British soldiers were called lobsterbacks don't forget red skins!
383,800 British Soldiers were killed during World War 2.
there were 5,397,000 british soldiers mobilised during ww1.
the were paid 1 pound
British.
Lobster Backs was the nickname for a British soldier during the French and Indian War because the British soldiers war red coats.
Yes, India gate is colonial. India Gate was built in commemoration of the Indian soldiers that died in WWI and the Anglo-Afghan war. It was built during British Colonial dominion of India.
tribute to the 70,000 Indian soldiers who lost their lives during World War I, when they fought for the British Army
All the shots fired during the Amritsar massacre were fired by British Indian Army soldiers, commanded by Brigadier-General Reginald Dyer. The people fired upon were unarmed. The British Indian Army soldiers were a mix of Gurkhas and Baluchis, so they were Indian under British orders.
The British had to pay for the supplies. The British soldiers kept dying so they had to pay for the guns and rope and wood and so froth.
During World War I and World War II, Indians fought on the side of the British Empire. Many Indian soldiers served in the British Indian Army and British armed forces.
In private colonial homes
70,000 soldiers died during the Third Battle
africa
If you mean the German soldiers that the British hired, that would be the Hessians. If you're talking about the actual British soldiers, that would be redcoats.
The oldest house in Princeton NJ is george washingtons barracks, which he used during the french and Indian war, but was used by the British and their hessian soldiers during the battle of Princeton.
During the Revolutionary War the Americans nicknamed the British soldiers 'red-coats'.