Temple, where Thampi committed suicide Velu Thampi Dalawa and the Paliath Achan, Govindan
Menon, met and decided on the extirpation of the British Resident and end of British supremacy in their respective states. Dalawa Velu Thampi organised recruits, strengthened forts and stored up ammunition while similar preparations was made by the Paliath Achan in
Cochin. Velu Thampi appealed to the Zamorin of
Calicut and to the French for assistance, but both did not acknowledge the request. The plan of the Paliath Achan and Velu Thampi was to join forces and attack the Fort of Cochin, storm the defences and murder the British Resident
Colin Macaulay and Kunju Krishna Menon. Under the leadership of Vaikom Padmanabha Pillai, troops from the garrisons at Alleppey, Alangad and Paravoor were transferred stealthily through the backwaters in covered boats to Kalvathy where they met up with four thousand of Paliyath Achan's followers. On the night of 28 December 1808, this united force attacked the Resident's palace and overwhelmed the Indian guards and domestics, but due to the warning of a native domestic, the Resident and Kunju Krishna Menon managed to escape the attacking army and flee to a frigate, the
HMS Piedmontese, which had been anchored in Cochin harbour. Almost simultaneously, the rebels attacked the British garrison at Quilon on 30 December 1808, but were repulsed. Dissatisfied with the failure to capture or kill the Resident, as well as the failure at Quilon, Velu Thampi moved south from Cochin and on 11 January 1809 (1st Makaram 984 M.E.), he issued his famous Kundara Proclamation in which he exhorted the nation to throw out the British. He then organised another force to attack the British garrison at
Quilon and the
Battle of Quilon took place on 15 January 1809 in which Velu Thampi's force lost 15 guns and suffered many casualties. Velu Thampi then sent a part of his force to launch another amphibious attack on the British garrison at Cochin, which was defended by Major Hewitt. On 18 January 1809, the rebel forces at Quilon were totally defeated when they attempted to storm the Quilon garrison. On 19 January 1809, the Cochin garrison, supported by the frigate
HMS Piedmontese, along with some boats manned by Nair soldiers loyal to Paliyath Achan's many rivals and enemies amongst the Cochin nobility, successfully repelled another amphibious attack on the Cochin garrison. On 30 January 1809, a small force of 3 military officers and 30 European soldiers, en route to Kochi, were captured and executed on the Dalawa's orders at Purakkad, even though one of the officers, Surgeon Hume, had treated Velu Thampi in the past. A sick lady, who was a member of this party, was permitted to travel unharmed to Cochin, since it was contrary to the laws of Travancore to kill women. In the aftermath of the battle at Quilon, Velu Thampi moved to the southern border of Travancore to bolster the defence at Aramboly pass located at
Aralvaimozhi. The two mile long fortifications at the Aramboly pass were guarded by masonry walls and had around 50 artillery pieces covering the road from
Palayamkottai to defend it in the event of a frontal attack from that road. On 6 February 1809, a force under the Hon. Col. St. Leger marched from
Tiruchirappalli and reached the fortified lines at Aramboly. On the morning of 10 February 1809, the British attacked the flanks of the fortified lines from the southern mountain and Velu Thampi fled from Aramboly. The British forces moved into the interior of Travancore on 17 February 1809, and were held up by Thampi's men who were entrenched in a fortified dugout in
Kottar. These soldiers were routed by Col. McLeod and within a few days, the strategic forts of Udayagiri and Padmanabhapuram fell to the British without a fight. On hearing the news, the rebels at Quilon dispersed and Col. Chalmers approached Trivandrum from the North and the Hon. Col. St. Leger approached from the south, in a pincer movement. ==Death of Velu Thampi==