History

Saturday, 27 August 2016

26 AUG 1071 BATTLE OF MANZIKERT_TURKEY

Battle of Manzikert

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Battle of Manzikert
نبرد ملازگرد
Part of the Byzantine–Seljuq wars
131 Bataille de Malazgirt.jpg
In this 15th-century French miniature depicting the Battle of Manzikert, the combatants are clad in contemporary Western European armour.
Date26 August 1071
Locationnear Manzikert, Byzantine Armenia[1][2]
(present-day Malazgirt, Turkey)
Result
  • Decisive Seljuk victory
  • Turkification of Anatolia
Belligerents
Byzantine Empire
  • Frankish, English, Norman, Georgian, Armenian, Bulgarian, Turkic Pecheneg andCuman mercenaries
Seljuk Empire
  • Pecheneg and Cumanmercenaries[note 1]
Commanders and leaders
Romanos IV (POW)
Nikephoros Bryennios
Theodore Alyates
Andronikos Doukas
Alp Arslan
Afshin Bey
Artuk Bey
Kutalmışoğlu Suleyman
Strength
40,000[3] to 70,000[4]20,000[5] to 30,000[6]
Casualties and losses
Killed: 2,000[7] to 8,000[5]
  • nearly the entire Varangian Guard (Scandinavian and Anglo-Saxon mercenaries)
  • 2,000 Turkish mercenaries who remained loyal
Captured: 4,000[7]Deserted: 20,000 to 35,000
  • mainly Frankish and Norman mercenaries who avoided almost the entire battle
unknown
[hide]
  • v
  • t
  • e
Byzantine–Seljuq wars
  • Kapetron
  • 1st Manzikert
  • Caesarea
  • Iconium
  • 2nd Manzikert
  • Seljuq campaigns in the Aegean
  • 1st Nicaea
  • 2nd Nicaea
  • Philomelion
  • Campaigns of John I Komnenos
  • Myriokephalon
  • Hyelion and Leimocheir
  • 1st Trebizond
  • Attalia
  • Antioch on the Meander
  • Sinope
  • 2nd Trebizond
The Battle of Manzikert was fought between the Byzantine Empire and the Seljuq Turks on August 26, 1071 near Manzikert (modern Malazgirt in Muş Province, Turkey). The decisive defeat of the Byzantine armyand the capture of the Emperor Romanos IV Diogenes[8] played an important role in undermining Byzantine authority in Anatolia and Armenia,[9] and allowed for the gradual Turkification of Anatolia.
The brunt of the battle was borne by the professional soldiers from the eastern and western tagmata, as large numbers of mercenaries and Anatolian levies fled early and survived the battle.[10] The fallout from Manzikert was disastrous for the Byzantines, resulting in civil conflicts and an economic crisis that severely weakened the Byzantine Empire's ability to adequately defend its borders.[11] This led to the mass movement of Turks into central Anatolia—by 1080, an area of 78,000 square kilometres (30,000 sq mi) had been gained by the Seljuk Turks. It took three decades of internal strife before Alexius I (1081 to 1118) restored stability to Byzantium. Historian Thomas Asbridge says: "In 1071, the Seljuqs crushed an imperial army at the Battle of Manzikert (in eastern Asia Minor), and though historians no longer consider this to have been an utterly cataclysmic reversal for the Greeks, it still was a stinging setback."[12] It was the first time in history a Byzantine Emperor had become the prisoner of a Muslim commander.[13]

Contents

  [hide] 
  • 1Background
  • 2Prelude
  • 3Battle
    • 3.1Captivity of Romanos Diogenes
  • 4Aftermath
  • 5Notes
  • 6References
  • 7Further reading
  • 8External links

Background[edit]

Although the Byzantine Empire had remained strong and powerful in the Middle Ages,[14] it began to decline under the reign of the militarily incompetent Constantine IX and again under Constantine X—a brief two-year period of reform under Isaac I merely delayed the decay of the Byzantine army.[15] Under Constantine IX the Byzantines first came into contact with the Seljuk Turks when they attempted to annex Ani, the Armenian capital. Constantine made a truce with the Seljuks that lasted until 1064, but they then took Ani, and in [14] 1067 the rest of Armenia, followed by Caesarea.[16]
In 1068 Romanos IV took power, and after some speedy military reforms entrusted Manuel Comnenus (nephew of Isaac I Comnenus) to lead an expedition against the Seljuks. Manuel captured Hierapolis Bambyce inSyria, next thwarted a Turkish attack against Iconium with a counter-attack,[8] but was then defeated and captured by the Seljuks under the Sultan Alp Arslan. Despite his success Alp Arslan was quick to seek a peace treaty with the Byzantines, signed in 1069; he saw the Fatimids in Egypt as his main enemy and had no desire to be diverted by unnecessary hostilities.[5]
In February 1071, Romanos sent envoys to Alp Arslan to renew the 1069 treaty, and keen to secure his northern flank against attack, Alp Arslan happily agreed.[5] Abandoning the siege of Edessa, he immediately led his army to attack Fatimid-held Aleppo. However, the peace treaty had been a deliberate distraction: Romanos now led a large army into Armenia to recover the lost fortresses before the Seljuks had time to respond.[5]

Prelude[edit]

Accompanying Romanos was Andronicus Ducas, his co-emperor and rival. The army consisted of about 5,000 professional Byzantine troops from the western provinces and probably about the same number from the eastern provinces; 500 Frankish and Norman mercenaries under Roussel de Bailleul; some Turkic (Uz and Pecheneg) and Bulgarian mercenaries; infantry under the duke of Antioch; a contingent of Georgian andArmenian troops; and some (but not all) of the Varangian Guard, to total around 40,000 to 70,000 men.[17][18] The quantity of the provincial troops had declined in the years prior to Romanos, as the government diverted funding to mercenaries who were judged less likely to be involved in politics and could be disbanded after use to save money.
Alp Arslan led Seljuq Turks to victory against the Byzantineannexation of Manzikert in 1071.
The march across Asia Minor was long and difficult, and Romanos did not endear himself to his troops by bringing a luxurious baggage train along with him; the local population also suffered some plundering by his Frankish mercenaries, whom he was obliged to dismiss. The expedition rested at Sebasteia on the river Halys, reaching Theodosiopolis in June 1071. There, some of his generals suggested continuing the march into Seljuk territory and catching Alp Arslan before he was ready. Others, including Nicephorus Bryennius, suggested they wait and fortify their position. It was decided to continue the march.
Thinking that Alp Arslan was either further away or not coming at all, Romanos marched towards Lake Van, expecting to retake Manzikert rather quickly, as well as the nearby fortress of Khliat if possible. Alp Arslan was already in the area, however, with allies and 30,000 cavalry from Aleppo and Mosul. Alp Arslan's scouts knew exactly where Romanos was, while Romanos was completely unaware of his opponent's movements.
Having made peace with the Byzantines the Seljuks intended to attack Egypt, until Alp Arslan learned in Aleppo of the Byzantine advance. He returned north and met the Byzantines north of Lake Van.
Romanos ordered his general Joseph Tarchaniotes to take some of the regular troops and the Varangians and accompany the Pechenegs and Franks to Khliat, while Romanos and the rest of the army marched to Manzikert. This split the forces in half, each taking about 20,000 men. It is unknown what happened to the army sent off with Tarchaniotes — according to Islamic sources, Alp Arslan smashed this army, but Roman sources make no mention of any such encounter, whilst Attaliates suggests that Tarchaniotes fled at the sight of the Seljuk Sultan — an unlikely event considering the reputation of the Roman general. Either way, Romanos' army was reduced to less than half his planned 40,000 to 70,000 men.[17][19]

Battle[edit]

Alp Arslan summoned his army and delivered a speech by appearing in a white robe, as in an Islamic funeral shroud, in the morning of the battle.[20] This was an encouraging message that he was ready to die in battle. Romanos was unaware of the loss of Tarchaneiotes and continued to Manzikert, which he easily captured on August 23; the Seljuks responded with heavy incursions by bowmen.[19] The next day some foraging parties under Bryennios discovered the Seljuk army and were forced to retreat back to Manzikert. The Armenian general Basilakes was sent out with some cavalry, as Romanos did not believe this was Alp Arslan's full army; the cavalry was destroyed and Basilakes taken prisoner. Romanos drew up his troops into formation and sent the left wing out under Bryennios, who was almost surrounded by the quickly approaching Turks and was forced to retreat once more. The Seljuk forces hid among the nearby hills for the night, making it nearly impossible for Romanos to counterattack.[8][21]
Byzantine territory (purple), Byzantine attacks (red) and Seljuk attacks (green)
On August 25, some of Romanos' Turkic mercenaries came into contact with their Seljuk kin and deserted. Romanos then rejected a Seljuk peace embassy. He wanted to settle the eastern question and the persistent Turkic incursions and settlements with a decisive military victory, and he understood that raising another army would be both difficult and expensive. The Emperor attempted to recall Tarchaneiotes, who was no longer in the area. There were no engagements that day, but on August 26 the Byzantine army gathered itself into a proper battle formation and began to march on the Turkish positions, with the left wing under Bryennios, the right wing under Theodore Alyates, and the centre under the emperor. At that moment, a Turkish soldier said to Alp Arslan, "My Sultan, the enemy army is approaching", and Alp Arslan is said to have replied, "Then we are also approaching them". Andronikos Doukas led the reserve forces in the rear—a foolish mistake, considering the loyalties of the Doukids. The Seljuks were organized into a crescentformation about four kilometres away.[22] Seljuk archers attacked the Byzantines as they drew closer; the centre of their crescent continually moved backwards while the wings moved to surround the Byzantine troops.
The Byzantines held off the arrow attacks and captured Alp Arslan's camp by the end of the afternoon. However, the right and left wings, where the arrows did most of their damage, almost broke up when individual units tried to force the Seljuks into a pitched battle; the Seljuk cavalry simply disengaged when challenged, the classic hit and run tactics of steppe warriors. With the Seljuks avoiding battle, Romanos was forced to order a withdrawal by the time night fell. However, the right wing misunderstood the order, and Doukas, as a rival of Romanos, deliberately ignored the emperor and marched back to the camp outside Manzikert, rather than covering the emperor's retreat. With the Byzantines thoroughly confused, the Seljuks seized the opportunity and attacked.[8] The Byzantine right wing was almost immediately routed, thinking they were betrayed either by the Armenians or the army's Turkish auxiliaries. In fact the Armenians were the first to flee and they all managed to get away, while by contrast the Turkish auxiliaries remained loyal to the end.[23] Other sources suggest that Armenian infantry were stoutly resisting and not turning tail and did not abandon the emperor as many had. When Romanos saw the boldness of Armenian foot soldiers, he displayed great affection for them and promised them unheard of rewards. In the end, the emperor's personal troops and these Armenian foot soldiers suffered the most numerous casualties in the Byzantine army.[24] The left wing under Bryennios held out a little longer but was also soon routed.[10] The remnants of the Byzantine centre, including the Emperor and the Varangian Guard, were encircled by the Seljuks. Romanos was injured and taken prisoner by the Seljuks. The survivors were the many who fled the field and were pursued throughout the night, but not beyond that; by dawn, the professional core of the Byzantine army had been destroyed whilst many of the peasant troops and levies who had been under the command of Andronikus had fled.[10]

Captivity of Romanos Diogenes[edit]

Alp Arslan humiliating EmperorRomanos IV. From a 15th-century illustrated French translation ofBoccaccio's De Casibus Virorum Illustrium.
When Emperor Romanos IV was conducted into the presence of Alp Arslan, the Sultan refused to believe that the bloodied and tattered man covered in dirt was the mighty Emperor of the Romans. After discovering his identity, Alp Arslan placed his boot on the Emperor's neck and forced him to kiss the ground.[10] A famous conversation is also reported to have taken place:[25][26]
Alp Arslan: "What would you do if I were brought before you as a prisoner?"
Romanos: "Perhaps I'd kill you, or exhibit you in the streets of Constantinople."
Alp Arslan: "My punishment is far heavier. I forgive you, and set you free."
Alp Arslan treated Romanos with considerable kindness and again offered the terms of peace that he had offered prior to the battle.[13]
According to Ibn al-Adim, in the presence of Arslan, Romanos blamed the raids of Rashid al-Dawla Mahmud into Byzantine territory for his interventions in Muslim territories which eventually led to the Battle of Manzikert.[27] Romanos remained a captive of the Sultan for a week. During this time, the Sultan allowed Romanos to eat at his table whilst concessions were agreed upon: Antioch, Edessa, Hierapolis, and Manzikert were to be surrendered.[11] This would have left the vital core of Anatolia untouched. A payment of 10 million gold pieces demanded by the Sultan as a ransom for Romanos was deemed as too high by the latter, so the Sultan reduced its short-term expense by asking for 1.5 million gold pieces as an initial payment instead, followed by an annual sum of 360,000 gold pieces.[11] Plus, a marriage alliance was prepared between Alp Arslan's son and Romanos’ daughter.[5] The Sultan then gave Romanos many presents and an escort of two emirs and one hundred Mamluks on his route to Constantinople.
Shortly after his return to his subjects, Romanos found his rule in serious trouble. Despite attempts to raise loyal troops, he was defeated three times in battle against the Doukas family and was deposed, blinded, and exiled to the island of Proti. He died soon after as a result of an infection caused by an injury during his brutal blinding. Romanos' final foray into the Anatolian heartland, which he had worked so hard to defend, was a public humiliation.[11]

Aftermath[edit]

The Turks did not move into Anatolia until after Alp Arslan's death in 1072.
While Manzikert was a long-term strategic catastrophe for Byzantium, it was by no means the massacre that historians earlier presumed. Modern scholars estimate that Byzantine losses were relatively low,[28][29] considering that many units survived the battle intact and were fighting elsewhere within a few months, and most Byzantine prisoners of war were later released.[29] Certainly, all the commanders on the Byzantine side (Doukas, Tarchaneiotes, Bryennios, de Bailleul, and, above all, the Emperor) survived and took part in later events.[30] The battle did not directly change the balance of power between the Byzantines and the Seljuks, however the ensuing civil war within the Byzantine Empire did, to the advantage of Seljuks.[29]
Doukas had escaped with no casualties and quickly marched back to Constantinople, where he led a coup against Romanos and proclaimed Michael VII as basileus.[11] Bryennios also lost a few men in the rout of his wing. The Seljuks did not pursue the fleeing Byzantines, nor did they recapture Manzikert itself at this point. The Byzantine army regrouped and marched to Dokeia, where they were joined by Romanos when he was released a week later. The most serious loss materially seems to have been the emperor's extravagant baggage train.
The result of this disastrous defeat was, in simplest terms, the loss of the Eastern Roman Empire's Anatolian heartland. John Julius Norwich says in his trilogy on the Byzantine Empire that the defeat was "its death blow, though centuries remained before the remnant fell. The themes in Anatolia were literally the heart of the empire, and within decades after Manzikert, they were gone." In his smaller book, A Short History of Byzantium, Norwich describes the battle as "the greatest disaster suffered by the Empire in its seven and a half centuries of existence".[31] Sir Steven Runciman, in his "History of the Crusades", noted that "The Battle of Manzikert was the most decisive disaster in Byzantine history. The Byzantines themselves had no illusions about it. Again and again their historians refer to that dreadful day."
Anna Komnene, writing a few decades after the actual battle, wrote:
...the fortunes of the Roman Empire had sunk to their lowest ebb. For the armies of the East were dispersed in all directions, because the Turks had over-spread, and gained command of, countries between the Euxine Sea [Black Sea] and the Hellespont, and the Aegean Sea and Syrian Seas [Mediterranean Sea], and the various bays, especially those which wash Pamphylia, Cilicia, and empty themselves into the Egyptian Sea [Mediterranean Sea].[32]
Years and decades later, Manzikert came to be seen as a disaster for the Empire; later sources therefore greatly exaggerate the numbers of troops and the number of casualties. Byzantine historians would often look back and lament the "disaster" of that day, pinpointing it as the moment the decline of the Empire began. It was not an immediate disaster, but the defeat showed the Seljuks that the Byzantines were not invincible—they were not the unconquerable, millennium-old Roman Empire (as both the Byzantines and Seljuks still called it). The usurpation of Andronikos Doukas also politically destabilized the empire and it was difficult to organize resistance to the Turkish migrations that followed the battle. Despite the traditional view of historians that a wave of Turkish immigration 'overran' Anatolia in the decades that followed,[31] modern genetic studies show that even with additional centuries of Turkic immigration, the population of Anatolia today has only a small admixture of Central Asian heritage.[33][34] The conquest of the Seljuk's appears to be one of installing a new political elite. Finally, while intrigue and the deposition of Emperors had taken place before, the fate of Romanos was particularly horrific, and the destabilization caused by it also rippled through the empire for centuries.
Settlements and regions affected during the first wave of Turkish invasions in Asia Minor (until 1204).
What followed the battle was a chain of events—of which the battle was the first link—that undermined the Empire in the years to come. They included intrigues for the throne, the fate of Romanos, and Roussel de Bailleul attempting to carve himself an independent kingdom in Galatia with his 3,000 Frankish, Norman, and German mercenaries.[35] He defeated the Emperor's uncle John Doukas, who had come to suppress him, advancing toward the capital to destroy Chrysopolis (Üsküdar) on the Asian coast of the Bosphorus. The Empire finally turned to the spreading Seljuks to crush de Bailleul (which they did). However the Turksransomed him back to his wife, and it was not before the young general Alexios Komnenos pursued him that he was captured. These events all interacted to create a vacuum that the Turks filled. Their choice in establishing their capital in Nikaea (Iznik) in 1077 could possibly be explained by a desire to see if the Empire's struggles could present new opportunities.
In hindsight, both Byzantine and contemporary historians are unanimous in dating the decline of Byzantine fortunes to this battle. As Paul K. Davis writes, "Byzantine defeat severely limited the power of the Byzantines by denying them control over Anatolia, the major recruiting ground for soldiers. Henceforth, the Muslims controlled the region. The Byzantine Empire was limited to the area immediately around Constantinople, and the Byzantines were never again a serious military force."[36] It is also interpreted as one of the root causes for the later Crusades, in that the First Crusade of 1095 was originally a western response to the Byzantine emperor's call for military assistance after the loss of Anatolia.[37] From another perspective, the West saw Manzikert as a signal that Byzantium was no longer capable of being the protector of Eastern Christianity or of Christian pilgrims to the Holy Places in the Middle East. Delbrück considers the importance of the battle to be exaggerated, but the evidence makes clear that it resulted in the Empire being unable to put an effective army into the field for many years to come.[38]
The Battle of Myriokephalon, also known as the Myriocephalum, has been compared to the Battle of Manzikert as a pivotal point in the decline of the Byzantine Empire.[39] In both battles, separated by over a hundred years, an expansive Byzantine army was ambushed by a more elusive Seljuk opponent. The implications of Myriocephalum were initially limited, however, thanks to Manuel I Komnenos holding on to power. The same could not be said of Romanos, whose enemies "martyred a courageous and upright man", and as a result "the Empire ... would never recover".[35]

Notes[edit]

  1. Jump up^ Pechenegs and Cumans defected to the Seljuq side when the war began.
About 187 results (0.80 seconds) 
Showing results for turks defeat byzantine army of romanus ivat manzikert
Search instead for turka defeat byzantine army of romanus ivat manzikert

Search Results

Battle of Manzikert - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Manzikert
The Battle of Manzikert was fought between the Byzantine Empire and the Seljuq Turks on ... The decisive defeat of the Byzantine army and the capture of the Emperor Romanos IV Diogenes played an important ..... 62-63: "With this large but untrustworthy army Romanus set out in the spring of 1071 to reconquer Armenia.

Anatolia 1071: Turks vs Byzantines - YouTube

Video for turks defeat byzantine army of romanus ivat manzikert▶ 3:37
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dWLWbmfaiv8
Aug 20, 2011 - Uploaded by turshuses
The Battle of Manzikert (Modern Turkish: Malazgirt Savaşı) was fought between the ... In the battle the ...

The Battle of Manzikert: Military Disaster or Political Failure? » De Re ...

deremilitari.org/2013/09/the-battle-of-manzikert-military-disaster-or-political-failure/
Sep 2, 2013 - Was the loss of Anatolia the result of Romanus IV Diogenes' failed military ... Romanus'Manzikert campaign and the significance of his defeat, and ..... [39] At the sight of the Byzantine army,Manzikert's Turkish garrison ...

The Deadliest Blogger: Military History Page | The historical writing of ...

https://deadliestblogpage.wordpress.com/page/23/
Aug 26, 2013 - THE BATTLE OF MANZIKERT: BYZANTIUM'S TERRIBLE DAY .... Unbeknownst toRomanus, the Turkish Sultan and his army were at that very moment .... The defeat of their political rival, Romans Diogenes, justified in their minds ...... feared sons: Ubba, Halfdan, and first-and-foremost,Ivar the Boneless.

History Year by Year - Page 128 - Google Books Result

https://books.google.co.in/books?isbn=1405391057
DK - 2011 - ‎History
He marched north to defeat a Norse invasion, before dashing south to ... In 1071, the Seljuks crushed the Byzantine army at Manzikert, capturing and ransoming Emperor Romanus IV ... This began its transformation into a Muslim Turkish region. ... aye u x T a p e str y c o m p le ted 1 0 77 Pen ite nce ofH e n ry IVat Can oss a ...

Jesus Christ 1068ADORIGINAL Ancient Medieval Byzantine Christian ...

www.ebay.com › Coins & Paper Money › Coins: Ancient › Byzantine (300-1400 AD)
... in an EU member state besides UK, import VAT on this purchase is not recoverable. ... Byzantine -Romanus IV, Diogenes - Emperor: January 1, 1068 A.D. - August 19, ... but in 1071 he was captured and his army routed at the Battle of Manzikert. .... He managed to engage the Turks in battle, but wasdefeated and taken ...

Medieval Timeline - Browse by Category - Shadowed Realm

www.shadowedrealm.com › Medieval Timeline
Battle of Manzikert ... Beginning in 304 A.D. China was ravaged by rampaging Turks, Tibetan, .... The invading mutinous Six Garrisons army of a million were defeated by ..... arrived in England under the command of Halfdan, Guthrum, and Ivar bent on .... In one of the worse defeats in Byzantine's history, Emperor Romanus ...

medieval midterm vocab flashcards | Quizlet

https://quizlet.com/67430810/medieval-midterm-vocab-flash-cards/
four shires come -> Alfred leads them out -> Saxons are able to beat Vikings .... Battle of Manzikert.Byzantines vs. Turks. Romanus marches out with army, try to ...

[PDF]PDF Original Colour - University of Toronto

scans.library.utoronto.ca/pdf/9/21/historyofgreecef03finl/historyofgreecef03finl.pdf
Irruption of the Seljouk Turks into Asia Minor ... Defeat at Manzikert .... Observations on the Vallachian population in the Byzantine empire . 2.-4. Origin of ...... these Uzes in the army of Romanus IV. was opposed to a ...... IVAR WITH VENICE. l8l.

Steve Simpson (mathematician) - Expand Your Mind - Revolvy

www.revolvy.com/main/index.php?s=Steve%20Simpson%20(mathematician)...
1509 – Battle of Agnadello : In northern Italy, French forces defeat the ... Nikolay Yegorovich Zhukovsky 1900 Federico Amodeo , Leon Autonne , Ivar .... Events 1071 – Battle of Manzikert : The Seljuq Turks defeat the Byzantine army at Manzikert . ... 1454 – The papal bull Romanus Pontifex awards the Kingdom of Portugal ...

Searches related to turks defeat byzantine army of romanus ivat manzikert

battle of manzikert significance
battle of manzikert definition
battle of manzikert quizlet
battle of myriokephalon
manzikert map
at the battle of manzikert in 1071 c.e. quizlet
malazgirt
battle of kapetron

12345678Next
Dahisar West, Mumbai, Maharashtra - From your search history - Use precise location
 - Learn more   
Help Send feedback Privacy Terms












Posted by bhushan at 06:58
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest

No comments:

Post a Comment

Newer Post Older Post Home
Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

About Me

bhushan
View my complete profile

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2016 (345)
    • ►  December (5)
    • ►  November (1)
    • ►  October (4)
    • ►  September (19)
    • ▼  August (176)
      • 31 AUG 2016 OVERDOSE AWARENESS DAY HomeHea...
      • 31 AUG HISTORY TODAY  Today in Indian HistoryE...
      • 28 AUG 1998 SECURITY COUNCIL BANNED TERRORISTS T...
      • 28 AUG1997 JAIN COMMISSION INTERIM REPORT_RAJIV ...
      • 28 AUG 1997 ELECTION COMMISSION ISSUED NOTICE NO...
      • 28 AUG 1994 3 KILLED AS INDIAN CONTINGENT TRY TO...
      • 28 AUG 1993 J&K PRESIDENT`S RULE EXTENDED FOR SI...
      • 28-30 SECOND WORLD HINDI CONFERENCE_MAURITIUS ...
      • 28 AUG  1973 INDO-PAK WAR PRISONERS FREED Delh...
      • 28 AUG 1972  GENERAL INSURANCE BUSINESS NATIONAL...
      • 28 AUG 1934 JUSTICE SUJATA MANOHAR Sujata Mano...
      • 28 AUG 1928 M.G.K.MENON M. G. K. Menon From ...
      • 28 AUG 1906-1991 CHINTAMANI GOVIND_MAMA PENDSE ...
      • 29 AUG 1905-3 DEC 1979 MAJOR DHYANCHAND Dhyan ...
      • 28 AUG 1904 FIRST CAR RALLY_CALCUTTA TO BARAKPUR...
      • 1 SEP 1896- 16 OCT 1974 C.VAIDYANATHA BHAGAVTHAR...
      • 28 AUG 1896-3 MAR 1982 FIRAK GORAKHPURI Firaq ...
      • 28 AUG 1879 BATTLE OF ULUNDI_ZULUS AND BRITISH ...
      • 28 AUG 1733 SEKHOJI ANGRE_DIED Mathurabai ...
      • 28 AUG 1600 MUGHALS CAPTURE AHMEDNAGAR_DEATH -CH...
      • 30 AUG HISTORY TODAY Today in Indian HistoryEv...
      • 29 AUG HISTORY TODAY Today in Indian HistoryEv...
      • 22 JUL 1923-27 AUG 1976 MUKESH CHAND MATHUR Mu...
      • 27 AUG 827-DEATH POPE EUGENE II Pope Eugene II...
      • 27 AUG 1980 NEHA DHUPIA Neha Dhupia From Wik...
      • 27 AUG 1974 MOHAMMAD YOUSUF Mohammad Yousuf (c...
      • 27 AUG 1972 THE GREAT KHALI The Great Khali ...
      • 27 AUG 1925-18 AUG 2008 NARAYAN DHARAP Narayan...
      • 27 AUG 1998 SACHIN TENDULKAR AND LEGENDARY DON B...
      • 27 AUG 1993 RAINBOW BRIDGE_TOKYO COMPLETED Rai...
      • 27 AUG 1991 MOLDOVA FREED FROM USSR Independen...
      • 25 JUN 1900-27 AUG 1979 LORD MOUNTBATTEN`S BOAT ...
      • 27 AUG 1976 METRIC SYSTEM OF WEIGHTS AND MEASURE...
      • 27 AUG 1958 VIGYAN MANDIR IN NEW DELHI ...
      • 28 AUG HISTORY TODAY Today in Indian HistoryEv...
      • 27 AUG 1916 ITALY DECLARES WAR ON GERMANY The...
      • 27 AUG 1912 TARZAN OF THE APES_MAGAZINE Tarzan...
      • 27 AUG 1870 SHRAMJIVI SANGHA_SASIPADA BANERJI ...
      • 27 AUG 1813 BATTLE OF DRESDEN Battle of Dresde...
      • 27 AUG  1781 BATTLE OF PALILORE Eyre Coote (E...
      • 27 AUG 1776 AMERICANS DEFEATED BY BRITISH IN NEW...
      • 27 AUG 1604 GURU GRANTH SAHIB ESTABLISHED Hi...
      • 26 AUG 1984 SIKH TERRORISTS HIJACKED INDIAN AIRL...
      • 26 AUG 1978 SIGMUND JAHN(BORN 13 FEB 1937)_1st G...
      • 26 AUG 1947 BHOPAL ACCEDED TO INDIA DOMINION 2...
      • 27 AUG HISTORY TODAY स्वगृह » मराठी दिनदर्शि...
      • 26 AUG 1944 FRENCH COMMITTEE OF NATIONAL LIBERAT...
      • 26 AUG 1927 2nd RADIO STATION IN CALCUTTA 26th...
      • 26 AUG 1920 19th CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT RATIFI...
      • 26 AUG 1910-5 SEP 1997 MOTHER TERESA  Mother T...
      • 26 AUG 1906-3 MAR 1993 ALBERT SABIN Albert Sab...
      • 26 AUG 1873-30 JUN 1961 LEE DE FOREST Lee de F...
      • 26 AUG 1852 BOMBAY ASSOCIATION ESTABLISHED Bomb...
      • 26 AUG 1303 ALLAUDIN KHILJI CAPTURES CHITTORGARH...
      • 26 AUG  HISTORY TODAY You are here: Home / To...
      • 26 AUG 1429 JOAN OF ARC TRIUMPHANT ENTRY TO PARI...
      • 26 AUG 1071 BATTLE OF MANZIKERT_TURKEY Battle ...
      • 25 AUG 1980 ZIMBABWE JOINS UNITED NATIONS Zimb...
      • 25 AUG 1975 BUNDELKHAND UNIVERSITY ESTABLISHED I...
      • 25 AUG 1959  PANDIT NEHRU DECLARED TO PROTECT SI...
      • 25 AUG 1948 JANA GANA MANA_NATIONAL ANTHEM BY CO...
      • 25 AUG 1948 THE HOUSE UN-AMERICAN COMMITTEE Ho...
      • 25 AUG 1916 THE NATIONAL PARK SERVICES Nationa...
      • 25 AUG 1913-18 OCT 1973 WALT KELLY  Walt Kelly...
      • 25 AUG 1888-27 AUG 1963 ALLAMA MASHRIQI Inayat...
      • 25 AUG 1875 MATHEW WEBB FIRST MAN SWIM THE ENGLI...
      • 25 AUG 357 JULIAN CAESAR DEFEATS ALAMANNI Batt...
      • 26 AUG HISTORY TODAY You are here: Home / Toda...
      • 24 AUG 1969 V.V. GIRI_PRESIDENT V. V. Giri F...
      • 24 AUG 1969 MOHD. HIDAYATULLAH_RETIRED AS ACTING...
      • 24 AUG 1954 CONGRESS BANNED COMMUNIST PARTY IN U...
      • 24 AUG 1952 PRAJA SOCIALIST PARTY FORMED Praja...
      • 24 AUG 1946 PANDIT NEHRU_HEAD OF INTERIM GOVERNM...
      • 24 AUG 1916-26 AUG 1975 DR.ADINATH LAHIRI  Adi...
      • 24 AUG 1891 MOVIE CAMERA PATENT_THOMAS EDISON ...
      • 24 AUG 2016 BICYCLE_FOR TERRAINS FIRS...
      • 24 AUG 1689 CALCUTTA CITY ESTABLISHED Discover...
      • 24 AUG 1608 BRITISHERS LANDED ON SHIP HECTOR_SUR...
      • 24 AUG 410 GERMAN BARBARIANS SACK ROME Sack of...
      • 25 AUG HISTORY TODAY You are here: Home / Toda...
      • 24 AUG HISTORY TODAY You are here: Home / Toda...
      • 23 AUG 2000 INDIA JAPAN UNVEIL GLOBAL PARTNERSHI...
      • 23 AUG 1995 FIRST CELLULAR PHONE SERVICES IN CAL...
      • 23 AUG 1990 EAST AND WEST GERMANY ANNOUNCES UNIF...
      • 26 JUL 1893-22 AUG 1989 PANDIT KRISHNARAO SHANKA...
      • 23 AUG 1966 LUNAR ORBITER 1-MOON PHOTOS Lunar ...
      • 23 AUG 1958 MARATHWADA UNIVERSITY FORMED Dr. B...
      • 23 AUG 1947 SARDAR PATEL DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER ...
      • 23 AUG 1933 MAHATMA GANDHIJI RELEASED  MAHATMA...
      • 23 AUG 1954 FIRST FLIGHT OF TRANSPORT AIRCRAFT ...
      • 23 AUG 1914 JAPAN DECLARES WAR ON GERMANY W...
      • 23 AUG HISTORY TODAY  You are here: Home / Tod...
      • 23 AUG 1839 BRITISH TAKEOVER HONGKONG Hong Kon...
      • 24 AUG HISTORY TODAY Today in Indian HistoryEv...
      • 23 AUG 1973 MALAIKA ARORA KHAN Malaika Arora K...
      • 23 AUG 1951 QUEEN NOOR_JORDAN Queen Noor of Jo...
      • 23 AUG 1944 SAIRA BANU Saira Banu From Wikip...
      • 23 AUG 1918-14 MAR 2010 GOVIND VINAYAK ALIAS VIN...
      • 23 AUG 1754-21 JAN 1815 KING LOUIS XVI_FRANCE ...
      • 24 SEP 1940-23 AUG 1994 AARTI SAHA Arati Saha ...
    • ►  July (127)
    • ►  June (13)
Watermark theme. Powered by Blogger.