David Killingray
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Gender issues and African colonial armies
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All the colonial powers in Africa established small colonial armies, lightly armed bodies of locally recruited, uniformed and disciplined men who were used to conquer and 'pacify' territory, and to guard frontiers. This chapter addresses gender relations of African colonial armies. The armies of the Second World War contained a substantial number of white women in uniform, with whom some African soldiers enjoyed close relations, despite the best attempts of the authorities to keep races and sexes apart. The majority of European officers in colonial armies were professional soldiers drawn for the most part from the middle and upper classes. Social class separated them from the few European NCOs and they used separate messes and clubs. Colonial armies were male institutions but in peacetime the camps or 'lines' also housed women who played an important role in the life and social economy of each force.

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Guardians of empire

The armed forces of the colonial powers c. 1700–1964

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