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BRITISH EXPEDITIONARY FORCE (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   132966


Throwing snowballs in France: Muslim sipahis of the Indian Army and Sheikh Ahmad's dream, 1915-1918 / Singh, Gajendra   Journal Article
Singh, Gajendra Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract The arrival of Indian sipahis (or 'sepoys') to fight alongside soldiers of the British Expeditionary Force in France in October 1914 was both a victory and a source of concern for the British Raj. It proved to be the zenith of martial race fantasies that had been carefully codified from the 1890s, and birthed fears about the effects that Europe and the rapidly intensifying conflict on the Western Front would have upon the 'best black troops in the world'. The situation resulted in the appointment of a special military censor to examine the letters sent to and from Indian sipahis and compile a fortnightly summary of Indian letters from France for the duration of the First World War. This paper investigates a portion of the letters contained in these reports. More particularly, it investigates the life of a single chain letter and the effect its chiliastic message had upon Muslim troops of the Indian Army during the First World War. As the letter was read, rewritten, and passed on, it served as a rejoinder to missionary efforts by the Ahmadiyya Movement, reinterpreted as a call for soldiers to purify their own bodies and oppose interracial sexual relationships, before, finally, being used as a critique of the British war effort against the Ottoman empire.
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2
ID:   175177


To Dig and Burrow like Rabbits: British Field Fortifications at the Battle of the Aisne, September to October 1914 / Dykstra, Bodie D   Journal Article
Dykstra, Bodie D Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article examines the British Expeditionary Force’s (BEF’s) use of field fortifications at the Battle of the Aisne in September and October 1914. It concludes that the BEF implemented a tactically robust and effective field works system that it quickly adapted to suit the unprecedented conditions of the battle. Thus, the army was more prepared for the combat realities of 1914 than much of the scholarship since the 1970s has implied. The BEF, however, struggled to apply the lessons of the Aisne in Flanders in late October 1914, portending the learning curve that characterized tactical development in 1915–18.
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