depicting Zorawar Singh Zorawar Singh had expressed his desire to expand the territories of Gulab Singh and the Sikh Empire. According to Sohan Lal Suri, an attorney in the court of the Sikh Empire, Zorawar Singh had met Maharaja
Ranjit Singh in March 1836 and asked him for permission to start a campaign in Tibet, the Maharaja however had declined his request. However, Zorawar Singh would finally get permission under Maharaja
Sher Singh in 1841, which allowed the Sikh Empire to expand northwards without violating their treaties with the
East India Company. One column under the Ladakhi prince, Nono Sungnam, followed the course of the
Indus River to its source. Another column of 300 men, under Ghulam Khan, marched along the mountains leading up to the
Kailas Range and thus south of the Indus. Zorawar himself led 4,000 men along the plateau region where the vast and picturesque
Pangong Lake is located. Sweeping all resistance before them, the three columns passed the
Lake Manasarovar and converged at
Gartok, defeating the small Tibetan force stationed there. The enemy commander fled to
Taklakot but Zorawar stormed that fort on 6 September 1841. Envoys from Tibet now came to him as did agents of the Maharaja of
Nepal, whose kingdom was only fifteen miles from Taklakot. The fall of Taklakot finds mention in the report of the Chinese Imperial Resident, Meng Pao, at
Lhasa: On my arrival at Taklakot a force of only about 1,000 local troops could be mustered, which was divided and stationed as guards at different posts. A guard post was quickly established at a strategic pass near Taklakot to stop the invaders, but these local troops were not brave enough to fight off the Shen-Pa (Dogras) and fled at the approach of the invaders. The distance between Central Tibet and Taklakot is several thousand li…because of the cowardice of the local troops; our forces had to withdraw to the foot of the Tsa Mountain near the Mayum Pass. Reinforcements are essential in order to withstand these violent and unruly invaders. Zorawar and his men now went on pilgrimage to
Mansarovar and
Mount Kailash. He had extended his communication and supply line over 450 miles of inhospitable terrain by building small forts and pickets along the way. The fort Chi-T’ang was built near Taklakot, where Mehta Basti Ram was put in command of 500 men, with 8 or 9 cannon. With the onset of winter all the passes were blocked and roads snowed in. The supplies for the Dogra army over such a long distance failed despite Zorawar's meticulous preparations. Owing to intense cold and fatigue, many of the soldiers lost their fingers and toes to frostbite. Mehta Basti Ram writes of men being unable to use weapons effectively due to cold. Others starved to death, while some burnt the wooden stock of their muskets to warm themselves. The Tibetans and their
Chinese allies regrouped and advanced to give battle, bypassing the Dogra fort of Chi-T’ang. Then the Dogra soldiers lost their way. When the Tibetan infantry also pressed into the entrenchments, the Dogra officers as well as the Ladakhi noblemen became confused. He who could save his life fled, the remainder were killed. A little after noon the battle came to an end. == Legacy ==