The term
militia is commonly used today to refer
to a military force composed of ordinary
citizens to provide defense, emergency law
enforcement, or
paramilitary service,
in times of emergency without being paid a regular salary or
committed to a fixed term of service. It is a
polyseme with multiple distinct but related
meanings. Legal and historical meanings of
militia
include:
- Defense activity or service, to protect a community, its
territory, property, and laws.
- The entire able-bodied population of a community, town, county,
or state, available to be called to
arms.
- * A subset of these who may be legally penalized for failing to
respond to a call-up.
- * A subset of these who actually respond to a call-up,
regardless of legal obligation.
Etymology
"Militia" derives from Latin roots:
- miles /miːles/ : soldier
- -itia /iːtia/ : a state, activity, quality or
condition of being
- militia /mil:iːtia/: Military service
In English, the word "militia" dates to 1590 when it was recorded
in a book by Sir John Smythe,
Certain Discourses Military
with the meanings: a military force; a body of soldiers and
military affairs; a body of military discipline
Militia was an alternative name for the Citizens' Military Forces
(CMF), the reserve units of the
Australian Army between 1901 and 1980. After
Australian
federation, the six
former
colonial
militias were merged to form the CMF. Initially the CMF
infantry forces formed the vast bulk of the
Australian Army, along with standing
artillery and engineer units.
The Defence Act of 1903 granted the
Australian federal government the
powers to
conscript men of military age
for home defense. However, these powers were unpopular and were
used only for short periods at a time. The government was also
forbidden by law from deploying the CMF outside Australian
territories, or using it in
strike and
other industrial disputes.
As a result of the ban on foreign service, during
World War I and
World
War II, all-volunteer
Australian Imperial Forces were
formed for overseas deployment. CMF units were sometimes scorned by
AIF soldiers as "chocolate soldiers" or "chockos", because "they
would melt under the pressure" of military operations; or in an
alternative version of the story of the origin of this term, as a
result of the 1930s' uniforms of Militia soldiers, these soldiers
were considered by AIF volunteers and some civilians as soldiers
only for show like the soldiers in garish 19th century dress
uniforms shown on tins of chocolates that were commonly sold in
Australia in the 1930s, hence the name "chocolate-tin soldiers" for
Militia members.
Nevertheless, some Militia units
distinguished themselves in action against the Empire of Japan
during the Pacific War,
and suffered extremely high casualties. In mid-1942 Militia
units fought in two significant battles, both in New Guinea
, which was then an Australian territory. The
exploits of the young and poorly trained soldiers of the
39th Battalion during the rearguard
action on the
Kokoda Track
remain celebrated to this day, as is the contribution of the
7th Brigade at the
Battle of Milne Bay.
Later in the war, the law was changed to allow the transfer of
Militia units to the 2nd AIF; of these Militia units, 65% of their
personnel had volunteered for overseas service. Another change
allowed Militia units to serve anywhere south of the
Equator in
South-East
Asia.
Consequently they also saw action against
Japanese forces in the Dutch East Indies
.
In addition to the CMF, the
Volunteer Defence Corps,
a volunteer force modeled on the British
Home Guard, was formed in 1940
and had a strength of almost 100,000 men across Australia at its
peak.
After the war, CMF units continued to form the bulk of the
peacetime army, although the creation of standing infantry units —
such as the
Royal Australian
Regiment — from 1947, meant that the regular army grew in
importance. By 1980, when the name of the CMF was changed to the
Army Reserve, the regular army was the more significant force.
Australian Reservists have a comparatively high level of
commitment, with an expected obligation of up to 4 nights and 2
full days per month, alongside a two week annual course. Since
September 2006, Reservist Salaries have been streamlined with those
of regular forces as a reflection of overall higher standard of
training. This initiative shows that since 1975, there are now many
positions for which there is little training gap at all between
Reservists and Permanent Force members
[3264]
After
World War I, multiple militias formed as
soldiers returned home to their villages, only to find many of them occupied by
Slovene
and Yugoslav
forces, especially in the southern province of
Carinthia. During the
First Republic, increasing
radicalization of politics led to
certain militias associating with certain
political parties. The
Heimwehr (German:
Home Defense) became
affiliated with the
Christian Social Party and
the
Republikanischer
Schutzbund (German:
Republican Defense League) became
affiliated with the
Social Democratic Workers'
Party of Austria. Violence increasingly escalated, breaking out
during the
July Revolt of 1927
and finally the
Austrian Civil
War, when the Schutzbund was defeated by the Heimwehr, police,
and federal army.
See also: Republikanischer Schutzbund,
Heimwehr
In Canada the title "Militia" historically referred to the land
component of the armed forces, both regular (full time) and
reserve. From 1760s to the 1860s, local militia units were used to
support
British Army units stationed in
the Canada. From 1867 to 1880s, the departure of British forces in
Canada meant militia units were the only army available on Canadian
soil. In 1940 the Permanent Active Militia and Non-Permanent Active
Militia were renamed to become the
Canadian Army. The term
Militia continued from then to the present day to refer to the
part-time army reserve component of the
Canadian Forces. Currently, Militia troops
usually train one night a week and every other weekend of the
month, except in the summer. Summertime training may consist of
courses, individual call-outs, or concentrations (unit and
formation training of one to two weeks' duration).
In addition, Primary Reserve members are increasingly
used for voluntary service as augmentation to the regular force
overseas—usually NATO
or United Nations missions. Most Canadian
cities have one or more militia units. Since the mid 1990s, the
term Militia has all but vanished in favor of the term Primary
Reserve. 'Milita' is generally associated with an earlier, less
professional organization than the reserve forces that directly
support the regular forces in Canada today.
China's current
militia is a mass force
engaged in daily production under the leadership of the
Communist Party of China (CCP),
forms part of the Chinese armed forces. Under the command of the
military organs, it undertakes such jobs as war preparation
services, security and defense operation tasks and assistance in
maintaining
social order and public
security.
Historically militias of varying levels of ability have existed in
China, organised on the village and
clan level, especially during periods of
instability and in areas subject to pirate and bandit attack. When
the British attempted to take control of the
New Territories in 1898 they were resisted
by the local militias which had been formed for mutual defence
against
pirate raids. Although ultimately
defeated the strength of resistance convinced the British to make
concessions to the
indigenous
inhabitants allowing them to preserve inheritance, property and
marriage rights and customs throughout most of the period of the
British rule.
Cuba has three militia organizations: The Territorial Militia
Troops
Milicias de Tropas Territoriales of about one
million people (half women)
[3265], the Youth Labor Army
Ejército
Juvenil del Trabajo devoted to agricultural production, and a
naval militia.
[3266]
The Danish Militia played a major role in repelling the Swedish
attackers during
The assault
on Copenhagen in 1659.
Modern timesSee
Danish Home
Guard
The first notable militia in French history was the resistance of
the
Gauls to invasion by the
Romans until they were defeated by Julius
Caesar.
The next notable militia was organized and led by
Joan of Arc until her capture and execution in
1431. It settled the succession to the French crown and laid the
basis for the formation of the modern nation of France.
During the
French Revolution the
term
levée en masse came into
use.
During the Franco-Prussian War the Parisian National Guard, which
was founded during the time of the American Revolution, engaged the
Prussian Army and later rebelled against the Versailles Army under
Marshal McMahon.
During
World War II under German
occupation, militia usually called the
French Resistance emerged to conduct a
guerrilla war of attrition against German forces and prepare the
way for the
D-Day Allied Invasion of
France.The Resistance militia were opposed by the collaborationist
French Militia - the paramilitary
police force of the
German puppet state of
Vichy.
The name
Freikorps (
German for "Free Corps") was originally
applied to voluntary armies. The first freikorps were recruited by
Frederick II of Prussia
during the
Seven Years' War. The
freikorps were regarded as unreliable by regular armies, so that
they were mainly used as sentries and for minor duties.
However,
after 1918, the term was used for nationalist paramilitary organizations that sprang up
around Germany
as soldiers returned in defeat from World War I. They were one of the many
Weimar paramilitary
groups active during that time. They received considerable
support from
Gustav Noske, the German
Defence Minister who used them to crush the
Spartakist League with enormous violence,
including the murders of
Karl
Liebknecht and
Rosa Luxemburg on
January 15, 1919. They were also used to put down the
Bavarian Soviet Republic in 1919.
They were officially "disbanded" in 1920, resulting in the
ill-fated
Kapp Putsch in March
1920.
The
Einwohnerwehr, active in Germany from 1919 to 1921 as
a paramilitary citizens' militia consisting of hundreds of
thousands of mostly former servicemen. Formed by the Prussian
Ministry of the Interior on April 15, 1919, for the purpose to
allow citizens to protect themselves from looters, armed gangs, and
revolutionaries. The
Einwohnerwehr was under the command
of the local
Reichswehr regiments and which supplied its
guns. In 1921, the Berlin government dissolved the
Einwohnerwehr. Many of its members went on to join the
Nazi Party.
[3267]
In 1944-45, as World War II was coming to a close in Europe the
German high command deployed increasing numbers of
Volkssturm units to combat duties. These
regiments were composed of men and women too old or otherwise unfit
for service in the Wehrmacht (German Regular Army). Their primary
role was assisting the army with fortification duties and digging
anti-tank ditches, but would as the shortage of manpower became
severe be used as front line infantry, most often in urban
settings. Due to the physical state of members, almost non-existent
training and shortage of weapons most there was not much the
Volkssturm could do except act like shields for regular army units.
However, armed with
Panzerfausts and
deeply entrenched a unit of Volkssturm could cause serious trouble
for Soviet armor.
The
Basij militia and the IRGC founded by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in
November 1979 is composed of 90,000 regular soldiers, and 300,000
reservists and ultimately draws from about 11 million members, and
is subordinate to their Army of the
Guardians of the Islamic Revolution in Iran
.

Peshmurga Kurdish Militia, cleaning
weapons
Several armed militia groups are presently active in Iraq. The
Mehdi Army is a sectarian armed force
created by the Iraqi Shi'a cleric
Muqtada al-Sadr in June 2003.
The Badr Organization is based in and around
Karbala
. The Anbar Salvation Council is a Sunni
armed group in Iraq formed by members of baathist and nationalist
elements to fight Al-Qaeda in Iraq.
The Kurdish
militia, the peshmerga, is
estimated to number upwards of 50,000.
The
Awakening Councils
or "concerned citizens" are emerging to defend their neighborhoods
against insurgents of every kind, functioning as a form of
vigilante "militia" similar to the model of militia in the
U.S..
The earliest historical record of militia is found in the
Old Testament and particularly the
Book of Judges, when the Israelites fought as
militia against the exitance of Palestinian Arabs who used to live
in Palestine before the mass Jewish migration from all over the
world to Palestine (today called Israel and occupied Palestinian
territories). In modern times there is a universal military service
requirement for Israeli citizens that leaves most of them in the
reserves of the
Israel Defense
Forces, authorized to carry and keep in their possession
weapons during the periods when they're called back to the
army.
The Free-Colored Militia, interracial militias of
New Spain, Colonial Mexico.
The
Rurales
The
Zapatista Army
of National Liberation
Many localized Militia saw service, together with British Imperial
troops, during the
New Zealand
land wars. The Militia were disbanded and reformed as the
Territorial Army in 1911.
- See Norwegian Home
Guard
Neither
the Russian
Empire
, nor the Soviet Union
ever had an organised force that could be equated
to a militia. Instead a form of organisation that pre-dated
the Russian state was used during national emergencies called
Narodnoe Opolcheniye (People's
Regimentation). More comparable to the English
Fyrd, it was a popular voluntary joining of the
local полк
polk, or a
regiment, though it had no regular established strength or
officers, these usually elected from prominent local citizens.
Although these spontaneously created popular forces had
participated in several major wars of the Russian Empire, including
in combat, they were not obligated to serve for more than one year,
and notably departed for home during the
1813 campaign in Germany. On only
one occasion, during the
military history of the
Soviet Union, the Narodnoe Opolcheniye was incorporated into
the regular forces of the
Red Army, notably
in
Leningrad and Moscow.
The first
militias formed in Sri
Lanka
were by Lankan Kings, who raised militia armies for
their military campaigns both within and out side the
island. This was due to the reason that the Kings never
maintained a standing army instead had a
Royal Guard during peace time and formed a
militia in wartime.
When the Portuguese
who were the first colonial power to dominate the
island raised local militias under the command of local leaders
known as Mudaliyars. These militias took
part in the many Portuguese
campaigns against the Lankan Kings.
The Dutch
continued to employ these militias but due to their unreliability
tended to favor employing Swiss
and Malay mercenaries in
their campaigns in the island. The British Empire then ousted the Dutch
from the coastal areas of the country, and sought
to conquer the independent Kandyan
Kingdom. In 1802, the British became the first foreign
power to raise a regular unit of
Sinhalese with British officers, which was
named the
2nd Ceylon Regiment,
also known as the
Sepoy Corps.It fought
alongside British troops in the
Kandyan
wars. After the
Matale
Rebellion lead by
Puran Appu in 1848,
in which a number of Sinhalese recruits defected to the side of the
rebels, the recruitment of Sinhalese to the British forces was
temporarily halted and the Ceylon Regiments disbanded.
In 1861 the
Ceylon
Light Infantry Volunteers were raised as a militia, but soon
became a
military reserve
force. This became the
Ceylon
Defence Force in 1910 and consisted of militia units. These
were the
Colombo Town Guard and
the
Town Guard Artillery
formed during the two world wars.
With the escalation of the
Sri
Lankan Civil War, local villagers under threat of attack were
formed into localized militia to protect their families and homes.
According to the Sri Lankan Military these militias were formed
after "massacres done by the
LTTE" and in the
early 1990s they were reformed as the
Sri Lankan Home Guard. In 2007 the
Home Guard became the
Sri Lanka Civil Defence
Force. In 2008, the government called for the formation of
nearly 15,000 civil defence committees at the village level for
additional protection.
In 2004, the
Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam claimed to establish a voluntary "Tamil
Eelam auxiliary force". According to the LTTE's head of police, the
force would be assigned to tasks such as rehabilitation,
construction, forest conservation and agriculture, but would also
be used to battle the Sri Lankan military if the need arose.. In
early 2009 it ceased to exist with the military defeat of the
LTTE at the hands of the
Sri Lanka Armed Forces.

Janjaweed "militiaman"
The
Janjaweed militia consists of armed Arab
Muslims fighting for the government in Khartoum
against non-Arab Muslim "rebels".
They are
active in the Darfur
region of
western Sudan and also in eastern Chad
.
According to
Human Rights Watch
these partisans are responsible for abuses including war crimes,
crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing.
[3268]
See
Swedish Home Guard
One of the most famous and ancient militias is the
Swiss Armed Forces.
Switzerland
long maintained, proportionally, the second largest
military force in the world, with about half the proportional
amount of reserve forces of the Israeli Defence Force, a militia of
some 33% of the total population. Article 58.1 of the 1999
Swiss constitution provides that the armed forces (armee) is "in
principle" organized as a militia, implicitly allowing a small
number of professional soldiers. In 1995, the number of soldiers
was reduced to 400,000 (including reservists, amounting to some
5.6% of the population) and again in 2004, to 200,000 (including
80,000 reservists, or 2.7% of the population). However, the Swiss
Militia continues to consist of most of the adult male population
(with voluntary participation by women) required to keep an
automatic rifle at home and to periodically engage in combat and
marksmanship training. The militia clauses of the Swiss Federal
Constitution are contained in Art. 59, where it is referred to as
"military service" ( ; ; ; ).
Historical Notes
The most important previous activity of the Texas Militia was the
Texas Revolution in 1836. The original purpose of that effort was
to bring the government of Mexico into compliance with its 1824
Constitution, and that is the purpose for which the defenders of
the Alamo died. Texas declared independence while the Alamo was
under attack during March, 1836, and on April 21, 1836, led by Sam
Houston, it defeated the Army of Mexico under the command of Gen.
Santa Ana, dictator of Mexico, at the Battle of San Jacinto, near
the present city of Houston. This overwhelming victory, and the
capture of Gen. Santa Ana, won independence for Texas.
Following the War of Independence, some militia units reorganized
into what was later to be known as the Texas Rangers, which was a
private, volunteer effort for several years before becoming an
official organization.
After Texas joined the Union in 1845, Texas militia units
distinguished themselves in the War with Mexico, which led to
defining the Rio Grande River the agreed border with Mexico, and
the cession of most of what was to become California, Arizona, and
New Mexico, from Mexico to the United States.
In 1861 Texas joined the other Confederate States in seceding from
the Union, and Texas militias played a role in the Civil War, until
it ended in 1865.
Texas militiamen joined Theodore Roosevelt's Rough Riders, a
volunteer militia, and fought with him during the Spanish-American
War in 1898. Some of the training of the Rough Riders took place in
San Pedro Park, in the north central part of San Antonio, near the
present site of San Antonio College. When a muster of the Militia
proposed to train there on April 19, 1994, they were threatened
with arrest, even though the charter of San Pedro Park forbids
exclusion of activities of that kind. This threat led to a change
of the meeting site to Highway 151.
Note like many other American States, Texas maintains a recognized
State Militia. See the Wikipedia entry for the Texas State
Guard.Purposes
...to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and
repel Invasions; — U.S. Constitution, Art. I, Sec. 8, Clause
16.
Origins
The obligation to serve in the militia in England derives from a
common law tradition, and dates back to
Anglo-Saxon times. The tradition was
that all able-bodied males were liable to be called out to serve in
one of two organisations. These were the
posse comitatus, an
ad
hoc assembly called together by a law officer to apprehend
lawbreakers, and the
fyrd, a military body
intended to preserve internal order or defend the locality against
an invader. The latter developed into the militia, and was usually
embodied by a
royal warrant. Service
in each organisation involved different levels of
preparedness.
Sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
With the decay of the feudal system and the military revolution of
the sixteenth century, the militia began to become an important
institution in English life. It was organized on the basis of the
shire county, and was
one of the responsibilities of the
Lord
Lieutenant, a royal official (usually a trusted nobleman). Each
of the
county hundreds was
likewise the responsibility of a
Deputy Lieutenant, who relayed orders to
the
justices of the peace or
magistrates. Every parish furnished a
quota of eligible men, whose names were recorded on
muster rolls. Likewise, each household was
assessed for the purpose of finding weapons, armour, horses, or
their financial equivalent, according to their status. The militia
was supposed to be
mustered for
training purposes from time to time, but this was rarely done. The
militia regiments were consequently ill-prepared for an emergency,
and could not be relied upon to serve outside their own
counties.
This state of affairs concerned many people. Consequently, an elite
force was created, composed of members of the militia who were
prepared to meet regularly for military training and exercise.
These
were formed into trained band regiments, particularly in the
City of
London
, where the Artillery Garden was used as a training
ground. The trained
bands performed an important role in the English Civil War on the side of
parliament, in marching to raise the siege of Gloucester
(5 September 1643).
Except for the London trained bands, both sides in the Civil War
made little use of the militia, preferring to recruit their armies
by other means.
Militia in the British Empire
As successful English settlement of North America began to take
place in 1607 in the face of the hostile intentions of the powerful
Spanish, and of the native populations, it became immediately
necessary to raise militia amongst the settlers. The militia in
Jamestown saw constant action
against the
Powhatan Federation and other
native polities.
In the Virginia
Company's other outpost, Bermuda
, fortification began immediately in 1612. A
Spanish attack in 1614 was repulsed by two shots fired from the
incomplete
Castle
Islands Fortifications manned by
Bermudian Militiamen. In the
Nineteenth century,
Fortress Bermuda would become
Britain's
Gibraltar of the West, heavily fortified by a
Regular Army garrison to protect the Royal Navy's headquarters and
dockyard in the Western Atlantic. In the 17th Century, however,
Bermuda's defence was left entirely in the hands of the Militia.
In
addition to requiring all male civilians to train and serve in the
militia of their Parish, the Bermudian Militia included a standing
body of trained artillerymen to garrison the numerous
fortifications which ringed New London (St.
George's
). This standing body was created by
recruiting volunteers, and by sentencing criminals to serve as
punishment. The Bermudian militiamen were called out on numerous
occasions of war, and, on one notable occasion, to quell rioting
privateers. In 1710, four years after Spanish and French forces
seized the
Turks Islands
from Bermudian salt producers in 1706, they were expelled by
Bermudian militia. By this time, the 1707
Acts of Union had made Bermudian and
other English militiamen
British.
Political issues
Up until the
Glorious Revolution
in 1688,
the Crown and Parliament were in
strong disagreement. The
English Civil
War left a rather unusual military legacy. Both
Whigs and
Tories
distrusted the creation of a large
standing army not under civilian control. The
former feared that it would be used as an instrument of royal
tyranny. The latter had memories of the
New Model Army and the anti-monarchical
social and political revolution that it brought about.
Consequently, both preferred a small standing army under civilian
control for defensive deterrence and to prosecute foreign wars, a
large navy as the first line of national defence, and a militia
composed of their neighbours as additional defence and to preserve
domestic order.
Consequently, the
English Bill of
Rights (1689) declared, amongst other things: "that the raising
or keeping a standing army within the kingdom in time of peace,
unless it be with consent of Parliament, is against law..." and
"that the subjects which are
Protestants
may have arms for their defense suitable to their conditions and as
allowed by law." This implies that they are fitted to serve in the
militia, which was intended to serve as a counterweight to the
standing army and preserve civil liberties against the use of the
army by a tyrannical monarch or government.
The Crown still (in the British constitution) controls the use of
the army. This ensures that officers and enlisted men swear an oath
to a politically neutral head of state, and not to a politician.
While the funding of the standing army subsists on annual financial
votes by parliament, the
Mutiny Act is
also renewed on an annual basis by parliament. If it lapses, the
legal basis for enforcing discipline disappears, and soldiers lose
their legal indemnity for acts committed under orders.
With the creation of the
British
Empire, militias were also raised in the colonies, where little
support could be provided by regular forces.
Overseas militias
were first raised in Jamestown,
Virginia
, and in Bermuda
, where the Bermuda Militia followed a
similar trajectory over the next two centuries to that in
Britain.
Eighteenth century and the Acts of Union
In 1707, the
Acts of Union united
the
Kingdom of England with the
Kingdom of Scotland. The
Scottish navy was incorporated into the Royal Navy. The Scottish
military (as opposed to naval) forces merged with the English, with
pre-existing regular Scottish regiments maintaining their
identities, though command of the new British Army was from
England. How this affected militias either side of the border is
unclear.
British Militia
The Militia Act of 1757 created a more professional force. Better
records were kept, and the men were selected by ballot to serve for
longer periods. Proper uniforms and better weapons were provided,
and the force was 'embodied' from time to time for training
sessions.
The militia was widely embodied at various times during the French
and
Napoleonic Wars.
It served at several
vulnerable locations, and was particularly stationed on the South
Coast and in Ireland
. A number of camps were held at Brighton
, where the militia regiments were reviewed by the
Prince Regent. (This is the
origin of the song "Brighton Camp".) The militia could not be
compelled to serve overseas, but it was seen as a training reserve
for the army, as
bounties were
offered to men who opted to 'exchange' from the militia to the
regular army.
Irish militia
The
Parliament of Ireland
passed an
act in 1715 raising
regiments of militia in each county and
county corporate. Membership was restricted
to
Protestants between the ages of 16 and
60. In 1793, during the
Napoleonic
Wars, the Irish militia were reorganized to form thirty-seven
county and city regiments. While officers of the reorganized force
were Protestant, membership of the other ranks was now made
available to members of all denominations.
Scottish militia
In the late Seventeenth century came calls for the resurrection of
militia in Scotland that had the understated aim of protecting the
rights of Scots from English oppression.
The 1757 Militia Act did not apply in Scotland. The old traditional
system continued, so that militia regiments only existed in some
places. This was resented by some and the Militia Club, soon to
become
the Poker Club, was formed to
promote the raising of a Scottish militia. This and several other
Edinburgh clubs became the crucible of the
Scottish Enlightenment.The Militia
Act of 1797 empowered Scottish Lord Lieutenants to raise and
command militia regiments in each of the "Counties, Stewartries,
Cities, and Places" under their jurisdiction.
Nineteenth century
Although muster rolls were prepared as late as 1820, the element of
compulsion was abandoned, and the militia was transformed into a
volunteer force. It was intended to be seen as an alternative to
the army. Men would volunteer and undertake basic training for
several months at an army depot. Thereafter, they would return to
civilian life, but report for regular periods of military training
(usually on the weapons ranges) and an annual two week training
camp. In return, they would receive military pay and a financial
retainer, a useful addition to their civilian wage. Of course, many
saw the annual camp as the equivalent of a paid holiday. The
militia thus appealed to agricultural labourers, colliers and the
like, men in
casual occupations,
who could leave their civilian job and pick it up again.
Until 1861 the militia were an entirely
infantry force, but in that year a number of county
regiments were converted to
artillery.
In 1877
the militia of Anglesey
and Monmouthshire
were converted to engineers.
Under the
reforms introduced by
Secretary of State for
War Hugh Childers in 1881, the
remaining militia infantry regiments were redesignated as numbered
battalions of regiments of the line, ranking after the two regular
battalions. Typically, an English, Welsh or Scottish regiment would
have two militia battalions (the 3rd and 4th) and Irish regiments
three (numbered 3rd - 5th).
The militia must not be confused with the volunteer units created
in a wave of enthusiasm in the second half of the nineteenth
century. In contrast with the
Volunteer Force, and the
similar
Yeomanry Cavalry, they were
considered rather plebeian.
The Special Reserve
The militia was transformed into the Special Reserve by the
military
reforms of
Haldane in the
reforming post 1906 Liberal government. In 1908 the militia
infantry battalions were redesignated as "reserve" and a number
were amalgamated or disbanded. Numbered
Territorial Force battalions, ranking
after the Special Reserve, were formed from the volunteer units at
the same time. Altogether, 101 infantry battalions, 33 artillery
regiments and two engineer regiments of special reservists were
formed.
Upon mobilisation, the special reserve units would be formed at the
depot and continue training while guarding vulnerable points in
Britain. The special reserve units remained in Britain throughout
the
First World War, but their rank
and file did not, since the object of the special reserve was to
supply drafts of replacements for the overseas units of the
regiment. The original militiamen soon disappeared, and the
battalions became training units pure and simple.
The Special Reserve reverted to its militia designation in 1921,
then to Supplementary Reserve in 1924, though the units were
effectively placed in "suspended animation" until disbanded in
1953.
Mexican Revolution
American militias, fighting in defense of their settlements on the
Mexican-American border,
engaged at the
Battle of
Columbus and the
Battle of
Ambos Nogales. Other engagements occurred as well along the
dozens of bortder towns dotting the vast border line.
Sometimes, American
insurgents went on to fight in
revolutionary campaigns in Mexico
. Many
joined
Pancho Villa's Division of the North.
The Militiamen
The name was briefly revived in 1939, in the aftermath of the
Munich Crisis.
Leslie Hore-Belisha, the then Minister
of War, wished to introduce a limited form of
conscription, an unheard of thing in peacetime.
It was thought that calling the conscripts 'militiamen' would make
this more acceptable, as it would render them distinct from the
rest of the army. Only single men of a certain age group were
conscripted (they were given a free suit of civilian clothes as
well as a uniform), and after serving for about a year, would be
discharged into the reserve. Although the first intake were called
up, the war broke out soon after, and the militiamen lost their
identity in the rapidly expanding army.
Modern survivals
Three units still maintain their militia designation in the
British Army, two in the
Territorial Army and one
in the
Army Cadet Force. These are
the
Royal
Monmouthshire Royal Engineers (formed in 1539), the
Jersey
Field Squadron (formed in 1337), and the
Royal Alderney Militia (created in
the 13th century and reformed in 1984). Additionally, the
Atholl Highlanders are a (ceremonial)
private army maintained by the
Duke of
Atholl — they are the only legal private "army" in the United
Kingdom.
The Troubles and Irish War of Independence
The
various non-state paramilitary groups involved in the 20th century
conflicts in Northern
Ireland
and the island of Ireland
, such as the various Irish Republican Army groups and
loyalist paramilitaries, could also
be described as militias and are occasionally referred to as
such.
Uniformed American militiamen during the American Civil War.
The
history of militia in the United States
dates from the colonial era, such as in the
American Revolutionary War. Based on the British system,
colonial militias were drawn from the body of adult male citizens
of a community, town, or local region. Because there were usually
few British regulars garrisoned in North America, colonial militia
served a vital role in local conflicts, particularly in the
French and Indian Wars.
Before shooting began in the
American War of Independence,
American revolutionaries took control of the militia system,
reinvigorating training and excluding men with
Loyalist inclinations.
Regulation of the militia was codified by the
Second Continental Congress with
the
Articles of
Confederation. The revolutionaries also created a full-time
regular army—the
Continental
Army—but because of manpower shortages the militia provided
short-term support to the regulars in the field throughout the
war.
In colonial era Anglo-American usage, militia service was
distinguished from military service in that the latter was normally
a commitment for a fixed period of time of at least a year, for a
salary, whereas militia was only to meet a
threat, or prepare to meet a threat, for periods of time expected
to be short. Militia persons were normally expected to provide
their own weapons, equipment, or supplies, although they may later
be compensated for losses or expenditures.
A related concept is the
jury, which can be
regarded as a specialized form of militia convened to render a
verdict in a court proceeding (known as a petit jury or
trial jury) or to investigate a public matter and
render a presentment or indictment (
grand
jury).
With the
Constitutional
Convention of 1787 and Article 1 Section 8 of the
United States Constitution,
control of the army and the power to direct the militia of the
states was concurrently delegated to the federal
Congress. The
Militia Clauses gave Congress authority for
"organizing, arming, and disciplining" the militia, and "governing
such Part of them as may be employed in the Service of the United
States", with the States retaining authority to appoint officers
and to impose the training specified by Congress.
Proponents describe a key element in the concept of "militia" was
that to be "genuine" it not be a "select militia", composed of an
unrepresentative subset of the population. This was an argument
presented in the
ratification
debates.
The first legislation on the subject was The
Militia Act of 1792 which provided, in
part:
- That each and every free able-bodied white male citizen of the
respective States, resident therein, who is or shall be of age of
eighteen years, and under the age of forty-five years (except as is
herein after excepted) shall severally and respectively be enrolled
in the militia, ... every citizen, so enrolled and notified, shall,
within six months thereafter, provide himself with a good musket or
firelock....
During the nineteenth century, each of the states maintained its
militia differently, some more than others. Prior to the Civil War,
militia units were sometimes used by southern states for slave
control. In free states, Republican militias - called "
Wide Awakes" - sided with abolitionists in
sometimes violent confrontations with Federal authorities.
During
Reconstruction after
the Civil War, Republican state governments had militias composed
almost entirely of freed slaves and populist whites. Their
deployment to maintain order in the former Confederate states,
caused increased resentment among many Southern whites. The war did
not end with Lee's surrender at Appomattox and continued to be
fought by insurgent groups through Reconstruction.
Nineteenth Century
During the nineteenth century, American militia saw action in the
War of 1812, the
American Civil War and the
Spanish-American War.
Sometimes militia units were sometimes found to be unprepared, ill
supplied and unwilling.
Twentieth Century
The
Militia Act of 1903 divided
what had been the militia into what it termed the "organized"
militia, created from portions of the former state guards to become
state
National Guard
units, and the "unorganized" militia consisting of all males from
ages 17 to 45, with the exception of certain officials and others,
which is codified in . Some states, such as Texas and California,
created separate
State Defense
Forces for assistance in local emergencies. Congress later
established a system of "dual enlistment" for the National Guard,
so that anyone who enlisted in the National Guard also enlisted in
the
U.S. Army.
Privately organized citizen militia-related groups blossomed in the
mid 1990s, which collectively became known as the
constitutional militia
movement. The supporters have not been affiliated with any
government organization, although most of them have been military
and law enforcement
veterans.
In its original sense,
militia meant "the state, quality,
condition, or activity of being a fighter or warrior." It can be
thought of as "combatant activity", "the fighter frame of mind",
"the militant mode", "the soldierly status", or "the warrior
way".
In this latter usage, a militia is a body of private persons who
respond to an emergency threat to public safety, usually one that
requires an armed response, but which can also include ordinary law
enforcement or disaster responses. The act of bringing to bear arms
contextually changes the status of the person, from peaceful
citizen, to warrior citizen. The militia is the sum total of
persons undergoing this change of state.
Persons have been said to engage in militia in response to a "call
up" by any person aware of the threat requiring the response, and
thence to be in "called up" status until the emergency is past.
There is no minimum size to militia, and a solitary act of defense,
including self-defense, can be thought of as one person calling up
himself to defend the community, represented by himself or others,
and to enforce the law. See
citizen's
arrest and
hue and cry.
Democratic paramilitary groups
Secret white
terrorist groups like the
Ku Klux Klan and
Knights of the White Camellia
arose quickly in states across the South, reaching a peak in the
late 1860s.
Even more significant in terms of effect
were private militias, paramilitary
organizations that formed starting in 1874, including the
White League in Louisiana
, which quickly formed chapters in other states; the
Red Shirts in
Mississippi
in 1875, and with force in South
Carolina
and
North
Carolina
; as well as
other "White Line" militias and rifle clubs. In contrast to
the KKK, they were open, members were often well-known in the
communities, and they directed their efforts at political aims:
using force, intimidation and violence, including murder, to push
out Republican officeholders, break up organizing, and suppress
freedmen's voting and civil rights. The paramilitary groups were
described as "the military arm of the Democratic Party" and were
instrumental in helping secure Democratic victories in the South in
the elections of 1876.
21st Century: Federally-organized or not
In the
2008 decision of the Supreme Court
in District of Columbia
v. Heller, the de jure definition of "militia" as used in
United
States
jurisprudence was
discussed. The court's opinion made explicit, in its
obiter dicta, that the term
"militia", as used in colonial times in this
originalist decision, included both the
federally-organized militia and the citizen-organized militias of
the several
States: "... the 'militia' in
colonial America consisted of a subset of 'the people'—those who
were male, able-bodied, and within a certain age range" (7) ...
Although the militia consists of all able-bodied men, the federally
organized militia may consist of a subset of them"(23).
Beside
the federal Yugoslav People's
Army, each constituent
republic of the former SFR Yugoslavia
had its own Territorial Defense
Forces. The
Non-Aligned Yugoslavia was concerned
about an eventual aggression from any of the
superpowers, especially by the
Warsaw Pact after the
Prague Spring, so the
Territorial Defense
Forces were formed as an integral part of the
total war military
doctrine called
Total National Defense. Those forces
corresponded to
military reserve
forces,
paramilitary or militia,
the latter, in the military meaning of the term (like
military formation). It should not be
confused with the Yugoslav Militia-
Milicija which was a term for a
police.
Militia service as a civic duty
The
Militia Information
Service (MIS) contends that militia membership is a civic duty
much like voting, neither of which they believe should be
restricted to government officials in a true
democracy.MIS also states that the people need to
maintain the power of the sword so they can fulfil their duty,
implicit in the
social contract,to
protect the rights and liberties of their fellow citizens, much as
individual citizens have a legal and ethical duty to protect
dependents under their care, such as a child, an elderly parent or
a disabled spouse.
See also
General
Public militias in Europe
Public militias in the United States
Private militias in the United States
Citations and notes
- The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language,
Fourth Edition. Houghton Mifflin Company, 2000
- p.7, Sumner
- Charlton T. Lewis, An Elementary Latin Dictionary, p. 505,
Oxford U. Pr., 1997.
- Noun Formation, Class Notes in Latin, U. Idaho
- John B. Van Sickle, Roots of Style: A Guide to Latin & Greek
Elements in English, Brooklyn College, City University of New
York.
- Oxford English Dictionary, March 2002. Oxford University
Press.
- The Components of the Armed Forces, PRC's
official website
- The Reason behind the resistance by the New Territories
inhabitants against British takeover in 1899
- Tai Po
- Gilliver, Kate. Caesar's Gallic Wars 58-50 BC. London:
Osprey Publishing, 2002. ISBN 0-415-96858-5
- Joan of Arc: Her Story, by Régine Pernoud (Author),
Marie-Véronique Clin (Author), Jeremy duQuesnay Adams (Translator),
Palgrave Macmillan (1999), ISBN 0312227302
- David
Schoenbrun, Soldiers of the Night, The Story of the French
Resistance, New American Library, 1980. ISBN
0-452-00612-0
- Campbell, Bruce: The Sa Generals and the Rise of
Nazism, Page 99. University Press of Kentucky, 1998. ISBN
0813190983
- Concerned citizens detain insurgents, press
release of Operation iraqi Freedom, 11 October 2007.
- Bregman, Ahron (2002). Israel's Wars: A History Since
1947. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-28716-2
- Vinson, Ben III. Bearing Arms for His Majesty: The
Free-Colored Militia in Colonial Mexico. Stanford, Calif.:
Stanford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-8047-4229-4
- Civil Defence militia rise beyond expectations,
sundayobserver.lk
- Home Guard Service, Ministry of Defence, Sri Lanka,
defence.lk
- ‘Citizens of Eelam come join us’
- LTTE recruits volunteers for auxiliary
forces
- LTTE setting up auxiliary force of Thamil Eelam
- The Swiss Report: A special study for Western Goals
Foundation, Gen. Lewis W. Walt and Maj. Gen. George S. Patton.
(1983)
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_State_Guard
- Oxford English Dictionary. Second Edition 1989
- The History of English Law Before the Time of Edward I, Pollock
and Maitland, Cambridge U. Pr. (1898)
- Century Dictionary (1891) articles on
posse comitatus and miltia.
- A Discourse of Government with Relation to
Militias, Andrew Fletcher (1698) ISBN 0521439949
- Units of the Militia to be transferred to the Special Reserve,
published as schedule to order in council made April 9, 1908,
The London Gazette, April 10, 1908
- John Shy, "Mobilizing Armed Force in the American Revolution",
in John Parker and Carol Urness, eds., The American Revolution:
A Heritage of Change (Minneapolis, 1975), pp. 104–5.
- Stephen P. Halbrook, The Right of the People or the Power of
the State Bearing Arms, Arming Militias, and the Second Amendment,
Valparaiso Law Review, vol. 26, number 1, page 131
(1991).
- William E. Nelson, The Eighteenth-Century Background of John
Marshall's Constitutional Jurisprudence, 76 Mich. L. Rev. 893
(1978), ch. 23, 23. The Jury and Consensus Government in
Mid-Eighteenth-Century America
- Wills, Garry
(1999). A Necessary Evil, A History of American Distrust of
Government. New York, NY; Simon & Schuster. ISBN
0684844893
- Right to Keep and Bear Arms, U. S. Senate.
Paladin
Press (2001). ISBN 1581602545
- Manski, Ben
(2006). States Rights for Civil Rights, Liberty
Tree Journal, Vol 1, Issue 4.
- Catton, Bruce (2004). The Civil War, Pages 28-29.
Mariner Books. ISBN 0618001875
- Wills, Garry
(1999). A Necessary Evil, A History of American Distrust of
Government. New York, NY; Simon & Schuster. ISBN
0684844893
- The Spanish American War, by Russell
Alexander Alger, Harper & Bros. (1901).
- Sumner, William H.: An Inquiry Into
the Importance of the Militia to a Free Commonwealth, Page 23.
Cummings and Hillard, 1823. ASIN B00085OK9E. Reprinted in Richard
H. Kohn, Anglo-American Antimilitary Tracts, 1697-1830,
Arno Press (1979) ISBN 0405118864.
- National Defense Act Amendments of 1933, Act of June 15, 1933,
ch. 87, 48 Stat. 153.
- The Citizen Soldier under Federal and State Law, by
James Biser Whisker, West Virginia Law Review 94 (1992):
947.
- Beckett, Ian, The Amateur Military Tradition, 1558-1945
(Manchester, 1991).
- Joyce Lee Malcolm, The Right of the People to Keep and Bear
Arms: The Common Law Tradition, Hastings Constitutional Law
Quarterly, Vol. 10:285-314, 1983
- Joyce Lee Malcolm, The Role of the Militia in the
Development of the Englishman's Right to be Armed — Clarifying the
Legacy, Royal Historical Society and Humanities Press,
1996
- Cases & Comments on Criminal Procedure, Fred E.
Inbau and James R. Thompson, Foundation Press, Mineola, NY
(1982)
- Nicholas Lemann, Redemption: The Last Battle of the Civil
War, New York: Farrar, Strauss & Giroux paperback, 2007,
pp.25, 167, 170
- George C. Rable, But There Was No Peace: The Role of
Violence in the Politics of Reconstruction, Athens: University
of Georgia Press, 1984, p. 132
References
- Sumner, William Hyslop, An Inquiry Into the Importance of
the Militia to a Free Commonwealth: In a Letter from William
H. Sumner ... to John Adams, Late President of the United
States; with His Answer, Cummings and Hilliard, Boston,
1823
Further reading
- The Rise and Decline of the American Militia System,
by James B. Whisker, Susquehanna University Press (1999) ISBN
094563692X
- Cooper, Jerry M. 1998. The rise of the National Guard: the
evolution of the American militia, 1865-1920. Studies in war,
society, and the military, v. 1. Lincoln: University of Nebraska
Press. ISBN 0803214863