Bengal Native Infantry

Bengal Native Infantry
Flag of the British East India Company
Active1757–1858 (as part of the East India Company's Bengal Army)
1858–1895 (as part of the Bengal Army of the British Raj)
1895–1903 (under the Bengal command of the British Indian Army)
AllegianceEast India Company
United Kingdom
BranchBengal Army
RoleInfantry
Size19 Battalions (1764)[1]
74 Regiments (1857)[2]
45 Regiments (1861)[3]
ConflictsBattle of Plassey
Third Carnatic War
First Anglo-Mysore War
Second Anglo-Mysore War
Third Anglo-Mysore War
First Anglo-Maratha War
Cotiote War
Fourth Anglo-Mysore War
Second Anglo-Maratha War
Invasion of Java
Anglo-Nepalese War
Third Anglo-Maratha War
First Anglo-Burmese War
First Opium War
First Anglo-Afghan War
First Anglo-Sikh War
Second Anglo-Sikh War
Second Anglo-Burmese War
Indian Mutiny
Second Opium War
Second Anglo-Afghan War
Suakin Expedition
Third Anglo-Burmese War

The regiments of Bengal Native Infantry, alongside the regiments of Bengal European Infantry, were the regular infantry components of the East India Company's Bengal Army from the raising of the first Native battalion in 1757 to the passing into law of the Government of India Act 1858 (as a direct result of the Indian Mutiny). At this latter point control of the East India Company's Bengal Presidency passed to the British Government. The first locally recruited battalion was raised by the East India Company in 1757 and by the start of 1857 there were 74 regiments of Bengal Native Infantry in the Bengal Army. Following the Mutiny the Presidency armies came under the direct control of the United Kingdom Government and there was a widespread reorganisation of the Bengal Army that saw the Bengal Native Infantry regiments reduced to 45.

The title "Bengal Native Infantry" fell out of use in 1885 and the Bengal Infantry regiments ceased to exist when the three separate Presidency armies were absorbed into the British Indian Army in 1903. There are units currently serving in the armies of India, Pakistan and the United Kingdom who can trace their lineage directly to units of the Bengal Native Infantry, for example the Jat Regiment in the Indian Army, the Royal Gurkha Rifles in the British Army and 6th Battalion, The Punjab Regiment in the Army of Pakistan.

  1. ^ Williams, John (1817). An historical account of the rise and progress of the Bengal Native Infantry, from its first formation in 1757, to 1796 when the present regulations took place, together with a detail of the services on which the several battalions have been employed. London: John Murray.
  2. ^ Quarterly Army List of Her Majesty's British Forces on the Bengal Establishment. Calcutta: R C Lepage & Co. 1859.
  3. ^ Army Headquarters India (1919). Indian Army List (2012 reprinted ed.). Luton: Andrews UK. ISBN 978-1-78150-255-6.