Most Indian soldiers were volunteers who could not read or write before they were recruited by the British but serving in a professional army provided opportunities to acquire new skills. Here Oliver Vanden Eynde writes about his research which suggests higher post-war literacy rates in heavily recruited areas can be attributed to informal learning opportunities in the army
Indian soldiers played a key role in British campaigns in Europe during World War I but the Middle E...
The Indian army under British rule was unique in that it had two sets of officers, one British and o...
The article analyzes the role of the Gurkhas during the First World War to explain the intercultural...
International audienceThis paper estimates the impact of military recruitment during World War I on ...
The scale of the contribution made by Indian soldiers in the First World War is increasingly recogni...
The major contribution of the Indian subcontinent to the British effort in the First World War is no...
India went to war in Europe in 1914 to plug the gaps on the Allied line of defence. Her army wasn't ...
The performance of the Indian Corps in France in the first months of the war was mixed: there were s...
Steven I. Wilkinson explores how India has succeeded in keeping the military out of politics when so...
In investigating the reading practices of Boer combatants during the South African War, diaries, let...
This thesis extends the current scholarship of the social impact of the First World War by analysing...
The Indian army under British rule was unique in that it had two sets of officers, one British and o...
During WWI, India found itself in the unusual position of being low on the British Empire’s list of ...
The Indian Army underwent a process of reform and modernisation from 1861 onwards. The aim was to cr...
Centenary celebrations of the First World War have seen renewed interest in the experience of Indian...
Indian soldiers played a key role in British campaigns in Europe during World War I but the Middle E...
The Indian army under British rule was unique in that it had two sets of officers, one British and o...
The article analyzes the role of the Gurkhas during the First World War to explain the intercultural...
International audienceThis paper estimates the impact of military recruitment during World War I on ...
The scale of the contribution made by Indian soldiers in the First World War is increasingly recogni...
The major contribution of the Indian subcontinent to the British effort in the First World War is no...
India went to war in Europe in 1914 to plug the gaps on the Allied line of defence. Her army wasn't ...
The performance of the Indian Corps in France in the first months of the war was mixed: there were s...
Steven I. Wilkinson explores how India has succeeded in keeping the military out of politics when so...
In investigating the reading practices of Boer combatants during the South African War, diaries, let...
This thesis extends the current scholarship of the social impact of the First World War by analysing...
The Indian army under British rule was unique in that it had two sets of officers, one British and o...
During WWI, India found itself in the unusual position of being low on the British Empire’s list of ...
The Indian Army underwent a process of reform and modernisation from 1861 onwards. The aim was to cr...
Centenary celebrations of the First World War have seen renewed interest in the experience of Indian...
Indian soldiers played a key role in British campaigns in Europe during World War I but the Middle E...
The Indian army under British rule was unique in that it had two sets of officers, one British and o...
The article analyzes the role of the Gurkhas during the First World War to explain the intercultural...