Academic literature on the topic 'India. Army. Mahar Regiment'

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Journal articles on the topic "India. Army. Mahar Regiment"

1

Coelho, Joanna Pereira, and Ganesha Somayaji. "Fatherland or Livelihood: Value Orientations Among Tibetan Soldiers in the Indian Army." Journal of Human Values 27, no. 3 (March 24, 2021): 225–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0971685821989116.

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The recruitment to military in modern nation states, by and large, is voluntary. Although it is commonly assumed that a soldiers’ job in the army is to fight against the enemies of their motherland, the Indian Army has a regiment of Tibetan soldiers who are not Indians as per the law of the land. Known as Special Frontier Force (SFF), this regiment was until recently a secret wing of the Indian Army. Joining the Indian Army during the heydays of their diasporic dispersal due to the Chinese territorial aggrandizement and Sino-Indian war of 1962, with a hope of direct encounter with their enemies, Tibetans continue to be voluntarily recruited to the now non-secret SFF. As part of the Indian Army, they should be ready to fight the enemies of their host country. In fact, over the decades, they have been requested by India to take part in several military exercises. In the changed international geopolitics, Tibetans in exile may not get another opportunity to fight against their own enemies. The trajectory of the value orientations of the Tibetan soldiers in the Indian Army constitutes the axial concern of this article.
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2

Hills, Carol, and Daniel C. Silverman. "Nationalism and Feminism in Late Colonial India: The Rani of Jhansi Regiment, 1943–1945." Modern Asian Studies 27, no. 4 (October 1993): 741–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x00001281.

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Between 1943 and 1945, 1,500 Indian women in Burma, Malaya and Singapore exchanged their colorful saris for the khakis, breeches, half caps and boots of the Rani of Jhansi Regiment, the all-female brigade of the Indian National Army (INA). Under the leadership of Subhas Chandra Bose, Hindus, Muslims, and Sikhs, members of the moneyed elite and the daughters of rubber plantation laborers shared the same food and fate to fight a jungle war for India's freedom.
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3

Draper, Mario. "Mutiny under the Sun: The Connaught Rangers, India, 1920." War in History 27, no. 2 (February 25, 2019): 202–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0968344518791208.

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This article re-examines the causes of the Connaught Rangers mutiny and argues that institutional failings in the British Army were far more influential in the breakdown of discipline than the oft-supposed politicization of its participants. New and under-used source material demonstrates how the popular myth surrounding the actions of James Daly and his co-conspirators was nothing more than a self-serving exaggeration of events designed to fit an idealized Nationalist narrative of Irish resistance to British rule. More compelling is the argument that demobilization left the regiment with an imbalance in officer–man relations that tipped a combustible situation over the edge.
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Little, J. I. "Family, Class, Honor, Manhood: Lieutenant Edmond de Lotbinière Joly in India, Paris, and Crimea, 1850–1857." Journal of Family History, July 14, 2020, 036319902093987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0363199020939877.

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During the relatively short period when he was a junior officer in the British colonial army, Edmond Joly served in the recently annexed Punjab, at the siege of Sebastopol, and in the effort to rescue his regiment in Lucknow where he was mortally wounded at the age of twenty-four. Earlier that same year, the young Canadian had spent four months in Paris immersed in the social whirl of the aristocratic elite. Beyond describing those eventful years in intimate detail, Joly’s hitherto-unexamined personal letters, memoir, and journal reveal that his chief motivation in becoming a soldier and repeatedly risking his life after a rebellious youth was to gain the respect of his demanding father. The themes of emerging manhood and family honor are therefore central to this article, which also provides an intimate example of the clash between traditional aristocratic values and those of the rising middle class in the modernizing Victorian era.
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Books on the topic "India. Army. Mahar Regiment"

1

Khairamoḍe, Cāṅgadevarāva Bhavānarāva. Aspr̥śyāñcā lashkarī peśā. Mumbaī: Mahārāshṭra Rājya Sāhitya āṇi Sãskr̥tī Maṇḍaḷa, 1987.

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2

Ahmed, Rafiuddin. History of the Baloch Regiment. Abbottabad: Baloch Regimental Centre, 1998.

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3

Anil, Shorey, and Rajput Regimental Centre Fatehgarh, eds. The history of Rajput Regiment. [Fatehgarh: Rajput Regimental Centre], 1989.

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Anil Shorey. The galley's historic voyage, 1761-2007: A history of the Punjab Regiment, India's oldest regiment. New Delhi: Force Multipliers, 2007.

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5

History of the Baloch Regiment: 1820-1939, the colonial period. Abbottabad, Pakistan: Baloch Regimental Centre, 1998.

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6

Centre, Dogra Regimental, ed. The gallant Dogras: An illustrated history of the Dogra Regiment. New Delhi: Lancer Publishers with the Dogra Regimental Centre, 2005.

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7

Raghavan, V. R. By land and sea: The post-independence history of the Punjab Regiment, 1947-1986. [Ramgarh Cantt., Bihar: Punjab Regimental Centre, 1986.

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Raghavan, V. R. By land and sea: The post-independence history of the Punjab Regiment, 1947-1986. [Ramgarh Cantt., Bihar: Punjab Regimental Centre, 1986.

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9

"Chhe-saat": Memoir of an officer of the 6th/7th Rajput regiment. New Delhi: Manohar Publishers & Distributors, 2008.

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10

Reginald, Hennell. A famous Indian regiment, the Kali Panchwin, 2/5th, formerly the 105th, Mahratta Light Infantry, 1768-1923. Delhi: B.R. Pub. Corp., 1985.

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Book chapters on the topic "India. Army. Mahar Regiment"

1

Grint, Keith. "Mutinies and Ethnicity." In Mutiny and Leadership, 214–307. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192893345.003.0007.

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The complexity of the causes of mutinies are captured in this chapter that focuses upon the role of ethnicity. Starting with the British West India Regiment in 1801, we examine the importance of the slave trade in supporting the recruitment to the British Army in the West Indies and consider how the ‘alternatives’ of slavery or forced recruitment are not regarded as alternatives by many ex-slaves. The chapter then moves on to the largest event to rock the early British Empire, the ‘mutiny’ or ‘1st War of Independence’ in India between 1857 and 1858. The nomenclature is a signal of the meaning of the events for different actors involved, and this ambiguity runs into the Curragh ‘Incident’ that has all the hallmarks of a mutiny, except it is staged by the military establishment not by the military subordinates. And if the British thought 1858 was the last time they would see Indian soldiers or sailors mutinying against them, they were wrong: in Singapore in 1915 and then in the Royal India Navy in 1946, the British Empire is forced to look at itself—but chooses not to. Finally, we consider the way British Foreign Labour Battalions were treated in France, compared to the treatment meted out to domestic units, and then consider the role of racism in the Port Chicago mutiny of 1944 which has echoes of the contemporary situation in the Black Lives Matter movement in 2020.
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