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Militia

A militia (/mɪˈlɪʃə/)[1] is generally an army or some other fighting organization of non-professional and/or part-time soldiers; citizens of a country, or subjects of a state, who may perform military service during a time of need, as opposed to a professional force of regular, full-time military personnel; or, historically, to members of a warrior-nobility class (e.g. knights or samurai). When acting independently militias are generally unable to hold ground against regular forces; militias commonly support regular troops by skirmishing, holding fortifications, or conducting irregular warfare, instead of undertaking offensive campaigns by themselves. Local civilian laws often limit militias to serve only in their home region, and to serve only for a limited time; this further reduces their use in long military campaigns. Militias may also, however, serve as a pool of available manpower for regular forces to draw from, particularly in emergencies.

The Hempstead Rifles, a volunteer militia company from Arkadelphia, Arkansas, 1861

Beginning in the late 20th century, some militias (in particular officially recognized and sanctioned militias of a government) act as professional forces, while still being "part-time" or "on-call" organizations. For instance, the members of United States National Guard units are considered professional soldiers, as they are trained to the same standards that their "full-time" (active duty) counterparts are.[2]

Militias thus can be either military or paramilitary, depending on the instance. Some of the contexts in which the term "militia" can apply include:

  • forces engaged in a defense activity or service, to protect a community, its territory, property, and laws,[3]
  • the entire able-bodied population of a community, town, county, or state available to be called to arms
    • a subset of these who may be legally penalized for failing to respond to a call-up
    • a subset of these who actually respond to a call-up regardless of legal obligation
  • a private (non-governmental) force not necessarily directly supported or sanctioned by a government
  • an irregular armed force that enables its leader to exercise military, economic, or political control over a subnational territory within a sovereign state
  • in Russia and some countries of the former Soviet Union, an official reserve army composed of citizen soldiers known as the militsiya
  • a select militia composed of a small, non-representative portion of the population,[4]
  • maritime militias composed of fishermen and other participants of the marine industry which are organized and sanctioned by a state to enforce its maritime boundaries.[5]

Etymology edit

Militia derives from Latin roots:

  • miles /miːles/ : soldier[6]
  • -itia /iːtia/ : a state, activity, quality or condition of being[7][8]
  • militia /mil:iːtia/: Military service[6]

The word militia dates back to ancient Rome, and more recently to at least 1590 when it was recorded in a book by Sir John Smythe, Certain Discourses Military with the meanings: a military force; a body of soldiers and military affairs; a body of military discipline[9] The word Militia comes from ancient Latin, in which it meant defense service, as distinguished from a body of (armed) defenders which would be volgus militum. The term is used by several countries with the meaning of "defense activity" indicating it is taken directly from Latin.

Afghanistan edit

Militias have been used throughout the history of Afghanistan. Afghan Militias and irregular forces have contributed significantly to the military history of the country and affected the process of state formation.[10]

Andorra edit

Andorra has a small army, which has historically been raised or reconstituted at various dates, but has never in modern times amounted to a standing army. The basic principle of Andorran defence is that all able-bodied men are available to fight if called upon by the sounding of the Sometent. Being a landlocked country, Andorra has no navy.

Before World War I, Andorra maintained an armed militia force of about 600 part-time militiamen under the supervision of a Captain (Capità or Cap de Sometent) and a Lieutenant (Desener or Lloctinent del Capità). This body was not liable for service outside the principality and was commanded by two officials (veguers) appointed by France and the Bishop of Urgell.[11]

In the modern era, the army has consisted of a very small body of volunteers willing to undertake ceremonial duties. Uniforms and weaponry were handed down from generation to generation within families and communities.[12]

The army's role in internal security was largely taken over by the formation of the Police Corps of Andorra in 1931. Brief civil disorder associated with the elections of 1933 led to assistance being sought from the French National Gendarmerie,[13] with a detachment resident in Andorra for two months under the command of René-Jules Baulard.[citation needed] The Andorran Police was reformed in the following year, with eleven soldiers appointed to supervisory roles.[14] The force consisted of six Corporals, one for each parish (although there are currently seven parishes, there were only six until 1978), plus four junior staff officers to co-ordinate action, and a commander with the rank of major. It was the responsibility of the six corporals, each in his own parish, to be able to raise a fighting force from among the able-bodied men of the parish.

Today a small, twelve-man ceremonial unit remains the only permanent section of the Sometent, but all able-bodied men remain technically available for military service,[15] with a requirement for each family to have access to a firearm. An area weapon such as a Shotgun per household is unregulated, however ranged weapons such as Pistols and Rifles require a license.[12] The army has not fought for more than 700 years, and its main responsibility is to present the flag of Andorra at official ceremonial functions.[16][17] According to Marc Forné Molné, Andorra's military budget is strictly from voluntary donations, and the availability of full-time volunteers.[18]

In more recent times there has only been a general emergency call to the popular army of Sometent during the floods of 1982 in the Catalan Pyrenees,[19] where 12 citizens perished in Andorra, to help the population and establish a public order along with the Local Police units.[20]

Argentina edit

In the early 1800s Buenos Aires, which was by then the capital of the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata, was attacked during the British invasions of the Río de la Plata. As regular military forces were insufficient to counter the British attackers, Santiago de Liniers drafted all males in the city capable of bearing arms into the military. These recruits included the criollo peoples, who ranked low down in the social hierarchy, as well as some slaves. With these reinforcements, the British armies were twice defeated.[21] The militias became a strong factor in the politics of the city afterwards, as a springboard from which the criollos could manifest their political ambitions.[22] They were a key element in the success of the May Revolution, which deposed the Spanish viceroy and began the Argentine War of Independence. A decree by Mariano Moreno derogated the system of promotions involving criollos,[clarification needed meaning unclear] allowing instead their promotion on military merit.

The Argentine Civil War was waged by militias again, as both federalists and unitarians drafted common people into their ranks as part of ongoing conflicts. These irregular armies were organized at a provincial level, and assembled as leagues depending on political pacts.[23] This system had declined by the 1870s, mainly due to the establishment of the modern Argentine Army, drafted for the Paraguayan War by President Bartolomé Mitre.[24] Provincial militias were outlawed and decimated by the new army throughout the presidential terms of Mitre, Sarmiento, Avellaneda and Roca.[25]

Armenia edit

 
Armenian fedayi were Armenian irregular militia formed in the late 19th and early 20th century to defend Armenian villages.

Armenian militia, or fedayi played a major role in the independence of various Armenian states, including Western Armenia, the First Republic of Armenia, and the Republic of Artsakh. Armenian militia also played a role in the Georgia-Abkhazia War of 1992–1993.

Australia edit

In the Colony of New South Wales, Governor Lachlan Macquarie proposed a colonial militia but the idea was rejected. Governor Ralph Darling felt a mounted police force was more efficient than a militia. A military volunteer movement attracted wide interest during the Crimean War.[26] Following Federation, the various military reserve forces of the Commonwealth of Australia became the Citizen Military Force (CMF).

A citizens' militia modeled on the British Home Guard called the Volunteer Defence Corps (VDC) was founded by the Returned and Services League of Australia (RSL) in 1940 in response to the possibility of a Japanese invasion of Australia. In the beginning, members didn't have uniforms and often paraded in business attire. They were given instruction on guerrilla warfare, and later the private organization was taken over by the Australian Government and became part of the Australian Military Forces (AMF). The government supported the organization and equipped them with anti-aircraft artillery; however, they were disbanded by the end of World War II due to the fact that there was no longer a significant threat to national security.

Austria edit

 
Republikanischer Schutzbund was an Austrian militia formed in 1923, one of several militias formed in post-World War I Austria.

During the Revolutions of 1848 in the Austrian Empire, a National Guard was established in Vienna. A separate but related Academic Legion was composed mainly of students in the capital city.

After World War I, multiple militias formed as soldiers returned home to their villages, only to find many of them occupied by Slovene and Yugoslav forces. Especially in the southern province of Carinthia the Volkswehr (Peoples Defense Force) was formed, to fight the occupant forces.

During the First Republic, similar to the development in Germany, increasing radicalization of politics led to certain paramilitary militias associating with certain political parties. The Heimwehr (German: Home Defense) became affiliated with the Christian Social Party and the Republikanischer Schutzbund (German: Republican Defense League) became affiliated with the Social Democratic Workers' Party of Austria. Violence increasingly escalated, breaking out during the July Revolt of 1927 and finally the Austrian Civil War, when the Schutzbund was defeated by the Heimwehr, police, Gendarmerie and Austrian Armed Forces.

After World War II the Austrian Armed Forces (Bundesheer) were reestablished as a conscript military force. A basic part of it is the militia, which is a regular reservists force of the Bundesheer, comparable to the national guard units of the United States. The conscript soldiers of the militia have to store their military equipment at home, to be mobilized quite fast within a few days in case of emergency. The system was established during the Cold War and still exists, but the members of the militia now are volunteers only.

Bahrain edit

In Bahrain, emergence of a small militia group Katibat al Haydariyah was first seen in 2015. During the year, total four attacks were claimed by the group, including on August 22 and 24, 2015, in Muharraq, on September 10, 2015, in Al Khamis, and on October 9, 2015, on Bahraini forces in the Al Juffair region. Katibat al Haydariyah is its own distinct organization that decries the Bahraini government, but Canada and the United Kingdom listed it as an alias for the larger Al-Ashtar Brigades (or the Saraya al Ashtar). After four years, the militia group reemerged on social media in October 2019, to threaten new attacks on the island. It stated that they “will not retreat from our goals of the downfall of the Al Khalifa entity,” and that “soon, guns will open their mouths and they will hear the whiz of bullets”.[27]

Belgium edit

The Garde Civique or Burgerwacht (French and Dutch; "Civic Guard") was a Belgian paramilitary militia which existed between 1830 and 1920. Created in October 1830 shortly after the Belgian Revolution, the Guard amalgamated the various militia groups which had been created by the middle classes to protect property during the political uncertainty. Its role was as a quasi-military "gendarmerie", with the primary role of maintaining social order within Belgium. Increasingly anachronistic, it was demobilised in 1914 and officially disbanded in 1920, following a disappointing performance during the German invasion of Belgium in World War I.

Brazil edit

In Brazil, the word milícia is heavily associated with paramilitary and drug-related criminal groups.

Canada edit

 
Depiction of the 2nd Regiment of York Militia during the Battle of Queenston Heights. The regiment was one of several Canadian militia units during the War of 1812.

In Canada the title "Militia" historically referred to the land component of the armed forces, both regular (full-time) and reserve. The earliest Canadian militias date from the beginning of the French colonial period. In New France, King Louis XIV created a compulsory militia of settlers in every parish that supported French authorities in the defence and expansion of the colony.

Following the British conquest of New France in 1760, local militia units supported British Army regiments stationed in British America, and, after the secession of thirteen continental colonies in the American War of Independence, British North America. In addition to the Canadian militia, British regiments were also supported by locally raised regulars (including the 40th Regiment of Foot, and the 100th (Prince of Wales's Royal Canadian) Regiment of Foot) and Fencibles regiments. These regiments were raised through ordinary modes of recruiting, as opposed to being raised by ballot like the militia. Most militia units were only activated in time of war, but remained inactive in between. The battle honours awarded to these colonial militia regiments are perpetuated by modern regiments within the Canadian Army.

Defence of the Canadas long relied on a contingent of British soldiers, as well as support from the Royal Navy. However, the Crimean War saw the diversion of a significant number of British soldiers from British North America. Fearing possible incursions from the United States, the Parliament of the Province of Canada passed the Militia Act of 1855, creating the Active Militia.[28] The Active Militia, later splitting into the Permanent Active Militia (PAM), a full-time professional army component (although it continued to use the label militia), and Non-Permanent Active Militia (NPAM), a military reserve force for the Canadian militia.[29] Following 1855, the traditional sedentary militia was reorganized into the Reserve Militia, with its last enrolment taking place in 1873, and was formally abolished in 1950.

Prior to Canadian Confederation, the colonies that made up the Maritimes, and Newfoundland maintained their own militias independent of the Canadian Militia. Bermuda, part of British North America and militarily subordinate to the Commander-in-Chief of the Maritimes,[30] allowed its militia to lapse following the American War of 1812.[31] United States Independence, however, elevated Bermuda to the status of an Imperial fortress and it would be strongly defended by the regular army,[32][33][34][35] and left out of the confederation of Canada.[36][37][38][39][40][41][42][43] From 1853 to 1871, the Colony of Vancouver Island (and the succeeding Colony of British Columbia) periodically raised and disbanded militia units. These units were raised for specific purposes, or in response to a specific threat, real or perceived.[44]

 
Uniforms of the Canadian Militia in 1898. The force included the Permanent Active Militia, a full-time professional land force which became the Canadian Army in 1940.

After the Treaty of Washington was signed between the Americans and British, nearly all remaining British soldiers were withdrawn from Canada in November 1871.[45] The departure of the majority of British forces in Canada made the Canadian militia the only major land forces available in Canada. In 1940, both components of the militia, PAM and NPAM were reorganized, the former into Canadian Army (Active), the latter into the Canadian Army (Reserve)

 
A church parade of the 13th Royal Regiment, Canadian Militia, in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, in 1915

In addition to the various colonial militia units, and the regiments of the Canadian militia, in 1942, the Army's Pacific Command created the Pacific Coast Militia Rangers. Intended to function similarly to the United Kingdom's Home Guard, the Rangers were a secondary defence force, defending the coast of British Columbia and Yukon from potential Japanese attack.[46] The Rangers were disbanded in September 1945, shortly after the conclusion of World War II. The legacy of the Pacific Coast Militia Rangers is perpetuated by the Canadian Rangers, a component of the Primary Reserve that provides a military presence in areas where it would not be economically or practically viable to have conventional Army units – most notably northern Canada.

The Canadian Army Reserve continued to use the term militia in reference to itself until the unification of the Canadian Armed Forces in 1968. Since unification, no Canadian military force has formally used militia in its name. However, the Canadian Army Reserve is still colloquially referred to as the militia.[47][48] Members of the Canadian Army Reserve troops typically train one night a week and every other weekend of the month, except in the summer. Summertime training may consist of courses, individual call-outs, or concentrations (unit and formation training of one to two weeks' duration). Most Canadian cities and counties have one or more militia units. Primary Reserve members may volunteer for overseas service, to augment their regular force counterparts—usually during NATO or United Nations missions.

China edit

China's current militia falls under the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), and forms part of the Chinese armed forces. Under the command of the military organs, it undertakes such jobs as war preparation services, security and defense operational tasks and assistance in maintaining social order and public security.[49]

Historically, militias of varying levels of ability have existed in China, organized on a village and clan level, especially during periods of instability and in areas subject to pirate and bandit attack. When the British attempted to take control of the New Territories in 1898, they were resisted by the local militias which had been formed for mutual defence against pirate raids. Although ultimately defeated, the militias' dogged resistance convinced the British to make concessions to the indigenous inhabitants allowing them to preserve inheritance, property and marriage rights and customs throughout most of the period of the British rule.[50][51]

Cuba edit

Cuba has three militia organizations: The Territorial Troops Militia (Milicias de Tropas Territoriales) of about one million people (half women),[52] the Youth Labor Army (Ejército Juvenil del Trabajo) devoted to agricultural production, and a naval militia.[53][54] Formerly, there existed the National Revolutionary Militias (Milicias Nacionales Revolucionarias), which was formed after the Cuban Revolution and initially consisted of 200,000 men who helped the 25,000 strong standing army defeat counter-revolutionary guerillas.[55]

Denmark edit

 
A joint patrol between Arizona National Guard and the Danish Home Guard during the Golden Coyote training exercise.

The Danish Home Guard (Danish: Hjemmeværnet) (HJV) is the fourth service of the Danish military. It was formerly concerned only with the defence of Danish territory but, since 2008, it has also supported Danish international military efforts in Afghanistan, Iraq and Kosovo. There are five branches: Army Home Guard, Naval Home Guard, Air Force Home Guard, Police Home Guard, and Infrastructure Home Guard.

Estonia edit

The Omakaitse (Home Guard) was an organisation formed by the local population of Estonia on the basis of the Estonian Defence League and the forest brothers resistance movement active on the Eastern Front between 3 July 1941 and 17 September 1944.[56] This arrangement was unique in the context of the war as in Latvia, which otherwise shared a common fate with Estonia, there was no organisation of this kind.[57]

Ethiopia edit

The People's Militia was established in 1975 under the Derg Proclamation No 71, used to assist police forces and protect farms and property. The militia has done operations in Eritrea during the Ogaden War, while Mengistu Haile Mariam reconstituted as the "Red Army". The Derg government conscripted about 30,000 to 40,000 civilians into the militia from Shewa, Wollo, and Gojam provinces in May 1976.[58][59] Fano militia is Amhara militia emerged during the premiership of Abiy Ahmed. It is perceived as either protest group or a militia. Fano intervened armed conflicts in the post-2018 regime, including Benishangul-Gumuz's Metekel conflict, Tigray War and recently War in Amhara. They have been accused of ethnic massacres, such as Qemant and other minorities.[60]

Finland edit

 
Members of the White Guard after the Battle of Varkaus. The White Guard was a voluntary militia that fought for the Whites in the Finnish Civil War.

While Finland employs conscription, they do not have separate militia units: all units are organized by and under the command of the Finnish Defence Forces. All men belong to the reserve until age 50 or 60 depending on rank, and may be called up in case of mobilization. Each reservist is assigned a position in a unit to be activated. However, since 2004, the FDF does have territorial forces, organized along the lines of regular infantry formations, which are composed of volunteers. Furthermore, long-range patrol units (sissi troops, a type of special forces) are assigned to local troops.

In history, before Finland became independent, two types of local militias existed: the White Guards and Red Guards, which were non-socialists and socialists, respectively. In the Finnish Civil War (1918) the White Guards founded the White Army, which was victorious over the Red Guards. White Guards continued their existence as a volunteer militia until the Second World War. In some cases their activity found overt political expression as in the Mäntsälä rebellion. However, in 1934 separate wartime White Guard units were dissolved and in the Second World War they served at the front, dispersed in regular units. They were dissolved as a condition of peace after the Continuation War.

France edit

The first notable militia in French history was the resistance of the Gauls to invasion by the Romans until they were defeated by Julius Caesar.[61] Centuries later, Joan of Arc organized and led a militia until her capture and execution in 1431. This settled the succession to the French crown and laid the basis for the formation of the modern nation of France.[62]

During the French Revolution the National Guard was a political home defense militia. The levée en masse was a conscription army used during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars.

At the time of the Franco-Prussian War, the Parisian National Guard engaged the Prussian Army and later rebelled against the Versailles Army under Marshal McMahon.

Under German occupation during World War II, a militia usually called the French Resistance emerged to conduct a guerrilla war of attrition against German forces and prepare the way for the D-Day Allied Invasion of France.[63] The Resistance militia were opposed by the collaborationist French Militia—the paramilitary police force of the German puppet state of Vichy.

Although defunct from 1871 until 2016, the French National Guard has now been reestablished for homeland security purposes.[64]

Germany edit

The earliest reports of Germanic militias was the system of hundreds described in AD 98 by the Roman historian Tacitus as the centeni. They were similar in nature to the Anglo-Saxon fyrd.

 
The Lützow Free Corps during the Napoleonic Wars. During the Napoleonic Wars, the Freikorps referred to volunteer forces that fought against the French.

Freikorps (German for "Free Corps") was originally applied to voluntary armies. The first Freikorps were recruited by Frederick II of Prussia during the Seven Years' War. These troops were regarded as unreliable by regular armies, so they were mainly used as sentries and for minor duties. During the Napoleonic occupation, organizations such as the Lutzow Free Corps fought against the occupiers and later joined the allied forces as regular soldiers.

However, after 1918, the term was used for nationalist paramilitary organizations that sprang up around Germany as soldiers returned in defeat from World War I. They were one of the many Weimar paramilitary groups active during that time. They received considerable support from Gustav Noske, the German Defence Minister who used them to crush the Spartakist League with enormous violence, including the murders of Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg on January 15, 1919. Militia were also used to put down the Bavarian Soviet Republic in 1919. They were officially "disbanded" in 1920, resulting in the ill-fated Kapp Putsch in March 1920. The Einwohnerwehr, active in Germany from 1919 to 1921 was a paramilitary citizens' militia consisting of hundreds of thousands of mostly former servicemen.[65] Formed by the Prussian Ministry of the Interior on April 15, 1919, to allow citizens to protect themselves from looters, armed gangs, and revolutionaries, the Einwohnerwehr was under the command of the local Reichswehr regiments, which supplied its guns. In 1921, the Berlin government dissolved the Einwohnerwehr. Many of its members went on to join the Nazi Party.[66]

 
The Volkssturm was a national militia formed by Nazi Germany in the last months of World War II.

In 1921 the Nazi Party created the Sturmabteilung (SA; Storm Detachment; Brownshirts), which was the first paramilitary wing of the Nazi Party and served as a Nazi militia whose initial assignment was to protect Nazi leaders at rallies and assemblies. The SA also took part in street battles against the forces of rival political parties and violent actions against Jews. From the SA sprung the Schutzstaffel (SS; Protective Squadron) which grew to become one of the largest and most powerful groups in Nazi Germany, which Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler (the leader of the SS from 1929) envisioned as an elite group of guards. The Waffen-SS, the military branch of the SS, became a de facto fourth branch of the Wehrmacht.[67]

In 1944–1945, as World War II came to a close in Europe, the German high command deployed increasing numbers of Volkssturm units to combat duties. These regiments were composed of men, women and children too old, young or otherwise unfit for service in the Wehrmacht (German Regular Army).[68] Their primary role was assisting the army with fortification duties and digging anti-tank ditches. As the shortage of manpower became severe, they were used as front line infantry, most often in urban settings. Due to the physical state of members, almost non-existent training and shortage of weapons, there was not much the Volkssturm could do except act like shields for regular army units.

India edit

Salwa Judum (meaning "Peace March"[69] or "Purification Hunt" in Gondi language) was a militia active in the Chhattisgarh state of India.

Iran edit

The Basij militia founded by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in November 1979,[70] is composed of 90,000 men, with an active and reserve strength up to 300,000 men. It ultimately draws from about 1 million members, and is subordinate to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in Iran.[71]

Iraq edit

Since the rise of ISIL in 2014 and their conquest of many predominantly-Sunni areas in Iraq, the Shiite militias became even more prominent in the country by joining the Iraqi Army in many major battles against ISIL.[72]

Israel edit

 
Hashomer in 1909

In 1908 a Jewish underground organisation, Bar Giora, re-invented itself as an armed militia – Hashomer. It was established to provide Jewish guards for the Zionist colonies being established in Ottoman Palestine. The group existed for 10 years. At its height it had around 100 members, including 23 women.[73]

In modern times, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) is often described as a heavily armed militia, not a full-fledged army, since it is legally and publicly viewed as a defensive force only, and since it relies heavily on the reserve duty of Israeli citizens who are annually called to service for set periods of time, rather than on professional, full-time soldiers.[74] Israeli settlements in the Israeli-occupied territories rely on armed militia teams for their security.[75] National service conscripts can also serve in the Israel Border Police (commonly known by its Hebrew abbreviation Magav which means border guard in Hebrew), which is a paramilitary branch of the Israel Police rather than the IDF.

Latvia edit

 
Members of the Latvian National Guard during a training exercise. The Guard was created in 1991 as a voluntary military self-defense force.

Libya edit

Since the fall of Gaddafi's rule of Libya in the aftermath of the Libyan Civil War, rebel groups that have contributed to the revolution splintered into self-organized militia movements and have been involved in a feud for control of each city.[76] Since the revolution, reports of clashes and violence by militia groups have been increasing.[77]

Mexico edit

Mexico has a history of various activities and insurrection by militia and paramilitary groups dating back several hundred years that include the exploits of historical figures such as Captain Manuel Pineda Munoz and Francisco "Pancho" Villa. This also includes groups such as the Free-Colored Militia (the interracial militias of New Spain, Colonial Mexico),[78] the Camisas Doradas, and the contemporary Self Defense Council of Michoacan.[79]

Free-colored militias were an important and at times critical organization in Colonial Mexico. Prior to the eighteenth century, Spain's territories in the Americas were mainly defended through a series of Spanish military units being based in strategic coastal port cities and important economic centers.[78]: 8–10  But as European rivals began to challenge the Spanish crown and their dominance in the new world, the Bourbon dynasty initiated a series of reforms, allowing people from their colonies to serve in the regular armies, as well as permitting local militias in their territories.[78]: 14–16 

While these groups began to integrate themselves into the official Spanish colonial militaries, free-colored militias have been reluctantly used since the-mid sixteenth century. Palenques, or run away slave communities, would often initiate slavery uprising in various cities and towns in New Spain, which made the colonial Spanish authorities uneasy about arming any free colored individuals.[78]: 14–16  Free colored rebellions and violence in Mexico City impacted regional policy of New Spain towards blacks. Given this social context, the racial climate in which these free-colored militias first appeared was a hostile one, and the first militias often had conflicts within them between their free-colored and white commanders.[78]: 20–23  The first large scale recruitment of fee-colored militias was in response to the attack on Veracruz port in 1683 by Dutch pirateer Lorenzo de Graff, with free-colored soldiers being called in from Mexico City, Puebla, Orizaba and other large colonial cities.[78]: 30–32  Militias increasingly began to take shape and develop over the course of the 17th and 18th centuries, but it's critical to understand that their development was not a linear progressive one. The experiences of militias in urban areas was vastly different from those in rural communities, and the role, influence, and duties of militias in the early 17th century were not the same as those of a century later. The critical stage for militia growth was during 1670–1762, where there was an increase of the militias responsibilities and they gained a considerable amount of autonomy over their own affairs.[78]: 30–32  The social impact of these free-colored militias added complexity to the race-based caste system that dominated the social landscape.

Free-colored militias were structured to follow the tercio organizational model that was used by Spanish Habsburg and Bourbon dynasties.[78]: 47–50  Tercios compromised 2,500 soldiers distributed among ten companies, each under the leadership of a captain. Free-colored militias under the tercio system were headed by a sargento mayor (major) who became the senior operating officer in militias. Under the sargento mayor were the junior officers, which included one captain and alferez (lieutenant) per company, who were also aided by an ayudante (adjutant) and subteniente (second lieutenant) after they were incorporated into the system after 1767. The captain had supreme authority within their company, only reporting to the sargento mayor when he could not control matters of the company. The alferez coordinated affairs with his captain and was next in line in command in his absence. Below the junior officers were ranking NCO's and up to four sergeants served per company. A cabo (corporal) was assigned to lead each squad of 25 soldiers. These NCO's were responsible for discipline of the soldiers and maintaining a limited record of individuals.[78]: 47–50  Officers and first sergeants were the only soldiers in the free-colored militias to receive a monthly salary with lower ranked soldiers only receiving pay when on campaigns. Their salaries came from the royal treasuries, alongside occasional supplementation by private contributions of prominent individuals.[78]: 83–84 

Who exactly constitutes as a “free-colored person” is subject to much debate and discussion. While the terms pardos, mulatos, negros and morenos were commonly used under the caste system that was in place during this era, their use in this context is much more complex and who exactly qualified as who was a very fluid process, dependent on the social context of the time and place.[78]: 200–201  Despite the lack of universal understanding of racial identification across New Spain, when they were faced with external threats to their organizations, free-colored militias showed great racial unity in these times, such as in the case of Huajolotitlan, a small town of Oaxaca in southern Mexico.[78]: 207–211  After a decree was passed in 1784 calling for the retirement of every free-colored officer and the disbandment of their militia, the tows free-coloreds fiercely resisted. Free-colored soldiers refused to leave their posts and they dispatched to the capital in protests to defend their racially integrated organizations. This later inspired the communities other free-colored people to protests what they saw as other aggressions by the government, such as increasing tribute burdens.[78]: 207–211 

While some of the previous examples are historical, the current official view on the existence of such militias in Mexico, when they are not backed by the government,[80] has been to always label them as illegal and to combat them in a military and a political way.[81]

Modern examples on the Mexican view on militias are the Chiapas conflict against the EZLN[82] and against the EPR in Guerrero,[83] where the government forces combated the upraised militias. And in a more recent case when civilian self-defence militias appeared during the Mexican war on drugs,[84] the government regulated them and transformed the militias in to Rural federal forces,[85] and those who resisted were combated and imprisoned.[86]

Montenegro edit

In 1910 King Nicholas I of Montenegro proclaimed that all male citizens were members of a national militia and had both a right and a duty to own at least one Gasser Pattern revolver under penalty of law.

The official reason for the King's decree was to create an armed populace that would deter neighbouring countries from attacking Montenegro, which was unable to field a large army. However, it was widely believed in Montenegro that this decision was actually taken because the King owned shares in Leopold Gasser Waffenfabrik in Vienna - the patent holder and sole manufacturer of the pistol at that time.[87][88][89] Despite this, the decree actually obliged Montenegrin adult males to own a Gasser Pattern revolver, not necessarily one made by Gasser itself. In fact Leopold Gasser was faced with such heavy demand for the pistol internationally, that it could not fulfil all of the orders placed for it. This led the revolver's manufacturer to license out production to other companies and many Gasser Pattern pistols were then manufactured and sold by other European firms, most notably based out of Belgium and Spain. Even these licensed models did not satiate demand for the pistol and this, alongside a lax enforcement of intellectual property rights in Montenegro, led to many unlicensed local models of the pistol also being produced, with quality ranging from very good to outright dangerous to its user.

Subsequently, the weapon quickly became a status symbol for Montenegrin men and was commonly worn alongside traditional attire. Many Montenegrin immigrants that travelled to North America brought their Gasser pattern revolvers with them and at least two batches of several thousand pistols were smuggled into Mexico during the Mexican Revolution, leading to the Gasser revolver becoming widespread in the Americas. However, as the original reason for their mass production and the generation that grew around it faded, the pistol eventually lost its place as a status symbol and many were either given away or sold in the secondhand market.

Netherlands edit

Schutterij (Dutch pronunciation: [sxʏtəˈrɛi]) refers to a voluntary city guard or citizen militia in the medieval and early modern Netherlands, intended to protect the town or city from attack and act in case of revolt or fire. Their training grounds were often on open spaces within the city, near the city walls, but, when the weather did not allow, inside a church. They are mostly grouped according to their district and to the weapon that they used: bow, crossbow or gun. Together, its members are called a Schuttersgilde, which could be roughly translated as a "shooter's guild". It is now a title applied to ceremonial shooting clubs and to the country's Olympic rifle team.

New Zealand edit

 
Member of the Armed Constabulary shot during the New Zealand Wars. The Constabulary was a law enforcement agency and a militia until it was reoriented into a police force in 1886.

From the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840 until 1844 small detachments of British Imperial troops based in New Zealand were the only military. This changed as a result of the Flagstaff War,[90] with the colonial government passing a Militia Act on 25 March 1845.[91] Militia units were formed in Auckland, Wellington, New Plymouth, and Nelson. Service in the militia was compulsory.

Many localized militia saw service, together with British Imperial troops, during the New Zealand Wars. In the late nineteenth century a system of local Volunteer militias evolved throughout the country. These were semi-trained but uniformed and administered by a small number of regular "Imperial" officers.[92] The militia units were disbanded and reformed as the Territorial Army in 1911.

North Korea edit

The Worker-Peasant Red Guards is a North Korean paramilitary organization organized on a provincial/town/city/village level.

Norway edit

 
Members of the Norwegian Home Guard.

Pakistan edit

Militias have played an important role supporting Pakistan's Military since the Indo-Pakistani War of 1947 when Pakistan, with the support of militias, was able to gain control of parts of the region of Kashmir.[93] Pakistan found the militias volunteering to participate in the Indo-Pakistani war of 1965 and the Indo-Pakistani war of 1971 quite useful as well.

Currently Pakistani citizens forming militias from the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province are participating in the 'war on terror'.[94][95]

Portugal edit

 
A Portuguese militiaman in 1812

Portugal has a long tradition in the use of militias for national defense. Between the 12th and 16th centuries, the municipal militias – composed of spearmen, pikemen, horsemen, slingers, javelineers, archers, crossbowmen and later arquebusiers – constituted the main component of the Portuguese Royal Army, together with smaller military forces from the King, the military orders and the feudal lords.

After some failed previous attempts, in 1570 King Sebastian of Portugal created the Ordenanças, a centrally managed military territorial organization that would replace the municipal militias and became the basis of a national army. After 60 years of foreign domination (1580–1640), the Ordenanças were reorganized for the Portuguese Restoration War. The Portuguese Army was then organized in three lines, with the 2nd and 3rd being militia forces. The Ordenanças became the 3rd line and acted both as a territorial draft organization for the 1st and 2nd line troops and as a kind of home guard for local defense. The 2nd line was made of the auxiliary troops, also militia units with the role of regional defense. In the end of the 18th century, the auxiliary troops were renamed "Militias".

In the Peninsular War, the Militia regiments and the Ordenanças units had an important role in the defense of the country against the Napoleonic invader army. Still in the 19th century, the Militia units also had an important role in the Liberal Wars, with the majority of those troops fighting on the side of King Miguel. Besides the regular militias, a number of volunteer militia units were formed to fight on both sides of the war.

With the establishment of the constitutional regime, the old Militias and Ordenanças were replaced by a single national militia force, the National Guard. However, the National Guard revealed itself an ineffective and undisciplined force. Their units became highly politicized, being involved in a number of conspiracies and coups. The National Guard having less and less confidence from the authorities, became extinct in 1847, terminating a long tradition of national militias in Portugal.

During the 20th century, some experiments with militia type forces were made. From 1911 to 1926, the Portuguese Army was organized as a militia army. Also, in 1936, the Estado Novo regime created the Portuguese Legion as a political volunteer militia, dedicated to the fight against the enemies of country and of the social order. From World War II, the Portuguese Legion assumed the responsibility for civil defense, this becoming its main role during the Cold War, until its extinction in 1974.

Russia and the Soviet Union edit

 
Banner of Saint Petersburg militia from Napoleon's invasion of Russia.

Neither the Russian Empire, nor the Soviet Union ever had an organised force that could be equated to a militia. Instead a form of organisation that predated the Russian state was used during national emergencies called Narodnoe Opolcheniye (People's Regimentation). More comparable to the English Fyrd, it was a popular voluntary joining of the local полк polk, or a regiment, though it had no regular established strength or officers, these usually elected from prominent local citizens. The Tsarist regime was particularly reluctant to arm and organise militia forces because of concern over a repetition of the Pugachev Serf Revolt of the late 18th century. Only in the face of the national emergency of 1812 was the raising of opolcheniye "cohorts" permitted. Numbering over 223,000, loosely trained and barely equipped, these enthusiastic volunteers nevertheless provided a useful reserve for the regular army.[96]

Although these spontaneously created popular forces had participated in several major wars of the Russian Empire, including in combat, they were not obligated to serve for more than one year, and notably departed for home during the 1813 campaign in Germany. On only one occasion, during the military history of the Soviet Union, the Narodnoe Opolcheniye was incorporated into the regular forces of the Red Army, notably in Leningrad and Moscow.

The term Militsiya in Russia and former Communist Bloc nations was specifically used to refer to the civilian police force, and should not be confused with the conventional western definition of militia. The term, as used in this context, dated from post-revolutionary Russia in late 1917 and was intended to draw a distinction between the new Soviet law enforcement agencies and the disbanded Tsarist police. In some of these states militia was renamed back to police such as Ukraine while in the other states it remains such as Belarus. In Russia it was renamed to Police (in Russian: Полиция, Politsiya) in March 2011.[97]

Sri Lanka edit

The first militias formed in Sri Lanka were by Lankan Kings, who raised militia armies for their military campaigns both within and outside the island. This was due to the reason that the Kings never maintained a standing army instead had a Royal Guard during peacetime and formed a militia in wartime.

When the Portuguese who were the first colonial power to dominate the island raised local militias under the command of local leaders known as Mudaliyars. These militias took part in the many Portuguese campaigns against the Lankan Kings. The Dutch continued to employ these militias but due to their unreliability tended to favor employing Swiss and Malay mercenaries in their campaigns in the island.

 
The Sri Lanka Civil Security Force is a paramilitary militia tasked to serve as an auxiliary to the Sri Lanka Police.

The British Empire then ousted the Dutch from the coastal areas of the country, and sought to conquer the independent Kandyan Kingdom. In 1802, the British became the first foreign power to raise a regular unit of Sinhalese with British officers, which was named the 2nd Ceylon Regiment, also known as the Sepoy Corps. It fought alongside British troops in the Kandyan wars. After the Matale Rebellion led by Puran Appu in 1848, in which a number of Sinhalese recruits defected to the side of the rebels, the recruitment of Sinhalese to the British forces was temporarily halted and the Ceylon Regiments disbanded.

In 1861, the Ceylon Light Infantry Volunteers were raised as a militia, but soon became a military reserve force. This became the Ceylon Defence Force in 1910 and consisted of militia units. These were the Colombo Town Guard and the Town Guard Artillery formed during the two world wars.

With the escalation of the Sri Lankan Civil War, local villagers under threat of attack were formed into localized militia to protect their families and homes.[98] According to the Sri Lankan Military these militias were formed after "massacres done by the LTTE" and in the early 1990s they were reformed as the Sri Lankan Home Guard. In 2007 the Home Guard became the Sri Lanka Civil Security Force.[99] In 2008, the government called for the formation of nearly 15,000 civil defence committees at the village level for additional protection.[100]

In 2004, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam claimed have establish a voluntary "Tamil Eelam auxiliary force". According to the LTTE's then head of police, the force was to be assigned to tasks such as rehabilitation, construction, forest conservation and agriculture, but would also be used to battle the Sri Lankan military if the need arose.[101][102][103] In early 2009 it ceased to exist with the military defeat of the LTTE at the hands of the Sri Lanka Armed Forces.

Sudan edit

 
A mounted Janjaweed militiaman. The Janjaweed are a militia operating in western Sudan and eastern Chad.

The Janjaweed militia consists of armed Arab Muslims fighting for the government in Khartoum against non-Arab Muslim "rebels". They are active in the Darfur region of western Sudan and also in eastern Chad. According to Human Rights Watch these partisans are responsible for abuses including war crimes, crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing.[104]

Sweden edit

As of 2012, the Swedish Home Guard consists of 22,000 organized into 40 light infantry battalions of 300–700 Guardsmen. These battalions are then organised into companies, usually one for every municipality. The main task of the battalions is to guard vital military and civilian installations throughout the country.[citation needed]

In 2001, the Rapid Response units numbered around 5,000 soldiers of the total of 42,000. As of 2014, the majority of the force, 17,000 out of 22,000 soldiers will be in Rapid Response units. The decrease in number of troops comes with an equal increase in quality and modern equipment. These units are motorized and are ready to be mobilized more often, than other Home Guard units. Rapid response units have more combat tasks compared to the rest of the Home Guard, including escort duties. Some battalions located near the coast also have marine companies equipped with Combat Boat 90. A few battalions have recently set up 'specialized' companies to evaluate the possibility to add new abilities to the Home Guard. These are at the time of writing eight reconnaissance/intelligence companies, four CBRN-platoons, a movcon platoon, an engineer platoon, and a military police unit.

Switzerland edit

One of the best known and ancient militias is the Swiss Armed Forces. Switzerland has long maintained, proportionally, the second largest military force in the world, with about half the proportional amount of reserve forces of the Israeli Defense Forces, a militia of some 33% of the total population. The "militia principle" of public duties is central to Swiss political culture and not limited to military issues. For example, in most municipalities it is common to serve as a conscript fire fighter in the Compulsory Fire Department.

Article 58.1 of the April 18, 1999, Federal Constitution of the Swiss Confederation (official, French version) provides that "Switzerland has an army. It is primarily organised according to the principle of a militia." However, under the country's militia system, professional soldiers constitute about 5 percent of military personnel. In 1995, the number of soldiers was reduced to 400,000 (including reservists, amounting to some 5.6% of the population) in 2004, to 200,000 (including 80,000 reservists, or 2.5% of the population) and again in 2022, to 150,000 (including 50,000 reservists). However, the Swiss Militia continues to consist of most of the adult male population (with voluntary participation by women) who are usually issued an assault rifle which they can keep at home or store in a central arsenal and most of them have to periodically engage in combat and marksmanship training.[105] The militia clauses of the Swiss Federal Constitution are contained in Art. 59, where it is referred to as "military service" (German: Militärdienst; French: service militaire; Italian: servizio militare; Romansh: servetsch militar).

Syria edit

The Syrian National Defense Force was formed out of pro-government militias. They receive their salaries and their military equipment from the government[106][107] and as of 2013 numbers around 100,000.[108][109] The force acts in an infantry role, directly fighting against rebels on the ground and running counter-insurgency operations in coordination with the army which provides them with logistical and artillery support. Unlike the Syrian Army, NDF soldiers are allowed to take loot from battlefields, which can then be sold on for extra money.[106]

United Kingdom edit

Origins edit

The obligation to serve in the militia (also known as the Constitutional Force) in England derives from a common law tradition, and dates back to Anglo-Saxon times. The tradition was that all able-bodied males were liable to be called out to serve in one of two organisations. These were the posse comitatus, an ad hoc assembly called together by a law officer to apprehend lawbreakers, and the fyrd,[110] a military body intended to preserve internal order or defend the locality against an invader. The latter developed into the militia, and was usually embodied by a royal warrant.[111] Service in each organisation involved different levels of preparedness.[112]

16th and 17th centuries edit

With the decay of the feudal system and the military revolution of the 16th century, the militia began to become an important institution in English life. It was organised on the basis of the shire county, and was one of the responsibilities of the Lord Lieutenant, a royal official (usually a trusted nobleman). Each of the county hundreds was likewise the responsibility of a Deputy Lieutenant, who relayed orders to the justices of the peace or magistrates. Every parish furnished a quota of eligible men, whose names were recorded on muster rolls. Likewise, each household was assessed for the purpose of finding weapons, armour, horses, or their financial equivalent, according to their status. The militia was supposed to be mustered for training purposes from time to time, but this was rarely done. The militia regiments were consequently ill-prepared for an emergency, and could not be relied upon to serve outside their own counties. This state of affairs concerned many people. Consequently, an elite force was created, composed of members of the militia who were prepared to meet regularly for military training and exercise. These were formed into trained band regiments, particularly in the City of London, where the Artillery Ground was used for training. The trained bands performed an important role in the English Civil War on the side of parliament, in marching to raise the siege of Gloucester (5 September 1643). Except for the London trained bands, both sides in the Civil War made little use of the militia, preferring to recruit their armies by other means.[citation needed]

Militia in the English Empire and the British Empire edit

 
Captain John Smith's 1624 map of the Somers Isles (Bermuda), showing St. George's Town and related fortifications, including the Castle Islands Fortifications with their garrisons of militia infantry and volunteer artillery.

As successful English settlement of North America began to take place in 1607 in the face of the hostile intentions of the powerful Spanish, and of the native populations, it became immediately necessary to raise militia amongst the settlers. The militia in Jamestown saw constant action against the Powhatan Federation and other native polities. In the Virginia Company's other outpost, Bermuda, fortification began immediately in 1612. A Spanish attack in 1614 was repulsed by two shots fired from the incomplete Castle Islands Fortifications manned by Bermudian Militiamen. In the Nineteenth century, Fortress Bermuda would become Britain's Gibraltar of the West, heavily fortified by a Regular Army garrison to protect the Royal Navy's headquarters and dockyard in the Western Atlantic.

In the 17th Century, however, Bermuda's defence was left entirely in the hands of the Militia. In addition to requiring all male civilians to train and serve in the militia of their Parish, the Bermudian Militia included a standing body of trained artillerymen to garrison the numerous fortifications which ringed New London (St. George's). This standing body was created by recruiting volunteers, and by sentencing criminals to serve as punishment. The Bermudian militiamen were called out on numerous occasions of war, and, on one notable occasion, to quell rioting privateers. The 1707 Acts of Union made Bermudian and other English militiamen British. The Militia in Bermuda came to include a Troop of Horse (mounted infantry) and served alongside volunteers and (from 1701) a small body of regulars. The Militia faded away after the American War of 1812 when the Parliament of Bermuda declined to renew the Militia Act. This resulted from the build-up of the regular army Bermuda Garrison along with Bermuda's development as the headquarters and dockyard of the North America and West Indies Station of the Royal Navy, which made the militia seem excess to need. Vast sums of the Imperial defence expenditure were lavished on fortifying Bermuda during the Nineteenth Century and the British Government cajoled, implored, begged, and threatened the colonial legislature for 80 years before it raised a militia and volunteer units (in 1894 and 1894 respectively). Although the militia had historically been an infantry force, many units in Britain had been re-tasked as militia artillery from the 1850s onward due to the increased importance of the coastal artillery defences and the new militia unit in Bermuda followed suit. Titled the Bermuda Militia Artillery, it was badged and uniformed as part of the Royal Artillery, and tasked with the garrison artillery role, manning coastal batteries. As in Britain, recruitment was of volunteers who engaged for terms of service, whereas the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps was organised on the same lines as volunteer rifle corps in Britain. Recruitment to the BVRC was restricted to whites, but the BMA recruited primarily coloured (those who were not entirely of European heritage) other ranks, though its officers were all white until 1953. Neither unit was reorganised in 1908 when the Militia, Volunteer Force and Yeomanry in Britain merged into the Territorial Force, but the BVRC was re-organised as a territorial in 1921 and the BMA in 1926. The BVRC name was not modified to Bermuda Rifles until 1951, however, and the Bermuda Militia Artillery (and from 1939 the Bermuda Militia Infantry) continued to be titled as militia until amalgamated with the Bermuda Rifles in 1965 to form the Bermuda Regiment.

In British India, a special class of militia was established in 1907. This took the form of the Frontier Corps, which consisted of locally recruited full-time auxiliaries under British officers. Their role combined the functions of tribal police and border guards deployed along the North-West Frontier. Regional units included the Zhob Militia, the Kurram Militia, and the Chagai Militia. After 1946 the Frontier Corps became part of the modern Pakistan Army.

Political issues edit

Until the Glorious Revolution in 1688 the Crown and Parliament were in strong disagreement. The English Civil War left a rather unusual military legacy. Both Whigs and Tories distrusted the creation of a large standing army not under civilian control. The former feared that it would be used as an instrument of royal tyranny. The latter had memories of the New Model Army and the anti-monarchical social and political revolution that it brought about. Both preferred a small standing army under civilian control for defensive deterrence and to prosecute foreign wars, a large navy as the first line of national defence, and a militia composed of their neighbours as additional defence and to preserve domestic order.[citation needed]

Consequently, the English Bill of Rights (1689) declared, amongst other things: "that the raising or keeping a standing army within the kingdom in time of peace, unless it be with consent of Parliament, is against law..." and "that the subjects which are Protestants may have arms for their defence suitable to their conditions and as allowed by law." This implies that they are fitted to serve in the militia, which was intended to serve as a counterweight to the standing army and preserve civil liberties against the use of the army by a tyrannical monarch or government.

The Crown still (in the British constitution) controls the use of the army. This ensures that officers and enlisted men swear an oath to a politically neutral head of state, and not to a politician. While the funding of the standing army subsists on annual financial votes by parliament, the Mutiny Act, superseded by the Army Act, and now the Armed Forces Act is also renewed on an annual basis by Parliament.[citation needed] If it lapses, the legal basis for enforcing discipline disappears, and soldiers lose their legal indemnity for acts committed under orders.[citation needed]

With the creation of the British Empire, militias were also raised in the colonies, where little support could be provided by regular forces. Overseas militias were first raised in Jamestown, Virginia, and in Bermuda, where the Bermuda Militia followed over the next two centuries a similar trajectory to that in Britain.

18th century and the Acts of Union edit

In 1707 the Acts of Union united the Kingdom of England with the Kingdom of Scotland. The Scottish navy was incorporated into the Royal Navy. The Scottish military (as opposed to naval) forces merged with the English, with pre-existing regular Scottish regiments maintaining their identities, though command of the new British Army was from England. How this affected militias either side of the border is unclear.

British Militia edit

 
A review of the Northampton Militia. Formed in 1763, its men were selected by ballot to serve for a period of time.

The Militia Act 1757 created a more professional force. Better records were kept, and the men were selected by ballot to serve for longer periods; specific provision was made for members of the Religious Society of Friends, Quakers, to be exempted, as conscientious objectors, from compulsory enlistment in the militia. Proper uniforms and better weapons were provided, and the force was 'embodied' from time to time for training sessions.

The militia was widely embodied at various times during the French and Napoleonic Wars. It served at several vulnerable locations, and was particularly stationed on the South Coast and in Ireland. A number of camps were held at Brighton, where the militia regiments were reviewed by the Prince Regent. (This is the origin of the song "Brighton Camp".) The militia could not be compelled to serve overseas, but it was seen as a training reserve for the army, as bounties were offered to men who opted to 'exchange' from the militia to the regular army.[citation needed]

Irish militia edit

The Parliament of Ireland passed an act in 1715 raising regiments of militia in each county and county corporate. Membership was restricted to Protestants between the ages of 16 and 60. In 1793, during the Napoleonic Wars, the Irish militia were reorganised to form thirty-seven county and city regiments. While officers of the reorganised force were Protestant, membership of the other ranks was now made available to members of all denominations.[citation needed]

Scottish militia edit

In the late 17th century, numerous individuals in the Kingdom of Scotland (then in a personal union with the Kingdom of England) called for the resurrection of a Scottish militia, with the understated aim of protecting the rights of Scots in Great Britain.[113] After Scotland became part of the Kingdom of Great Britain, the Militia Act 1757 did not apply there. The traditional Scottish militia system continued, with only certain settlements in Scotland playing host to a militia regiment. This was viewed with resentment among some in Scotland, and the Militia Club was formed to promote the raising of a Scottish militia. The Militia Club, along with several other Scottish gentlemen's clubs became the crucible of the Scottish Enlightenment. The Militia Act 1797 empowered Scottish Lord Lieutenants to raise and command militia regiments in each of the "Counties, Stewartries, Cities, and Places" under their jurisdiction.[citation needed]

19th century edit

Although muster rolls were prepared as late as 1820, the element of compulsion was abandoned, and the militia transformed into a volunteer force, revived by the Militia Act 1852. It was intended to be seen as an alternative to the regular army. Men would volunteer and undertake basic training for several months at an army depot. Thereafter, they would return to civilian life, but report for regular periods of military training (usually on the weapons ranges) and an annual two-week training camp. In return, they would receive military pay and a financial retainer, a useful addition to their civilian wage. Of course, many saw the annual camp as the equivalent of a paid holiday. The militia thus appealed to agricultural labourers, colliers and the like, men in casual occupations, who could leave their civilian job and pick it up again. Until 1852 the militia were an entirely infantry force, but from that year a number of county infantry regiments were converted to artillery and new ones raised. In 1877 the militia of Anglesey and Monmouthshire were converted to engineers. Under the reforms, introduced by Secretary of State for War Hugh Childers in 1881, the remaining militia infantry regiments were re-designated as numbered battalions of regiments of the line, ranking after the two regular battalions. Typically, an English, Welsh or Scottish regiment would have two militia battalions (the 3rd and 4th) and Irish regiments three (numbered 3rd–5th).

The militia must not be confused with the volunteer units created in a wave of enthusiasm in the second half of the nineteenth century. In contrast with the Volunteer Force, and the similar Yeomanry Cavalry, they were considered rather plebeian.

The Special Reserve edit

 
Recruitment poster for the British Territorial Army during World War II. The reserve force was formed after the militias were reorganized in 1907.

The militia was transformed into the Special Reserve by the military reforms of Haldane in the reforming post 1906 Liberal government. In 1908 the militia infantry battalions were redesignated as "reserve" and a number were amalgamated or disbanded. Numbered Territorial Force battalions, ranking after the Special Reserve, were formed from the volunteer units at the same time. Altogether, 101 infantry battalions, 33 artillery regiments and two engineer regiments of special reservists were formed.[114] Upon mobilisation, the special reserve units would be formed at the depot and continue training while guarding vulnerable points in Britain. The special reserve units remained in Britain throughout the First World War, but their rank and file did not, since the object of the special reserve was to supply drafts of replacements for the overseas units of the regiment. The original militiamen soon disappeared, and the battalions simply became training units. The Special Reserve reverted to its militia designation in 1921, then to Supplementary Reserve in 1924, though the units were effectively placed in "suspended animation" until disbanded in 1953.

The militiamen edit

The name was briefly revived in the Military Training Act 1939, in the aftermath of the Munich Crisis. Leslie Hore-Belisha, Secretary of State for War, wished to introduce a limited form of conscription, not known in peacetime Britain since the militia of the early 19th century and previously. It was thought that calling the conscripts 'militiamen' would make this more acceptable, as it would render them distinct from the rest of the army. Only single men aged 20 up to the day before their 22nd birthday were to be conscripted, for six months full-time training before discharge into the reserve (with a free suit of civilian clothing). Although the first intake was called up in late July 1939, the declaration of war on 3 September entailed implementation of full-time conscription for all men aged 18–41, superseding the militia, never to be revived.

Modern survivals edit

 
A non-commissioned officer of the Royal Militia of the Island of Jersey. The unit is one of two regiments in the Territorial Army that maintain their militia designation.

Three units still maintain their militia designation in the British Army. These are the Royal Monmouthshire Royal Engineers (formed in 1539), the Jersey Field Squadron (The Royal Militia Island of Jersey) (formed in 1337), and the Royal Alderney Militia (created in the 13th century and reformed in 1984). Additionally, the Atholl Highlanders are a ceremonial infantry militia maintained by the Duke of Atholl—they are the only legal private army in Europe.

Other British militias edit

Various other part-time, home defence organisations have been raised during times of crisis or perceived threat, although without the word "militia" in their title. These have included:

The Troubles and Irish War of Independence edit

The various non-state paramilitary groups involved in the 20th-century conflicts in Northern Ireland and the island of Ireland, such as the various Irish Republican Army groups and loyalist paramilitaries, could also be described as militias and are occasionally referred to as such.

The Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR) was a locally raised professional militia instituted by an Act of Parliament in December 1969, becoming operational on 1 April 1970. Created as a non-partisan force to defend Northern Ireland "against armed attack or sabotage", it eventually peaked at 11 battalions with 7,559 men and women. 197 soldiers of the UDR were killed as active servicemen, with a further 61 killed after leaving the regiment, mostly by the Provisional Irish Republican Army. As a result of defence cuts it was eventually reduced to 7 battalions before being amalgamated with the Royal Irish Rangers in 1992 to form the "Home Service Battalions" of the Royal Irish Regiment.

United States edit

The history of militia in the United States dates from the colonial era, such as in the American Revolutionary War.[115] Based on the English system, colonial militias were drawn from the body of adult male citizens of a community, town, or local region. Because there was no standing English Army before the English Civil War, and subsequently the English Army and later the British Army had few regulars garrisoning North America, colonial militia served a vital role in local conflicts, particularly in the French and Indian Wars. Before shooting began in the American War of Independence, American revolutionaries took control of the militia system, reinvigorating training and excluding men with Loyalist inclinations.[116] Regulation of the militia was codified by the Second Continental Congress with the Articles of Confederation. The revolutionaries also created a full-time regular army—the Continental Army—but, because of manpower shortages, the militia provided short-term support to the regulars in the field throughout the war.

In colonial era Anglo-American usage, militia service was distinguished from military service in that the latter was normally a commitment for a fixed period of time of at least a year, for a salary, whereas militia was only to meet a threat, or prepare to meet a threat, for periods of time expected to be short. Militia persons were normally expected to provide their own weapons, equipment, or supplies, although they may later be compensated for losses or expenditures.[117] A related concept is the jury, which can be regarded as a specialized form of militia convened to render a verdict in a court proceeding (known as a petit jury or trial jury) or to investigate a public matter and render a presentment or indictment (grand jury).[118]

With the Constitutional Convention of 1787 and Article 1 Section 8 of the United States Constitution, control of the army and the power to direct the militia of the states was concurrently delegated to the federal Congress.[119] The Militia Clauses gave Congress authority for "organizing, arming, and disciplining" the militia, and "governing such Part of them as may be employed in the Service of the United States", and the States retained authority to appoint officers and to impose the training specified by Congress. Proponents describe a key element in the concept of "militia" was that to be "genuine" it not be a "select militia", composed of an unrepresentative subset of the population. This was an argument presented in the ratification debates.[120]

The first legislation on the subject was the Militia Act of 1792 which provided, in part:

That each and every free able-bodied white male citizen of the respective States, resident therein, who is or shall be of age of eighteen years, and under the age of forty-five years (except as is herein after excepted) shall severally and respectively be enrolled in the militia,... every citizen, so enrolled and notified, shall, within six months thereafter, provide himself with a good musket or firelock.

Prior to the War of Independence, the officers of militia units were commissioned by the royal governors. During the war, they were commissioned either by the legislature or the chief executive of the state. After the war, commissions were typically granted by the state's chief executive. Militias did not operate independently of the state governments but were under the command of the civil government just like the regular military forces.[121] Twenty-four of the current US states maintain state defense forces in the form of a constitutional militia in addition to the National Guard which is shared with the US government. These states include Alabama, Alaska, California, Connecticut, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Vermont, and Virginia. In addition, the Territory of Puerto Rico has a defense force.

19th century edit

 
Uniformed American militiamen during the American Civil War.

During the nineteenth century, each of the states maintained its militia differently, some more than others. American militia saw action in the various Indian Wars, the War of 1812, the American Civil War, and the Spanish–American War. Sometimes militia units were found to be unprepared, ill-supplied, and unwilling.[119][122][123] Prior to the Civil War, militia units were sometimes used by southern states for slave control. Formed in 1860, Republican Party-affiliated Wide Awakes clubs were quick to take action to defend persons against southern slave-hunters.[124] In California, the militia carried out campaigns against bandits and against the Indians at the direction of its Governor between 1850 and 1866. During Reconstruction after the Civil War, Republican state governments had militias composed almost entirely of freed slaves and populist whites. Their deployment to maintain order in the former Confederate states caused increased resentment among many Southern whites.[125]

After the American Civil War, secret groups like the Ku Klux Klan and Knights of the White Camellia arose quickly across the South, reaching a peak in the late 1860s. Even more significant in terms of effect were private militias: paramilitary organizations that formed starting in 1874, including the White League in Louisiana, which quickly formed chapters in other states; the Red Shirts in Mississippi in 1875, and with force in[clarification needed] South Carolina and North Carolina; and other "white line" militias and rifle clubs.

In contrast to the KKK, these paramilitary organizations were open; members were often well known in their communities. Nevertheless, they used force, intimidation, and violence, including murder, to push out Republican officeholders, break up organizing, and suppress freedmen's voting and civil rights.[126] The paramilitary groups were described as "the military arm of the Democratic Party" and were instrumental in helping secure Democratic victories in the South in the elections of 1876.[127]

20th century edit

 
Members of the United States National Guard undergoing self-defense training. The force was created in 1903 as an organized militia.

The Militia Act of 1903 divided what had been the militia into what it termed the "organized" militia, created from portions of the former state guards to become state National Guard units, and the "unorganized" militia consisting of all males from ages 17 to 45, with the exception of certain officials and others, which is codified in 10 U.S.C. § 311. Some states, such as Texas, California, and Ohio, created separate state defense forces for assistance in local emergencies. Congress later established[128] a system of "dual enlistment" for the National Guard, so that anyone who enlisted in the National Guard also enlisted in the U.S. Army.[129] When the U.S. Air Force was established as an independent service in 1947, the National Guard was further divided into the Army National Guard and the Air National Guard. Under this construct, the 1933 defense act's "dual enlistment" facet was further amended so that enlisted soldiers and commissioned officers in the Army National Guard were also enlisted or commissioned in the Reserve Component of the U.S. Army. Enlisted airmen and commissioned officers in the Air National Guard were also enlisted or commissioned in the Air Reserve Component (ARC) of the U.S. Air Force.[citation needed]

The 20th century saw the rise of militia organizations in the United States, these private militias often have an anti-government outlook and are not under the civil authority of the states. Privately organized citizen militia-related groups blossomed in the mid-1990s. Many militia groups are based on religious or political extremism and some are regarded as hate groups.[130]

21st century edit

In the 2008 decision of the Supreme Court, in District of Columbia v. Heller, the de jure definition of "militia" as used in United States jurisprudence was discussed. The Court's opinion made explicit, in its obiter dicta, that the term "militia", as used in colonial times in this originalist decision, included both the federally organized militia and the citizen-organized militias of the several States: "... the 'militia' in colonial America consisted of a subset of 'the people'—those who were male, able-bodied, and within a certain age range" (7)... Although the militia consists of all able-bodied men, the federally-organized militia may consist of a subset of them"(23).[131]

Active militias edit

Texas edit

 
Basic orientation for the Texas State Guard. The Guard is a state defense force, military units under the sole authority of the state government.

The most important previous activity of the Texas Militia was the Texas Revolution in 1836. Texans declared independence from Mexico while they were defeated during the Battle of the Alamo, in March 1836. On April 21, 1836, led by Sam Houston, the Militia attacked the Mexican Army at their camp, in the Battle of San Jacinto near the present city of Houston. Following the war, some militia units reorganized into what was later to be known as the Texas Rangers, which was a private, volunteer effort for several years before becoming an official organization. After Texas joined the Union of the United States in 1845, Texas militia units participated in the Mexican–American War.

In 1861 Texas joined the other Confederate States in seceding from the Union, and Texas militias played a role in the American Civil War until it ended in 1865. Texas militiamen joined Theodore Roosevelt's Rough Riders, a volunteer militia, and fought with him during the Spanish–American War in 1898. Some of the training of the Rough Riders took place in San Pedro Park, in the north-central part of San Antonio near the present site of San Antonio College. When a muster of the Militia proposed to train there on April 19, 1994, they were threatened with arrest, even though the charter of San Pedro Park forbids exclusion of activities of that kind. This threat led to a change in the meeting site. Like many other American states, Texas maintains a recognized State Militia, the Texas State Guard.

Vietnam edit

The Dân quân tự vệ (Self-Defence Militia) is a part of Vietnam People's Armed Forces. The militia organized in communes, wards and townships and is put under commune-level military commands.

The Self-Defence Militia has two branches: Dân quân tự vệ nòng cốt (Core Self-Defence Militia) and Dân quân tự vệ rộng rãi (General Self-Defence Militia). The term of service in the Core Militia is 4 years.[132]

SFR Yugoslavia edit

Beside the federal Yugoslav People's Army, each constituent republic of the former SFR Yugoslavia had its own Territorial Defense Forces. The Non-Aligned Yugoslavia was concerned about eventual aggression from any of the superpowers, especially by the Warsaw Pact after the Prague Spring, so the Territorial Defense Forces were formed as an integral part of the total war military doctrine called Total National Defense. Those forces corresponded to military reserve forces, paramilitary or militia, the latter, in the military meaning of the term (like military formation). It should not be confused with the Yugoslav Militia- Milicija which was a term for a police.

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

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Sources edit

  • ACLED (2015), "Real-Time Analysis of African Political Violence", January 2015, Conflict Trends 33, http://www.acleddata.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/ACLED-Conflict-Trends-Report-No.-33-January-2015_updated.pdf
  • Ahrem, Ariel (2011), Proxy Warriors: The Rise and Fall of State Sponsored Militias, (Stanford, Stanford University Press).
  • Jones, Rebecca (2008), 'State Failure and Extra-legal Justice; Vigilant groups, civil militias, and the rule of law in West Africa', UNHCR, New Issues in Refugee Research. http://www.refworld.org/pdfid/4c23256dd.pdf
  • Raleigh, Clionadh (2014), "Pragmatic and Promiscuous: Explaining the Rise of Competitive Political Militias across Africa", Journal of Conflict Resolution, pp. 1–28.
  • Sumner, William Hyslop, An Inquiry Into the Importance of the Militia to a Free Commonwealth: In a Letter from William H. Sumner... to John Adams, Late President of the United States; with His Answer, Cummings and Hilliard, Boston, 1823

Further reading edit

  • Aliyev, Huseyn (Jan. 2019) "When and How Do Militias Disband? Global Patterns of Pro-Government Militia Demobilization in Civil Wars. Studies in Conflict & Terrorism 42/8: 715–734. DOI: 10.1080/1057610X.2018.1425112
  • Bledsoe, Andrew S. Citizen-Officers: The Union and Confederate Volunteer Junior Officer Corps in the American Civil War. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press, 2015. ISBN 978-0-8071-6070-1.
  • Churchill, Robert H. To Shake Their Guns in the Tyrant's Face,University of Michigan Press 2012-11-14 at the Wayback Machine, 2009. ISBN 978-0-472-11682-9.
  • Cooper, Jerry M. The rise of the National Guard: the evolution of the American militia, 1865–1920. Studies in war, society, and the military, v. 1. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. 1998 ISBN 0-8032-1486-3
  • Galvin, John R. The Minute Men – The First Fight: Myths and Realities of the American Revolution, Brasseys, 1996 ISBN 1-57488-049-7
  • Hay, George J. The Constitutional Force, 1908 (reprinted by Ray Westlake Military Books, 1987). ISBN 0-9508530-7-0.
  • Smith, Joshua M. "The Yankee Soldier's Might: The District of Maine and the Reputation of the Massachusetts Militia, 1800–1812," in New England Quarterly LXXXIV no. 2, pp. 234–264, 2011.
  • Whisker, James B. The Rise and Decline of the American Militia System, Susquehanna University Press, 1999 ISBN 0-945636-92-X

militia, other, uses, disambiguation, citizen, soldier, redirects, here, other, uses, citizen, soldier, disambiguation, militia, generally, army, some, other, fighting, organization, professional, part, time, soldiers, citizens, country, subjects, state, perfo. For other uses see Militia disambiguation Citizen soldier redirects here For other uses see Citizen Soldier disambiguation A militia m ɪ ˈ l ɪ ʃ e 1 is generally an army or some other fighting organization of non professional and or part time soldiers citizens of a country or subjects of a state who may perform military service during a time of need as opposed to a professional force of regular full time military personnel or historically to members of a warrior nobility class e g knights or samurai When acting independently militias are generally unable to hold ground against regular forces militias commonly support regular troops by skirmishing holding fortifications or conducting irregular warfare instead of undertaking offensive campaigns by themselves Local civilian laws often limit militias to serve only in their home region and to serve only for a limited time this further reduces their use in long military campaigns Militias may also however serve as a pool of available manpower for regular forces to draw from particularly in emergencies The Hempstead Rifles a volunteer militia company from Arkadelphia Arkansas 1861Beginning in the late 20th century some militias in particular officially recognized and sanctioned militias of a government act as professional forces while still being part time or on call organizations For instance the members of United States National Guard units are considered professional soldiers as they are trained to the same standards that their full time active duty counterparts are 2 Militias thus can be either military or paramilitary depending on the instance Some of the contexts in which the term militia can apply include forces engaged in a defense activity or service to protect a community its territory property and laws 3 the entire able bodied population of a community town county or state available to be called to arms a subset of these who may be legally penalized for failing to respond to a call up a subset of these who actually respond to a call up regardless of legal obligation a private non governmental force not necessarily directly supported or sanctioned by a government an irregular armed force that enables its leader to exercise military economic or political control over a subnational territory within a sovereign state in Russia and some countries of the former Soviet Union an official reserve army composed of citizen soldiers known as the militsiya a select militia composed of a small non representative portion of the population 4 maritime militias composed of fishermen and other participants of the marine industry which are organized and sanctioned by a state to enforce its maritime boundaries 5 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Afghanistan 3 Andorra 4 Argentina 5 Armenia 6 Australia 7 Austria 8 Bahrain 9 Belgium 10 Brazil 11 Canada 12 China 13 Cuba 14 Denmark 15 Estonia 16 Ethiopia 17 Finland 18 France 19 Germany 20 India 21 Iran 22 Iraq 23 Israel 24 Latvia 25 Libya 26 Mexico 27 Montenegro 28 Netherlands 29 New Zealand 30 North Korea 31 Norway 32 Pakistan 33 Portugal 34 Russia and the Soviet Union 35 Sri Lanka 36 Sudan 37 Sweden 38 Switzerland 39 Syria 40 United Kingdom 40 1 Origins 40 2 16th and 17th centuries 40 3 Militia in the English Empire and the British Empire 40 4 Political issues 40 5 18th century and the Acts of Union 40 5 1 British Militia 40 5 2 Irish militia 40 5 3 Scottish militia 40 6 19th century 40 7 The Special Reserve 40 8 The militiamen 40 9 Modern survivals 40 10 Other British militias 40 11 The Troubles and Irish War of Independence 41 United States 41 1 19th century 41 2 20th century 41 3 21st century 41 3 1 Active militias 41 4 Texas 42 Vietnam 43 SFR Yugoslavia 44 See also 45 References 45 1 Citations 45 2 Sources 46 Further readingEtymology editMilitia derives from Latin roots miles miːles soldier 6 itia iːtia a state activity quality or condition of being 7 8 militia mil iːtia Military service 6 The word militia dates back to ancient Rome and more recently to at least 1590 when it was recorded in a book by Sir John Smythe Certain Discourses Military with the meanings a military force a body of soldiers and military affairs a body of military discipline 9 The word Militia comes from ancient Latin in which it meant defense service as distinguished from a body of armed defenders which would be volgus militum The term is used by several countries with the meaning of defense activity indicating it is taken directly from Latin Afghanistan editMilitias have been used throughout the history of Afghanistan Afghan Militias and irregular forces have contributed significantly to the military history of the country and affected the process of state formation 10 Andorra editAndorra has a small army which has historically been raised or reconstituted at various dates but has never in modern times amounted to a standing army The basic principle of Andorran defence is that all able bodied men are available to fight if called upon by the sounding of the Sometent Being a landlocked country Andorra has no navy Before World War I Andorra maintained an armed militia force of about 600 part time militiamen under the supervision of a Captain Capita or Cap de Sometent and a Lieutenant Desener or Lloctinent del Capita This body was not liable for service outside the principality and was commanded by two officials veguers appointed by France and the Bishop of Urgell 11 In the modern era the army has consisted of a very small body of volunteers willing to undertake ceremonial duties Uniforms and weaponry were handed down from generation to generation within families and communities 12 The army s role in internal security was largely taken over by the formation of the Police Corps of Andorra in 1931 Brief civil disorder associated with the elections of 1933 led to assistance being sought from the French National Gendarmerie 13 with a detachment resident in Andorra for two months under the command of Rene Jules Baulard citation needed The Andorran Police was reformed in the following year with eleven soldiers appointed to supervisory roles 14 The force consisted of six Corporals one for each parish although there are currently seven parishes there were only six until 1978 plus four junior staff officers to co ordinate action and a commander with the rank of major It was the responsibility of the six corporals each in his own parish to be able to raise a fighting force from among the able bodied men of the parish Today a small twelve man ceremonial unit remains the only permanent section of the Sometent but all able bodied men remain technically available for military service 15 with a requirement for each family to have access to a firearm An area weapon such as a Shotgun per household is unregulated however ranged weapons such as Pistols and Rifles require a license 12 The army has not fought for more than 700 years and its main responsibility is to present the flag of Andorra at official ceremonial functions 16 17 According to Marc Forne Molne Andorra s military budget is strictly from voluntary donations and the availability of full time volunteers 18 In more recent times there has only been a general emergency call to the popular army of Sometent during the floods of 1982 in the Catalan Pyrenees 19 where 12 citizens perished in Andorra to help the population and establish a public order along with the Local Police units 20 Argentina editIn the early 1800s Buenos Aires which was by then the capital of the Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata was attacked during the British invasions of the Rio de la Plata As regular military forces were insufficient to counter the British attackers Santiago de Liniers drafted all males in the city capable of bearing arms into the military These recruits included the criollo peoples who ranked low down in the social hierarchy as well as some slaves With these reinforcements the British armies were twice defeated 21 The militias became a strong factor in the politics of the city afterwards as a springboard from which the criollos could manifest their political ambitions 22 They were a key element in the success of the May Revolution which deposed the Spanish viceroy and began the Argentine War of Independence A decree by Mariano Moreno derogated the system of promotions involving criollos clarification needed meaning unclear allowing instead their promotion on military merit The Argentine Civil War was waged by militias again as both federalists and unitarians drafted common people into their ranks as part of ongoing conflicts These irregular armies were organized at a provincial level and assembled as leagues depending on political pacts 23 This system had declined by the 1870s mainly due to the establishment of the modern Argentine Army drafted for the Paraguayan War by President Bartolome Mitre 24 Provincial militias were outlawed and decimated by the new army throughout the presidential terms of Mitre Sarmiento Avellaneda and Roca 25 Armenia edit nbsp Armenian fedayi were Armenian irregular militia formed in the late 19th and early 20th century to defend Armenian villages Main article Armenian irregular units Armenian militia or fedayi played a major role in the independence of various Armenian states including Western Armenia the First Republic of Armenia and the Republic of Artsakh Armenian militia also played a role in the Georgia Abkhazia War of 1992 1993 Australia editIn the Colony of New South Wales Governor Lachlan Macquarie proposed a colonial militia but the idea was rejected Governor Ralph Darling felt a mounted police force was more efficient than a militia A military volunteer movement attracted wide interest during the Crimean War 26 Following Federation the various military reserve forces of the Commonwealth of Australia became the Citizen Military Force CMF A citizens militia modeled on the British Home Guard called the Volunteer Defence Corps VDC was founded by the Returned and Services League of Australia RSL in 1940 in response to the possibility of a Japanese invasion of Australia In the beginning members didn t have uniforms and often paraded in business attire They were given instruction on guerrilla warfare and later the private organization was taken over by the Australian Government and became part of the Australian Military Forces AMF The government supported the organization and equipped them with anti aircraft artillery however they were disbanded by the end of World War II due to the fact that there was no longer a significant threat to national security Austria editSee also Republikanischer Schutzbund and Heimwehr This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Republikanischer Schutzbund was an Austrian militia formed in 1923 one of several militias formed in post World War I Austria During the Revolutions of 1848 in the Austrian Empire a National Guard was established in Vienna A separate but related Academic Legion was composed mainly of students in the capital city After World War I multiple militias formed as soldiers returned home to their villages only to find many of them occupied by Slovene and Yugoslav forces Especially in the southern province of Carinthia the Volkswehr Peoples Defense Force was formed to fight the occupant forces During the First Republic similar to the development in Germany increasing radicalization of politics led to certain paramilitary militias associating with certain political parties The Heimwehr German Home Defense became affiliated with the Christian Social Party and the Republikanischer Schutzbund German Republican Defense League became affiliated with the Social Democratic Workers Party of Austria Violence increasingly escalated breaking out during the July Revolt of 1927 and finally the Austrian Civil War when the Schutzbund was defeated by the Heimwehr police Gendarmerie and Austrian Armed Forces After World War II the Austrian Armed Forces Bundesheer were reestablished as a conscript military force A basic part of it is the militia which is a regular reservists force of the Bundesheer comparable to the national guard units of the United States The conscript soldiers of the militia have to store their military equipment at home to be mobilized quite fast within a few days in case of emergency The system was established during the Cold War and still exists but the members of the militia now are volunteers only Bahrain editIn Bahrain emergence of a small militia group Katibat al Haydariyah was first seen in 2015 During the year total four attacks were claimed by the group including on August 22 and 24 2015 in Muharraq on September 10 2015 in Al Khamis and on October 9 2015 on Bahraini forces in the Al Juffair region Katibat al Haydariyah is its own distinct organization that decries the Bahraini government but Canada and the United Kingdom listed it as an alias for the larger Al Ashtar Brigades or the Saraya al Ashtar After four years the militia group reemerged on social media in October 2019 to threaten new attacks on the island It stated that they will not retreat from our goals of the downfall of the Al Khalifa entity and that soon guns will open their mouths and they will hear the whiz of bullets 27 Belgium editMain article Belgian Civil Guard The Garde Civique or Burgerwacht French and Dutch Civic Guard was a Belgian paramilitary militia which existed between 1830 and 1920 Created in October 1830 shortly after the Belgian Revolution the Guard amalgamated the various militia groups which had been created by the middle classes to protect property during the political uncertainty Its role was as a quasi military gendarmerie with the primary role of maintaining social order within Belgium Increasingly anachronistic it was demobilised in 1914 and officially disbanded in 1920 following a disappointing performance during the German invasion of Belgium in World War I Brazil editFurther information Brazilian militias In Brazil the word milicia is heavily associated with paramilitary and drug related criminal groups Canada editMain article Canadian Militia See also Canadian units of the War of 1812 and Colonial militia in Canada nbsp Depiction of the 2nd Regiment of York Militia during the Battle of Queenston Heights The regiment was one of several Canadian militia units during the War of 1812 In Canada the title Militia historically referred to the land component of the armed forces both regular full time and reserve The earliest Canadian militias date from the beginning of the French colonial period In New France King Louis XIV created a compulsory militia of settlers in every parish that supported French authorities in the defence and expansion of the colony Following the British conquest of New France in 1760 local militia units supported British Army regiments stationed in British America and after the secession of thirteen continental colonies in the American War of Independence British North America In addition to the Canadian militia British regiments were also supported by locally raised regulars including the 40th Regiment of Foot and the 100th Prince of Wales s Royal Canadian Regiment of Foot and Fencibles regiments These regiments were raised through ordinary modes of recruiting as opposed to being raised by ballot like the militia Most militia units were only activated in time of war but remained inactive in between The battle honours awarded to these colonial militia regiments are perpetuated by modern regiments within the Canadian Army Defence of the Canadas long relied on a contingent of British soldiers as well as support from the Royal Navy However the Crimean War saw the diversion of a significant number of British soldiers from British North America Fearing possible incursions from the United States the Parliament of the Province of Canada passed the Militia Act of 1855 creating the Active Militia 28 The Active Militia later splitting into the Permanent Active Militia PAM a full time professional army component although it continued to use the label militia and Non Permanent Active Militia NPAM a military reserve force for the Canadian militia 29 Following 1855 the traditional sedentary militia was reorganized into the Reserve Militia with its last enrolment taking place in 1873 and was formally abolished in 1950 Prior to Canadian Confederation the colonies that made up the Maritimes and Newfoundland maintained their own militias independent of the Canadian Militia Bermuda part of British North America and militarily subordinate to the Commander in Chief of the Maritimes 30 allowed its militia to lapse following the American War of 1812 31 United States Independence however elevated Bermuda to the status of an Imperial fortress and it would be strongly defended by the regular army 32 33 34 35 and left out of the confederation of Canada 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 From 1853 to 1871 the Colony of Vancouver Island and the succeeding Colony of British Columbia periodically raised and disbanded militia units These units were raised for specific purposes or in response to a specific threat real or perceived 44 nbsp Uniforms of the Canadian Militia in 1898 The force included the Permanent Active Militia a full time professional land force which became the Canadian Army in 1940 After the Treaty of Washington was signed between the Americans and British nearly all remaining British soldiers were withdrawn from Canada in November 1871 45 The departure of the majority of British forces in Canada made the Canadian militia the only major land forces available in Canada In 1940 both components of the militia PAM and NPAM were reorganized the former into Canadian Army Active the latter into the Canadian Army Reserve nbsp A church parade of the 13th Royal Regiment Canadian Militia in Hamilton Ontario Canada in 1915In addition to the various colonial militia units and the regiments of the Canadian militia in 1942 the Army s Pacific Command created the Pacific Coast Militia Rangers Intended to function similarly to the United Kingdom s Home Guard the Rangers were a secondary defence force defending the coast of British Columbia and Yukon from potential Japanese attack 46 The Rangers were disbanded in September 1945 shortly after the conclusion of World War II The legacy of the Pacific Coast Militia Rangers is perpetuated by the Canadian Rangers a component of the Primary Reserve that provides a military presence in areas where it would not be economically or practically viable to have conventional Army units most notably northern Canada The Canadian Army Reserve continued to use the term militia in reference to itself until the unification of the Canadian Armed Forces in 1968 Since unification no Canadian military force has formally used militia in its name However the Canadian Army Reserve is still colloquially referred to as the militia 47 48 Members of the Canadian Army Reserve troops typically train one night a week and every other weekend of the month except in the summer Summertime training may consist of courses individual call outs or concentrations unit and formation training of one to two weeks duration Most Canadian cities and counties have one or more militia units Primary Reserve members may volunteer for overseas service to augment their regular force counterparts usually during NATO or United Nations missions China editMain articles Paramilitary forces of China People s Armed Forces Maritime Militia and Militia China China s current militia falls under the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party CCP and forms part of the Chinese armed forces Under the command of the military organs it undertakes such jobs as war preparation services security and defense operational tasks and assistance in maintaining social order and public security 49 Historically militias of varying levels of ability have existed in China organized on a village and clan level especially during periods of instability and in areas subject to pirate and bandit attack When the British attempted to take control of the New Territories in 1898 they were resisted by the local militias which had been formed for mutual defence against pirate raids Although ultimately defeated the militias dogged resistance convinced the British to make concessions to the indigenous inhabitants allowing them to preserve inheritance property and marriage rights and customs throughout most of the period of the British rule 50 51 Cuba editMain article Military of Cuba Cuba has three militia organizations The Territorial Troops Militia Milicias de Tropas Territoriales of about one million people half women 52 the Youth Labor Army Ejercito Juvenil del Trabajo devoted to agricultural production and a naval militia 53 54 Formerly there existed the National Revolutionary Militias Milicias Nacionales Revolucionarias which was formed after the Cuban Revolution and initially consisted of 200 000 men who helped the 25 000 strong standing army defeat counter revolutionary guerillas 55 Denmark edit nbsp A joint patrol between Arizona National Guard and the Danish Home Guard during the Golden Coyote training exercise This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Danish Home Guard Danish Hjemmevaernet HJV is the fourth service of the Danish military It was formerly concerned only with the defence of Danish territory but since 2008 it has also supported Danish international military efforts in Afghanistan Iraq and Kosovo There are five branches Army Home Guard Naval Home Guard Air Force Home Guard Police Home Guard and Infrastructure Home Guard Estonia editMain article Omakaitse The Omakaitse Home Guard was an organisation formed by the local population of Estonia on the basis of the Estonian Defence League and the forest brothers resistance movement active on the Eastern Front between 3 July 1941 and 17 September 1944 56 This arrangement was unique in the context of the war as in Latvia which otherwise shared a common fate with Estonia there was no organisation of this kind 57 Ethiopia editThe People s Militia was established in 1975 under the Derg Proclamation No 71 used to assist police forces and protect farms and property The militia has done operations in Eritrea during the Ogaden War while Mengistu Haile Mariam reconstituted as the Red Army The Derg government conscripted about 30 000 to 40 000 civilians into the militia from Shewa Wollo and Gojam provinces in May 1976 58 59 Fano militia is Amhara militia emerged during the premiership of Abiy Ahmed It is perceived as either protest group or a militia Fano intervened armed conflicts in the post 2018 regime including Benishangul Gumuz s Metekel conflict Tigray War and recently War in Amhara They have been accused of ethnic massacres such as Qemant and other minorities 60 Finland edit nbsp Members of the White Guard after the Battle of Varkaus The White Guard was a voluntary militia that fought for the Whites in the Finnish Civil War See also White Guard Finland While Finland employs conscription they do not have separate militia units all units are organized by and under the command of the Finnish Defence Forces All men belong to the reserve until age 50 or 60 depending on rank and may be called up in case of mobilization Each reservist is assigned a position in a unit to be activated However since 2004 the FDF does have territorial forces organized along the lines of regular infantry formations which are composed of volunteers Furthermore long range patrol units sissi troops a type of special forces are assigned to local troops In history before Finland became independent two types of local militias existed the White Guards and Red Guards which were non socialists and socialists respectively In the Finnish Civil War 1918 the White Guards founded the White Army which was victorious over the Red Guards White Guards continued their existence as a volunteer militia until the Second World War In some cases their activity found overt political expression as in the Mantsala rebellion However in 1934 separate wartime White Guard units were dissolved and in the Second World War they served at the front dispersed in regular units They were dissolved as a condition of peace after the Continuation War France editThe first notable militia in French history was the resistance of the Gauls to invasion by the Romans until they were defeated by Julius Caesar 61 Centuries later Joan of Arc organized and led a militia until her capture and execution in 1431 This settled the succession to the French crown and laid the basis for the formation of the modern nation of France 62 During the French Revolution the National Guard was a political home defense militia The levee en masse was a conscription army used during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars At the time of the Franco Prussian War the Parisian National Guard engaged the Prussian Army and later rebelled against the Versailles Army under Marshal McMahon Under German occupation during World War II a militia usually called the French Resistance emerged to conduct a guerrilla war of attrition against German forces and prepare the way for the D Day Allied Invasion of France 63 The Resistance militia were opposed by the collaborationist French Militia the paramilitary police force of the German puppet state of Vichy Although defunct from 1871 until 2016 the French National Guard has now been reestablished for homeland security purposes 64 Germany editThe earliest reports of Germanic militias was the system of hundreds described in AD 98 by the Roman historian Tacitus as the centeni They were similar in nature to the Anglo Saxon fyrd nbsp The Lutzow Free Corps during the Napoleonic Wars During the Napoleonic Wars the Freikorps referred to volunteer forces that fought against the French Freikorps German for Free Corps was originally applied to voluntary armies The first Freikorps were recruited by Frederick II of Prussia during the Seven Years War These troops were regarded as unreliable by regular armies so they were mainly used as sentries and for minor duties During the Napoleonic occupation organizations such as the Lutzow Free Corps fought against the occupiers and later joined the allied forces as regular soldiers However after 1918 the term was used for nationalist paramilitary organizations that sprang up around Germany as soldiers returned in defeat from World War I They were one of the many Weimar paramilitary groups active during that time They received considerable support from Gustav Noske the German Defence Minister who used them to crush the Spartakist League with enormous violence including the murders of Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg on January 15 1919 Militia were also used to put down the Bavarian Soviet Republic in 1919 They were officially disbanded in 1920 resulting in the ill fated Kapp Putsch in March 1920 The Einwohnerwehr active in Germany from 1919 to 1921 was a paramilitary citizens militia consisting of hundreds of thousands of mostly former servicemen 65 Formed by the Prussian Ministry of the Interior on April 15 1919 to allow citizens to protect themselves from looters armed gangs and revolutionaries the Einwohnerwehr was under the command of the local Reichswehr regiments which supplied its guns In 1921 the Berlin government dissolved the Einwohnerwehr Many of its members went on to join the Nazi Party 66 nbsp The Volkssturm was a national militia formed by Nazi Germany in the last months of World War II In 1921 the Nazi Party created the Sturmabteilung SA Storm Detachment Brownshirts which was the first paramilitary wing of the Nazi Party and served as a Nazi militia whose initial assignment was to protect Nazi leaders at rallies and assemblies The SA also took part in street battles against the forces of rival political parties and violent actions against Jews From the SA sprung the Schutzstaffel SS Protective Squadron which grew to become one of the largest and most powerful groups in Nazi Germany which Reichsfuhrer SS Heinrich Himmler the leader of the SS from 1929 envisioned as an elite group of guards The Waffen SS the military branch of the SS became a de facto fourth branch of the Wehrmacht 67 In 1944 1945 as World War II came to a close in Europe the German high command deployed increasing numbers of Volkssturm units to combat duties These regiments were composed of men women and children too old young or otherwise unfit for service in the Wehrmacht German Regular Army 68 Their primary role was assisting the army with fortification duties and digging anti tank ditches As the shortage of manpower became severe they were used as front line infantry most often in urban settings Due to the physical state of members almost non existent training and shortage of weapons there was not much the Volkssturm could do except act like shields for regular army units India editSalwa Judum meaning Peace March 69 or Purification Hunt in Gondi language was a militia active in the Chhattisgarh state of India Iran editMain article Basij The Basij militia founded by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in November 1979 70 is composed of 90 000 men with an active and reserve strength up to 300 000 men It ultimately draws from about 1 million members and is subordinate to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps in Iran 71 Iraq editMain article Private militias in Iraq See also Popular Mobilization Forces Since the rise of ISIL in 2014 and their conquest of many predominantly Sunni areas in Iraq the Shiite militias became even more prominent in the country by joining the Iraqi Army in many major battles against ISIL 72 Israel edit nbsp Hashomer in 1909In 1908 a Jewish underground organisation Bar Giora re invented itself as an armed militia Hashomer It was established to provide Jewish guards for the Zionist colonies being established in Ottoman Palestine The group existed for 10 years At its height it had around 100 members including 23 women 73 In modern times the Israel Defense Forces IDF is often described as a heavily armed militia not a full fledged army since it is legally and publicly viewed as a defensive force only and since it relies heavily on the reserve duty of Israeli citizens who are annually called to service for set periods of time rather than on professional full time soldiers 74 Israeli settlements in the Israeli occupied territories rely on armed militia teams for their security 75 National service conscripts can also serve in the Israel Border Police commonly known by its Hebrew abbreviation Magav which means border guard in Hebrew which is a paramilitary branch of the Israel Police rather than the IDF Latvia edit nbsp Members of the Latvian National Guard during a training exercise The Guard was created in 1991 as a voluntary military self defense force Main articles Aizsargi Latvian national partisans and Latvian National GuardLibya editMain articles Post civil war violence in Libya and 2011 Libyan Civil War Since the fall of Gaddafi s rule of Libya in the aftermath of the Libyan Civil War rebel groups that have contributed to the revolution splintered into self organized militia movements and have been involved in a feud for control of each city 76 Since the revolution reports of clashes and violence by militia groups have been increasing 77 Mexico editMain article Gun laws in Mexico Militia This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2008 Mexico has a history of various activities and insurrection by militia and paramilitary groups dating back several hundred years that include the exploits of historical figures such as Captain Manuel Pineda Munoz and Francisco Pancho Villa This also includes groups such as the Free Colored Militia the interracial militias of New Spain Colonial Mexico 78 the Camisas Doradas and the contemporary Self Defense Council of Michoacan 79 Free colored militias were an important and at times critical organization in Colonial Mexico Prior to the eighteenth century Spain s territories in the Americas were mainly defended through a series of Spanish military units being based in strategic coastal port cities and important economic centers 78 8 10 But as European rivals began to challenge the Spanish crown and their dominance in the new world the Bourbon dynasty initiated a series of reforms allowing people from their colonies to serve in the regular armies as well as permitting local militias in their territories 78 14 16 While these groups began to integrate themselves into the official Spanish colonial militaries free colored militias have been reluctantly used since the mid sixteenth century Palenques or run away slave communities would often initiate slavery uprising in various cities and towns in New Spain which made the colonial Spanish authorities uneasy about arming any free colored individuals 78 14 16 Free colored rebellions and violence in Mexico City impacted regional policy of New Spain towards blacks Given this social context the racial climate in which these free colored militias first appeared was a hostile one and the first militias often had conflicts within them between their free colored and white commanders 78 20 23 The first large scale recruitment of fee colored militias was in response to the attack on Veracruz port in 1683 by Dutch pirateer Lorenzo de Graff with free colored soldiers being called in from Mexico City Puebla Orizaba and other large colonial cities 78 30 32 Militias increasingly began to take shape and develop over the course of the 17th and 18th centuries but it s critical to understand that their development was not a linear progressive one The experiences of militias in urban areas was vastly different from those in rural communities and the role influence and duties of militias in the early 17th century were not the same as those of a century later The critical stage for militia growth was during 1670 1762 where there was an increase of the militias responsibilities and they gained a considerable amount of autonomy over their own affairs 78 30 32 The social impact of these free colored militias added complexity to the race based caste system that dominated the social landscape Free colored militias were structured to follow the tercio organizational model that was used by Spanish Habsburg and Bourbon dynasties 78 47 50 Tercios compromised 2 500 soldiers distributed among ten companies each under the leadership of a captain Free colored militias under the tercio system were headed by a sargento mayor major who became the senior operating officer in militias Under the sargento mayor were the junior officers which included one captain and alferez lieutenant per company who were also aided by an ayudante adjutant and subteniente second lieutenant after they were incorporated into the system after 1767 The captain had supreme authority within their company only reporting to the sargento mayor when he could not control matters of the company The alferez coordinated affairs with his captain and was next in line in command in his absence Below the junior officers were ranking NCO s and up to four sergeants served per company A cabo corporal was assigned to lead each squad of 25 soldiers These NCO s were responsible for discipline of the soldiers and maintaining a limited record of individuals 78 47 50 Officers and first sergeants were the only soldiers in the free colored militias to receive a monthly salary with lower ranked soldiers only receiving pay when on campaigns Their salaries came from the royal treasuries alongside occasional supplementation by private contributions of prominent individuals 78 83 84 Who exactly constitutes as a free colored person is subject to much debate and discussion While the terms pardos mulatos negros and morenos were commonly used under the caste system that was in place during this era their use in this context is much more complex and who exactly qualified as who was a very fluid process dependent on the social context of the time and place 78 200 201 Despite the lack of universal understanding of racial identification across New Spain when they were faced with external threats to their organizations free colored militias showed great racial unity in these times such as in the case of Huajolotitlan a small town of Oaxaca in southern Mexico 78 207 211 After a decree was passed in 1784 calling for the retirement of every free colored officer and the disbandment of their militia the tows free coloreds fiercely resisted Free colored soldiers refused to leave their posts and they dispatched to the capital in protests to defend their racially integrated organizations This later inspired the communities other free colored people to protests what they saw as other aggressions by the government such as increasing tribute burdens 78 207 211 While some of the previous examples are historical the current official view on the existence of such militias in Mexico when they are not backed by the government 80 has been to always label them as illegal and to combat them in a military and a political way 81 Modern examples on the Mexican view on militias are the Chiapas conflict against the EZLN 82 and against the EPR in Guerrero 83 where the government forces combated the upraised militias And in a more recent case when civilian self defence militias appeared during the Mexican war on drugs 84 the government regulated them and transformed the militias in to Rural federal forces 85 and those who resisted were combated and imprisoned 86 Montenegro editIn 1910 King Nicholas I of Montenegro proclaimed that all male citizens were members of a national militia and had both a right and a duty to own at least one Gasser Pattern revolver under penalty of law The official reason for the King s decree was to create an armed populace that would deter neighbouring countries from attacking Montenegro which was unable to field a large army However it was widely believed in Montenegro that this decision was actually taken because the King owned shares in Leopold Gasser Waffenfabrik in Vienna the patent holder and sole manufacturer of the pistol at that time 87 88 89 Despite this the decree actually obliged Montenegrin adult males to own a Gasser Pattern revolver not necessarily one made by Gasser itself In fact Leopold Gasser was faced with such heavy demand for the pistol internationally that it could not fulfil all of the orders placed for it This led the revolver s manufacturer to license out production to other companies and many Gasser Pattern pistols were then manufactured and sold by other European firms most notably based out of Belgium and Spain Even these licensed models did not satiate demand for the pistol and this alongside a lax enforcement of intellectual property rights in Montenegro led to many unlicensed local models of the pistol also being produced with quality ranging from very good to outright dangerous to its user Subsequently the weapon quickly became a status symbol for Montenegrin men and was commonly worn alongside traditional attire Many Montenegrin immigrants that travelled to North America brought their Gasser pattern revolvers with them and at least two batches of several thousand pistols were smuggled into Mexico during the Mexican Revolution leading to the Gasser revolver becoming widespread in the Americas However as the original reason for their mass production and the generation that grew around it faded the pistol eventually lost its place as a status symbol and many were either given away or sold in the secondhand market Netherlands editMain article Schutterij Schutterij Dutch pronunciation sxʏteˈrɛi refers to a voluntary city guard or citizen militia in the medieval and early modern Netherlands intended to protect the town or city from attack and act in case of revolt or fire Their training grounds were often on open spaces within the city near the city walls but when the weather did not allow inside a church They are mostly grouped according to their district and to the weapon that they used bow crossbow or gun Together its members are called a Schuttersgilde which could be roughly translated as a shooter s guild It is now a title applied to ceremonial shooting clubs and to the country s Olympic rifle team New Zealand edit nbsp Member of the Armed Constabulary shot during the New Zealand Wars The Constabulary was a law enforcement agency and a militia until it was reoriented into a police force in 1886 Main article New Zealand Defence Force From the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840 until 1844 small detachments of British Imperial troops based in New Zealand were the only military This changed as a result of the Flagstaff War 90 with the colonial government passing a Militia Act on 25 March 1845 91 Militia units were formed in Auckland Wellington New Plymouth and Nelson Service in the militia was compulsory Many localized militia saw service together with British Imperial troops during the New Zealand Wars In the late nineteenth century a system of local Volunteer militias evolved throughout the country These were semi trained but uniformed and administered by a small number of regular Imperial officers 92 The militia units were disbanded and reformed as the Territorial Army in 1911 North Korea editThe Worker Peasant Red Guards is a North Korean paramilitary organization organized on a provincial town city village level Norway edit nbsp Members of the Norwegian Home Guard Main article Norwegian Home GuardPakistan editMilitias have played an important role supporting Pakistan s Military since the Indo Pakistani War of 1947 when Pakistan with the support of militias was able to gain control of parts of the region of Kashmir 93 Pakistan found the militias volunteering to participate in the Indo Pakistani war of 1965 and the Indo Pakistani war of 1971 quite useful as well Currently Pakistani citizens forming militias from the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province are participating in the war on terror 94 95 Portugal edit nbsp A Portuguese militiaman in 1812Portugal has a long tradition in the use of militias for national defense Between the 12th and 16th centuries the municipal militias composed of spearmen pikemen horsemen slingers javelineers archers crossbowmen and later arquebusiers constituted the main component of the Portuguese Royal Army together with smaller military forces from the King the military orders and the feudal lords After some failed previous attempts in 1570 King Sebastian of Portugal created the Ordenancas a centrally managed military territorial organization that would replace the municipal militias and became the basis of a national army After 60 years of foreign domination 1580 1640 the Ordenancas were reorganized for the Portuguese Restoration War The Portuguese Army was then organized in three lines with the 2nd and 3rd being militia forces The Ordenancas became the 3rd line and acted both as a territorial draft organization for the 1st and 2nd line troops and as a kind of home guard for local defense The 2nd line was made of the auxiliary troops also militia units with the role of regional defense In the end of the 18th century the auxiliary troops were renamed Militias In the Peninsular War the Militia regiments and the Ordenancas units had an important role in the defense of the country against the Napoleonic invader army Still in the 19th century the Militia units also had an important role in the Liberal Wars with the majority of those troops fighting on the side of King Miguel Besides the regular militias a number of volunteer militia units were formed to fight on both sides of the war With the establishment of the constitutional regime the old Militias and Ordenancas were replaced by a single national militia force the National Guard However the National Guard revealed itself an ineffective and undisciplined force Their units became highly politicized being involved in a number of conspiracies and coups The National Guard having less and less confidence from the authorities became extinct in 1847 terminating a long tradition of national militias in Portugal During the 20th century some experiments with militia type forces were made From 1911 to 1926 the Portuguese Army was organized as a militia army Also in 1936 the Estado Novo regime created the Portuguese Legion as a political volunteer militia dedicated to the fight against the enemies of country and of the social order From World War II the Portuguese Legion assumed the responsibility for civil defense this becoming its main role during the Cold War until its extinction in 1974 Russia and the Soviet Union edit nbsp Banner of Saint Petersburg militia from Napoleon s invasion of Russia This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Neither the Russian Empire nor the Soviet Union ever had an organised force that could be equated to a militia Instead a form of organisation that predated the Russian state was used during national emergencies called Narodnoe Opolcheniye People s Regimentation More comparable to the English Fyrd it was a popular voluntary joining of the local polk polk or a regiment though it had no regular established strength or officers these usually elected from prominent local citizens The Tsarist regime was particularly reluctant to arm and organise militia forces because of concern over a repetition of the Pugachev Serf Revolt of the late 18th century Only in the face of the national emergency of 1812 was the raising of opolcheniye cohorts permitted Numbering over 223 000 loosely trained and barely equipped these enthusiastic volunteers nevertheless provided a useful reserve for the regular army 96 Although these spontaneously created popular forces had participated in several major wars of the Russian Empire including in combat they were not obligated to serve for more than one year and notably departed for home during the 1813 campaign in Germany On only one occasion during the military history of the Soviet Union the Narodnoe Opolcheniye was incorporated into the regular forces of the Red Army notably in Leningrad and Moscow The term Militsiya in Russia and former Communist Bloc nations was specifically used to refer to the civilian police force and should not be confused with the conventional western definition of militia The term as used in this context dated from post revolutionary Russia in late 1917 and was intended to draw a distinction between the new Soviet law enforcement agencies and the disbanded Tsarist police In some of these states militia was renamed back to police such as Ukraine while in the other states it remains such as Belarus In Russia it was renamed to Police in Russian Policiya Politsiya in March 2011 97 Sri Lanka editThe first militias formed in Sri Lanka were by Lankan Kings who raised militia armies for their military campaigns both within and outside the island This was due to the reason that the Kings never maintained a standing army instead had a Royal Guard during peacetime and formed a militia in wartime When the Portuguese who were the first colonial power to dominate the island raised local militias under the command of local leaders known as Mudaliyars These militias took part in the many Portuguese campaigns against the Lankan Kings The Dutch continued to employ these militias but due to their unreliability tended to favor employing Swiss and Malay mercenaries in their campaigns in the island nbsp The Sri Lanka Civil Security Force is a paramilitary militia tasked to serve as an auxiliary to the Sri Lanka Police The British Empire then ousted the Dutch from the coastal areas of the country and sought to conquer the independent Kandyan Kingdom In 1802 the British became the first foreign power to raise a regular unit of Sinhalese with British officers which was named the 2nd Ceylon Regiment also known as the Sepoy Corps It fought alongside British troops in the Kandyan wars After the Matale Rebellion led by Puran Appu in 1848 in which a number of Sinhalese recruits defected to the side of the rebels the recruitment of Sinhalese to the British forces was temporarily halted and the Ceylon Regiments disbanded In 1861 the Ceylon Light Infantry Volunteers were raised as a militia but soon became a military reserve force This became the Ceylon Defence Force in 1910 and consisted of militia units These were the Colombo Town Guard and the Town Guard Artillery formed during the two world wars With the escalation of the Sri Lankan Civil War local villagers under threat of attack were formed into localized militia to protect their families and homes 98 According to the Sri Lankan Military these militias were formed after massacres done by the LTTE and in the early 1990s they were reformed as the Sri Lankan Home Guard In 2007 the Home Guard became the Sri Lanka Civil Security Force 99 In 2008 the government called for the formation of nearly 15 000 civil defence committees at the village level for additional protection 100 In 2004 the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam claimed have establish a voluntary Tamil Eelam auxiliary force According to the LTTE s then head of police the force was to be assigned to tasks such as rehabilitation construction forest conservation and agriculture but would also be used to battle the Sri Lankan military if the need arose 101 102 103 In early 2009 it ceased to exist with the military defeat of the LTTE at the hands of the Sri Lanka Armed Forces Sudan edit nbsp A mounted Janjaweed militiaman The Janjaweed are a militia operating in western Sudan and eastern Chad This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2008 The Janjaweed militia consists of armed Arab Muslims fighting for the government in Khartoum against non Arab Muslim rebels They are active in the Darfur region of western Sudan and also in eastern Chad According to Human Rights Watch these partisans are responsible for abuses including war crimes crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing 104 Sweden editAs of 2012 the Swedish Home Guard consists of 22 000 organized into 40 light infantry battalions of 300 700 Guardsmen These battalions are then organised into companies usually one for every municipality The main task of the battalions is to guard vital military and civilian installations throughout the country citation needed In 2001 the Rapid Response units numbered around 5 000 soldiers of the total of 42 000 As of 2014 the majority of the force 17 000 out of 22 000 soldiers will be in Rapid Response units The decrease in number of troops comes with an equal increase in quality and modern equipment These units are motorized and are ready to be mobilized more often than other Home Guard units Rapid response units have more combat tasks compared to the rest of the Home Guard including escort duties Some battalions located near the coast also have marine companies equipped with Combat Boat 90 A few battalions have recently set up specialized companies to evaluate the possibility to add new abilities to the Home Guard These are at the time of writing eight reconnaissance intelligence companies four CBRN platoons a movcon platoon an engineer platoon and a military police unit Switzerland editMain article Conscription in Switzerland One of the best known and ancient militias is the Swiss Armed Forces Switzerland has long maintained proportionally the second largest military force in the world with about half the proportional amount of reserve forces of the Israeli Defense Forces a militia of some 33 of the total population The militia principle of public duties is central to Swiss political culture and not limited to military issues For example in most municipalities it is common to serve as a conscript fire fighter in the Compulsory Fire Department Article 58 1 of the April 18 1999 Federal Constitution of the Swiss Confederation official French version provides that Switzerland has an army It is primarily organised according to the principle of a militia However under the country s militia system professional soldiers constitute about 5 percent of military personnel In 1995 the number of soldiers was reduced to 400 000 including reservists amounting to some 5 6 of the population in 2004 to 200 000 including 80 000 reservists or 2 5 of the population and again in 2022 to 150 000 including 50 000 reservists However the Swiss Militia continues to consist of most of the adult male population with voluntary participation by women who are usually issued an assault rifle which they can keep at home or store in a central arsenal and most of them have to periodically engage in combat and marksmanship training 105 The militia clauses of the Swiss Federal Constitution are contained in Art 59 where it is referred to as military service German Militardienst French service militaire Italian servizio militare Romansh servetsch militar Syria editMain article National Defense Force Syria The Syrian National Defense Force was formed out of pro government militias They receive their salaries and their military equipment from the government 106 107 and as of 2013 numbers around 100 000 108 109 The force acts in an infantry role directly fighting against rebels on the ground and running counter insurgency operations in coordination with the army which provides them with logistical and artillery support Unlike the Syrian Army NDF soldiers are allowed to take loot from battlefields which can then be sold on for extra money 106 United Kingdom editMain articles Militia English and Militia United Kingdom Origins edit The obligation to serve in the militia also known as the Constitutional Force in England derives from a common law tradition and dates back to Anglo Saxon times The tradition was that all able bodied males were liable to be called out to serve in one of two organisations These were the posse comitatus an ad hoc assembly called together by a law officer to apprehend lawbreakers and the fyrd 110 a military body intended to preserve internal order or defend the locality against an invader The latter developed into the militia and was usually embodied by a royal warrant 111 Service in each organisation involved different levels of preparedness 112 16th and 17th centuries edit With the decay of the feudal system and the military revolution of the 16th century the militia began to become an important institution in English life It was organised on the basis of the shire county and was one of the responsibilities of the Lord Lieutenant a royal official usually a trusted nobleman Each of the county hundreds was likewise the responsibility of a Deputy Lieutenant who relayed orders to the justices of the peace or magistrates Every parish furnished a quota of eligible men whose names were recorded on muster rolls Likewise each household was assessed for the purpose of finding weapons armour horses or their financial equivalent according to their status The militia was supposed to be mustered for training purposes from time to time but this was rarely done The militia regiments were consequently ill prepared for an emergency and could not be relied upon to serve outside their own counties This state of affairs concerned many people Consequently an elite force was created composed of members of the militia who were prepared to meet regularly for military training and exercise These were formed into trained band regiments particularly in the City of London where the Artillery Ground was used for training The trained bands performed an important role in the English Civil War on the side of parliament in marching to raise the siege of Gloucester 5 September 1643 Except for the London trained bands both sides in the Civil War made little use of the militia preferring to recruit their armies by other means citation needed Militia in the English Empire and the British Empire edit Main article Militia British Dominions and Crown Colonies nbsp Captain John Smith s 1624 map of the Somers Isles Bermuda showing St George s Town and related fortifications including the Castle Islands Fortifications with their garrisons of militia infantry and volunteer artillery As successful English settlement of North America began to take place in 1607 in the face of the hostile intentions of the powerful Spanish and of the native populations it became immediately necessary to raise militia amongst the settlers The militia in Jamestown saw constant action against the Powhatan Federation and other native polities In the Virginia Company s other outpost Bermuda fortification began immediately in 1612 A Spanish attack in 1614 was repulsed by two shots fired from the incomplete Castle Islands Fortifications manned by Bermudian Militiamen In the Nineteenth century Fortress Bermuda would become Britain s Gibraltar of the West heavily fortified by a Regular Army garrison to protect the Royal Navy s headquarters and dockyard in the Western Atlantic In the 17th Century however Bermuda s defence was left entirely in the hands of the Militia In addition to requiring all male civilians to train and serve in the militia of their Parish the Bermudian Militia included a standing body of trained artillerymen to garrison the numerous fortifications which ringed New London St George s This standing body was created by recruiting volunteers and by sentencing criminals to serve as punishment The Bermudian militiamen were called out on numerous occasions of war and on one notable occasion to quell rioting privateers The 1707 Acts of Union made Bermudian and other English militiamen British The Militia in Bermuda came to include a Troop of Horse mounted infantry and served alongside volunteers and from 1701 a small body of regulars The Militia faded away after the American War of 1812 when the Parliament of Bermuda declined to renew the Militia Act This resulted from the build up of the regular army Bermuda Garrison along with Bermuda s development as the headquarters and dockyard of the North America and West Indies Station of the Royal Navy which made the militia seem excess to need Vast sums of the Imperial defence expenditure were lavished on fortifying Bermuda during the Nineteenth Century and the British Government cajoled implored begged and threatened the colonial legislature for 80 years before it raised a militia and volunteer units in 1894 and 1894 respectively Although the militia had historically been an infantry force many units in Britain had been re tasked as militia artillery from the 1850s onward due to the increased importance of the coastal artillery defences and the new militia unit in Bermuda followed suit Titled the Bermuda Militia Artillery it was badged and uniformed as part of the Royal Artillery and tasked with the garrison artillery role manning coastal batteries As in Britain recruitment was of volunteers who engaged for terms of service whereas the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps was organised on the same lines as volunteer rifle corps in Britain Recruitment to the BVRC was restricted to whites but the BMA recruited primarily coloured those who were not entirely of European heritage other ranks though its officers were all white until 1953 Neither unit was reorganised in 1908 when the Militia Volunteer Force and Yeomanry in Britain merged into the Territorial Force but the BVRC was re organised as a territorial in 1921 and the BMA in 1926 The BVRC name was not modified to Bermuda Rifles until 1951 however and the Bermuda Militia Artillery and from 1939 the Bermuda Militia Infantry continued to be titled as militia until amalgamated with the Bermuda Rifles in 1965 to form the Bermuda Regiment In British India a special class of militia was established in 1907 This took the form of the Frontier Corps which consisted of locally recruited full time auxiliaries under British officers Their role combined the functions of tribal police and border guards deployed along the North West Frontier Regional units included the Zhob Militia the Kurram Militia and the Chagai Militia After 1946 the Frontier Corps became part of the modern Pakistan Army Political issues edit Until the Glorious Revolution in 1688 the Crown and Parliament were in strong disagreement The English Civil War left a rather unusual military legacy Both Whigs and Tories distrusted the creation of a large standing army not under civilian control The former feared that it would be used as an instrument of royal tyranny The latter had memories of the New Model Army and the anti monarchical social and political revolution that it brought about Both preferred a small standing army under civilian control for defensive deterrence and to prosecute foreign wars a large navy as the first line of national defence and a militia composed of their neighbours as additional defence and to preserve domestic order citation needed Consequently the English Bill of Rights 1689 declared amongst other things that the raising or keeping a standing army within the kingdom in time of peace unless it be with consent of Parliament is against law and that the subjects which are Protestants may have arms for their defence suitable to their conditions and as allowed by law This implies that they are fitted to serve in the militia which was intended to serve as a counterweight to the standing army and preserve civil liberties against the use of the army by a tyrannical monarch or government The Crown still in the British constitution controls the use of the army This ensures that officers and enlisted men swear an oath to a politically neutral head of state and not to a politician While the funding of the standing army subsists on annual financial votes by parliament the Mutiny Act superseded by the Army Act and now the Armed Forces Act is also renewed on an annual basis by Parliament citation needed If it lapses the legal basis for enforcing discipline disappears and soldiers lose their legal indemnity for acts committed under orders citation needed With the creation of the British Empire militias were also raised in the colonies where little support could be provided by regular forces Overseas militias were first raised in Jamestown Virginia and in Bermuda where the Bermuda Militia followed over the next two centuries a similar trajectory to that in Britain 18th century and the Acts of Union edit In 1707 the Acts of Union united the Kingdom of England with the Kingdom of Scotland The Scottish navy was incorporated into the Royal Navy The Scottish military as opposed to naval forces merged with the English with pre existing regular Scottish regiments maintaining their identities though command of the new British Army was from England How this affected militias either side of the border is unclear British Militia edit Main articles Militia Great Britain and Militia United Kingdom nbsp A review of the Northampton Militia Formed in 1763 its men were selected by ballot to serve for a period of time The Militia Act 1757 created a more professional force Better records were kept and the men were selected by ballot to serve for longer periods specific provision was made for members of the Religious Society of Friends Quakers to be exempted as conscientious objectors from compulsory enlistment in the militia Proper uniforms and better weapons were provided and the force was embodied from time to time for training sessions The militia was widely embodied at various times during the French and Napoleonic Wars It served at several vulnerable locations and was particularly stationed on the South Coast and in Ireland A number of camps were held at Brighton where the militia regiments were reviewed by the Prince Regent This is the origin of the song Brighton Camp The militia could not be compelled to serve overseas but it was seen as a training reserve for the army as bounties were offered to men who opted to exchange from the militia to the regular army citation needed Irish militia edit The Parliament of Ireland passed an act in 1715 raising regiments of militia in each county and county corporate Membership was restricted to Protestants between the ages of 16 and 60 In 1793 during the Napoleonic Wars the Irish militia were reorganised to form thirty seven county and city regiments While officers of the reorganised force were Protestant membership of the other ranks was now made available to members of all denominations citation needed Scottish militia edit In the late 17th century numerous individuals in the Kingdom of Scotland then in a personal union with the Kingdom of England called for the resurrection of a Scottish militia with the understated aim of protecting the rights of Scots in Great Britain 113 After Scotland became part of the Kingdom of Great Britain the Militia Act 1757 did not apply there The traditional Scottish militia system continued with only certain settlements in Scotland playing host to a militia regiment This was viewed with resentment among some in Scotland and the Militia Club was formed to promote the raising of a Scottish militia The Militia Club along with several other Scottish gentlemen s clubs became the crucible of the Scottish Enlightenment The Militia Act 1797 empowered Scottish Lord Lieutenants to raise and command militia regiments in each of the Counties Stewartries Cities and Places under their jurisdiction citation needed 19th century edit Although muster rolls were prepared as late as 1820 the element of compulsion was abandoned and the militia transformed into a volunteer force revived by the Militia Act 1852 It was intended to be seen as an alternative to the regular army Men would volunteer and undertake basic training for several months at an army depot Thereafter they would return to civilian life but report for regular periods of military training usually on the weapons ranges and an annual two week training camp In return they would receive military pay and a financial retainer a useful addition to their civilian wage Of course many saw the annual camp as the equivalent of a paid holiday The militia thus appealed to agricultural labourers colliers and the like men in casual occupations who could leave their civilian job and pick it up again Until 1852 the militia were an entirely infantry force but from that year a number of county infantry regiments were converted to artillery and new ones raised In 1877 the militia of Anglesey and Monmouthshire were converted to engineers Under the reforms introduced by Secretary of State for War Hugh Childers in 1881 the remaining militia infantry regiments were re designated as numbered battalions of regiments of the line ranking after the two regular battalions Typically an English Welsh or Scottish regiment would have two militia battalions the 3rd and 4th and Irish regiments three numbered 3rd 5th The militia must not be confused with the volunteer units created in a wave of enthusiasm in the second half of the nineteenth century In contrast with the Volunteer Force and the similar Yeomanry Cavalry they were considered rather plebeian The Special Reserve edit nbsp Recruitment poster for the British Territorial Army during World War II The reserve force was formed after the militias were reorganized in 1907 Main article Special Reserve The militia was transformed into the Special Reserve by the military reforms of Haldane in the reforming post 1906 Liberal government In 1908 the militia infantry battalions were redesignated as reserve and a number were amalgamated or disbanded Numbered Territorial Force battalions ranking after the Special Reserve were formed from the volunteer units at the same time Altogether 101 infantry battalions 33 artillery regiments and two engineer regiments of special reservists were formed 114 Upon mobilisation the special reserve units would be formed at the depot and continue training while guarding vulnerable points in Britain The special reserve units remained in Britain throughout the First World War but their rank and file did not since the object of the special reserve was to supply drafts of replacements for the overseas units of the regiment The original militiamen soon disappeared and the battalions simply became training units The Special Reserve reverted to its militia designation in 1921 then to Supplementary Reserve in 1924 though the units were effectively placed in suspended animation until disbanded in 1953 The militiamen edit The name was briefly revived in the Military Training Act 1939 in the aftermath of the Munich Crisis Leslie Hore Belisha Secretary of State for War wished to introduce a limited form of conscription not known in peacetime Britain since the militia of the early 19th century and previously It was thought that calling the conscripts militiamen would make this more acceptable as it would render them distinct from the rest of the army Only single men aged 20 up to the day before their 22nd birthday were to be conscripted for six months full time training before discharge into the reserve with a free suit of civilian clothing Although the first intake was called up in late July 1939 the declaration of war on 3 September entailed implementation of full time conscription for all men aged 18 41 superseding the militia never to be revived Modern survivals edit nbsp A non commissioned officer of the Royal Militia of the Island of Jersey The unit is one of two regiments in the Territorial Army that maintain their militia designation Three units still maintain their militia designation in the British Army These are the Royal Monmouthshire Royal Engineers formed in 1539 the Jersey Field Squadron The Royal Militia Island of Jersey formed in 1337 and the Royal Alderney Militia created in the 13th century and reformed in 1984 Additionally the Atholl Highlanders are a ceremonial infantry militia maintained by the Duke of Atholl they are the only legal private army in Europe Other British militias edit Various other part time home defence organisations have been raised during times of crisis or perceived threat although without the word militia in their title These have included Volunteer Corps part of the British anti invasion preparations of 1803 1805 Yeomanry volunteer cavalry initially raised in the Napoleonic Wars Volunteer Force from 1857 to 1908 Volunteer Training Corps 1914 to 1918 National Defence Companies 1936 to 1939 Home Guard initially Local Defence Volunteers 1940 to 1944 and 1951 to 1957 Ulster Defence Regiment 1970 to 1992 Home Service Force 1982 to 1992The Troubles and Irish War of Independence edit See also The Troubles and Irish War of Independence The various non state paramilitary groups involved in the 20th century conflicts in Northern Ireland and the island of Ireland such as the various Irish Republican Army groups and loyalist paramilitaries could also be described as militias and are occasionally referred to as such The Ulster Defence Regiment UDR was a locally raised professional militia instituted by an Act of Parliament in December 1969 becoming operational on 1 April 1970 Created as a non partisan force to defend Northern Ireland against armed attack or sabotage it eventually peaked at 11 battalions with 7 559 men and women 197 soldiers of the UDR were killed as active servicemen with a further 61 killed after leaving the regiment mostly by the Provisional Irish Republican Army As a result of defence cuts it was eventually reduced to 7 battalions before being amalgamated with the Royal Irish Rangers in 1992 to form the Home Service Battalions of the Royal Irish Regiment United States editMain article Militia United States The history of militia in the United States dates from the colonial era such as in the American Revolutionary War 115 Based on the English system colonial militias were drawn from the body of adult male citizens of a community town or local region Because there was no standing English Army before the English Civil War and subsequently the English Army and later the British Army had few regulars garrisoning North America colonial militia served a vital role in local conflicts particularly in the French and Indian Wars Before shooting began in the American War of Independence American revolutionaries took control of the militia system reinvigorating training and excluding men with Loyalist inclinations 116 Regulation of the militia was codified by the Second Continental Congress with the Articles of Confederation The revolutionaries also created a full time regular army the Continental Army but because of manpower shortages the militia provided short term support to the regulars in the field throughout the war In colonial era Anglo American usage militia service was distinguished from military service in that the latter was normally a commitment for a fixed period of time of at least a year for a salary whereas militia was only to meet a threat or prepare to meet a threat for periods of time expected to be short Militia persons were normally expected to provide their own weapons equipment or supplies although they may later be compensated for losses or expenditures 117 A related concept is the jury which can be regarded as a specialized form of militia convened to render a verdict in a court proceeding known as a petit jury or trial jury or to investigate a public matter and render a presentment or indictment grand jury 118 With the Constitutional Convention of 1787 and Article 1 Section 8 of the United States Constitution control of the army and the power to direct the militia of the states was concurrently delegated to the federal Congress 119 The Militia Clauses gave Congress authority for organizing arming and disciplining the militia and governing such Part of them as may be employed in the Service of the United States and the States retained authority to appoint officers and to impose the training specified by Congress Proponents describe a key element in the concept of militia was that to be genuine it not be a select militia composed of an unrepresentative subset of the population This was an argument presented in the ratification debates 120 The first legislation on the subject was the Militia Act of 1792 which provided in part That each and every free able bodied white male citizen of the respective States resident therein who is or shall be of age of eighteen years and under the age of forty five years except as is herein after excepted shall severally and respectively be enrolled in the militia every citizen so enrolled and notified shall within six months thereafter provide himself with a good musket or firelock Prior to the War of Independence the officers of militia units were commissioned by the royal governors During the war they were commissioned either by the legislature or the chief executive of the state After the war commissions were typically granted by the state s chief executive Militias did not operate independently of the state governments but were under the command of the civil government just like the regular military forces 121 Twenty four of the current US states maintain state defense forces in the form of a constitutional militia in addition to the National Guard which is shared with the US government These states include Alabama Alaska California Connecticut Georgia Illinois Indiana Louisiana Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Missouri New Jersey New Mexico New York Ohio Oklahoma Oregon South Carolina Tennessee Texas Washington Vermont and Virginia In addition the Territory of Puerto Rico has a defense force 19th century edit nbsp Uniformed American militiamen during the American Civil War During the nineteenth century each of the states maintained its militia differently some more than others American militia saw action in the various Indian Wars the War of 1812 the American Civil War and the Spanish American War Sometimes militia units were found to be unprepared ill supplied and unwilling 119 122 123 Prior to the Civil War militia units were sometimes used by southern states for slave control Formed in 1860 Republican Party affiliated Wide Awakes clubs were quick to take action to defend persons against southern slave hunters 124 In California the militia carried out campaigns against bandits and against the Indians at the direction of its Governor between 1850 and 1866 During Reconstruction after the Civil War Republican state governments had militias composed almost entirely of freed slaves and populist whites Their deployment to maintain order in the former Confederate states caused increased resentment among many Southern whites 125 After the American Civil War secret groups like the Ku Klux Klan and Knights of the White Camellia arose quickly across the South reaching a peak in the late 1860s Even more significant in terms of effect were private militias paramilitary organizations that formed starting in 1874 including the White League in Louisiana which quickly formed chapters in other states the Red Shirts in Mississippi in 1875 and with force in clarification needed South Carolina and North Carolina and other white line militias and rifle clubs In contrast to the KKK these paramilitary organizations were open members were often well known in their communities Nevertheless they used force intimidation and violence including murder to push out Republican officeholders break up organizing and suppress freedmen s voting and civil rights 126 The paramilitary groups were described as the military arm of the Democratic Party and were instrumental in helping secure Democratic victories in the South in the elections of 1876 127 20th century edit Further information Militia organizations in the United States nbsp Members of the United States National Guard undergoing self defense training The force was created in 1903 as an organized militia The Militia Act of 1903 divided what had been the militia into what it termed the organized militia created from portions of the former state guards to become state National Guard units and the unorganized militia consisting of all males from ages 17 to 45 with the exception of certain officials and others which is codified in 10 U S C 311 Some states such as Texas California and Ohio created separate state defense forces for assistance in local emergencies Congress later established 128 a system of dual enlistment for the National Guard so that anyone who enlisted in the National Guard also enlisted in the U S Army 129 When the U S Air Force was established as an independent service in 1947 the National Guard was further divided into the Army National Guard and the Air National Guard Under this construct the 1933 defense act s dual enlistment facet was further amended so that enlisted soldiers and commissioned officers in the Army National Guard were also enlisted or commissioned in the Reserve Component of the U S Army Enlisted airmen and commissioned officers in the Air National Guard were also enlisted or commissioned in the Air Reserve Component ARC of the U S Air Force citation needed The 20th century saw the rise of militia organizations in the United States these private militias often have an anti government outlook and are not under the civil authority of the states Privately organized citizen militia related groups blossomed in the mid 1990s Many militia groups are based on religious or political extremism and some are regarded as hate groups 130 21st century edit Not to be confused with American militia movement In the 2008 decision of the Supreme Court in District of Columbia v Heller the de jure definition of militia as used in United States jurisprudence was discussed The Court s opinion made explicit in its obiter dicta that the term militia as used in colonial times in this originalist decision included both the federally organized militia and the citizen organized militias of the several States the militia in colonial America consisted of a subset of the people those who were male able bodied and within a certain age range 7 Although the militia consists of all able bodied men the federally organized militia may consist of a subset of them 23 131 Active militias edit National Guard State defense forcesTexas edit nbsp Basic orientation for the Texas State Guard The Guard is a state defense force military units under the sole authority of the state government This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message The most important previous activity of the Texas Militia was the Texas Revolution in 1836 Texans declared independence from Mexico while they were defeated during the Battle of the Alamo in March 1836 On April 21 1836 led by Sam Houston the Militia attacked the Mexican Army at their camp in the Battle of San Jacinto near the present city of Houston Following the war some militia units reorganized into what was later to be known as the Texas Rangers which was a private volunteer effort for several years before becoming an official organization After Texas joined the Union of the United States in 1845 Texas militia units participated in the Mexican American War In 1861 Texas joined the other Confederate States in seceding from the Union and Texas militias played a role in the American Civil War until it ended in 1865 Texas militiamen joined Theodore Roosevelt s Rough Riders a volunteer militia and fought with him during the Spanish American War in 1898 Some of the training of the Rough Riders took place in San Pedro Park in the north central part of San Antonio near the present site of San Antonio College When a muster of the Militia proposed to train there on April 19 1994 they were threatened with arrest even though the charter of San Pedro Park forbids exclusion of activities of that kind This threat led to a change in the meeting site Like many other American states Texas maintains a recognized State Militia the Texas State Guard Vietnam editMain article Civil Defense Force The Dan quan tự vệ Self Defence Militia is a part of Vietnam People s Armed Forces The militia organized in communes wards and townships and is put under commune level military commands The Self Defence Militia has two branches Dan quan tự vệ nong cốt Core Self Defence Militia and Dan quan tự vệ rộng rai General Self Defence Militia The term of service in the Core Militia is 4 years 132 SFR Yugoslavia editMain article Territorial Defense Forces Yugoslavia Beside the federal Yugoslav People s Army each constituent republic of the former SFR Yugoslavia had its own Territorial Defense Forces The Non Aligned Yugoslavia was concerned about eventual aggression from any of the superpowers especially by the Warsaw Pact after the Prague Spring so the Territorial Defense Forces were formed as an integral part of the total war military doctrine called Total National Defense Those forces corresponded to military reserve forces paramilitary or militia the latter in the military meaning of the term like military formation It should not be confused with the Yugoslav Militia Milicija which was a term for a police See also editCondottieri Gendarmerie Historical reenactment Irregular military Milicja Obywatelska National Bolivarian Militia of Venezuela Violent non state actorReferences editCitations edit militia n June 2009 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Army National Guard Today s Military www todaysmilitary com Retrieved 2022 08 14 p 7 Sumner Fields William S Hardy David T Spring 1992 The Militia and the Constitution A Legal History Military Law Review Archived from the original on 2008 04 10 Charles II demobilized the army keeping only troops that he felt would be loyal to the new regime Charles s select militia was composed only of a small part of the population Parameswaran Prashanth What s Next for Vietnam s Maritime Militia thediplomat com The Diplomat Retrieved 30 January 2020 a b Charlton T Lewis An Elementary Latin Dictionary p 505 Oxford U Pr 1997 4 Noun Formation www class uidaho edu Archived from the original on March 6 2012 Roots of Style Radicals of Latin amp Greek in English JVS Academic brooklyn cuny edu Archived from the original on 2013 03 27 Retrieved 2014 02 22 Oxford English Dictionary March 2002 Oxford University Press Lauri Antonio De Suhrke Astri 3 April 2021 Armed governance the case of the CIA supported Afghan militias Small Wars amp Insurgencies 32 3 490 508 doi 10 1080 09592318 2020 1777618 hdl 11250 2661004 ISSN 0959 2318 S2CID 225715612 Cos de Policia Historia i identitat Policia ad Retrieved 26 March 2019 a b El Sometent es lliura de registrar l arma El Periodic d Andorra 23 February 2016 Retrieved 26 March 2019 De la policia vLex Retrieved 26 March 2019 Andorra s ARMY Eleven Permanent Troops The Times 5 January 1934 Retrieved 26 August 2012 Vella Elisenda Pallares Andorra la 21 October 2018 Els anhels d Andorra DiariAndorra ad Retrieved 26 March 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bop14073 PDF Retrieved 26 August 2012 History of the Principality of Andorra Andorramania com 11 December 1997 Retrieved 26 August 2012 Andorra Un org 25 September 2003 Retrieved 26 August 2012 La Tribuna 82 aiguats El Periodic d Andorra 23 November 2012 Retrieved 26 March 2019 La nit mes llarga en molts anys El Periodic d Andorra 29 October 2012 Retrieved 26 March 2019 Granadero Voluntario Archived from the original on May 13 2013 Lyman Johnson Workshop of Revolution Plebeian Buenos Aires and the Atlantic World 1776 1810 Duke University Press United States p 264 Academia Nacional de la Historia Journal Partes de batalla de las guerras civiles 1977 in Spanish Miguel Angel De Marco La guerra del Paraguay Ed Booket Buenos Aires 2010 ISBN 978 987 580 364 0 in Spanish Trinidad Delia Chianelli El gobierno del puerto Memorial de la Patria volume XII Ed La Bastilla Buenos Aires 1984 in Spanish pp 21 22 Grey Jeffrey A Military History of Australia Cambridge University Press Bahraini militia reemerges to threaten new attacks FDD s Long War Journal 2019 11 03 Retrieved 3 November 2019 The 1855 Volunteers Canadian Military Heritage vol 2 Government of Canada 1 May 2017 Archived from the original on 15 December 2017 Retrieved 15 December 2017 The Defence of Canada by Canadians Canadian Military Heritage vol 3 Government of Canada 1 May 2017 Archived from the original on 15 December 2017 Retrieved 15 December 2017 Young Douglas MacMurray 1961 The Colonial Office in The Early Nineteenth Century London Published for the Royal Commonwealth Society by Longmans p 55 Ingham Hind Jennifer M 1992 Defence Not Defiance A History Of The Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps Bermuda The Island Press ISBN 0969651716 Harris Edward C 1997 Bermuda Forts 1612 1957 Bermuda The Bermuda Maritime Museum Press ISBN 9780921560111 The Quebec Almanack and British American Royal Kalendar For The Year 1815 Quebec J Neilson and Cowan No 3 Mountain Street 1815 CIVIL LIST OF THE PROVINCE OF LOWER CANADA 1828 GOVERNOR The Quebec Almanack and British American Royal Kalendar For The Year 1828 Quebec Neilson and Cowan No 3 Mountain Street 1812 STAFF of the ARMY in the Provinces of Nova Scotia New Brunswick and their Dependencies including the Island of Newfoundland Cape Breton Prince Edward and Bermuda The Quebec Almanack and British American Royal Kalendar For The Year 1828 Quebec Neilson and Cowan No 3 Mountain Street 1812 The Andrew and The Onions The Story of The Royal Navy in Bermuda 1795 1975 by Lieutenant Commander B Ian D Stranack Bermuda Maritime Museum Press Bermuda Online Bermuda s Royal Navy base at Ireland Island from 1815 to the 1960s Archived from the original on 3 February 2013 Retrieved 22 June 2020 Anglican Diocese of Eastern Newfoundland and Labrador Our History Anglican Diocese of Eastern Newfoundland and Labrador Piper Liza 2000 The Church of England Heritage Newfoundland and Labrador Newfoundland and Labrador Heritage Web Site Retrieved 2021 08 17 A History Of Our Church Roman Catholic Diocese of Hamilton in Bermuda The Diocese of Hamilton in Bermuda Retrieved 2021 08 28 The Diocese of Hamilton in Bermuda was established in 12th June 1967 Bermuda was served by the Diocesan clergy of Halifax until 1953 after which pastoral responsibility transferred to the Congregation of the Resurrection Sir Henry Hardinge MP for Launceston 1839 03 22 SUPPLY ARMY ESTIMATES Parliamentary Debates Hansard Vol 46 Parliament of the United Kingdom House of Commons col 1141 1142 In the Maritimes Canadian Military Heritage vol 2 Government of Canada 1 May 2017 Archived from the original on 17 January 2018 Retrieved 16 January 2018 Goulet Adam 2014 The Colonial Militia of Vancouver Island and British Columbia 1853 1871 Canadian Military Journal Canadian Forces 14 3 64 Withdrawal of British Troops from Canada Canadian Military Heritage vol 3 Government of Canada 1 May 2017 Archived from the original on 15 December 2017 Retrieved 14 December 2017 Lackenbauer P Whitney 2013 The Canadian Rangers A Living History UBC Press pp 32 33 ISBN 978 0 7748 2455 2 McDonald Corinne 29 November 1999 The Canadian Armed Forces The Role of the Reserves Government of Canada Publications Government of Canada Retrieved 27 January 2019 The Reserve Force and Reserve Classes of Service Department of National Defence Government of Canada 6 July 2018 Archived from the original on 2 March 2020 Retrieved 27 January 2019 The Components of the Armed Forces English gov cn Archived from the original on 2012 08 09 Retrieved 2014 02 22 The reason behind the resistance by the New Territories inhabitants against British takeover in 1899 Archived from the original on October 27 2009 Retrieved 2014 02 22 Traditional Society and Living PDF www districtcouncils gov hk Archived from the original PDF on June 9 2011 Google Translate Retrieved 2014 02 22 Jr Karl DeRouen Heo Uk 27 September 2005 Defense and Security 2 volumes A Compendium of National Armed Forces and Security Policies 2 volumes Bloomsbury Publishing USA p 199 ISBN 978 1 85109 786 9 The Cuban Threat to U S National Security Intelligence Resource Program Federation of American Scientists Retrieved 7 September 2023 Szulc Ted Fidel A Critical Portrait Page 440 Hutchinson 1986 ISBN 0 09 172602 6 Resistance www okupatsioon ee Archived from the original on May 23 2010 Argo Kuusik 2006 Estonian Omakaitse in 1941 1944 In Toomas Hiio in Estonian Meelis Maripuu Indrek Paavle in Estonian eds Estonia 1940 1945 Reports of the Estonian International Commission for the Investigation of Crimes Against Humanity Tallinn pp 797 806 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ethiopia The Armed Forces August 7 2023 Archived from the original on 2007 12 24 ETHIOPIA NEW 80 000 STRONG PEOPLE S MILITIA PARADES BEFORE ETHIOPIA S RULER LIEUTENANT COLONEL MENGISTU HAILE MARIAM British Pathe Retrieved 2023 08 07 Account 2022 05 04 The truth about Fano militia and the false accusations against it Borkena Ethiopian News Retrieved 2023 08 07 Gilliver Kate Caesar s Gallic Wars 58 50 BC London Osprey Publishing 2002 ISBN 0 415 96858 5 Joan of Arc Her Story by Regine Pernoud Author Marie Veronique Clin Author Jeremy duQuesnay Adams Translator Palgrave Macmillan 1999 ISBN 0 312 22730 2 David Schoenbrun Soldiers of the Night The Story of the French Resistance New American Library 1980 ISBN 0 452 00612 0 Corbet Sylvie October 12 2016 France creates National Guard to battle terrorism Military Times Campbell Bruce The SA Generals and the Rise of Nazism Page 99 University Press of Kentucky 1998 ISBN 0 8131 9098 3 German Police Unit Marks 1920 1937 www radix net Archived from the original on June 5 2013 Wolfgang Benz 2007 A Concise History of the Third Reich University of California Press ISBN 978 0520253834 Yelton David K Hitler s Volkssturm The Nazi Militia and the Fall of Germany 1944 1945 University Press of Kansas 2002 ISBN 0700611924 Salwa Judum menace or messiah The Times of India 2010 03 20 Archived from the original on 2011 08 11 Retrieved 2014 02 22 Arjomand Said Amir 20 November 2009 After Khomeini Iran Under His Successors Oxford University Press pp 58 59 ISBN 978 0 19 974576 0 Cordesman Anthony H Kleiber Martin 2007 Iran s Military Forces and Warfighting Capabilities The Threat in the Northern Gulf CSIS pp 81 82 ISBN 978 0 89206 501 1 mnf iraq com mnf iraq com Archived from the original on 2009 09 11 Retrieved 2014 02 22 Segev Tom 2018 2019 translation Haim Watzman A State at Any Cost The Life of David Ben Gurion Apollo ISBN 9 781789 544633 p 96 Bregman Ahron 2002 Israel s Wars A History Since 1947 London Routledge ISBN 0 415 28716 2 Israel Kershner August 30 2011 Israel Intensifies Training of Settler Security Teams The New York Times Kirkpatrick David D 1 November 2011 In Libya Fighting May Outlast the Revolution The New York Times Tripoli Retrieved 16 November 2011 Libya militia leader Heat seeking missiles other weapons stolen during firefight The Washington Post 24 September 2012 Retrieved 25 September 2012 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Vinson III Ben 2001 Bearing Arms For His Majesty The Free Colored Militia in Colonial Mexico Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 5024 0 Pineda Leticia Mexican vigilantes seize new town from drug cartel Yahoo News Archived from the original on 15 January 2014 Retrieved 13 January 2014 La Jornada El gobierno creo en 1976 brigada especial para aplastar a guerrilleros en el valle de Mexico Retrieved 23 March 2015 MIPT Terrorism Knowledge Base Archived from the original on 13 July 2007 Retrieved 23 March 2015 Chris Arsenault Zapatistas The war with no breath Retrieved 23 March 2015 Desapariciones forzadas del calderonismo Retrieved 23 March 2015 Autoridades consignan a lider templario senalado por autodefensas 20 January 2014 Archived from the original on 18 March 2015 Retrieved 23 March 2015 Autodefensas inicia operaciones como Fuerza Rural de Michoacan Excelsior 2014 05 11 Retrieved 23 March 2015 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2014 06 27 Retrieved 2014 06 28 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Mc Pheeters Antique Militaria 11MM Montenegro Revolver used in Mexican Revolution www mcpheetersantiquemilitaria com Retrieved 2020 10 17 McCollum Ian 2016 06 20 RIA A Pair of Arresting Montenegrin Gasser Revolvers Forgotten Weapons Retrieved 2020 10 17 Peterson Phillip 2011 11 04 The Revolvers of Montenegro Gun Digest Retrieved 2020 10 17 Bay of Islands Daily Southern Cross vol 2 issue 101 22 March 1845 p2 Militia Ordinance Daily Southern Cross Vol 2 issue 103 5 April 1845 p2 Stack Wayne 2011 10 18 The New Zealand Expeditionary Force in World War I Bloomsbury USA p 6 ISBN 978 1 84908 539 7 Robert Blackwill James Dobbins Michael O Hanlon Clare Lockhart Nathaniel Fick Molly Kinder Andrew Erdmann John Dowdy Samina Ahmed Anja Manuel Meghan O Sullivan Nancy Birdsall Wren Elhai 2011 Nicholas Burns Jonathon Price eds American Interests in South Asia Building a Grand Strategy in Afghanistan Pakistan and India Aspen Institute pp 155 ISBN 978 1 61792 400 2 Retrieved 3 November 2011 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Pakistan Timeline 2012 Satp org Retrieved 2012 08 06 Taliban kill then behead three Pakistan tribesmen The China Post 2009 03 14 Retrieved 2012 08 06 Haythornthwaite Philip 23 April 1987 The Russian Army of the Napoleonic Wars 1 Infantry 1799 1814 Bloomsbury USA pp 37 38 ISBN 0 85045 737 8 Russian Police Bill to Come into Force Next Spring Georgianjournal ge 2010 11 03 Archived from the original on 2012 07 24 Retrieved 2012 08 06 Security News Sundayobserver lk Sri Lanka Sundayobserver lk 2008 02 17 Archived from the original on 2014 02 26 Retrieved 2014 02 22 Ministry of Defence and Urban Development Sri Lanka Defence lk Archived from the original on 2014 03 07 Retrieved 2014 02 22 Civil Defence Committees to protect civilians from terrorist attacks Government of Sri Lanka 2008 02 14 Archived from the original on 2009 01 09 Retrieved 2008 03 26 News Sundaytimes lk Retrieved 2014 02 22 International LTTE recruits volunteers for auxiliary forces The Hindu 2004 06 24 Archived from the original on 2004 09 18 Retrieved 2014 02 22 News Sundaytimes lk Retrieved 2014 02 22 Sudan Janjaweed Camps Still Active Human Rights Watch Hrw org 2004 11 27 Retrieved 2022 03 16 The Swiss Report A special study for Western Goals Foundation Gen Lewis W Walt and Maj Gen George S Patton 1983 a b Insight Battered by war Syrian army creates its own replacement Reuters April 21 2013 Retrieved May 29 2013 Michael Weiss 17 May 2013 Rise of the militias NOW Archived from the original on 5 November 2013 Syria s Alawite Force Turned Tide for Assad Wall Street Journal 26 August 2013 Retrieved 2 September 2013 Syria s civil war The regime digs in The Economist 15 June 2013 Oxford English Dictionary Second Edition 1989 The History of English Law Before the Time of Edward I Pollock and Maitland Cambridge U Pr 1898 Century Dictionary 1891 articles on posse comitatus and militia A Discourse of Government with Relation to Militias Andrew Fletcher 1698 ISBN 0 521 43994 9 Units of the Militia to be transferred to the Special Reserve published as a schedule to an Order in Council made 9 April 1908 The London Gazette 10 April 1908 Linder Doug 2008 United States vs Miller U S 1939 Exploring Constitutional Law University of Missouri Kansas City Law School Archived from the original on 2001 11 23 Retrieved 2008 07 26 John Shy Mobilizing Armed Force in the American Revolution in John Parker and Carol Urness eds The American Revolution A Heritage of Change Minneapolis 1975 pp 104 5 Stephen P Halbrook The Right of the People or the Power of the State Bearing Arms Arming Militias and the Second Amendment Valparaiso Law Review vol 26 number 1 page 131 1991 William E Nelson The Eighteenth Century Background of John Marshall s Constitutional Jurisprudence 76 Mich L Rev 893 1978 ch 23 23 The Jury and Consensus Government in Mid Eighteenth Century America a b Wills Garry 1999 A Necessary Evil A History of American Distrust of Government New York NY Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 684 84489 3 Right to Keep and Bear Arms U S Senate Paladin Press 2001 ISBN 1 58160 254 5 Constitution of the State of New Hampshire 1776 amp 1784 Russell Alexander Alger 1901 The Spanish American War Harper amp Bros p 18 Retrieved 2014 02 22 spanish american war militia Sumner William H An Inquiry Into the Importance of the Militia to a Free Commonwealth Page 23 Cummings and Hillard 1823 ASIN B00085OK9E Reprinted in Richard H Kohn Anglo American Antimilitary Tracts 1697 1830 Arno Press 1979 ISBN 0 405 11886 4 Manski Ben 2006 States Rights for Civil Rights Liberty Tree Journal Vol 1 Issue 4 Catton Bruce 2004 The Civil War pages 28 29 Mariner Books ISBN 0 618 00187 5 Nicholas Lemann Redemption The Last Battle of the Civil War New York Farrar Straus amp Giroux paperback 2007 pp 25 167 170 George C Rable But There Was No Peace The Role of Violence in the Politics of Reconstruction Athens University of Georgia Press 1984 p 132 National Defense Act Amendments of 1933 Act of June 15 1933 ch 87 48 Stat 153 West Virginia Law Review www saf org Archived from the original on February 7 2012 Carless Will Corey Michael 24 June 2019 The American militia movement a breeding ground for hate is pulling in cops on Facebook www revealnews org The Center for Investigative Reporting Retrieved 4 February 2020 Scalia Antonin 2008 06 26 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA ET AL v HELLER PDF Judicial Decision Supreme Court of the United States Retrieved 2008 06 27 Law no 43 2009 QH12 on Militia and Self Defense Forces Sources edit ACLED 2015 Real Time Analysis of African Political Violence January 2015 Conflict Trends 33 http www acleddata com wp content uploads 2015 01 ACLED Conflict Trends Report No 33 January 2015 updated pdf Ahrem Ariel 2011 Proxy Warriors The Rise and Fall of State Sponsored Militias Stanford Stanford University Press Jones Rebecca 2008 State Failure and Extra legal Justice Vigilant groups civil militias and the rule of law in West Africa UNHCR New Issues in Refugee Research http www refworld org pdfid 4c23256dd pdf Raleigh Clionadh 2014 Pragmatic and Promiscuous Explaining the Rise of Competitive Political Militias across Africa Journal of Conflict Resolution pp 1 28 Sumner William Hyslop An Inquiry Into the Importance of the Militia to a Free Commonwealth In a Letter from William H Sumner to John Adams Late President of the United States with His Answer Cummings and Hilliard Boston 1823Further reading editAliyev Huseyn Jan 2019 When and How Do Militias Disband Global Patterns of Pro Government Militia Demobilization in Civil Wars Studies in Conflict amp Terrorism 42 8 715 734 DOI 10 1080 1057610X 2018 1425112 Bledsoe Andrew S Citizen Officers The Union and Confederate Volunteer Junior Officer Corps in the American Civil War Baton Rouge Louisiana Louisiana State University Press 2015 ISBN 978 0 8071 6070 1 Churchill Robert H To Shake Their Guns in the Tyrant s Face University of Michigan Press Archived 2012 11 14 at the Wayback Machine 2009 ISBN 978 0 472 11682 9 Cooper Jerry M The rise of the National Guard the evolution of the American militia 1865 1920 Studies in war society and the military v 1 Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 1998 ISBN 0 8032 1486 3 Galvin John R The Minute Men The First Fight Myths and Realities of the American Revolution Brasseys 1996 ISBN 1 57488 049 7 Hay George J The Constitutional Force 1908 reprinted by Ray Westlake Military Books 1987 ISBN 0 9508530 7 0 Smith Joshua M The Yankee Soldier s Might The District of Maine and the Reputation of the Massachusetts Militia 1800 1812 in New England Quarterly LXXXIV no 2 pp 234 264 2011 Whisker James B The Rise and Decline of the American Militia System Susquehanna University Press 1999 ISBN 0 945636 92 X Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Militia amp oldid 1193767342, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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