78th Moplah Rifles
78th Moplah Rifles | |
---|---|
Active | 1794-1907 |
Country | Indian Empire |
Branch | Army |
Type | Infantry |
Part of |
Madras Army (to 1895) Madras Command |
Colors |
Red; faced dark green, 1882 green, 1898 emerald green 1904 Red; faced green. From 1902 red fezs replaced turbans. |
Engagements | Third Burmese War |
The 78th Moplah Rifles were an infantry regiment of the British Indian Army. They could trace their origins to 1794, when they were raised as the 35th Madras Battalion. At the beginning of the 20th century the basis for recruitment was changed from Madrasis to Moplahs - a Muslim Dravidian people located along the coast of Malabar. The Moplahs had a reputation as an aggressive race and it was hoped to make use of their martial skills in the Indian Army. A problem from the beginning was that the population numbers available for recruitment were limited.[1]
Two battalion-sized regiments of Moplah Rifles were accordingly raised (the 77th and 78th MR) and the second of these was posted to the North West Frontier in 1905 to be tested under active-service conditions. The experiment was not considered as being a success.[2] In part this was because of difficulties experienced by British officers in learning the Moplah language, which did not include any military terms.[3] Another problem reported was that the Moplah sepoys, acclimatized to the moist humidity of southern India, suffered severely from the dry climate of the Punjab frontier.[4]
In the year that the Moplahs became the 2nd Moplah Rifles (1902), a detachment was shipped to England for the Coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra. They attracted attention, in part because of their scarlet zouave jackets[5] and red tarbushes - a headdress not previously worn by the Indian Army.[6]
The two regiments fell foul of Lord Kitchener's reductions of 'generally inefficient' Madras regiments and were disbanded in 1907.[7]
Predecessor names
- 35th Madras Battalion - 1794
- 25th Madras Infantry - 1861
- 2nd Moplah Rifles - 1902
- 77th Moplah Rifles - 1903
References
- ↑ John Gaylor, page 9 Sons of John Company, ISBN 0-946771-98-7
- ↑ John Gaylor, page 9 Sons of John Company, ISBN 0-946771-98-7
- ↑ W.Y. Carman, page 226, Indian Army Uniforms Under the British - Artillery, Engineers and Infantry, Morgan-Grampian London 1969
- ↑ paragraph 9, Indian Office Records and Private Papers, Ref IOR/L/MIL/7015-7235, 28 June 1906
- ↑ W.Y. Carman, page 9 Sons of John Company, ISBN 0-946771-98-7
- ↑ W.Y. Carman, page 226, Indian Army Uniforms Under the British - Artillery, Engineers and Infantry, Morgan-Grampian London 1969
- ↑ http://www.britishempire.co.uk/forces/armyunits/indianinfantry/78thmoplahrifles.htm
- Barthorp, Michael; Burn, Jeffrey (1979). Indian infantry regiments 1860-1914. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 0-85045-307-0.
- Rinaldi, Richard A (2008). Order of Battle British Army 1914. Ravi Rikhye. ISBN 0-9776072-8-3.
- Sharma, Gautam (1990). Valour and sacrifice: famous regiments of the Indian Army. Allied Publishers. ISBN 81-7023-140-X.
- Sumner, Ian (2001). The Indian Army 1914-1947. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-84176-196-6.
- Moberly, F.J. (1923). Official History of the War: Mesopotamia Campaign, Imperial War Museum. ISBN 1-870423-30-5