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Indian troops marching through New Street, Baghdad, 1917 (b/w photo)

Indian troops marching through New Street, Baghdad, 1917 (b/w photo)
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No Additional Copyright
Largest available format 4494 × 3882 px 14 MB
Dimension [pixels] Dimension in 300dpi [mm] File size [MB]
Large 4494 × 3882 px 380 × 329 mm 13.6 MB
Medium 1024 × 885 px 87 × 75 mm 829 KB
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IMAGE number
NAM5924790
Image title
Indian troops marching through New Street, Baghdad, 1917 (b/w photo)
Auto-translated text View Original Source
Photographer
Unknown photographer, (20th century)
Location
National Army Museum, London
Medium
black and white photograph
Date
1917 AD (C20th AD)
Image description

Indian troops marching through New Street, Baghdad, 1917. Photograph, World War One, Mesopotamia (1914-1918), 1917. On the morning of 11 March 1917, General Sir Frederick Maude’s Anglo-Indian army entered Baghdad, capital of the Ottoman province of Mesopotamia. The soldiers were initially greeted with enthusiasm by the local population and Maude issued a proclamation a week later, part of which could be seen as a sobering precursor to 2003’s Operation Iraqi Freedom: 'Our military operations have as their object the defeat of the enemy, and the driving of him from these territories. In order to complete this task, I am charged with absolute and supreme control of all regions in which British troops operate; but our armies do not come into your cities and lands as conquerors or enemies, but as liberators'. Despite Maude’s words, the Army remained in the region and the new state of Iraq became a British mandate. Between 1920 and 1922, the British suppressed a major revolt in the country. From album of 103 official photographs compiled by Colonel A H McCleverty, 2nd Queen Victoria’s Own Rajput Light Infantry.

Photo credit
© National Army Museum / Bridgeman Images
Image keywords
marching / city / topography / Photograph / Photography / Mzphoto

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