Sepoy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A sepoy (from Persian سپاهی Sipâhi meaning "soldier") was a native of India employed as a soldier in the service of a European power, usually of the United Kingdom. Specifically, it was the term used in the British Indian Army for an infantry Private (a cavalry Trooper was a Sowar), and is still so used in the modern Indian Army, Pakistan Army and Bangladesh Army.
The same Persian word has reached English via another route in the form of Spahi.
[edit] See also
- Sepoy Mutiny (also Indian Mutiny or First Indian War of Independence)