Kandahar Timeline

Kandahar is one of the oldest continuously significant places in the region, and its history stretches from a Bronze Age farming culture to the present. This timeline gathers the key dates on a single page; where dates are approximate or disputed, that is noted.

How to read this timeline

Ancient dates are inevitably approximate, and scholars sometimes differ over them. Early figures should be read as rough estimates rather than precise years. For deeper accounts of the turning points, follow the links to the pages on Old Kandahar, Mirwais Hotak, Ahmad Shah Durrani and the Battle of Maiwand.

Antiquity

Ancient Kandahar (approximate dates)
c. 3000–2000 BCEMundigak, near Kandahar, flourishes as a Bronze Age settlement trading with the Indus and Iranian worlds.
c. 6th–4th c. BCEThe region forms Arachosia, a satrapy of the Achaemenid Persian Empire.
330–329 BCEAlexander the Great campaigns through Arachosia; a city later identified with Old Kandahar is associated with him as Alexandria in Arachosia.
c. 3rd c. BCEUnder the Mauryan Empire, the emperor Ashoka leaves bilingual Greek and Aramaic edicts in the area.
c. 2nd c. BCE – 3rd c. CEGreco-Bactrian, Indo-Greek, Saka and Kushan rulers hold the region in turn.
3rd–5th c. CESasanian Persian influence and, in the surrounding region, Buddhist and other communities leave their mark before the coming of Islam.

The deep antiquity of the area is best represented at Old Kandahar, whose great earthen ramparts were rebuilt many times over these centuries. Nearby Mundigak, excavated by French archaeologists in the mid-twentieth century, shows that organised settlement in the district long predates the classical cities. Dates before the Islamic period are approximate and depend on archaeological interpretation as much as on written records.

Islamic and medieval eras

Kandahar under Islamic dynasties
7th–8th c. CEArab armies bring Islam to the region over the course of the early Islamic conquests.
10th–12th c.The Ghaznavids and then the Ghurids rule from centers in what is now Afghanistan.
13th–14th c.Mongol invasions and the rise of the Timurids reshape the region.
Early 16th c.Babur, founder of the Mughal Empire, campaigns here and leaves inscriptions at Chil Zena.
16th–17th c.Kandahar is contested repeatedly between the Safavids of Persia and the Mughals of India.
1595Kandahar passes to Mughal control under the emperor Akbar, one of several changes of hands in the Safavid–Mughal rivalry.
1649The Safavids retake Kandahar; repeated Mughal attempts to recover the city fail, and it remains a hard-fought frontier fortress.

For much of this long period Kandahar was a border city prized by two great empires. Its citadel changed hands several times as Safavid shahs and Mughal emperors campaigned for control of the routes between Persia and India, and this rivalry left the local population — including the Pashtun tribes of the surrounding districts — accustomed to shifting overlords. That experience of contested rule forms the background to the revolt that followed.

The Afghan states emerge

From revolt to empire
1709Mirwais Hotak leads a revolt against the Safavid governor Gurgin Khan and makes Kandahar the seat of an independent Hotak dynasty.
1722Hotak forces capture Isfahan, briefly toppling the Safavid dynasty of Persia.
1738Nader Shah besieges and destroys Old Kandahar, breaking Hotak power in the region.
1747After Nader Shah's assassination, a jirga near Kandahar chooses Ahmad Shah Durrani as king; the Durrani Empire and a new walled city are founded.
1772Ahmad Shah Durrani dies and is buried in Kandahar; his son Timur Shah later moves the capital to Kabul.
1770sTimur Shah transfers the Durrani court from Kandahar to Kabul, and the city's role shifts from imperial capital to regional centre.

These few decades transformed Kandahar from a contested provincial fortress into the birthplace of an Afghan state. The revolt of 1709 and the coronation of 1747 are the two pivots; between them, the destruction of the old citadel in 1738 cleared the way for the new walled city that Ahmad Shah laid out. Even after the capital moved to Kabul, Kandahar retained deep symbolic weight as the place where the monarchy had begun.

The colonial-era wars

Kandahar and the Anglo-Afghan wars
1839–1842British and Indian forces occupy Kandahar during the First Anglo-Afghan War.
27 July 1880At the Battle of Maiwand, Ayub Khan defeats a British-Indian brigade; the legend of Malalai dates from this day.
1 September 1880General Roberts relieves the besieged Kandahar garrison at the Battle of Kandahar, ending the campaign in the south.

The nineteenth century brought Kandahar into the wider contest between the British and Russian empires for influence in the region, sometimes called the "Great Game." British and Indian forces occupied the city in both Anglo-Afghan wars, and the plains to its west became the scene of the sharp Afghan victory at Maiwand in 1880. After relieving the garrison, Britain withdrew rather than annex the country, leaving Amir Abdur Rahman Khan to consolidate a centralised Afghan state over the following years.

The modern era

Twentieth century to today
Mid-20th c.Modernization brings new infrastructure, including an airport built with American assistance in the 1950s–60s and growth of fruit-export industries.
1979–1989The Soviet war and its aftermath bring heavy fighting and displacement across the south.
1994 onwardThe Taliban movement emerges from the Kandahar area, and the city passes through successive periods of conflict and changes of control.
Early 20th c.Afghanistan asserts full independence after the Third Anglo-Afghan War of 1919; Kandahar remains the chief city of the south.
21st centuryReconstruction, cross-border trade through Spin Boldak, and orchard agriculture in the Arghandab Valley shape the present-day city.

The modern entries are deliberately broad. Recent decades in Kandahar and the wider south have been shaped by conflict, displacement and repeated changes of control, and accounts of these events remain contested and politically sensitive; this page keeps to a neutral, factual summary rather than attempting to adjudicate them. What has endured through the upheavals is the city's role as the commercial and cultural heart of southern Afghanistan, tied to the orchards of the Arghandab, the pomegranate and fruit trade, and the cross-border routes toward Pakistan.

Taken as a whole, the timeline shows a place that has been continuously significant for far longer than most cities: a Bronze Age settlement, a satrapal city of the Persian and Hellenistic worlds, a frontier fortress between Persia and India, the cradle of an Afghan monarchy, and a modern provincial capital. The individual dates matter less than the pattern they trace — a strategic crossroads that successive powers have found worth holding, and that has repeatedly given rise to movements of lasting historical consequence.

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