After the massacre of
General Elphinstone's Army during the
1842 retreat from Kabul, the only forces left in Afghanistan were at
Jalalabad and Kelat-I-Ghilzie, a fort between
Kabul and
Kandahar. The garrison numbering 932, (55 Europeans and 877 Natives), Before the relief force arrived, the garrison repulsed one final major attack by some six thousand Afghans on 21 May 1842. A few days after this attack the garrison was finally relieved by the forces under
Sir William Nott, on 26 May 1842. For the courage displayed by the garrison at Kelat-i-Ghilzie, the East India Company, on 4 October 1842, authorised the medal to be awarded to all troops who participated in the protracted siege. A testament to the distinguished service of the native troops is evident in the fact that the troops of Shah Shoja's 3rd Infantry Battalion were taken into the
Bengal Army as the
Kelat-i-Ghilzie Regiment. ==Description==