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General Nott at Kandahar

29 bytes removed, 08:12, 23 April 2010
Amend summary.
Headquarters in Kabul believed the country to be pacified and instructed Nott to sent part of his troops back to India. On 8 November the 16th, 42nd and 43rd Bengal Native Infantry under Colonel Maclaren set out for [[Quetta]]. They had only gone one march when news came of the [[Battle at Syadabad|death of Captain Woodburn]]. Nott promptly recalled Colonel Maclaren and his troops.
A letter from headquarters with news of the [[Kabul Uprising]] requested Nott to send the three regiments to reinforce the capital. They were dispatched under Colonel Maclaren on 17 November. The [[Siege of Ghazni]] began on 20 November and communication north was cut. Colonel Maclaren turned back in the face of extreme weather<ref>Disputed by some sources. [http://books.google.com/books?id=5NANAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA395&dq=History+of+the+war+in+Afghanistan+On+the+8th+of+December+Maclaren's+brigade&cd=1#v=onepage&q&f=false ''History of the War in Afghanistan Vol II (1841-1842)'' by John William Kaye (1851) ] </ref> and reached Kandahar again on 8 December. Nott and his garrison remained bottled up until the end of the year. During On 27 December two regiments of Shah Shujah's Afghan cavalry ordered to move to quarters outside ([[Mutiny of the city attacked their British officers and made off with ammunition and treasureJanbaz|Janbaz]]) mutinied. They were pursued Two days later Prince Sufder Jung, son of Shah Shujah, fled Kandahar and many of them cut downjoined Atta Mahomed.
== Garrison ==

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