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ID140958
Title ProperArriving in the nick of time
Other Title Informationthe Indian corps in France, 1914–15
LanguageENG
AuthorSundaram, Chandar S
Summary / Abstract (Note)Today, military historians as well as those dealing with colonial South Asian history tend to overlook the fact that during the First World War, the Indian Army was Britain’s strategic reserve. It vitally despatched over 150,000 troops to the Western Front to shore-up the British sector in the critical period of 1914-1915. To the Indian sepoys who crossed the kala pani to fight, die or be wounded in the trenches there, it was a jarring initiation into modern industrialised warfare. This article examines that episode and advances two arguments: first, that, contrary to accounts written as recently as the 1980s, Indian sepoys performed quite well in the trenches; second, that racial concerns and the advent of the Kitchener armies, rather than a poor combat record, led to their transfer from the Western Front at the end of 1915.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Defence Studies Vol. 9, No.4; Oct/Dec 2015: p.71-94
Journal SourceJournal of Defence Studies Vol: 9 No 4
Key WordsFirst World War ;  Western Front ;  Nick of Tim ;  Indian Corps in France ;  1914–15 ;  Indian Sepoys


 
 
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