A cantonment (/kænˈtɒnmənt/, /kænˈtoʊnmənt/, or UK: /kænˈtuːnmənt/) is a military quarters.[1] In Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and other parts of South Asia, a cantonment refers to a permanent military station (a term from the colonial era).[1] In United States military parlance, a cantonment is, essentially, "a permanent residential section (i.e. barrack) of a fort or other military installation," such as Fort Cavazos.
The word cantonment, derived from the French word canton, meaning corner or district,[2] refers to a temporary military or winter encampment. For example, at the start of the Waterloo campaign in 1815, while the Duke of Wellington's headquarters were in Brussels, most of his Anglo–allied army of 93,000 soldiers were cantoned, or stationed, to the south of Brussels.[3]
List of permanent cantonments
editAfghanistan
editThe former Sherpur Cantonment in Kabul, Afghanistan, which was the site of the Siege of the Sherpur Cantonment (1879) in the Second Anglo-Afghan War (1878–1880), is now maintained as a British Army cemetery.
Bangladesh
editIn Bangladesh, cantonments are residential quarters for many military personnel as well as headquarters for different army units. A wide variety of military training is provided in Bangladesh cantonments:
- Alikadam Cantonment, Bandarban
- Bandarban Cantonment, Bandarban
- Bangladesh Military Academy, Chittagong
- Chittagong Cantonment, Chittagong
- Comilla Cantonment, Comilla
- Dhaka Cantonment, Dhaka
- Dighinala Cantonment, Khagrachari
- Freedom Fighter Abdul Hamid Cantonment, Kishoreganj
- Halishahar Cantonment, Chittagong
- Jahanabad Cantonment, Khulna
- Jahangirabad Cantonment, Bogra
- Jalalabad Cantonment, Sylhet
- Jamuna Cantonment, Tangail
- Jessore Cantonment, Jessore
- Kaptai Cantonment, Kaptai
- Khagrachari Cantonment, Khagrachari
- Kholahati Cantonment, Dinajpur
- Lalmonirhat Cantonment, Lalmonirhat
- Majhira Cantonment, Bogra
- Mawa Cantonment, Louhajong, Munshigonj
- Mirpur Cantonment, Dhaka
- Mymensingh Cantonment, Mymensingh
- Padma Cantonment, Shariatpur
- Postogola Cantonment, Dhaka
- Qadirabad Cantonment, Natore
- Rajendrapur Cantonment, Gazipur
- Rajshahi Cantonment, Rajshahi
- Ramu Cantonment, Cox's Bazar
- Rangamati Cantonment, Rangamati
- Rangpur Cantonment, Rangpur
- Saidpur Cantonment, Nilphamari
- Savar Cantonment, Dhaka
- Shahid Salahuddin Cantonment, Ghatail
- Sylhet Cantonment, Sylhet
- Sheikh Hasina Cantonment, Lebukhali, Barisal-Patuakhali
India
editSeveral cities in the Indian subcontinent, including Ahmedabad, Ambala, Bellary, Belgaum, Bangalore, Danapur, Jabalpur, Kanpur, Bathinda, Delhi, Nilgiris, Chennai, Mumbai, Pune, Meerut, Ramgarh, Secunderabad, and Trichy, contained large cantonments of the former British Indian Army, with Meerut and Ramgarh being two of the most important cantonments in Northern India, second only to the headquarters at Rawalpindi (now in Pakistan). Meerut was established in 1803, and for 150 years was the largest cantonment in the region. Although cantonments in India were considered to be semi-permanent in the 18th and 19th centuries, by the turn of the 20th century, they had transitioned to being permanent garrisons. They were further entrenched as such, via the military reforms of Lord Kitchener in 1903, and the Cantonments Act of 1924.[4][5]
At India's Independence in 1947, India had 56 cantonments. After this India added 6 cantonments the last being Ajmer Cantonment in 1962, taking the total number to 62. They covered an area of 161,000 acres (650 km2).[6]
As of 2019, there were sixty-one "notified cantonments" in India, occupying an area of 157,000 acres (640 km2):[7] twenty-five in Central Command, nineteen in Southern Command, thirteen in Western Command, four in Eastern Command, and one in Northern Command.[8]
On 24 July 2024, a press release notified that, in order to move on from older Colonial-era concepts, Ministry of Defence has decided to give up responsibility to consider to excise civil areas of certain Cantonments and merge them with neighbouring State municipalities. As of then, there were 58 Cantonments of which 10 were to be handed over in the first phase. The administration of civil areas was to be handed over from Cantonment Boards to the neighbouring Municipalities while the military region was to remain with the Armed Forces.[9][10][11] However, on 27 April 2024, KhasYol had become the first cantonment board to be "de-notified".[12]
On 2 September 2024, it was reported that paperwork are being completed to handover civilian areas of Cantonments from the Indian Army. The Cantonments include Dehradun, Deolali, Nasirabad, Babina, Ajmer, Ramgarh, Mathura, Shahjahanpur, Clement Town and Fatehgarh. The report sain, "Indian Army’s Central Command, South Western Command and Southern Command are in the process of completing the hand over exercise in coordination with Uttarakhand, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Jharkhand and Uttar Pradesh governments."[6]
Major cantonments and garrisons include the following:[13]
Notified Cantonments
edit- Central Command
- Agra Cantonment, Uttar Pradesh
- Almora Cantonment, Uttarakhand
- Ayodhya Cantonment, Uttar Pradesh
- Bareilly Cantonment, Uttar Pradesh
- Chakrata Cantonment, Uttarakhand
- Clement Town Cantonment, Uttarakhand (To be denotified)[6]
- Danapur Cantonment, Bihar
- Dehradun Cantonment, Uttarakhand (To be denotified)[6]
- Fatehgarh Cantonment, Uttar Pradesh (To be denotified)[6]
- Gopalpur Cantonment, Odisha
- Jabalpur Cantonment, Madhya Pradesh
- Kanpur Cantonment, Uttar Pradesh
- Landour Cantonment, Uttarakhand
- Lansdowne Cantonment, Uttarakhand
- Lucknow Cantonment, Uttar Pradesh
- Mathura Cantonment, Uttar Pradesh (To be denotified)[6]
- Meerut Cantonment, Uttar Pradesh
- Mhow Cantonment, Madhya Pradesh
- Nainital Cantonment, Uttarakhand
- Pachmarhi Cantonment, Madhya Pradesh
- Prayagraj Cantonment, Uttar Pradesh
- Ramgarh Cantonment, Jharkhand (To be denotified)[6]
- Ranikhet Cantonment, Uttarakhand
- Roorkee Cantonment, Uttarakhand
- Shahajahanpur Cantonment, Uttar Pradesh (To be denotified)[6]
- Varanasi Cantonment, Uttar Pradesh
- Southern Command
- Ahmedabad Cantonment, Gujarat
- Ahmednagar Cantonment, Maharashtra
- Ajmer Cantonment, Rajasthan (To be denotified)[6]
- Aurangabad Cantonment, Maharashtra
- Babina Cantonment, Jhansi, Uttar Pradesh (To be denotified)[6]
- Belgaum Cantonment, Karnataka
- Bellary Cantonment, Karnataka (Inactive, De-notified)[14]
- Dehu Road Cantonment, Maharashtra
- Deolali Cantonment, Maharashtra (To be denotified)[6]
- Jhansi Cantonment, Uttar Pradesh
- Kamptee Cantonment, Maharashtra
- Kannur Cantonment, Kerala
- Kirkee Cantonment, Maharashtra
- Morar Cantonment, Gwalior, Madhya Pradesh
- Nasirabad Cantonment, Rajasthan (To be denotified)[6]
- Pune Cantonment, Maharashtra
- Sagar Cantonment, Madhya Pradesh
- Secunderabad Cantonment, Telangana
- St. Thomas Mount Cantonment, Chennai, Tamil Nadu
- Wellington Cantonment, Tamil Nadu
- Western Command
- Ambala Cantonment, Haryana
- Amritsar Cantonment, Punjab
- Bakloh Cantonment, Chamba District, Himachal Pradesh
- Dagshai Cantonment, Himachal Pradesh
- Dalhousie Cantonment, Himachal Pradesh
- Delhi Cantonment, Delhi
- Ferozepur Cantonment, Punjab
- Jalandhar Cantonment, Punjab
- Jammu Cantonment, Jammu and Kashmir
- Jutogh Cantonment, Shimla, Himachal Pradesh
- Kasauli Cantonment, Himachal Pradesh
- Subathu Cantonment, Shimla Hills, Himachal Pradesh
- KhasYol Cantonment, Dharamshala, Himachal Pradesh (de-notified on 2023)[12]
- Eastern Command
- Barrackpore, West Bengal
- Dum Dum Cantonment, West Bengal (Inactive, De-notified)
- Jalapahar, Darjeeling, West Bengal
- Lebong, Darjeeling, West Bengal
- Shillong Cantonment, Meghalaya
- Northern Command
Unlisted Military Cantonments
edit- Abohar Cantonment (Abohar, Punjab)
- Akhnoor Cantonment (Akhnoor, Jammu and Kashmir)
- Baddowal Cantonment (Ludhiana, Punjab)
- Bangalore Cantonment (Bangalore, Karnataka)
- Bikaner Cantonment (Bikaner, Rajasthan)
- Bharatpur Cantonment (Rajasthan)
- Bhatinda Cantonment (Bhatinda, Punjab)
- Binnaguri Cantonment (West Bengal)
- Bhuj Cantonment (Bhuj, Gujarat)
- Bhopal Cantonment (Madhya Pradesh)
- Beas Military Station (Punjab)
- Chandimandir Cantonment (Chandigarh)
- Dipatoli Cantonment (Ranchi, Jharkhand)
- Faridkot Cantonment (Faridkot, Punjab)
- Fazilka Cantonment (Fazilka, Punjab)
- Gandhinagar Cantonment (Gandhinagar, Gujarat)
- Gopalpur Cantonment (Brahmapur, Orissa)
- Hisar Cantonment (Hisar, Haryana)
- Itarana Cantonment (Alwar, Rajasthan)
- Jaipur Cantonment (Jaipur, Rajasthan)
- Jaisalmer Cantonment (Jaisalmer, Rajasthan)
- Jodhpur Cantonment (Rajasthan)
- Joshimath Cantonment (Joshimath, Uttarakhand)
- Kapurthala Cantonment (Kapurthala, Punjab)
- Khasa Cantonment (Amritsar, Punjab)
- Kollam Cantonment (Kollam, India)
- Ludhiana Cantonment (Punjab)
- Mamun Cantonment (Pathankot, Punjab)
- Missamari Cantonment (Missamari, Assam)
- Nagrota Cantonment (Nagrota, Jammu & Kashmir)
- Narengi Cantonment (Guwahati, Assam)
- Pathankot Cantonment (Pathankot, Punjab)
- Patiala Cantonment (Punjab)
- Pithoragarh Cantonment (Pithoragarh , Uttarakhand)
- Shahjahanpur Cantonment (Shahjahanpur, Uttar Pradesh)
- Solmara Cantonment (Tezpur, Assam)
- Sri Ganganagar Cantonment (Sri Ganganagar, Rajasthan)
- Suratgarh Cantonment (Suratgarh, Rajasthan)
- Thiruvananthapuram Cantonment (Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala)
- Tibri Cantonment (Gurdaspur, Punjab)
- Udhampur Cantonment (Udhampur, Jammu & Kashmir)
- Udaipur Cantonment (Rajasthan)
- Vadodra Cantonment (Vadodra, Gujarat)
- Varanasi Cantonment, Uttar Pradesh, Central Command
- Siliguri Cantonment(West Bengal)
- Shillong Cantonment(Meghalaya)
Ghana
editBabina cantonments*Cantonments, Accra
Nigeria
editCantonments in Nigeria refer to permanent military installations which house active personnel and their families. Cantonments in Nigeria include:
- Airforce Cantonment, Ikeja, Lagos
- Armed forces resettlement centre, Oshodi, Lagos
- Army Ordnance Cantonment, (also known as Abalti Barracks), Yaba, Lagos
- Arn Cantonment, Yaba, Lagos
- Badagry Cantonment, Badagry, Lagos
- Dodan Cantonment, Ikoyi, Lagos
- Ikeja Cantonment, Ikeja, Lagos
- Marda Cantonment, Yaba, Lagos
- Navy Town, Ojo, Lagos
- Ojo Cantonment (also known as Palm Barracks), Ojo, Lagos,
- Bonny Camp, Victoria Island
- Jaji military cantonment, kaduna,
- Dalet cantonment, kaduna,
- Mogadishu cantonment,
- Abiyssinia cantonment,
- .Burma cantonment,
- Adshanti cantonment,
- Nigerian Defence Academy, Afaka, Kaduna
Pakistan
edit- Abbottabad Cantonment
- Attock Cantonment
- Allama Iqbal Cantonment
- Bannu Cantonment
- Bhawalpur Cantonment
- Chaklala Cantonment
- Clifton Cantonment, Karachi
- Dera Ismail Khan Cantonment
- Faisal Cantonment, Karachi
- Faisalabad Cantonment
- Gujranwala Cantonment
- Hyderabad Cantonment
- Jhelum Cantonment
- Kamra Cantonment
- Karachi Cantonment
- Kharian Cantonment
- Khuzdar Cantonment[15]
- Korangi Creek Cantonment, Karachi
- Lahore Cantonment[4]
- Walton Cantonment: Created out of the southern parts of the original Lahore Cantt., Walton, Lahore[4]
- Loralai Cantonment
- Malir Cantonment, Karachi
- Mangla Cantonment
- Manora Cantonment, Karachi
- Mardan Cantonment
- Multan Cantonment
- Murree Cantonment
- Nowshera Cantonment
- Okara Cantonment
- Ormara Cantonment
- Pano Aqil Cantonment
- Peshawar Cantonment[16]
- Quetta Cantonment
- Rawalpindi Cantonment
- Sanjwal Cantonment
- Sargodha Cantonment
- Shorkot Cantonment (PAF Rafiqui)
- Sialkot Cantonment
- Taxila Cantonment
- Wah Cantonment
- Zhob Cantonment
Singapore
editIn Singapore, the term is used to denote a police cantonment.[17]
South Africa
editSri Lanka
editUnited States
editThe United States military commonly uses the term "cantonment" to describe the permanent facilities at U.S. Army training bases as opposed to the field training areas. Cantonment areas often include housing (such as barracks and maid-service quarters), dining facilities, training classrooms, exchanges, and paved air fields.[18]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b "cantonment". Dictionary.com Unabridged (Online). n.d.
- ^ "canton". Dictionary.com Unabridged (Online). n.d.
- ^ Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition Waterloo Campaign
- ^ a b c Sheikh, Omer; Ali, Amna (26 October 2009). "Lahore Cantonment". geocities.com. Retrieved 29 November 2023.
- ^ "THE CANTONMENTS ACT, 1924" (PDF). indiacode.nic.in. India Code. Retrieved 29 November 2023.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Ray, Kalyan. "Ten army cantonments to be handed over to civil authorities". Deccan Herald. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
- ^ "Annual Report 2018-19: Ministry of Defence" (PDF). mod.gov.in. Ministry of Defence. p. 131. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
The Ministry of Defence owns approximately 17.57 lakh acres of land throughout the country managed by the three Services and other Organizations like DGDE, Ordnance Factory Board, DRDO, DGQA, CGDA etc. The Army has the maximum of the land i.e. 14.147 lakh acres followed by Air Force 1.40 lakh acres and Navy 0.44 lakh acres. The defence land inside the notified Cantonments is approximately 1.57 lakh acres and the remaining around 16.00 lakh lies outside the Cantonments
- ^ "Directorate General Defence Estates Main menu". Directorate General Defence Estates. Retrieved 30 December 2013.
- ^ "MOVING AWAY FROM THE BRITISH-ERA CONCEPT OF CANTONMENT TOWNS". Press Information Bureau. 24 July 2024. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
- ^ "Defence Ministry denotifies civil areas of 10 cantonments". The Indian Express. 7 March 2024. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
- ^ "Military Cantonments To Lose Control On Civil Areas. What This Means". NDTV.com. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
- ^ a b "Khasyol in Dharamshala 1st Cantonment in country to lose civilian area control". The Times of India. 29 April 2023. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 2 September 2024.
- ^ "Cantonment Boards". pib.gov.in. Press Information Bureau. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
- ^ Malagi, Shivakumar G. (16 August 2017). "Ballari's jail walls have many a story to tell". Deccan Chronicle. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
- ^ "Military: Khuzdar Cantonment" Global Security
- ^ "Sarhad Conservation Network® Reports: Book on Peshawar Cantonment Launched". 27 October 2009. Archived from the original on 27 October 2009.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ "Singapore Police Force". Archived from the original on 4 July 2012. Retrieved 4 May 2011.
- ^ "Marseilles Training Center". www.il.ngb.army.mil. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
External links
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