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129th Duke of Connaught's Own Baluchis

The 129th Duke of Connaught's Own Baluchis was an infantry regiment of the British Indian Army raised in 1846 as the 2nd Bellochee Battalion. It was designated as the 129th Duke of Connaught's Own Baluchis in 1903, and became 4th Battalion (Duke of Connaught's Own) 10th Baluch Regiment in 1922. In 1947, it was allocated to Pakistan Army, where it continues to exist as 11th Battalion of The Baloch Regiment.[1]

129th Duke of Connaught's Own Baluchis
Active1903 - 1922
Country British India (1922 - 47)
Pakistan (1947 - 56)
Branch British Indian Army
 Pakistan Army
TypeInfantry
Size2 Battalions
UniformGreen; faced red; red trousers
EngagementsAnglo-Persian War 1856-57
Taiping Rebellion 1862-64
Second Afghan War 1878-80
Anglo-Egyptian War 1882
First World War 1914-18 (France & Flanders, German East Africa)
Third Afghan War 1919
Iraqi Revolt 1920
Commanders
Colonel-in-ChiefThe Duke of Connaught
Colonel of
the Regiment
General Sir Garrett O'Moore Creagh, VC, GCB, GCSI

Early history edit

 
Typical Baluchi riflemen (Estaire-La Bassée Road, France, 4 Aug 1915). Photographer- H. D. Girdwood. (13875264813)

The regiment was raised on 6 May 1846 at Karachi on the orders of General Sir Charles Napier, the British Governor of Sindh. Its manpower was mostly drawn from Balochis, Sindhis and Pathans of Sindh. Later, it also recruited Brahuis and Punjabi Muslims, while the recruitment area was extended to include Baluchistan, North-West Frontier Province and the Punjab. In 1856, the battalion was dispatched to Persia and fought in the Anglo-Persian War. In the post-Mutiny realignment, it was brought into line in 1861 and became the 29th Regiment of Bombay Native Infantry or the 2nd Belooch Regiment. In 1862, the regiment went to China to suppress the Taiping Rebellion. Two years later, they became the first foreign troops to be stationed in Japan, when two companies were sent to Yokohama to guard the British legation. In 1878–80, the 2nd Belooch Regiment fought in the Second Afghan War, followed by the Anglo-Egyptian War of 1882. In 1883, the Duke of Connaught was appointed their Colonel-in-Chief.[2][3][4][5]

Subsequent to the reforms brought about in the British Indian Army by Lord Kitchener in 1903, all former Bombay Army units had 100 added to their numbers. Consequently, the regiment's designation was changed to 129th Duke of Connaught's Own Baluchis.[4] In 1912, General Sir Garrett O'Moore Creagh, VC, GCB, GCSI, Commander-in-Chief, British Indian Army was appointed Colonel of the 129th DCO Baluchis. He was a former Commanding Officer of the regiment.[4] The regimental full dress uniform in 1914 included a rifle green turban and kurta (knee length tunic) piped in red, worn with red trousers and white gaiters. The red trousers were a distinctive feature of all five Baluch infantry regiments then serving in the British Indian Army.[6]

 
The 29th (Duke of Connaught's Own) Bombay Native Infantry on firing exercise. Coloured lithograph by Richard Simkin, c. 1885.

During the First World War, the 129th DCO Baluchis served on the Western Front in France and Belgium, where they became the first Indian regiment to attack the Germans. At Hollebeke, during the First Battle of Ypres, Sepoy Khudadad Khan became the first Pakistani to win the Victoria Cross; Britain's highest decoration for valour. The regiment also fought in the Battles of Messines 1914, Armentières 1914, Festubert 1914, Givenchy 1914 and Neuve Chapelle 1915. From France, the regiment proceeded from Marseilles to German East Africa and again distinguished itself in the long and difficult campaign.[1][4] The German commander, General von Lettow-Vorbeck, said of them: "... the 129th Baluchis ... were without a doubt very good".[7] The regiment suffered a staggering 3585 casualties out of the 4447 officers and men, who served with it in the First World War.[8] Out of these casualties 348 died, including 45 attached men from the 127th Baluchi Light Infantry and 6 men from the 124th Baluchis. In 1918, the regiment raised a second battalion. Both 1st & 2nd Battalions 129th Duke of Connaught's Own Baluchis fought in the Third Afghan War of 1919, while the 2nd Battalion also served in Iraq during the Iraqi revolt against the British in 1920. The 2nd Battalion was disbanded in 1922.[1]

Subsequent history edit

In 1922, the regiment was grouped with five other Baluch battalions: 1st & 2nd Battalions of 124th Duchess of Connaught's Own Baluchistan Infantry, 126th Baluchistan Infantry, 127th Queen Mary's Own Baluch Light Infantry and the 130th King George's Own Baluchis (Jacob's Rifles), to form the 10th Baluch Regiment. The 129th Duke of Connaught's Own Baluchis were designated as the 4th Battalion (Duke of Connaught's Own) 10th Baluch Regiment.[4]

 
The 129th Duke of Connaught's Own Baluchis near Hollebeke, Belgium, First Battle of Ypres, October 1914.

During the Second World War, 4/10th Baluch served in Italian East Africa, North Africa and Italy. The battalion's performance in the war was once again highly commendable. It suffered a total of 1677 casualties and received numerous gallantry awards. On the Partition of India in 1947, the battalion, along with the Baluch Regiment was allocated to Pakistan Army. In the 1948 Indo-Pakistan War, the battalion captured the strategic heights of Pandu in Kashmir.[9][10] In 1956, on the merger of 8th Punjab and Bahawalpur Regiments with the Baluch Regiment, 4 Baluch was redesignated as 11 Baluch (now 11 Baloch). During the Indo-Pakistani Wars of 1965 and 1971, the battalion fought with distinction in the Lahore and Zafarwal Sectors.[1]

Genealogy edit

  • 18462nd Bellochee Battalion
  • 18582nd Belooch Extra Battalion Bombay Native Infantry
  • 18592nd Belooch Regiment Bombay Native Infantry
  • 186129th Regiment Bombay Native Infantry or 2nd Belooch Regiment
  • 188329th (Duke of Connaught's Own) Regiment Bombay Native Infantry or 2nd Belooch Regiment
  • 188529th (Duke of Connaught's Own) Regiment Bombay Infantry or 2nd Belooch Regiment
  • 188829th (Duke of Connaught's Own) Regiment (2nd Belooch Battalion) Bombay Infantry
  • 189229th (Duke of Connaught's Own) Regiment (2nd Baluch Battalion) Bombay Infantry or 29th Baluchis
     
    Lance Naik Ghulam Haider, 129th Duke of Connaught's Own Baluchis, 1911.
  • 190129th (Duke of Connaught's Own) Baluch Infantry
  • 1903129th Duke of Connaught's Own Baluchis
  • 19171st Battalion 129th Duke of Connaught's Own Baluchis
  • 1922129th Duke of Connaught's Own Baluchis
  • 19224th Battalion (Duke of Connaught's Own) 10th Baluch Regiment or 4/10th Baluch
  • 19454th Battalion (Duke of Connaught's Own) The Baluch Regiment or 4 Baluch
  • 195611th Battalion The Baluch Regiment or 11 Baluch
  • 199111th Battalion The Baloch Regiment or 11 Baloch[1]

Uniforms edit

Throughout its existence as a separate regiment the 129th Baluchis wore a full dress comprising dark green turban and tunic, the latter with red facings. Trousers were red and cut wide in "knickerbocker" style. Gaiters were white and equipment of brown leather. British officers wore green tunics of rifle regiment pattern with silver ornamented pouch-belts and red trousers.[11] Khaki drill field service uniforms were introduced about 1880 and replaced the green and red for most occasions after 1914.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Ahmad, Lt Col RN. (2010). Battle Honours of the Baloch Regiment. Abbottabad: The Baloch Regimental Centre.
  2. ^ Qureshi, Lt Col IA. (1966). History of 11th Battalion, the Baluch Regiment. Lahore: The Allied Press.
  3. ^ Cadell, Sir Patrick. (1938). History of the Bombay Army. London: Longmans & Green.
  4. ^ a b c d e Ahmed, Maj Gen Rafiuddin. (1998). History of the Baloch Regiment 1820-1939. Abbottabad: Baloch Regimental Centre.
  5. ^ Gaylor, J (1992). Sons of John Company: The Indian and Pakistan Armies 1903–1991. Spellmount.
  6. ^ Barthorp, Michael; Jeffrey Burn (1979). Indian Infantry Regiments 1860–1914. p. 32. London: Osprey.
  7. ^ Von Lettow, Gen Paul. (1957). East African Campaigns. New York: Robert Speller & Sons. p. 154.
  8. ^ Thatcher, WS. (1932). The Fourth Battalion, Duke of Connaught's Own, Tenth Baluch Regiment in the Great War. Cambridge: The University Press.
  9. ^ Ahmed, Maj Gen Rafiuddin. (2000). History of the Baloch Regiment 1939-1956. Abbottabad: The Baloch Regimental Centre.
  10. ^ Thatcher, WS. (1980). The Tenth Baluch Regiment in the Second World War. Abbottabad: The Baluch Regimental Centre.
  11. ^ Mollo, Boris (1981). The Indian Army. p. 137. ISBN 0-7137-1074-8.

Further reading edit

  • Ahmad, Lt Col Rifat Nadeem. (2010). Battle Honours of the Baloch Regiment. Abbottabad: The Baloch Regimental Centre.
  • Ahmed, Maj Gen Rafiuddin. (1998). History of the Baloch Regiment 1820-1939. Abbottabad: The Baloch Regimental Centre. ISBN 1-84734-130-6
  • Ahmed, Maj Gen Rafiuddin. (2000). History of the Baloch Regiment 1939-1956. Abbottabad: The Baloch Regimental Centre. ISBN 1-84574-094-7
  • Barthorp, Michael, & Jeffrey Burn. (1979). Indian Infantry Regiments 1860–1914. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-0-85045-307-2
  • Cadell, Sir Patrick. (1938). History of the Bombay Army. London: Longmans & Green
  • Gaylor, John (1992). Sons of John Company: Indian and Pakistan Armies, 1903-1991, Spellmount Publishers Ltd. ISBN 978-0-946771-98-1.
  • Qureshi, Lt Col IA. (1966). History of 11th Battalion, the Baluch Regiment. Lahore: The Allied Press.
  • Thatcher, WS. (1932). The Fourth Battalion, Duke of Connaught's Own, Tenth Baluch Regiment in the Great War. Cambridge: The University Press. ISBN 1-84734-752-5
  • Thatcher, WS. (1980). The Tenth Baluch Regiment in the Second World War. Abbottabad: The Baluch Regimental Centre.

External links edit

  • History of the Baloch Regiment 1820–1939 the Colonial Period, text of pages 1 to 15 available online as download preview

129th, duke, connaught, baluchis, infantry, regiment, british, indian, army, raised, 1846, bellochee, battalion, designated, 1903, became, battalion, duke, connaught, 10th, baluch, regiment, 1922, 1947, allocated, pakistan, army, where, continues, exist, 11th,. The 129th Duke of Connaught s Own Baluchis was an infantry regiment of the British Indian Army raised in 1846 as the 2nd Bellochee Battalion It was designated as the 129th Duke of Connaught s Own Baluchis in 1903 and became 4th Battalion Duke of Connaught s Own 10th Baluch Regiment in 1922 In 1947 it was allocated to Pakistan Army where it continues to exist as 11th Battalion of The Baloch Regiment 1 129th Duke of Connaught s Own BaluchisActive1903 1922CountryBritish India 1922 47 Pakistan 1947 56 Branch British Indian Army Pakistan ArmyTypeInfantrySize2 BattalionsUniformGreen faced red red trousersEngagementsAnglo Persian War 1856 57 Taiping Rebellion 1862 64 Second Afghan War 1878 80 Anglo Egyptian War 1882 First World War 1914 18 France amp Flanders German East Africa Third Afghan War 1919 Iraqi Revolt 1920CommandersColonel in ChiefThe Duke of ConnaughtColonel ofthe RegimentGeneral Sir Garrett O Moore Creagh VC GCB GCSI Contents 1 Early history 2 Subsequent history 3 Genealogy 4 Uniforms 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly history edit nbsp Typical Baluchi riflemen Estaire La Bassee Road France 4 Aug 1915 Photographer H D Girdwood 13875264813 The regiment was raised on 6 May 1846 at Karachi on the orders of General Sir Charles Napier the British Governor of Sindh Its manpower was mostly drawn from Balochis Sindhis and Pathans of Sindh Later it also recruited Brahuis and Punjabi Muslims while the recruitment area was extended to include Baluchistan North West Frontier Province and the Punjab In 1856 the battalion was dispatched to Persia and fought in the Anglo Persian War In the post Mutiny realignment it was brought into line in 1861 and became the 29th Regiment of Bombay Native Infantry or the 2nd Belooch Regiment In 1862 the regiment went to China to suppress the Taiping Rebellion Two years later they became the first foreign troops to be stationed in Japan when two companies were sent to Yokohama to guard the British legation In 1878 80 the 2nd Belooch Regiment fought in the Second Afghan War followed by the Anglo Egyptian War of 1882 In 1883 the Duke of Connaught was appointed their Colonel in Chief 2 3 4 5 Subsequent to the reforms brought about in the British Indian Army by Lord Kitchener in 1903 all former Bombay Army units had 100 added to their numbers Consequently the regiment s designation was changed to 129th Duke of Connaught s Own Baluchis 4 In 1912 General Sir Garrett O Moore Creagh VC GCB GCSI Commander in Chief British Indian Army was appointed Colonel of the 129th DCO Baluchis He was a former Commanding Officer of the regiment 4 The regimental full dress uniform in 1914 included a rifle green turban and kurta knee length tunic piped in red worn with red trousers and white gaiters The red trousers were a distinctive feature of all five Baluch infantry regiments then serving in the British Indian Army 6 nbsp The 29th Duke of Connaught s Own Bombay Native Infantry on firing exercise Coloured lithograph by Richard Simkin c 1885 During the First World War the 129th DCO Baluchis served on the Western Front in France and Belgium where they became the first Indian regiment to attack the Germans At Hollebeke during the First Battle of Ypres Sepoy Khudadad Khan became the first Pakistani to win the Victoria Cross Britain s highest decoration for valour The regiment also fought in the Battles of Messines 1914 Armentieres 1914 Festubert 1914 Givenchy 1914 and Neuve Chapelle 1915 From France the regiment proceeded from Marseilles to German East Africa and again distinguished itself in the long and difficult campaign 1 4 The German commander General von Lettow Vorbeck said of them the 129th Baluchis were without a doubt very good 7 The regiment suffered a staggering 3585 casualties out of the 4447 officers and men who served with it in the First World War 8 Out of these casualties 348 died including 45 attached men from the 127th Baluchi Light Infantry and 6 men from the 124th Baluchis In 1918 the regiment raised a second battalion Both 1st amp 2nd Battalions 129th Duke of Connaught s Own Baluchis fought in the Third Afghan War of 1919 while the 2nd Battalion also served in Iraq during the Iraqi revolt against the British in 1920 The 2nd Battalion was disbanded in 1922 1 Subsequent history editIn 1922 the regiment was grouped with five other Baluch battalions 1st amp 2nd Battalions of 124th Duchess of Connaught s Own Baluchistan Infantry 126th Baluchistan Infantry 127th Queen Mary s Own Baluch Light Infantry and the 130th King George s Own Baluchis Jacob s Rifles to form the 10th Baluch Regiment The 129th Duke of Connaught s Own Baluchis were designated as the 4th Battalion Duke of Connaught s Own 10th Baluch Regiment 4 nbsp The 129th Duke of Connaught s Own Baluchis near Hollebeke Belgium First Battle of Ypres October 1914 During the Second World War 4 10th Baluch served in Italian East Africa North Africa and Italy The battalion s performance in the war was once again highly commendable It suffered a total of 1677 casualties and received numerous gallantry awards On the Partition of India in 1947 the battalion along with the Baluch Regiment was allocated to Pakistan Army In the 1948 Indo Pakistan War the battalion captured the strategic heights of Pandu in Kashmir 9 10 In 1956 on the merger of 8th Punjab and Bahawalpur Regiments with the Baluch Regiment 4 Baluch was redesignated as 11 Baluch now 11 Baloch During the Indo Pakistani Wars of 1965 and 1971 the battalion fought with distinction in the Lahore and Zafarwal Sectors 1 Genealogy edit18462nd Bellochee Battalion 18582nd Belooch Extra Battalion Bombay Native Infantry 18592nd Belooch Regiment Bombay Native Infantry 186129th Regiment Bombay Native Infantry or 2nd Belooch Regiment 188329th Duke of Connaught s Own Regiment Bombay Native Infantry or 2nd Belooch Regiment 188529th Duke of Connaught s Own Regiment Bombay Infantry or 2nd Belooch Regiment 188829th Duke of Connaught s Own Regiment 2nd Belooch Battalion Bombay Infantry 189229th Duke of Connaught s Own Regiment 2nd Baluch Battalion Bombay Infantry or 29th Baluchis nbsp Lance Naik Ghulam Haider 129th Duke of Connaught s Own Baluchis 1911 190129th Duke of Connaught s Own Baluch Infantry 1903129th Duke of Connaught s Own Baluchis 19171st Battalion 129th Duke of Connaught s Own Baluchis 1922129th Duke of Connaught s Own Baluchis 19224th Battalion Duke of Connaught s Own 10th Baluch Regiment or 4 10th Baluch 19454th Battalion Duke of Connaught s Own The Baluch Regiment or 4 Baluch 195611th Battalion The Baluch Regiment or 11 Baluch 199111th Battalion The Baloch Regiment or 11 Baloch 1 Uniforms editThroughout its existence as a separate regiment the 129th Baluchis wore a full dress comprising dark green turban and tunic the latter with red facings Trousers were red and cut wide in knickerbocker style Gaiters were white and equipment of brown leather British officers wore green tunics of rifle regiment pattern with silver ornamented pouch belts and red trousers 11 Khaki drill field service uniforms were introduced about 1880 and replaced the green and red for most occasions after 1914 See also edit10th Baluch Regiment The Baloch Regiment Sepoy Khudadad Khan VCReferences edit a b c d e Ahmad Lt Col RN 2010 Battle Honours of the Baloch Regiment Abbottabad The Baloch Regimental Centre Qureshi Lt Col IA 1966 History of 11th Battalion the Baluch Regiment Lahore The Allied Press Cadell Sir Patrick 1938 History of the Bombay Army London Longmans amp Green a b c d e Ahmed Maj Gen Rafiuddin 1998 History of the Baloch Regiment 1820 1939 Abbottabad Baloch Regimental Centre Gaylor J 1992 Sons of John Company The Indian and Pakistan Armies 1903 1991 Spellmount Barthorp Michael Jeffrey Burn 1979 Indian Infantry Regiments 1860 1914 p 32 London Osprey Von Lettow Gen Paul 1957 East African Campaigns New York Robert Speller amp Sons p 154 Thatcher WS 1932 The Fourth Battalion Duke of Connaught s Own Tenth Baluch Regiment in the Great War Cambridge The University Press Ahmed Maj Gen Rafiuddin 2000 History of the Baloch Regiment 1939 1956 Abbottabad The Baloch Regimental Centre Thatcher WS 1980 The Tenth Baluch Regiment in the Second World War Abbottabad The Baluch Regimental Centre Mollo Boris 1981 The Indian Army p 137 ISBN 0 7137 1074 8 Further reading editAhmad Lt Col Rifat Nadeem 2010 Battle Honours of the Baloch Regiment Abbottabad The Baloch Regimental Centre Ahmed Maj Gen Rafiuddin 1998 History of the Baloch Regiment 1820 1939 Abbottabad The Baloch Regimental Centre ISBN 1 84734 130 6 Ahmed Maj Gen Rafiuddin 2000 History of the Baloch Regiment 1939 1956 Abbottabad The Baloch Regimental Centre ISBN 1 84574 094 7 Barthorp Michael amp Jeffrey Burn 1979 Indian Infantry Regiments 1860 1914 Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 0 85045 307 2 Cadell Sir Patrick 1938 History of the Bombay Army London Longmans amp Green Gaylor John 1992 Sons of John Company Indian and Pakistan Armies 1903 1991 Spellmount Publishers Ltd ISBN 978 0 946771 98 1 Qureshi Lt Col IA 1966 History of 11th Battalion the Baluch Regiment Lahore The Allied Press Thatcher WS 1932 The Fourth Battalion Duke of Connaught s Own Tenth Baluch Regiment in the Great War Cambridge The University Press ISBN 1 84734 752 5 Thatcher WS 1980 The Tenth Baluch Regiment in the Second World War Abbottabad The Baluch Regimental Centre External links editHistory of the Baloch Regiment 1820 1939 the Colonial Period text of pages 1 to 15 available online as download preview Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 129th Duke of Connaught 27s Own Baluchis amp oldid 1156103670, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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