
The Battles of Tarain, also known as the Battles of Taraori, were fought in 1191 and 1192 near the town of Tarain (Taraori), near Thanesar in present-day Haryana, approximately 150 kilometres north of Delhi, India, between a Turkic Ghurid raiding force led by Sultan Shahabuddin Muhammad Ghauri and a Rajput army led by Prithviraj Chauhan.
Ghori launched an invasion against India in 1191, but was defeated by Prithviraj III, at the First Battle of Tarain. The Muslim army collapsed, and Ghori was captured.
Prithviraj released his captive, perhaps unwisely, because Ghori returned the following year with 120,000 troops. Despite earth-shaking elephant phalanx charges, the Rajputs were defeated.
As a result, northern India was under Muslim rule until the start of the British Raj in 1858. Today, Ghori is a Pakistani national hero.