Academic literature on the topic 'Military Cantonment'

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Journal articles on the topic "Military Cantonment"

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WALD, ERICA. "Health, Discipline and Appropriate Behaviour: the Body of the Soldier and Space of the Cantonment." Modern Asian Studies 46, no. 4 (November 25, 2011): 815–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x11000746.

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AbstractAnxiety about the intemperance and misbehaviour of the European soldiery in nineteenth century India prompted a raft of regulations which not only imposed a punitive regime on those living and working in and around the cantonments, but prompted an extension of military space. This paper specifically examines the methods and levels of control—both of which existed and were attempted in and around the cantonment. These ranged from regulations enacted to order the physical space of the cantonment, to calls for a more direct control over the bodies of the soldiers themselves as well as the numerous others who occupied the land. Crucially for this argument, moral and medical concerns were of critical importance in moulding this ordering. However, as this paper argues, social and class perceptions of the men—and the fear of provoking their wrath—dictated what officers and officials felt was legally possible. The various ways in which the military and government imposed order on the cantonment (or attempted to do so) had serious implications for the shaping of the empire itself and European understanding of its inhabitants.
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Raj, Jamuna. "Regulationist Measures: Prostitution and Politics in the State of Mysore." Artha - Journal of Social Sciences 17, no. 2 (April 1, 2018): 105–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.12724/ajss.45.7.

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The paper explores official policies towards Prostitution and the spread of Venereal Diseases in the Cantonment and Mysore Provinces. A medico-military discourse emerged in the Cantonment with the spread of Sexually Transmitted Diseases among white troopers. Transgressive sex was tolerated despite prostitutes being considered a receptacle of diseases. In not recognizing the dynamics of disease transmission, regulatory measures and race, sex, and class-bias blatantly vilified prostitutes. Though civilian spaces in the State of Karnataka were not as complex, regulations were enforced in tandem with the Cantonment during the colonial rule. Consequently, after the independence, the State’s measures were coincidental with the social purity movement’s censure of Devadasis.
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Muhammad Namadi, Muktar, and Afeez Oyeshola Jimoh. "Analysis of Institutional Solid Waste Generation and Disposal in Afaka Military Cantonment Kaduna." International Journal of Environmental Protection and Policy 8, no. 5 (2020): 100. http://dx.doi.org/10.11648/j.ijepp.20200805.12.

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Anwarul Hoque, Muhammad, Nazmin Rahman, and Mohammad Khalid Mahmud. "Safe Food Practices among the Regimental Food Handlers of Selected Military Unit." Journal of Armed Forces Medical College, Bangladesh 16, no. 1 (June 7, 2021): 65–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/jafmc.v16i1.53844.

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Introduction: Food safety is a key public health concern. Food handlers play an important role in ensuring food safety throughout the chain of preparation, storage and serving. Aim: To assess the food safety practice level among the food handlers of selected unit messes in Dhaka Cantonment. Methods: This descriptive cross sectional study was conducted among the food handlers of selected unit messes in Dhaka Cantonment from January 2013 to December 2013. A total of 133 food handlers were selected following convenient sampling technique. Data were collected by face to face interview using a predesigned semi-structured questionnaire and check list. All completed questionnaires were validated manually and data were analyzed with Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) verson 15.0 by using descriptive and inferential statistics. Results: In this study, the food handlers had a mean age of 32.94 years; all were male and Muslim. Regarding educational qualification, majority (42.9%) were between class VI to X and 80.5% were married. The mean monthly income of the participants was taka 17,115.8 and 53.4% belonged to nuclear family. Majority (65.4%) of the participants were cook and 39.8% had family members between 4-5 persons. It was found that out of all food handlers 12% had good, 78.9% had average and 9.0% had poor food safety practice status. Descriptive statistics revealed that occupation, education and marital status played a major role for food safety practice level. Conclusion: Efforts need to be taken to improve the awareness among the food handlers. Safety practices and further studies are recommended on determinants of non-compliance to safety practices by the food handlers. JAFMC Bangladesh. Vol 15, No 1 (June) 2020: 65-68
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Arlukevich, Aliaksandr B. "Cantonment of troops and housing service in Belarus (mid 1850s – mid 1870s)." Journal of the Belarusian State University. History, no. 1 (February 16, 2021): 36–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.33581/2520-6338-2021-1-36-58.

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The article reveals the essence of one of the phenomena of the era of Alexander’s reforms which on the scale of the Russian Empire was most common in Belarus but until now has not become the subject of research by Belarusian historians. According to the sources identified in the archives and book repositories of Belarus, Russia, Lithuania the military post due to the special geostrategic position of the Belarusian provinces in the mid 1850s – mid 1870s was an integral attribute of the daily life of hundreds of thousands of their inhabitants. In the present study is the first to assess the extent of involvement of the population in Belarusian provinces in support of troops of the Russian Empire housing allowance, sets out the principles and forms of army civilian infrastructure and food within the housing service, the role of local civil administration and selfgovernment in the cantonment of the troops on the ground. For the first time most of the used ones are mentioned.
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Hossain, AKM Alamgir, ASM Zulfiquer Ali, Sayeda Nazrina, and Nusrat Hossain. "Nutritional Status of Under Five Years Children in Rangpur Cantonment." Journal of Armed Forces Medical College, Bangladesh 15, no. 2 (December 20, 2020): 168–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/jafmc.v15i2.50832.

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Introduction: Nutrition is an important factor because of its role in preventing disease and infant survival and growth. Malnutrition and diseases are interlinked with each other and a great problem in all countries of the developing world. Objectives: To assess the nutritional status of the under five year's children in Rangpur Cantonment. Materials and Methods: This descriptive cross-sectional study was done in Children Welfare Centre (CWC) of Combined Military Hospital (CMH), Rangpur from July to August 2018. A total of 50 under five years children were selected and a structured questionnaire was used keeping the focus on socioeconomic status, dietary habits, hygiene practices, and anthropometric indices of the children. Results: Out of 50 children, 60% were male and 40% were female. About 26% of children were in the 36 to 48 months of age group. About 50% were in the height group of >100 cm, 34.0% were in the height group of 91-100 cm, 16% were in the height group up to 90 cm, 48.0% were in the weight group of 12.1-16 kg, 34.0% were in the weight group of 16 kg, 10%were in the weight group of 10.1-12 kg and 8%were in the weight group below 10 kg. Conclusion: In this study, 20% of cases were stunted and 80% of cases were not stunted and no wasted case was found and the overall prevalence of malnutrition in the Rangpur cantonment was low. A further in-depth study is recommended to draw conclusive inferences. JAFMC Bangladesh. Vol 15, No 2 (December) 2019: 168-170
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Rahman, Irtika, ATMA Rustom, Farzana Zafreen, and Md Abdul Wahab. "Prevalence of Overweight among Military Personnel of a Selected Bangladesh Army Unit." Journal of Armed Forces Medical College, Bangladesh 14, no. 2 (March 10, 2020): 193–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/jafmc.v14i2.45908.

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Introduction: Overweight are associated with high rates of morbidity and mortality, but prevalence data on these conditions are not readily available among military personnel in Bangladesh. The aim of this study is to determine the prevalence of overweight and its association with sociodemographic characteristics among military personnel in a unit of Bangladesh Army. Objectives: The aim of the present study was therefore to determine the prevalence of overweight/obesity among military personnel in a military unit of Jalalabad cantonment and also to investigate their association with selected sociodemographic characteristics. Materials and Methods: A cross-sectional descriptive study was conducted among 385 military personnel. Height weight, BMI were assessed using standardized procedures. Results: Prevalence of overweight was 54(14%) and n one of the participants were obese or underweight. Overweight status was significantly (p<0.05) higher among 30-45 years of age group and JCOs. No significant association was found with other socio-demographic characteristics. Conclusion: Though overall prevalence of overweight was low among military personnel because of their physical hardship and training. But it is significantly higher among the JCOs and younger age groups. Life style modification and education on appropriate diet and physical exercise during formal and informal sessions may be advised. Journal of Armed Forces Medical College Bangladesh Vol.14 (2) 2018: 193-196
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Chowdhury, Md Ismail, Md Delwar Hossain, SM Mijanur Rahman, and Mohammad Ariful Islam Miah. "Epidemiological Study on Acute Viral Hepatitis Outbreak in Chattogram Cantonment Area." Journal of Armed Forces Medical College, Bangladesh 16, no. 1 (June 7, 2021): 3–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/jafmc.v16i1.53837.

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Introduction: Acute viral hepatitis (AVH) incidence had suddenly increased at Artillery Centre and School (AC&S) at Halishahore under Chattogram (Ctg) cantonment area from 16 April 2018 to 25 June 2018. Total 1304 cases of AVH got admitted and received treatment from Combined Military Hospital (CMH), Ctg during that period. Aim: To find out the incidence, cause, predisposing factors, clinical course and to prevent such outbreaks in future. Methods: This retrospective observational study was conducted from 16 April 2018 to 25 June 2018. Total 1304 acute viral hepatitis cases were studied for epidemiological analysis to find out the causes, mode of spread, laboratory findings and outcome. Results: Among 1304 AVH cases 90% belonged to age group of 18-45 years and most of them were combatants and the age range was 5 to 60 years with mean age 30.31±11.29 years. HEV was 99% etiological factor and patients’ hospital stay were 10 to 55 days. Thirteen cases developed hepatic encephalopathy, 01 case developed acute pancreatitis and 108 cases had thrombocytopenia. No specific source of contamination was detected within AC&S, although coliform bacteria were identified in drinking water supplied to the area by WASA of Ctg city. Conclusion: We came to the conclusion that the source of infection was contaminated water supplied by WASA of Chattogram city. As we had also found that high incidence of AVH due to HEV were prevailing in Ctg city area during the same period of the outbreak. JAFMC Bangladesh. Vol 15, No 1 (June) 2020: 3-7
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Barsi, Béla. "El origen de la familia Rodriguez del Banato a través de la historia militar del siglo XVIII el ascendiente español." Acta Hispanica 22 (January 1, 2017): 121–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.14232/actahisp.2017.22.121-136.

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The author – the descendant of the brothers Ödön (Barsi) and Endre Rodriguez who managed to be successful in the Hungarian cultural life and who were the descendants of the Rodriguez family from Banat – during a nonprofessional research of various decades reveals the Spanish ancestors of the family. During the research he used the oral tradition and the relatively few written documents, preserved objects. The military history of the 18th century played an important role in the research because this was the principal cause of the Spanish migration in Hungary. However, without reading the basic work of the historian Zoltán Fallenbüchl (Spaniards in Hungary in the 18th century) this research would not have managed its goal. Considering the fact that the study mentions the cantonment of the regiment of Alcaudate around 1717 and following this lead, the inspection online of the registers of Osijek was started. This was that brought the desired success with the statement of the Hungarian delegation of the Military Archive of Wien where a person called Antonio de Rodriguez is mentioned who was lieutenant, then captain and who before his death in the battlefield, established his family in Banat.
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Shcherbinin, Pavel, Svetlana Bukalova, and Aleksei Chubarov. "Central Black Earth Region: the military class and its role in regional development." Tambov University Review. Series: Humanities, no. 183 (2019): 193–203. http://dx.doi.org/10.20310/1810-0201-2019-24-183-193-203.

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We consider the multifactorial effects of the military class, including the soldiers of the Russian army and their families, as well as indefinite, spare and retired soldiers, military disabled, on the social and cultural, ethnic and confessional, social and class development of the Central Black Earth Region. Included in it Voronezh, Kursk, Orel and Tambov Governorates were the largest densely populated, agricultural regions, traditionally used by the government for military procurement, cantonment of troops and other military mobilization activities in the Russian Em-pire in the 18th – early 20th century. The military factor had almost continuous impact on all as-pects of life of the Central Black Earth Region population, forming in its inhabitants a special character, endurance and stamina, which allowed to be quite successful in a peaceful, “non-military” life. We give the evaluation of historiographical approaches and interpretation of sources on the role of the military class in the Center Black Earth Region development in domestic and foreign historiography. We pay special attention to the impact of recruitment on the daily life of the population in the cities of the region and rural areas. We reveal the historical and legal aspects of changes in the legal status of male and female representatives of the “military class” in the agrarian society in the Imperial Russia. We clarify military and statistical indicators of military class representation in the social structure of the provincial society during the period of conscript obligation and in post-reform Russia, as well as the complexity of accounting for family members of military servicemen during the service and after retirement. The involvement of archival docu-ments, statistical and other published materials allowed for a successful reconstruction of the so-cial and legal regulation and the position of the military class in the Center Black Earth Region of the considered chronological period. We draw conclusions about the prospects of studying the post-reform ethnic and social, social and cultural, class and legal features of the military class life in a non-belligerent provincial society. We prove that the military class was a special social institu-tion in the Russian province of the Imperial period of Russian history.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Military Cantonment"

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Mullen, Wayne Thomas. "Deccan Queen: A Spatial Analysis of Poona in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries." University of Sydney. School of Philosophical and Historical Inquiry, 2003. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/495.

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This thesis is structured around the analysis of a model that describes the Cantonment, the Civil Lines, the Sadr Bazar and part of the Native City of the Western Indian settlement of Poona in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
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Books on the topic "Military Cantonment"

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Pakistan. Manual of Cantonment laws in Pakistan: With Cantonment ordinance, 2002 ... 2nd ed. Lahore: Kausar Brothers, 2003.

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Mittal, J. P. The cantonment laws. 4th ed. Meerut: Western Law House, 2008.

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P, Mittal J. The cantonment laws: Commentary. Meerut: Western Law House, 1986.

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Pakistan. Complete Cantonment laws in Pakistan. Lahore: National law Book House, 2008.

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Manual of Cantonment laws in Pakistan. Lahore: Punjab Law Book House, 2007.

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Pakistan. Manual of Military lands administration: With laws relating to Cantonment properties & accommodations. Rawalpindi: Federal Law House, 2006.

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Mumtaz, Faridi Muhammad, ed. Manual of Cantonment laws: With all amendments and upto-date case law. Lahore: Imran Law Book House, 2010.

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author, Jameel Ch Mohammad, and Bajwa, M. Ahmed Ullah, author, eds. The cantonment laws in Pakistan: With all amendments and upto-date case law. Lahore: Law Book Land, 2013.

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Harfield, Alan. Meerut, the Cantonment Cemetery part II (1876-1939): The Race Course Cemetery and military memorials. Putney, London: BACSA, 1999.

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Baker, John Harvard. Camp Adair: The story of a World War II cantonment : today, Oregon's largest ghost town. 3rd ed. Newport, Or: J.H. Baker, 2004.

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Book chapters on the topic "Military Cantonment"

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"23 Scandal Point and the Military Cantonment." In Atlas, 62–63. Columbia University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.7312/dung16100-023.

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"Military Space: The Cantonment As a System of Environmental Control." In Colonial Urban Development, 115–40. Routledge, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203717035-13.

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Bettez, David J. "Army Camps." In Kentucky and the Great War. University Press of Kentucky, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813168012.003.0007.

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Kentucky had four military camps during the war: Fort Thomas in northern Kentucky, Camp Stanley in Lexington, Camp Taylor in Louisville, and Camp Knox between Louisville and Elizabethtown. Camps Thomas and Stanley dealt primarily with the Kentucky National Guard, while Camps Taylor and Knox became facilities to train draftees. US entry into the war prompted the federal government to establish new cantonments to train millions of men for the military. A rivalry to get one of these camps developed between Louisville and Lexington, exacerbated by newspaper coverage in the Louisville Courier-Journal and Lexington Herald. Louisville received the new cantonment: Camp Zachary Taylor. The camp processed men primarily from Kentucky, Indiana, and Illinois, many of whom were formed into the Eighty-Fourth Division, known as the “Lincoln Division.” Other training consisted of a Field Artillery Central Officers Training School (FACOTS) and a school for chaplains. Segregated divisions comprised of African Americans were created and officered by white men. At times, the number of men in the camp reached nearly 60,000. Several organizations provided services, including the YMCA, Red Cross, Knights of Columbus, and Young Men’s Hebrew Association. Libraries and “Moonlight Schools” helped combat soldier illiteracy. Toward the end of the war, Camp Knox was developed to provide better artillery range facilities. The new camps vastly boosted the local economies.
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James, Simon. "Why Was the Base Where It Was, and As It Was?" In The Roman Military Base at Dura-Europos, Syria. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198743569.003.0027.

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In the foregoing, it was argued that the unitary base area seen in the third century, encompassing the entire N part of the city from the W defences almost to the River Gate, resulted from expansion and coalescence of two later-second-century nuclei, one near the Temple of Bêl, the other focused on the Citadel. Subsequently, presumably increasing Roman troop numbers at Dura led to takeover of the far N part of the intramural area, linking up the military holdings. But why did it start as two nuclei? When Roman power became permanently established over Dura c.165, and a decision was made to station Palmyrene symmachiarii there, while the Realpolitik may have been that these were proxy forces holding the city for Rome, the option of sending in troops from a long-standing friend of Dura may have been chosen as a face-saving measure for the Durene elite. The Palmyrenes were likely presented as defending the newly ‘liberated’ city from Arsacid interference. Under such circumstances, a less obtrusive, peripheral location would have been appropriate. The zone around the Temple of Bêl appears at the time to have comprised only partially built-up city blocks offering open ground, with more free space along the city wall to accommodate the Palmyrene force with minimal disruption to civic life. The temple plaza also offered a ready-made military assembly space. It is further possible that the Palmyrenes attested in Arsacid Dura—visiting traders and soldiers, and resident expatriates—already tended to congregate in or use this zone, around the temple which, at least later, would become especially associated with Palmyrene Bêl. With subsequent arrival of regular Roman troops, and the proposed enrolling of the Palmyrene archers as the nucleus of the nascent cohors XX, the NW cantonment was then probably expanded as it was developed into a Roman auxiliary base. With regard to the inner wadi/Citadel zone, it was suggested above that the incoming Romans would have taken over the great inner stronghold by default, as part of the defensive circuit. They also used the flat wadi floor in its shadow as a campus.
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James, Simon. "Impact of Garrison and Base on the City." In The Roman Military Base at Dura-Europos, Syria. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198743569.003.0029.

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What effect did the military base and the people who occupied it have on Dura-Europos, as both civil community and urban landscape? It was clearly profound, seen in the military transfiguration of so much of the city’s fabric. But was it as traumatic and negative as Rostovtzeff and his colleagues envisaged, with a once-proud Greek polis reduced to a diminished, cowed, and brutalized satellite village of a Roman military camp? Or was it indeed more benign or even positive, seeing cordial shared urban prosperity based on a military-pay-induced economic boom, as more recent commentators like Stoll, Reeve, Sommer, and Ruffing have variously sketched? What does the new study of the archaeological evidence indicate? In some ways, it is now clear that impact of the military was even greater than the Yale expedition realized. As we have seen, the base area included the Citadel and most or even all of the N branch of the inner wadi, and so was significantly larger than hitherto thought. On the other hand, far from being the result of a sudden, short, massively disruptive episode of appropriation, conversion, demolition, and building c.210 as envisaged by Rostovtzeff, the base evolved incrementally over half a century, apparently beginning with the Palmyrene archers’ cantonment of the later 160s. This reflected a history of residence of substantial Roman regular forces in the city starting considerably earlier than previously envisaged, correspondingly characterized by incremental change. On present evidence, instead of massively expanding c.210, resident troop numbers may have peaked c.190, with little or no increase when the garrison was reshaped c.210, which episode saw qualitative change (replacement of some auxilia by legionaries), rather than quantitative. We have no clear evidence of significant subsequent variation in troop levels between the 210s and 250, although these cannot be ruled out. There was, then, a large presence of Roman troops inside the walls during the last decades of the second century, as well as the first half of the third. This has significant implications for wider political history, as well as local affairs.
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Conference papers on the topic "Military Cantonment"

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Kurguzov, Pavel. "From the History of the Quartering of the 20th Eastern Siberian Region in Troitskosavsk in 1908." In Irkutsk Historical and Economic Yearbook 2020. Baikal State University, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.17150/978-5-7253-3017-5.10.

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Based on archival and data of Russian historiography, the article analyzes the course and main results of the cantonment of the 20th East Siberian Regiment of the 2nd Army Corps of the Russian Imperial Army in Troitskosavsk (now Kyakhta) in 1908–1909, XX century. The main problems associated with the deployment of this military unit, the consequences of this event for the economy of Troitskosavsk and the county of the same name are analyzed. For the first time, data on the number of rank-and-file and regiment officers placed at the time of the study (1908–1909) in Troitskosavsk are being put into scientific circulation.
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