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12 - The Tirah Campaign, 1897–1898

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 June 2021

Stephen M. Miller
Affiliation:
University of Maine, Orono
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Summary

The North-West Frontier of British India was the site of continuous Pukhtun armed struggle against colonial intrusion throughout the nineteenth century. Persistent tribal armed attacks and major rebellions were followed by 'butcher and bolt' or 'burn and scuttle' British military expeditions, including one of the biggest Victorian 'small wars', the Tirah Campaign of 1897–99. The campaign was undertaken to recover imperial prestige lost due to the fall of the strategically important Khyber Pass in August 1897. Lacking topographical knowledge, the British had to march a large force through rugged mountainous terrain without roads or tracks. Considering the historiography to date and relevant recent scholarship as well as shifting paradigms such as the New Military History, this chapter will offer a critical reappraisal of the Tirah Campaign including as an anatomy of battle, the infamous battle for the Dargai bluff, which the British captured on 18 October, abandoned it later that day, and then re-took again two days later. This re-examination of the Tirah war opens up a rich space to question the framework of small wars as it has been applied to such colonial wars.

Type
Chapter
Information
Queen Victoria's Wars
British Military Campaigns, 1857–1902
, pp. 240 - 259
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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References

Further Reading

Agha, Sameetah. ‘Sub-imperialism and the loss of the Khyber: The politics of imperial defence on British India’s North-West Frontier’. Indian Historical Review 40, 2(2013): 307–30.Google Scholar
Callwell, C. E. Tirah 1897. London: Constable, 1911.Google Scholar
Frontier and Overseas Expeditions from India, vol. 2. Simla: Govt. Monotype Press, 1910.Google Scholar
Hernon, Ian. The Savage Empire: Forgotten Wars of the 19th Century. Stroud: Sutton Publishing Limited, 2000.Google Scholar
Hutchinson, Col. H.D. The Campaign in the Tirah 1897–1898: An Account of the Expedition Against the Orakzais and Afridis under Gen. Sir. William Lockhart. London: Macmillan, 1898.Google Scholar
James, Colonel Lionel. The Indian Frontier War: Being an Account of the Mohmund and Tirah Expeditions 1897. London: Heinemann, 1898.Google Scholar
Johnson, Rob. The Afghan Way of War: How and Why They Fight. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012.Google Scholar
Mills, H. Woosnam. The Tirah Campaign, Being the Sequel to the Pathan Revolt in North-West India. Lahore, India: Civil and Military Gazette, 1898.Google Scholar
Moreman, T. R. The Army in India and the Development of Frontier Warfare, 1849–1947. London: Macmillan Press LTD, 1998.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nevill, Captain H. L. Campaigns on the North-West Frontier. London: J. Murray, 1912.Google Scholar
Shadwell, Leonard Julius. Lockhart’s Advance through Tirah. London: W. Thacker, 1898.Google Scholar
Slessor, A. K. The 2nd Battalion, Derbyshire Regiment in Tirah. London: Swan Sonnenschein, 1900.Google Scholar
Stewart, J. The Khyber Rifles: From the British Raj to Al Gaeda. Stroud: Gloucestershire, 2005.Google Scholar
Surridge, Keith. ‘The Ambiguous Amir: Britain, Afghanistan and the 1897 North-West Frontier Uprising’. Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 36, 3(2008): 417–34.Google Scholar
Thomsett, Richard Gillham. With the Peshawar Column, Tirah Expeditionary Force. London: Digby, Long & Co., 1899.Google Scholar
Warburton, Robert. Eighteen Years in the Khyber, 1879–1898. London: J. Murray, 1900.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, Glenn R., ‘Purple prose and the yellow press: Imagined spaces and the military expedition to Tirah, 1897’. In Finkelstein, David and Peers, Douglas M. (eds.) Negotiating India in the Nineteenth-Century Media. London: Macmillan Press, 2000.Google Scholar
Yate, Arthur Campbell. Lieutenant-Colonel John Haughton, Commandant of the 36th Sikhs, A Hero of Tirah: A Memoir. London: J. Murray, 1900.Google Scholar

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