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| - The Fauj-i-Khas was a brigade of the Sikh Khalsa Army of Punjab in the time before the First Anglo-Sikh War. It was the Maharaja Ranjit Singh who started to hire European officers to train and command parts of his army. The Fauj-i-Khas was a model brigade trained and equipped after European model under the command of General Jean-Baptiste Ventura.It was consisted of 11000,horsemen(Ghor Charras),dived in to fifteen Dera led by eminents sardars,amoungh them Sham Singh Atariwala,Gurmukh Singh Lamba,Hari Singh Nalwa,and two by non Sikhs,the Mulraj Derah and Dorgra Derah.Izazi-i-sardari was the highest honour,most distinguished Sikh generals,sardar Gurmukh Singh Lamba, Hari Singh Nalwa, and Dal Singh Nahama were the recipient.Sikh General Sardar Gurmukh Singh Lamba sketch portrait Painting is d
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abstract
| - The Fauj-i-Khas was a brigade of the Sikh Khalsa Army of Punjab in the time before the First Anglo-Sikh War. It was the Maharaja Ranjit Singh who started to hire European officers to train and command parts of his army. The Fauj-i-Khas was a model brigade trained and equipped after European model under the command of General Jean-Baptiste Ventura.It was consisted of 11000,horsemen(Ghor Charras),dived in to fifteen Dera led by eminents sardars,amoungh them Sham Singh Atariwala,Gurmukh Singh Lamba,Hari Singh Nalwa,and two by non Sikhs,the Mulraj Derah and Dorgra Derah.Izazi-i-sardari was the highest honour,most distinguished Sikh generals,sardar Gurmukh Singh Lamba, Hari Singh Nalwa, and Dal Singh Nahama were the recipient.Sikh General Sardar Gurmukh Singh Lamba sketch portrait Painting is displayed at Central Museum Lahore under serial D-40 with a caption. The Fauj-i-Khas had 4 battalions of infantry, 2 regiments of cavalry and a troop of artillery. The cavalry was built on a British model and the infantry on French pattern. This was the first unit in the army to be equipped European-style. Impressed by its performance, the Maharaja ordered a total reorganisation of his whole regular force on the model of Fauj-i-Khas in 1835. This alarmed the British, who had come to see the emerging military power of Punjab as a threat, to such a degree that they in 1837 issued orders to be vigilant and try to arrest any French officer travelling in disguise to join Ranjit Singh’s army. Before Ranjit Singh, the Punjab army was mainly a pure cavalry army. Under the supervision of the European officers, and encouragement by the Maharaja, the infantry and artillery gained importance, and by the time of the death of Ranjit Singh, the infantry service had become the preferred service in the army. Over the years many Europeans served in the army of the Punjab. Among them:
* General Jean-François Allard (cavalry) - French
* General Paolo Di Avitabile (infantry) - Italian (Naples)
* General Jean-Baptiste Ventura (infantry) - Italian (Modena)
* General Claude August Court (artillery) - French
* Colonel Alexander Gardner (artillery) - American (Wisconsin)
* Colonel John Holmes - Anglo-Indian
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