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

Vans Agnew Monument
Map
30°11′55″N 71°28′29″E / 30.19872°N 71.47483°E / 30.19872; 71.47483
LocationMultan, Punjab, Pakistan
DesignerBritish East India Company
TypeMonument
Dedicated toPatrick Alexander Vans Agnew
W. A. Anderson

History edit

The mounment was commissioned by the British East India Company. It commemorates murder of Patrick Alexander Vans Agnew (1822-1848) and Lieutenant W. A. Anderson 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 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 Edgah, under the walls of Multan.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ Miraj, Muhammad Hassan (November 11, 2013). "The famous Four – Part II". DAWN.COM.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Vans Agnew Monument, Multan, Pakistan". Asian Architecture.