Battle of Yeghevārd

Battle of Yeghevārd
Part of the Ottoman–Persian War (1730–1735) and Nader's Campaigns

Painting of the battle between the Persian and Ottoman armies. In the illustration, Nader was riding at the head of his troops. A unit of his elite jazāyerchi musketeers was hidden in the mountains, and shot down the fleeing Turkish troops as Nader's main force pushed them back.
DateJune 19, 1735
Location
Yeghevārd, Armenia (then Murattepe village of Erevan, Ottoman Empire)
Result

Safavid victory

Territorial
changes

Surrender of numerous Ottoman-held cities and strongholds in the Caucasus including:

Belligerents
Safavid Empire Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders
Nader Shah Köprülü Abdullah Pasha 
Strength

15,000

80,000

Casualties and losses
Negligible 40,000–50,000 killed & wounded
32 cannons captured

The Battle of Yeghevārd, also known as the Battle of Baghavard or Morad Tapeh, was the final major engagement of the Ottoman–Persian War of (1730–1735) where the principal Ottoman army in the Caucasus theatre under Koprulu Pasha's command was utterly destroyed by only the advance guard of Nader's army before the main Persian army could enter into the fray. The complete rout of Koprulu Pasha's forces led to a number of besieged Ottoman strongholds in the theatre surrendering as any hope of relief proved ephemeral in light of the crushing defeat at Yeghevārd. One of Nader's most impressive battlefield victories, in which he decimated a force four or five times the size of his own, it helped establish his reputation as a military genius and stands alongside many of his other great triumphs such as at Karnal, Mihmandoost or Kirkuk.