The British East India Company, from its…
January 1779 CE
The British East India Company, from its base in Bombay, had intervened in a succession struggle in Pune, on behalf of Raghunathrao (also called Raghobadada), which had become the First Anglo-Maratha War.
Raghunathrao, according to the Treaty of Surat signed on March 6, 1775, had ceded the territories of Salsette and Bassein to the British, along with part of the revenues from Surat and Bharuch districts.
The British had promised in return to provide Raghunathrao with twenty-five hundred soldiers.
The British Calcutta Council had then condemned the treaty, sending Colonel Upton to Pune to annul it and make a new treaty with the regency.
The Treaty of Purandhar (March 1, 1776) had annulled that of Surat, Raghunathrao had been pensioned and his cause abandoned, but the British had retained the revenues of Salsette and Broach districts.
The Bombay government had rejected this new treaty and given refuge to Raghunathrao.
Nana Phadnavis had violated the treaty with the Calcutta Council by granting the French a port on the west coast in 1777.
The British had replied by sending a force towards Pune.
The tangle is increased by the support of the London authorities for Bombay, which in 1778–79 again supports Raghunathrao.
The East India Company's force from Bombay consists of about thirty-nine hundred men (about six hundred Europeans, the rest Asian) accompanied by many thousands of servants and specialist workers.
They are joined on the way by Raghunathrao's forces, adding several thousand more soldiers, and more artillery.
The Maratha army includes forces contributed by all the partners in the federation, tens of thousands in all, commanded by the brilliant Tukojirao Holkar and General Mahadji Shinde (also known as Mahadji Sindia).
Mahadji slows the British march and sends forces west to cut off its supply lines.
When they discover this, the British halt at Talegaon, a few hours' brisk march from Pune, but days away for the thousands of support staff with their ox-drawn carts.
Now the Maratha cavalry harasses the enemy from all sides.
The Marathas also utilize a scorched earth policy, burning farmland and poisoning wells.
The British begin to withdraw from Talegaon in the middle of the night, but the Marathas attack, forcing them to halt in the village of Wadgaon (now called Vadgaon Maval), where the British force is surrounded on January 12, 1779.
The British are ready by the end of the next day to discuss surrender terms, and on January 16 sign the Treaty of Wadgaon, which forces the Bombay government to relinquish all territories acquired by the Bombay office of the East India Company since 1773.