As a result of this, as well as the input of the armed forces, the Gendarmerie remained a largely conservative body throughout the period, there was also a certain amount of politicization during training as the Gendarmerie were trained in military camps. See also Krozier, ‘Dowbiggan to Tegart’, passim. 41 Meinertzhagen to Thwaites, undated, Mar. 90–122, at p. 112. 68 Tudor to Trenchard, 25 Jan. 1923 (RAF archives, Colindale, London, MRAF Viscount Trenchard papers (MFC76/1), MFC76/1/285); Samuel to Devonshire, 8 Mar. Leeson, D. M., The Black and Tans: British police and auxiliaries in the Irish War of Independence (Oxford, 2011), p. 69. 40 Quoted in Horne, Edward, A job well done: being a history of the Palestine Police Force, 1920–1948 (Lewes, 2003) pp. Usage data cannot currently be displayed. L'Essor de la gendarmerie nationale, premier journal des gendarmes, depuis 1936. 18–32. Partagez et commentez en temps réel, à tout moment de la journée.

2 talking about this. In fact, in terms of force discipline and levels of police brutality, the British Gendarmerie's record compared very favourably with those of its ‘parent’ forces in Ireland, lending support to recent claims that historians have tended to over-value character-based explanations at the expense of circumstance-based assessments when analysing police behaviour both during the Irish revolution and the Palestine Mandate. 57 Cahill, Richard, ‘“Going berserk”; Black and Tans in Palestine’, Jerusalem Quarterly, 38 (2009), pp. The Greek Gendarmerie was established after the enthronement of King Otto in 1833 as the Royal Gendarmerie (Greek: Βασιλική Χωροφυλακή) and modeled after the French National Gendarmerie. Le mensuel destiné aux actifs, réservistes, retraités, veuves et orphelins de la Gendarmerie Nationale.

At the end of the line: colonial policing and the imperial endgame, 1945–1980, The Irish policeman and the empire: influencing the policing of the British Empire–Commonwealth, The problems of disbandment: the Royal Irish Constabulary and imperial migration, The origins of the Transjordan Frontier Force, The breakdown of public security: the case of Ireland, 1916–1921, and Palestine, 1936–1939, The British army and the crisis of empire, 1918–1922, The Irish constabularies, 1822–1922: a century of policing in Ireland, The last days of Dublin Castle: the Mark Sturgis diaries, A job well done: being a history of the Palestine Police Force, 1920–1948, “Going berserk”; Black and Tans in Palestine, The British (Palestine) Gendarmerie’ (part 2), Tidings from Zion: Helen Bentwich's letters from Jerusalem, 1919–1931, The Royal Irish Constabulary: an oral history, The Black and Tans: British police and auxiliaries in the Irish War of Independence, The defence of Palestine: insurrection and public security, 1936–1939, The British culture of paramilitary violence in the Irish War of Independence, War in peace: paramilitary violence in Europe after the Great War, Communal conflict and insurrection in Palestine, 1936–1948, Policing and decolonisation: nationalism, politics and the police, Promise and fulfilment: Palestine, 1917–1949, From Dowbiggan to Tegart: revolutionary change in the colonial police in Palestine during the 1930s, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, Major Farran's hat: murder, scandal and Britain's war against Jewish terrorism, 1945–1948, The banality of brutality: British armed forces and the repression of the Arab Revolt in Palestine, 1936–1939, A line in the sand: Britain, France and the struggle that shaped the Middle East, An orderly retreat: policing the end of the empire, The “Irish model” and the empire: a case for reassessment, Policing the empire: government, authority and control, 1830–1940, https://doi.org/10.1017/S0018246X13000253, Sovereignty, Sacrifice and States of Emergency in Colonial Ireland, ‘Make the terror behind greater than the terror in front’?