This thesis discusses the relationship between the British and Indian soldiers in World War One. The first two chapters discuss the British officers. Chapter One shows how British commanding officers viewed the Indian soliders. Chapter Two shows how some lower-ranking British officers, due to combat experience and proximity to the Indian soldiers, changed their perceptions of people from India and the British empire. Chapter Three discusses the reaction of the Indian soldiers to combat in the trenches of the Western Front
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences.Although the 1914-18 war is com...
The Indian army under British rule was unique in that it had two sets of officers, one British and o...
This chapter delineates Asian contributions as soldiers, politicians, journalists and commentators t...
This thesis discusses the relationship between the British and Indian soldiers in World War One. The...
The Indian Army underwent a process of reform and modernisation from 1861 onwards. The aim was to cr...
The mobilisation of the British empire during the First World War created new spaces for encounter b...
This thesis extends the current scholarship of the social impact of the First World War by analysing...
This essay explores memorial and historiographical aspects of British India in World War One. In Ind...
This thesis explores the experiences of North African and Indian soldiers in the First World War in ...
In the rush to claim a relationship with Asia, military imperial connections are easily forgotten. P...
In 1917, a mere thirty years before India gained independence from Britain, Indians were alIowed int...
This chapter’s main concern is how the South African War, and its aftermath, insinuated itself into ...
The Indian army under British rule was unique in that it had two sets of officers, one British and o...
This dissertation examines the experiences of British West Indian soldiers of the all-volunteer Brit...
In the first decades of the twentieth century, the British Indian Army went from being a force to su...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences.Although the 1914-18 war is com...
The Indian army under British rule was unique in that it had two sets of officers, one British and o...
This chapter delineates Asian contributions as soldiers, politicians, journalists and commentators t...
This thesis discusses the relationship between the British and Indian soldiers in World War One. The...
The Indian Army underwent a process of reform and modernisation from 1861 onwards. The aim was to cr...
The mobilisation of the British empire during the First World War created new spaces for encounter b...
This thesis extends the current scholarship of the social impact of the First World War by analysing...
This essay explores memorial and historiographical aspects of British India in World War One. In Ind...
This thesis explores the experiences of North African and Indian soldiers in the First World War in ...
In the rush to claim a relationship with Asia, military imperial connections are easily forgotten. P...
In 1917, a mere thirty years before India gained independence from Britain, Indians were alIowed int...
This chapter’s main concern is how the South African War, and its aftermath, insinuated itself into ...
The Indian army under British rule was unique in that it had two sets of officers, one British and o...
This dissertation examines the experiences of British West Indian soldiers of the all-volunteer Brit...
In the first decades of the twentieth century, the British Indian Army went from being a force to su...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences.Although the 1914-18 war is com...
The Indian army under British rule was unique in that it had two sets of officers, one British and o...
This chapter delineates Asian contributions as soldiers, politicians, journalists and commentators t...