Panjdeh incident

The Panjdeh Incident (spelled Penjdeh in older accounts, and known in Russian historiography as the Battle of Kushka) was an armed engagement between the Emirate of Afghanistan and the Russian Empire in 1885 that led to a diplomatic crisis between Great Britain and the Russian Empire regarding the Russian expansion south-eastwards towards the Emirate of Afghanistan and the British Raj (India). After nearly completing the Russian conquest of Central Asia (Russian Turkestan), the Russians captured an Afghan border fort, threatening British interests in the area. Seeing this as a threat to India, Britain prepared for war but both sides backed down and the matter was settled diplomatically. The incident halted further Russian expansion in Asia, except for the Pamir Mountains, and resulted in the definition of the north-western border of Afghanistan.

Panjdeh Incident
Part of the Russian conquest of Central Asia and The Great Game

Painting by Franz Roubaud depicting the battle
Date30 March 1885
Location
Result Russian military victory
Belligerents
 Russian Empire
Commanders and leaders
Aleksandr Komarov
Casualties and losses
600 killed 40 killed or wounded
Krasno-
vodsk
Ash-
gabat
Geok
Tepe
Bukhara
Khiva
Tejend
Serakhs
PuliKhatun
Zulfikar
Merv
Yoloten
SaryYazy
Panjdeh
BalaMurghab
to Herat
Panjdeh Incident on a map of modern Turkmenistan
= Hari-Rud river =Murghab river
The Tejend and Merv oases are larger than the above dots
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