Village in Punjab, Pakistan
Mong or Mung (مونگ ) is a village and Union Council of Mandi Bahauddin District in the Punjab province of Pakistan .[ 1]
History
According to Alexander Cunningham , Mong was built on the ancient city of Nicaea which was founded by Alexander the Great in commemoration of his victory over Porus in the Battle of the Hydaspes .[ 2] [ 3] [ 4] [ 5] However, the ruins of the city of Nicea have not been found yet, not least because the landscape has changed somewhat.[ 6] The 1910 edition of Encyclopædia Britannica cited Mong as the location of Nicaea,[ 7] but the latest edition does not state this.
According to The Imperial Gazetteer of India :
"The overthrow of the Bactrians by the Parthians in the latter half of the second century brought another change of rulers, and the coins of the Indo-Scythian king Maues (c. 120 BCE), who is known to local tradition as Raja Moga, have been found at Mong".[ 5] [ 8] [ 9] At the end of the first century CE the whole of the Punjab was conquered by the Yueh-chi ."[ 10]
Centuries later, at almost the same location, a few kilometers away from Mong, in the Second Anglo-Sikh War , the British forces under Lord Gough and the Khalsa Sikh Army fought the Battle of Chillianwala .
References
^ Bahauddin Tehsils & Unions in the District of Mandi Bahauddin - Government of Pakistan
^ Michael Wood , In the Footsteps of Alexander the Great (Random House , 2004 ).
^ F. R. Allchin & George Erdosy, The archaeology of early historic South Asia : the emergence of cities and states /(Cambridge University Press, 1995).
^ Michael Wood, In the Footsteps of Alexander the Great (Random House, 2004).
^ a b The Ancient Geography of India/Taki, pp. 177–179 .
^ P. H. L. Eggermont, Alexander's campaign in Southern Punjab (1993).
^ The encyclopædia britannica: a dictionary of arts, sciences, literature and general information, Volume 14 p. 398. 1910
^ "The Minor Indo-Parthian Eras" . 4 October 2023. Archived from the original on 7 August 2011. Retrieved 16 June 2016 .
^ R. C. Senior Indo-Scythian coins and history , Vol IV, p. xxxvi.
^ "Imperial Gazetteer of India, Volume 12, page 365" . University of Chicago . Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 3 December 2017 .
32°38′48″N 73°30′36″E / 32.64667°N 73.51000°E / 32.64667; 73.51000