- Sadashivrao Bhau
Infobox Military Person
name=Sadashivrao Bhau
born=birth date|1730|07|05
died= death date and age|1761|01|20|1730|07|05
placeofbirth=Maharashtra ,India
placeofdeath=Panipat , India
caption=
nickname=
allegiance=Maratha Empire
branch=
serviceyears=
rank=
commands=Third Battle of Panipat
unit=
battles=Third Battle of Panipat
awards=
relations=Parvatibai (wife)Vishwasrao (nephew)Nanasaheb Peshwa (brother)Kashibai (daughter)
laterwork=
portrayedby= Sadashivrao Bhau (July 5, 1730 - January 20, 1761) was a nephew of PeshwaBaji Rao I and served as the commander of theMaratha army.Birth and early years
Sadashivrao, born in Saswad near
Pune , was the son of Baji Rao's brotherChimaji Appa .At the age of seven, Sadashivrao's marriage was arranged to the three year old
Parvatibai , a daughter of Sardar Korde, who was the finance minister in the cabinet of ChhatrapatiShahu .Establishment of artillery units
While observing several battles, Bhau witnessed the effectiveness artillery and light-weight guns mounted on British ships and began incorporating artillery units in the army of Balaji Baji Rao. Bhau enlisted the services of
Ibrahim Khan Gardi , who brought with him 2,500 trained soldiers and fifteen cannons. Bhau also employed European mercenaries who used be in the employ of Tulaji Angre before his defeat. Notable among them was an engineer named Le Corbosier, who was an expert in foundry and in handling explosives. Within two years, Balaji Baji Rao's Infantry-Artillery division had 10,000 men and 56 guns.Third battle of Panipat
In January 1758, news reached the prime minister
Nanasaheb Peshwa thatAhmad Shah Durrani had invaded and captured thePunjab region . Bhau led Nanasaheb's forces in recapturingDelhi in May 1758, a battle in which artillery units were crucial in destroying the fortifications of Durrani's forces. Bhau later captured the fortified village ofKunjpura with ablitzkrieg offensive that demolished of the fort's ramparts withland mine s andartillery shelling and an attack ofcavalry andmusketeer units. Durrani went on to loseSirhind ,Lahore andKasur toSikh forces, andMultan andAttock toKhokhar -Khatri Muslims. Both groups were supplied withmunition s by the Maratha empire.Durrani attempted to turn the tide against the Marathas by allying with other
Rohilla chieftains including theNawab ofAwadh , Prince Vijay Singh ofJodhpur , and Kachawa Prince Madho Singh of Amber. Durrani also recruitedAfghan s displaced by the war, and by August 1760, Durrani had 120,000 soldiers to block Maratha passage to the south. Durrani isolated the Marathas financially and politically by having his allies convincing other nobles to break their alliances with Bhau and not fund his campaign.Bhau was responsible for adjusting the
hit-and-run tactics used by the Maratha calvary, ill-suited for the heavymateriel and numerous family members andcamp follower s that accompanied the army (outnumbering actualcombatant s by an estimated five to one), to a more effective use of artillery and infantry. Though the changes resulted in several victories for the army, the Maratha generals were unready to adopt the new strategy completely and pointed out that the new units of artillery and infantry were not compatible with the other forces in the army and that the generals were not adequately trained on the deployment of the new units. Despite reservations of his generals and a shortage of time and money, Bhau formed a unit consisting of 10,000 infantry and 50 artillery pieces.Durrani had noted the large number of non-combatants following Bhau's army, and ordered an attack on their camp, which included Bhau's wife, slaughtering large numbers of civilians and soldiers' families. The resulting casualties and refugees fleeing to the Maratha camp caused overcrowding, supply shortages and shook the morale of Bhau's army, forcing him to turn his attention to safely transporting the civilians to
Pune . In January 1761, Bhau facedfamine and was blocked reinforcement due to Durrani's control of key transportation routes. He offered a treaty to Durrani, including half the annual revenue from the Punjab-Sindh region.Final battle and death
After a no reply regarding the terms of the treaty, Bhau decided to try to break the siege and allow the civilians under his protection to escape to
Rohtak andJind .Sadashivraobhau along with Ibrahim Khan Gardi had planned & were executing a foolproof battle strategy to pulverise the enemy formations with cannon fire and not to employ his cavalry until the Afghans were thoroughly softened up. With the Afghans now broken, he'd move camp in a defensive formation towards Delhi, where they were assured supplies but jealous of the exploits of their artillery chief envious maratha generals overacted while some left battlefield leaving their defences open resulting defeat of marathas.
Durrani was taken unaware by the early morning attack, and decided to counter-attack during daylight. Durrani faced heavy initial losses, ultimately moving his forces out of range of the artillery bombardment and awaited Bhau's attempt to break the civilians out of the battlelines, a plan that was brought to his attention by spies placed in Bhau's camp. While Bhau's forces were split between escorting civilians and defending the battle, Durrani planned to kill the opposing leader and
Vishwasrao , Bhau's nephew and heir toNanasaheb Peshwa . Durrani's forces killed Vishwasrao and Bhau departed the battlefield to visit the corpse, with devastating effect on themorale of his troops. Durrani attacked to take advantage of the confusion and weakness of Bhau's forces. Bhau counter-attacked but ultimately the army was defeated and any remaining civilians were massacred. Bhau was renderedcoma tose and removed toKurukshetra , dying on January 20th, 1761 without regaining consciousness. His body was cremated.References
*
Tryambak Shankar Shejwalkar , "Panipat 1761" (Deccan College Monograph Series. I.), Pune (1946)
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.