaf Khan commands the right flank of the Mughal imperial army and is the first to advance his forces against Major Hector Munro at daybreak; the British lines form within twenty minutes and reverse the advance of the Mughals.
According to the British, Durrani and Rohilla cavalry were also present and fought during the battle in various skirmishes, but by midday, the battle was over and Shuja-ud-Daula blew up large tumbrils and three massive magazines of gunpowder.
Munro divides his army into various columns and particularly pursues the Mughal Grand Vizier Shuja-ud-Daula the Nawab of Awadh, who responds by blowing up his boat-bridge after crossing the river, thus abandoning the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II and members of his own regiment.
Mir Qasim also flees with his three million rupees worth of gemstones and later commits suicide.
Mirza Najaf Khan reorganizes formations around Shah Alam II, who retreats, then chooses to negotiate with the victorious British.
Historian John William Fortescue will claim that the British casualties totaled 847: 39 killed and 64 wounded from the European regiments and 250 killed, 435 wounded and 85 missing from the East India Company's sepoys.
He will also claim that the three Indian allies suffered 2,000 dead and that many more were wounded.
Another source says that there were 69 European and 664 sepoy casualties on the British side and 6,000 casualties on the Mughal side.
The victors captured 133 pieces of artillery and over 1 million rupees of cash.
Immediately after the battle Munro decides to assist the Marathas, who are described as a "warlike race", well known for their relentless and unwavering hatred towards the Mughal Empire and its Nawabs and the Sultanate of Mysore.
The short campaign of Mir Qasim is significant as a direct fight against British outsiders.
Unlike Siraj-ud-Daulah before him, Mir Qasim had been an effective and popular ruler.
The success at Buxar establishes the British East India company as a powerful force in the province of Bengal in a much more real sense than the Battle of Plassey seven years earlier and the Battle of Bedara five years earlier.
Locations
Groups
Durrani (Pashtun tribal confederacy)
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Maratha
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Malla (Nepal)
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France, (Bourbon) Kingdom of
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Rohilla (Pashtun tribe)
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Mughal Empire (Delhi)
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Maratha Empire
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Carnatic, Nawabs of the
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Britain, Kingdom of Great
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East India Company, British (United Company of Merchants of England Trading to the East Indies)
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French Company of the Indies
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Bengal, Nawabs of
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