Imperial Military Transportation in British Asia sheds light on attempts by royal engineers to introduce innovations devised in the UK to wartime India, Iraq, and Burma, as well as the resistance of local groups of colonial railwaymen to such metropolitan innovations. Arguing that the literature on military adaptation and imperial circulation of knowledge is oversimplified, Michael W. Charney shows how some kinds of military technology – as an example of imperial knowledge – faced resistance due to 1930s-era colonial insularity. He also covers the efforts made by one engineer to revive the railways during the Japanese invasion of Burma in 1942 and why this effort was responsible for the development of a truly imperial technology that was su...
Burma was the most geographically isolated part of the Japanese-occupied Southeast Asia and hosted t...
The Japanese army began to invade Southeast Asia simultaneously with the Pearl Harbour attack on 7th...
This article explores recent literature on the often-overlooked Burma theatre of the Second World Wa...
Recent work on military logistics in India during World War II have focused on the mobilisation of s...
In 1942-43 a force of possibly 200,000 to 300,000 people, working under the supervision of the Imper...
A map of the Thailand-Burma railway and the basic facts behind its logistics, workforce, and constr...
The logistical challenges facing the British imperial Army in the Burma campaign of 1942-1945 were ...
This study suggests that, from a situation where co-operation between the British Army and the RAF ...
This book explores the impact of railways on colonial Indian society from the commencement of railw...
This book explores the impact of railways on colonial Indian society from the commencement of railw...
Colonel Heyland’s observations on army horses and cavalry regiments in the final stages of the Third...
Colonel Heyland’s observations on army horses and cavalry regiments in the final stages of the Third...
Colonel Heyland’s observations on army horses and cavalry regiments in the final stages of the Third...
The introduction of firearms did not bring about a revolution in Burmese warfare or in the army (or ...
This article examines the history of railway development in British Burma between 1870 until 1900. I...
Burma was the most geographically isolated part of the Japanese-occupied Southeast Asia and hosted t...
The Japanese army began to invade Southeast Asia simultaneously with the Pearl Harbour attack on 7th...
This article explores recent literature on the often-overlooked Burma theatre of the Second World Wa...
Recent work on military logistics in India during World War II have focused on the mobilisation of s...
In 1942-43 a force of possibly 200,000 to 300,000 people, working under the supervision of the Imper...
A map of the Thailand-Burma railway and the basic facts behind its logistics, workforce, and constr...
The logistical challenges facing the British imperial Army in the Burma campaign of 1942-1945 were ...
This study suggests that, from a situation where co-operation between the British Army and the RAF ...
This book explores the impact of railways on colonial Indian society from the commencement of railw...
This book explores the impact of railways on colonial Indian society from the commencement of railw...
Colonel Heyland’s observations on army horses and cavalry regiments in the final stages of the Third...
Colonel Heyland’s observations on army horses and cavalry regiments in the final stages of the Third...
Colonel Heyland’s observations on army horses and cavalry regiments in the final stages of the Third...
The introduction of firearms did not bring about a revolution in Burmese warfare or in the army (or ...
This article examines the history of railway development in British Burma between 1870 until 1900. I...
Burma was the most geographically isolated part of the Japanese-occupied Southeast Asia and hosted t...
The Japanese army began to invade Southeast Asia simultaneously with the Pearl Harbour attack on 7th...
This article explores recent literature on the often-overlooked Burma theatre of the Second World Wa...