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Somnath Campaign (1025–1026)

From Indopedia
The Somnath Campaign · 1025–26
Part of The Resistance Chronicle — Age I · the Ghazni ledger
Dates 18 October 1025 (departure) – spring 1026 (return)
Place Multan → the Thar → Anhilavada → Somnath; return by Kutch and Sindh
Belligerents Ghaznavids — Chaulukya Gujarat; the temple’s defenders; the Jats on the retreat
Commanders Mahmud of Ghazni — Bhima I (withdrew to Kanthkot)
Outcome Temple sacked (January 1026) — and a retreat that cost the army dearly
The shrine’s own story Somnath Temple — The Shrine Eternal

The Somnath campaign (1025–26) is the most famous operation of the age — told here as a military campaign: the desert march, the defence, and the price of the return. The temple's history, memory and rebuilding belong to Somnath Temple — The Shrine Eternal. This page is a placeholder of The Resistance Chronicle (Age I); its sections will be filled under the founder's direction, to the wing's rules: verdict, meaning for India, sources labelled.

Background — why Somnath

(To be written — the founder will guide this page.)

The march — Multan to the sea

(To be written — the founder will guide this page.)

The defence of the temple

(To be written — the founder will guide this page.)

The sack

(To be written — the founder will guide this page.)

The retreat — Param Dev, the desert, the Jats

(To be written — the founder will guide this page.)

Verdict

(To be written — the founder will guide this page.)

What it meant for India

(To be written — the founder will guide this page.)

Sources — labelled

(To be written — the founder will guide this page.)