no information available
<p>Alha Udal ballad is a military folk rendition traditionally sung in large parts of northern and central India. It carries traditions terms and idioms of nearly nine hundred years of collective memory of residents of Haryana in the northwest to Bihar in the east and is sung in several dialects that stretch through this vast landscape. The present book is dedicated to the Khari Boli variant of the rendition which was sung in Western Uttar Pradesh Delhi and Haryana with some overlap over the adjoining Brajbhasha cultural zone. Throughout our historical past citizen soldiers were the backbone of all the armed forces of the subcontinent working as farmers and herders during peacetime and as soldiers of the empire the king or military generals when called out during times of war. It was folk renditions like Alha Udal that instilled in these citizens the requisite martial traits transforming them into tough and seasoned soldiers with a will to fight and bear all adversities which they encountered with bravery and fortitude. This military rendition that prepared the residents of these lands to become soldiers from an early age was thus instrumental in evolving a strong martial culture in India the impact of which can be felt even today. The rendition is therefore an integral part of Project Udbhav that seeks to study and document the long history of Indian military and strategic thought and traditions. About the Author Dr. Amit Pathak is a Senior Fellow at the Center for Military History and Conflict Studies United Service Institution of India New Delhi. His research focuses on the history and culture of Western Uttar Pradesh and he is also involved in the preservation of folk renditions of this rapidly urbanising region. His upcoming publication is on the military history of India between ad 1000 to 1803. In addition he is studying various facets of the history of NorthEast India and the Uprising of 1857 with multiple publications to his credit.</p>