Baloch Regiment
The Baloch Regiment is an infantry regiment of the Pakistan Army sister to Artillery. The modern regiment was formed in May 1956 by the merger of 8th Punjab and Bahawalpur Regiments with the Baluch Regiment. Since then, further raisings have brought the strength of the Regiment to 57 active battalions. The Baloch Regiment is descended from the infantry of the old British Indian Army and is named after Balochistan (formerly Baluchistan). Before 1991, it was called the Baluch Regiment but the spelling was changed to 'Baloch' to better reflect the correct pronunciation.
Abdul Qayum SherAli Kuli Khan KhattakBilal ZafarHabibullah Khan KhattakIftikhar Ali Khan (general)Jamshed_Gulzar_Kiani__MilitaryService__1John DalviKhalid_Maqbool__MilitaryService__1Lionel Protip SenMirza_Aslam_Beg__MilitaryService__1Qamar_Javed_Bajwa__MilitaryService__1Rahimuddin_Khan__MilitaryService__1Tajammul Hussain MalikTariq_Majid__MilitaryService__1Zahirul Islam Abbasi
military unit
Wikipage redirect
10th Baluch Regiment11th Gorkha Rifles124th Duchess of Connaught's Own Baluchistan Infantry126th Baluchistan Infantry127th Baluch Light Infantry129th Duke of Connaught's Own Baluchis130th Baluchis15th Lancers19 Baloch Regiment26th Jacob's Mountain Battery36 Baloch Regiment54th Infantry Division (India)89th Punjabis8th Punjab Regiment90th Punjabis91st Punjabis (Light Infantry)92nd Punjabis93rd Burma InfantryAbdul Hamid Khan (general)Abdul Qayum SherAbu Saleh Mohammad Mustafizur RahmanAhmad ZamirAhsan MalikAlfred Astley PearsonAli Kuli Khan KhattakAltaf Hussain (Pakistani politician)Anglo-Persian WarAshfaq Parvez KayaniBahawalpur RegimentBaluch RegimentBaseer ShamsiBhandari RamBilal ZafarBombay ArmyBritish East Africa 1896British East Africa 1897–99Central Indian campaign of 1858
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
commands
primaryTopic
Baloch Regiment
The Baloch Regiment is an infantry regiment of the Pakistan Army sister to Artillery. The modern regiment was formed in May 1956 by the merger of 8th Punjab and Bahawalpur Regiments with the Baluch Regiment. Since then, further raisings have brought the strength of the Regiment to 57 active battalions. The Baloch Regiment is descended from the infantry of the old British Indian Army and is named after Balochistan (formerly Baluchistan). Before 1991, it was called the Baluch Regiment but the spelling was changed to 'Baloch' to better reflect the correct pronunciation.
has abstract
The Baloch Regiment is an infa ...... ttle of Qaisar-i-Hind in 1971.
@en
active years start year
battle
colour name
Kai Kai
@en
garrison
military unit size
57 Battalions
motto
(Victorious or Martyr)
Ghazi ya Shaheed
role
Standard Infantry with 2 Light Commando, 5 Mechanized and 8 Light Anti Tank Battalions
second commander
type
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
Wikipage page ID
12,920,604
page length (characters) of wiki page
Wikipage revision ID
1,023,599,644
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
battles
Abyssinian Campaign 1868
@en
Anglo-Egyptian War 1882
@en
Anglo-Persian War 1856–57
@en
British East Africa 1896
@en
British East Africa 1897–99
@en
British Somaliland 1908–10
@en
Burmese Rebellion 1931–32
@en
Coorg War 1834
@en
Expedition to Aden 1839
@en
First Burma War 1824–26
@en
Colors
Kai Kai
@en
colors label
War Cry
@en
commander
General Qamar Javed Bajwa, (NI )
@en
commander2 label
Colonel in Chief
@en
dates
equipment
Rifle Green; faced cherry
@en
equipment label
Uniform
@en
garrison
garrison label
Regimental Centre
@en
image size
motto
@en
Ghazi ya Shaheed
@en
role
Standard Infantry with 2 Light Commando, 5 Mechanized and 8 Light Anti Tank Battalions
@en
type
unit name
The Baloch Regiment
@en
wikiPageUsesTemplate
wordnet_type
subject
hypernym
type
comment
The Baloch Regiment is an infa ...... ect the correct pronunciation.
@en
label
Baloch Regiment
@en
wasDerivedFrom
isPrimaryTopicOf
name
The Baloch Regiment
@en