Gurkha, soldier from Nepal serving in either the British or Indian army.
The term Gurkha refers to the region around the town of Gurkha, whose Shah dynasty (1559–2008) consolidated the modern state of Nepal through military conquest in the late 18th century. The dynasty continued to rule Nepal until the monarchy was abolished in 2008. Although the dynasty’s armed forces were derived from a geographically and ethnically diverse set of recruits, including the Gurung and Magar peoples in west-central Nepal and the Rai and Limbu peoples in eastern Nepal, the forces were collectively identified by outsiders with the dynasty’s region of origin.
Active in Nepal at the time of the British East India Company’s ascendance in the subcontinent, Gurkha fighters soon became known globally for their excellent combat qualities and their use of kukri knives. They were defeated by the British in the Anglo-Nepalese (Gurkha) War of 1814–16, however, due to their relative limitation in both resources and manpower. The war resulted in the Treaty of Sagauli (1816), whose provisions required Nepal’s rulers to cede roughly half of the kingdom’s territory and allow the British a political presence in Kathmandu, the capital. The British began recruiting Gurkha fighters to employ in the East India Company’s armed forces in India. Gurkhas fought on behalf of the East India Company in a number of conflicts, including the Pindari War (1817–18), the Sikh Wars (1845–46 and 1848–49), and the Indian Mutiny (1857–58). Under the British raj (1858–1947), which followed the dissolution of the East India Company, they were incorporated into the British Indian army, and many contingents fought overseas in the First and Second World Wars.
Upon Indian independence in 1947, four Gurkha regiments of the British Indian army were transferred to the British Army, and six regiments joined the Indian Army. In the 21st century, several thousand Gurkha soldiers serve in the British Army, and tens of thousands serve in the Indian Army.