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Vans Agnew Monument

Historical monument in Punjab state of Pakistan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Vans Agnew Monumentmap
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Vans Agnew Monument is a monument in Multan, Punjab, Pakistan.[1]

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History

Vans Agnew Monument was commissioned by the British East India Company. It commemorates murder of Patrick Alexander Vans Agnew (1822-1848) and Lieutenant William A. Anderson of the 1st. Bombay Fusilier Regiment by followers of Dewan Mulraj, the Diwan of Multan. This instigated the Second Anglo-Sikh War, which culminated in the British East India Company's conquest and annexation of the Punjab.[2]

The monument stands over the final resting place of Vans Agnew, a member of the Bengal civil service, and Lieutenant Anderson of the 1st Bombay Fusilier Regiment.[2] The pair were dispatched, as Assistants to the Resident at Lahore Sir Henry Lawrence, to relieve Dewan Moolraj, Viceroy of Multan, of his fortress and duties at his behest.[2] However, they were assaulted and injured by the garrison on April 19, 1848, and subsequently abandoned by their Sikh escort.[2] On the following day, they were brutally murdered at the Eedgah, under the walls of Multan.[2][3]

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References

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