Indian Army Armoured Corps: Difference between revisions
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The naming of the regiments reflects its historical origins. The terms ''Cavalry'', ''Horse'' and ''Lancers'', which have been dispensed with in the case of units raised post-independence, are historical legacies from the raising and renaming of these units when part of the [[East India Company]]'s army and/or later the [[British Indian Army]].{{fact|date=October 2021}} |
The naming of the regiments reflects its historical origins. The terms ''Cavalry'', ''Horse'' and ''Lancers'', which have been dispensed with in the case of units raised post-independence, are historical legacies from the raising and renaming of these units when part of the [[East India Company]]'s army and/or later the [[British Indian Army]].{{fact|date=October 2021}} |
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[[File:Vijayanta Vickers MBT. (49141256562).jpg|thumb|305x305px|The Vijayanta - main battle tank of the Indian Army between 1965 and the early 2000s.]] |
[[File:Vijayanta Vickers MBT. (49141256562).jpg|thumb|305x305px|The [[Vijayanta]] - [[main battle tank]] of the Indian Army between 1965 and the early 2000s.]] |
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==Composition of an Armoured Regiment== |
==Composition of an Armoured Regiment== |
Revision as of 03:13, 27 January 2023
Indian Army Armoured Corps | |
---|---|
Symbol of Indian Armoured Corps | |
Active | 1941 - Present |
Country | India |
Branch | Indian Army |
Role | Armoured Combat |
Size | 67 Armoured regiments[1] |
The Indian Army Armoured Corps is one of the combat arms of the Indian Army. Tracing its origins from the first regiment formed in 1776, the present corps was formed in 1947 from two-thirds of the personnel and assets of the British Indian Army's Indian Armoured Corps. It currently consists of 67 armoured regiments, including the President's Bodyguards.[1]
School and Centre
The Armoured Corps School and Centre (ACC&S) is located in Ahmednagar, Maharashtra. In 1921, six Armoured Car companies arrived and in 1924 the Royal Tank Corps School was established at Ahmednagar to train the personnel of the Royal Tank Corps. This school was the forerunner of the Fighting Vehicle School, which began to impart to driving & maintenance training. The Fighting Vehicle School along with the Machine Gun School, the training regiments, the recruit training centre, Armoured Corps Depot and Armoured Corps Records were amalgamated to form the present school and centre in 1948.[2]
Armour Day
The Armoured Corps of Indian Army celebrates 'Armour Day' on 1 May. It was on this day in 1938 that Scinde Horse became the first regiment to dismount from their horses and move to tanks.[3] The first equipment inducted were Vickers Light Tanks and Chevrolet Armoured Cars.[4]
Naming Convention of the Armoured Regiments
The naming of the regiments reflects its historical origins. The terms Cavalry, Horse and Lancers, which have been dispensed with in the case of units raised post-independence, are historical legacies from the raising and renaming of these units when part of the East India Company's army and/or later the British Indian Army.[citation needed]
Composition of an Armoured Regiment
An armoured corps regiment is commanded by a Colonel ranked officer, who is known as the Commandant of the Unit. An armoured regiment comprises 3 Sabre Squadrons and a Headquarter Squadron. Each squadron is commanded by a Major ranked officer. He holds the appointment of a Squadron Commander.[5]
An Armoured Regiment has around 45 to 50 tanks in all. Each Sabre Squadron consists of 14-15 tanks and one Armoured Recovery Vehicle. 3 tanks are assigned to the Headquarter Squadron, including that of the commandant.[6] Each squadron consists of four troops, each consisting of 3 tanks.[7]
Black Beret
The officers and troops of Armoured Corps regiments wear the Black Berets as opposed to the rifle green and blue coloured berets which are worn by the regiments of other arms and services respectively. The Black Beret gives the Tankman a distinct identity of their own within the Army fold.[5]
Equipment
The Armoured Corps of the Indian Army is currently equipped with the following tanks-
- Arjun MBT – Mk.1 variant in use and Mk.1A under order.
- T-90 – M and S variants with DRDO made upgrades.
- T-72 – M1 variant with upgrades namely Ajeya MK1/MK2 and Combat Improved Ajeya.
List of regiments
The list of regiments forming part of the Armoured Corps of the Indian Army is as follows. This list is as per unit serial number but not as per the order of precedence of the Indian Army. In that list, The President's Bodyguard is first, but is followed by 16 Light Cavalry, 7 Light Cavalry, 8 Cavalry and 1st Horse. As a matter of tradition, each Armoured Regiment has its own "Colonel of the Regiment", an honorary post for a senior officer who oversees the regimental issues concerning the unit.[8]
Name | Other Name(s) | Raising Date | Raising Commander | Raising Location | Current Location | References | Tank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
President's Bodyguard | 1773 | New Delhi | Horse | ||||
1st Horse | Skinner's Horse, The Yellow Boys | 23 February 1803 | Col James Skinner | Hansi | [9] | T-72 | |
2nd Lancers | Gardner's Horse | 1809 | Lt Col William Gardner | Farrukhabad and Mainpuri | [10] | T-72 | |
3rd Cavalry | 1822 | [11] | T-72 | ||||
4 Horse | Hodson's Horse, Flamingoes | 1857 | Brevet Major WSR Hodson | Punjab | [12] | T-72 | |
5th Armoured Regiment** | 1 December 1983 | Lt Col JPS Hanspal | Jodhpur | Patiala | [13][14] | T-90 | |
6th Lancers*** | 1 February 1984 | Lt Col RS Deol, SM | Nabha | ||||
7th Light Cavalry | 3rd Madras Lancers, 28th Light Cavalry | 1784 | T-72 | ||||
8th Light Cavalry | 5th Madras Native Cavalry, 1st Madras Native Cavalry, 4th Nizam of Hyderabad's Contingent Cavalry, 30th Lancers (Gordon's Horse), 26th Prince of Wales' Own Cavalry, 26th King George's Own Cavalry, 8th King George's Own Light Cavalry | 23 Oct 1787 | Maj Henry Darley | Arcot | T-72 | ||
9th Deccan Horse | The Royal Deccan Horse | 1790 | |||||
10th Armoured Regiment | 16 April 1984 | Lt Col Kulwant Singh | Ahmednagar | T-72 | |||
11th Armoured Regiment | 7 May 1984 | Lt Col Harjeet Singh Lamba | Kaluchak | ||||
12th Armoured Regiment | Barsinghas | 1 October 1984 | Lt Col LR Vaid | Kapurthala | T-90 | ||
13th Armoured Regiment | Triskaideca, Nightstrikers | 21 December 1984 | Lt Col Balram Singh Mehta | Ahmednagar | T-90 | ||
14 Horse | The Scinde Horse | 8 August 1839 | Captain W Ward | Hyderabad, Sindh | [15] | T-72 | |
15th Armoured Regiment | 1 March 1985 | Lt Col MD Law | Mamun | T-90 | |||
16th Light Cavalry | 1776 | T-72 | |||||
17 Horse | The Poona Horse, Fakr-e-Hind | 15 July 1817 | Sirur | [16] | T-72 | ||
18 Cavalry | 31 January 1842 | Amritsar | [17][18] | T-72 | |||
19th Armoured Regiment | Invincibles | 25 March 1985 | Ahmednagar | T-90 | |||
20th Lancers | 1857/1858 Re-raised 10 July 1956 |
Lt Col Umrao Singh | Ahmednagar | T-72 | |||
Central India Horse | 21st King George V's Own Horse | 1857 | Captain Henry Otway Mayne | [19][20] | |||
41st Armoured Regiment | 1 July 1980 | Lt Col JP Singh | Ahmednagar | [13] | T-72 | ||
42nd Armoured Regiment | 1 January 1981 | Lt Col Ranjit Talwar | Babina | [13] | T-90 | ||
43rd Armoured Regiment | Charioteers | 1981 | Lt Col BM Kapur | Ahmednagar | [13][21] | Arjun Mk1 | |
44 Armoured Regiment | 15 December 1981 | Lt Col DS Dhillon | Ahmednagar | [13][22][23] | T-72 | ||
45th Cavalry | Paintalis Risala | 16 May 1965 | Lt Col SK Candade | New Delhi | Suratgarh, Rajasthan | [13] | T-90 |
46th Armoured Regiment | Thunderbolts | 1 July 1982 | Lt Col Prithpal Singh Sandhu | Ahmednagar | [13][24][25] | T-72 | |
47th Armoured Regiment | Penetrators | 15 November 1982 | Lt Col Tejvir Singh Sirohi | Babina | Sikkim | [26][27] | T-72 |
48th Armoured Regiment | 1 December 1982 | Lt Col DS Dhadwal | Meerut | T-90 | |||
49th Armoured Regiment | Falcons | 1 October 1983 | Lt Col JPS Nakai | Ahmednagar | Jodhpur | ||
50 Armoured Regiment | Fear Naught | July 1989 | Lt Col AK Bhatia | Ahmednagar | [28][29] | T-72 | |
51 Armoured Regiment | The Unicorn | 15 July 1989 | Lt Col RS Gill | T-72 | |||
52 Armoured Regiment | 1 February 1994 | Col Jugvir Singh | Roorkee | T-72 | |||
53 Armoured Regiment | 1 April 2002 | [30] | |||||
54 Armoured Regiment | 1 July 2010 | [31] | T-90 | ||||
55 Armoured Regiment | T-90 | ||||||
56 Armoured Regiment | Lionhearts | 1 October 2011 | [32] | ||||
57 Armoured Regiment | |||||||
58 Armoured Regiment | Awwal Atthawan, the Patiala Risala | 1 October 2014 | Patiala | T-90 | |||
59 Armoured Regiment | |||||||
60 Armoured Regiment | Panthers | 2019 | Ahmednagar | [33] | T-90 | ||
61 Cavalry | 1 October 1953 | Lt Col Phulel Singh | Gwalior | Horse | |||
62 Cavalry | 31 March 1957 | Lt Col RS Butalia | Ambala | Dehradun | [34] | T-72 | |
63 Cavalry | Tresath | 2 January 1957 | Lt Col Harmandar Singh | Alwar | T-72 | ||
64 Cavalry | 31 March 1966 | Lt Col Trevor Lancelot Perry | Babina | ||||
65 Armoured Regiment | 1 September 1966 | Lt Col KK Kaul | T-72 | ||||
66 Armoured Regiment | 1 September 1966 | Lt Col Narinder Singh | Ahmednagar | T-72 | |||
67 Armoured Regiment | 15 September 1967 | Lt Col Niranjan Singh Cheema | T-72 | ||||
68 Armoured Regiment | Gladiators | 1 March 1968 | Lt Col RN Thumby | T-72 | |||
69 Armoured Regiment | 1 October 1968 | Ahmednagar | [35] | T-72 | |||
70 Armoured Regiment | 11 February 1968 | Lt Col R Christian | Ahmednagar | Raised as 70 Guided Missile Regiment | T-90 | ||
71 Armoured Regiment | 1 January 1971 | Lt Col BS Chimni | Ahmednagar | T-90 | |||
72 Armoured Regiment | The Chhamb Knights | 1 July 1971 | Lt Col Inderjit Chopra | Ahmednagar | Jaisalmer | youngest armd regt of the indian army to be blooded in war | T-90 |
73 Armoured Regiment | The Desert Rats | 3 Dec 1971 | Lt Col KM Dhody | Ahmednagar | T-90 | ||
74 Armoured Regiment | 1 Jun 1972 | Lt Col KS Khajuria | Ahmednagar | T-90 | |||
75 Armoured Regiment | 12 March 1972 | Lt Col Vijai Singh | Sakna | Jaisalmer | Only regiment to be raised on foreign soil[36][21] | Arjun Mk1 | |
76 Armoured Regiment | 21 March 1985 | Ahmednagar | T-72 | ||||
81 Armoured Regiment | 1 October 1973 | ||||||
82 Armoured Regiment | Toofan-e-hind | 1 Oct 1975 | Lt Col Moti Lal Dhar | T-72 | |||
83 Armoured Regiment | 1 Jan 1976 | Ahmednagar | [37] | T-90 | |||
84 Armoured Regiment | 1 July 1976 | Lt Col Tarif Singh Dhiyia | Ahmednagar | Pathankot | [38][29] | T-72 | |
85 Armoured Regiment | 1 October 1976 | Lt Col DP Singh | Ahmednagar | Nyoma | [39] | T-72 | |
86 Armoured Regiment | Chhiassi | 1 March 1977 | Lt Col NS Malik | Ahmednagar | Nabha | [36] | T-90 |
87 Armoured Regiment | Lightning Streaks Regiment | 1 July 1979 | Lt Col DD Singh | Ahmednagar | Suratgarh | [40] | T-72 |
88 Armoured Regiment | September 1979 | Lt Col Iesh Rikhy | Ahmednagar | [41] | T-72 | ||
89 Armoured Regiment | 1 February 1980 | Lt Col KL Bakshi | Ahmednagar | Namkum | [42] | T-72 | |
90 Armoured Regiment | 15 August 1979 | Lt Col Manjit Singh Sawhney | Pawan Da Chak | Amritsar |
** The original 5th Horse (Probyn's) was transferred to Pakistan in 1947.
*** Original 6th Duke of Connaught's Own Lancers was transferred to Pakistan in 1947.
Notes
- ^ a b Press Trust of India (31 December 2018). "Pak procuring 600 battle tanks to boost combat capability". The Quint. Retrieved 31 December 2018.
- ^ "Ahmednagar District". Retrieved 7 February 2021.
- ^ "Armoured Corps Centre & School, Ahmednagar celebrate 78th Armour Day". 4 May 2016. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
- ^ "Armoured Corps Centre and School Celebrates Armoured Corps Day". 1 May 2019. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
- ^ a b "Know The Indian Army: Hailed As 'King Of Battlefield', The Armoured Corps Packs A Punch With Lethal Tank Fire". 6 June 2020. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
- ^ "Armoured Regiment Structure". 12 October 2016. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
- ^ "Strike Corps reorientation comes for Ladakh but Army needs larger restructuring". 14 January 2021. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
- ^ "Armoured Corps of Indian Army celebrates its 82nd Armour Day; Gen MM Naravane extends wishes". 1 May 2020. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
- ^ John Pike. "1st Horse / Skinner's Horse". GlobalSecurity.org. Retrieved 11 June 2020.
- ^ "2nd Lancers". The Royal Tank Regiment Association. 2011. Archived from the original on 4 April 2011. Retrieved 9 June 2020.
- ^ History of the 3rd Cavalry.
- ^ "Hodson's Horse in 'British Empire'". Retrieved 25 April 2021.
- ^ a b c d e f g Web-page on "armoured Corps" at Bharat Rakshak Archived 19 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine, accessed December 2009.
- ^ Globalsecurity.org, 5 Armoured Regiment, accessed 23 July 2010
- ^ Record book of The Scinde Irregular Horse, Volume 1. Smith, Elder and Co, London. 1856.
- ^ "The Poona Horse Regiment Completes 200 Years Of Epic Journey". NDTV.com. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
- ^ "Standard presented to 18 CAVALRY by the Chief of the Army Staff". pib.nic.in. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
- ^ "Army chief presents President's Standard to 18 Cavalry in Amritsar". Hindustan Times. 8 March 2016. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
- ^ "Henry Otway Mayne". Retrieved 10 December 2020.
- ^ "Henry Mayne 1819 - 1861". Retrieved 10 December 2020.
- ^ a b "Standards presented to 75 Armoured Regiment and 43 Armoured Regiment by the Chief of Army Staff". Press hip Bureau. 16 March 2016. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
- ^ "President's Standards presented to 44 Armoured Regiment at Suratgarh Military Station : Listicles: Microfacts". indiatoday.intoday.in. Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
- ^ "44 Armoured Regiment gets President's Standards | Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis". dna. 25 February 2015. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
- ^ "Standard presentation to 46-Armoured Regiment by President Patil". www.oneindia.com. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
- ^ "Honour for 46 Armoured Regiment - Indian Express". archive.indianexpress.com. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
- ^ "Army Chief presents Standard to 47 Armoured Regiment". www.tribuneindia.com.
- ^ "General Bipin Rawat presented President's Standard to 47th Armoured Regiment". TimesNow. 21 October 2017. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
- ^ Delhi (5 November 2014). "Standards Presented to 50 Armoured Regiment and 84 Armoured Regiment by the Chief of Army Staff on 05 Nov 2014". Business Standard India. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
- ^ a b "Standards Presented to 50 Armoured Regiment and 84 Armoured Regiment by the Chief of Army Staff on 05 Nov 2014". pib.nic.in. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
- ^ "Armoured regiment celebrates Raising Day". 2 April 2004. Retrieved 4 May 2021.
- ^ "Haryana: Captain Bhanghoo from Panchkula to lead Republic Day Tank Contingent at Rajpath". The Times of India. 24 January 2021. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
- ^ "Indian Tankmen and their beasts: Remembering the hero of Basantar on Armoured Day". 2 May 2021. Retrieved 4 May 2021.
- ^ "Southern Command tweet on 60 Armd". 5 May 2021. Retrieved 13 May 2021.
- ^ "62 Cavalry celebrates its Golden Jubilee". www.oneindia.com. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
- ^ "Steps afoot to modernise forces, says Kalam in 'The Tribune'". 2 December 2003. Retrieved 26 December 2020.
- ^ a b Lt Gen Kamal Davar takes over as director general mechanised forces, 4 August 2001.
- ^ "Sainik Samachar Nov 2010". 1 November 2010. Retrieved 31 October 2020.
- ^ Delhi (5 November 2014). "Standards Presented to 50 Armoured Regiment and 84 Armoured Regiment by the Chief of Army Staff on 05 Nov 2014". Business Standard India. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
- ^ "Army Chief presents standards to 85 Armoured Regiment". The Hindu. Special Correspondent, Special Correspondent. 1 October 2011. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: others (link) - ^ "President Standards conferred on three armoured regiments in 'DNA India'". 6 December 2017. Retrieved 27 December 2020.
- ^ "Regiment celebrates silver jubilee in 'The Tribune'". 26 November 2004. Retrieved 27 December 2020.
- ^ "PressReader.com - Connecting People Through News". www.pressreader.com. Retrieved 23 October 2017.
Further reading
- Cavalry Officers Association [2000]. Valour Honour Tradition (Vignettes of the Indian Armored Corps 1773 - 2000. Director General Mechanized Forces, Sena Bhawan, New Delhi 110001.
- Maj Gen Gurchan Singh Sandhu, PVSM (1987). The Indian Armour- History of the Indian Armoured Corps : 1941 - 1971. Vision Books (incorporating Orient Paperbacks), New Delhi. ISBN 81-7094-004-4.
- Ashok Nath (2009). Izzat: Historical Records and Iconography of Indian Cavalry Regiments, 1750 - 2007. Centre for Armed Forces Historical Research, United Services Institution of India, New Delhi.