When the British East India Company, led by Robert Clive, defeated the Nawab of Bengal and his French allies in the war of Plassey in 1757, it consolidated its position in Bengal and subsequently expanded to all over India during the next 100 years.
At the same time, an ambitious king of Gorkha, a princely state only a few miles from the outskirts of Kathmandu valley, was also on the rise and busy expanding his kingdom. His name was Prithvi Narayan Shah and he later became known as the father of modern Nepal. He created Nepal by conquering all the small states in the surrounding areas, including the Kathmandu valleys.
The Indian subcontinent had only two major powers by then: The Honorable British East India Company and the Gorkhali Army of Nepal. The two powers were to eventually lock horns as they crossed each other’s paths and fought a decisive battle known as the Anglo-Gorkha War of 1814-16.
Defeat for the Gorkhali side did not only stop its ongoing expansion, but also clipped its wings once and for all. The war had crippled the losing nation and it never recovered its former glory.
However, the 1814-16 war was not the first time the two sides had clashed – they fought a brief war in 1767. The king of the Kathmandu valley and the British had already established a trade relationship and the British sent troops to aid the troubled valley king when he was attacked by the Gorkhali army.
The British, led by Captain Kinloch, suffered a humiliating defeat at the hands of the Gorkhali force, losing more than 1,000 men. They fled, leaving behind weapons and munitions. The incident became known as “The Kinloch Expedition.”
In its heyday, the borders of Nepal extended to Kangra, including Simla and Dehradoon, to the west to the River Tista, including Darjeeling and Sikkim, to the east. After their previous defeat, the British avoided confrontation.
But the Gorkhali army had its own problems. It was founded on an ill-thought out plan called the Jagir system, which meant that the army was paid through taxes raised from newly acquired lands. Since the troops were not paid from the national treasury, they needed to conquer more lands to pay their expanding ranks.

Greed also played a role in defining the course of history. When the Gorkhali army attacked the British Protectorate state of Oudh, the British had no choice but to go to war.
Initially, the war did not go well for the British. Four of six generals had to be reprimanded and eventually relieved of duty, one died and the last remaining general, David Ochterlony, was the final senior ranking man left standing.
Defeated by deception
Despite being outgunned and outnumbered, the Gorkhali army fought bravely and held on. However, they were finally defeated by deception and their own system of recruitment. The men fighting for the Gorkhali army were not all from the hills – they were men of different tribes from the newly conquered lands and their allegiances were not to the Gorkhali commanders, but to their tribal leaders.
The British knew the situation and exploited it. As a result, soldiers deserted in large numbers, forcing the Gorkhali army to accept defeat. The defeat in the Anglo-Gorkha War was the end of the Gorkhali army, and as the saying goes, the rest is history.
Nepal was nothing more than a remote, mosquito-infested and mysterious place for the British, run by a beast-like tribe, and they had no stomach for taming that beast. Still, they had some expectations for the place and hatched a brilliant plan on how to achieve them.
First, they needed an open route to Tibet via Kathmandu for trade and it was imperative to have a friendly regime in Kathmandu, which they achieved once Nepal was brought under the nations of its influence.
Secondly, the British needed someone in Kathmandu to check on the Nepali regime on a regular basis. Having a British resident at the heart of Kathmandu did that job perfectly and the regime in Nepal came under the group of British Protectorate nations without even realizing it.
Thirdly and most importantly, the British had to make sure Nepal would never be allowed to raise a military force and become a powerful nation again. The British had seen the bravery of these men in battle and a plan was hatched to bring them into the British army. The policy of recruiting them into the British Indian Army was, in fact, a masterstroke, and it was so tactfully done that it wasn’t even anointed at the Segauli Treaty that both the British and Nepal were to sign at the end of the war.
Treaty of Sugauli
By signing the Treaty of Sugauli, the British did get what they had hoped for and needed nothing more. The question of colonizing Nepal must have never occurred as it would have further complicated the situation.
Besides, colonization entails responsibility. The British had a free hand with the resources of a whole nation without having to bear any responsibilities. And the British were smart – the resources of the nation were at their disposal and they did not even have to ask for it. History can attest that the rulers of Nepal did their best to help make it even easier for the British for their personal gain, and the ulterior motives of the British side were never questioned.
Had the British colonized Nepal, it would have become a member of the Commonwealth later on and the British would have had to treat the Gurkhas on an equal basis like the forces of other member nations.
But if you can get something for free, why bother to pay for it? That was the main reason the British did not colonize Nepal.

The man who suffers does not want to see others happiness.
Our history ..our pride..nepal never becomes others slave like urs..
The Indian subcontinent had only two major powers then: The honorab British east India company and The ghorkhali army of Nepal …..
Blady Dhotis.
Where is Dislike Button ????????????????
Unless the lion knows how to write, stories will always glorify the hunter.
British never colonized Nepal because they could not do that.
I thought "SHAH" are muslim but here i found a great ruler Prithvi Narayan Shah from the Gorkha community. ???? And as a saying goes on from my great great geandfather that we are brother by blood with the Gol-Kha (strong-bitter) who is left during our journey from the wicked ruler of the Chinese centuries ago
Yeah. May be they got what they needed at that time. But let me remind you we were never a slave, never colonised, we were soverign country back then too. And that’s what every Nepalese is proud of.
Thought of slavers is limited so they can’t go beyond boundaries
The person who wrote this journal failed his history test ????
The Honorable British East India Company
Why bother about the past when present is the only time where we really have to live. We sd. forget nasty history if we are really civilized. Those who think their ancestors were great means they are suffering from inferiority complex. My suggestion to Nepalese and me too……If we really think Gurkhas were brave we sd. prove them by becoming braver but we should prove it in other way….by becoming developed….and to the British I would like to tell that there is no need to prove your intelligence by the rotten past if you have that a bit…….
Subba Robin timi jsto horu le gare ra ini horu le yo sab lekxan saram gara afno astitva sanga…nepali hou nepali jstei basa..bholi sarnathi banai diyo india le vani Nepal mei aira basnu prxa.
"become a member of the Commonwealth later", so they thought about it 300 yrs ago? wasted time
hoped some good insights though it might be biased
Bikram Lama wot abt u dai?? #Don’t hate India. . #if hate is only thing left for u to show the Save it for British.. #If u clear ur History fact den in most of the case u will find british involvement nd aftr reading this all.. #u shud hav to feel pitty on ur ancesteros decision… nd Slavery is cmpltly highlighted on this article towards Nepal.. #Grow up man
Everybody can smell the loser’s thaught. Who was the dog of british colonization for several decades.
History can be bend …British may have compromised but they didn’t just left Nepal for free resources only. A complete hypothetical and personal view nothing to worry about.
The writer needs more research before publishing the article.. It’s not a complete analysis.. Here is huge contractions in interpretation.. Some parts are deeply analytical and some are just written with verbal listening.. Gurkha’s army are the army of kindom Nepal.. They aren’t pay.. They are self motivated..
An out burst of slavery mentality. Trying to convey message that British colonised India because they were very capable and rich. Journalism does mean write write whatever you like or feel; need some deep studies and investigations dear Mr FANTOOS journalist.
Indians and dogs are not allowed at kathmandu restaurants.
If it was India that the British cannot colonize ,Then, the indians would be like, " The most powerful country in the world of whom even the British got scared. No one can defeat us, bla, bla, bla." If you cannot praise the bravery, do some respect at least. And be thankful that your borders are being watched over by Gorkhalis,otherwise, who knows, what’s gonna happen!!