| Great Britain. Adjutant-General's Office, Richard Cannon - 1847 - 180 pagina’s
...made in four divisions; the left wing under the direction of the Governor-General (Lieutenant- General Sir Henry Hardinge), who had volunteered his services as second in command. One hundred guns of the enemy, nearly one-half of battering * See memoir of Colonel Sir John McCaskill... | |
| Richard Cannon - 1848 - 174 pagina’s
...made in four divisions; the left wing under the direction of the Governor-General (Lieutenant-General Sir Henry Hardinge), who had volunteered his services as second in command. One hundred guns of the enemy, nearly one-half of battering * See memoir of Colonel Sir John McCaskill... | |
| Thomas Carter - 1861 - 644 pagina’s
...made in four divisions; the left wing under the direction of the GovernorGeneral, (Lieutenant-General Sir Henry Hardinge,) who had volunteered his services as second in command. One hundred guns of the enemy, nearly one half of battering calibre, opened a heavy caunonade, which... | |
| Thomas Carter, William Henry Long - 1893 - 796 pagina’s
...in four divisions ; the left wing under the direction of the Governor-General, (Lieutenant-General Sir Henry Hardinge,) who had volunteered his services as second in command. The force of the Sikhs was about 35,000 men, two-thirds of whom were regular troops, with ninety-eight... | |
| |