Subjects
Citizen Soldiers and the British Empire, 1837–1902
Editor: Ian Beckett
Warfare, Society and Culture
978 1 84893 204 3: 234x156mm: £60.00/$99.00
This edited collection of essays examines the role of citizen soldiers in the British empire during the Victorian period. The tradition of raising auxiliary forces from amateur soldiers had by the 1850s experienced a revival that spread to the colonies. Each essay focuses on a specific case to account for the development and military performance of different auxiliary forces across the Empire. Taken together they describe the wider social, political and cultural contexts in which these forces operated. The volume concludes with a chapter on the South African War, in which British and colonial contingents fought together, heralding the contribution that the Commonwealth would make to the Great War.
Readership
Military History, Empire Studies and Victorian Studies
Contents
Introduction – Ian Beckett
1 Britain – Ian Beckett
2 Ireland – Timothy Bowman and William Butler
3 Australia – Bob Marmion
4 Canada – Jim Wood
5 India – Kaushik Roy
6 New Zealand – John Crawford
7 South Africa – Tim Stapleton
8 The South African War – Stephen Miller
Appendix: Other Colonies
Reviews
'The contributors to this book amply demonstrate how all the far-flung, exotically-named units of Victorian citizen soldiers were thoroughly interwoven into the social, cultural and military fabric of the British Empire, and must be considered seriously in any attempt to explain its complex dynamics.' John Laband, Wilfrid Laurier University